Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Stroke segments that are horizontal or vertical get the same
antidropout treatment as filled rectangles.
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This is not a complete general fix for features dropping out of
rendered line art, but merely a fix for one of the more common
cases.
When rendering rectangles (currently, specifically only those
rectangles that are actually defined as rectangles within the
path structure), if they are axis aligned, then ensure that they
always fill the subpixel line they are on.
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Firstly, we make the definition of the path structures local to
path.c. This is achieved by using an fz_path_processor function to
step through paths enumerating each section using callback functions.
Next, we extend the internal path representation to include other
section types, including quads, beziers with common control points
rectangles, horizontal, vertical and degenerate lines. We also roll
close path sections up into the previous sections commands.
The hairiest part of this is that fz_transform_path has to cope with
changing the path commands depending on the matrix. This is a
relatively rare operation though.
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Purge several embedded contexts:
Remove embedded context in fz_output.
Remove embedded context in fz_stream.
Remove embedded context in fz_device.
Remove fz_rebind_stream (since it is no longer necessary).
Remove embedded context in svg_device.
Remove embedded context in XML parser.
Add ctx argument to fz_document functions.
Remove embedded context in fz_document.
Remove embedded context in pdf_document.
Remove embedded context in pdf_obj.
Make fz_page independent of fz_document in the interface.
We shouldn't need to pass the document to all functions handling a page.
If a page is tied to the source document, it's redundant; otherwise it's
just pointless.
Fix reference counting oddity in fz_new_image_from_pixmap.
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Adobe Reader and Microsoft XPS viewer differ in their handling of
non-empty dashed strokes where the phase is 0: Adobe Reader considers
these to be faulty and omits them while Microsoft XPS Viewer renders
them the same as an empty dash (i.e. solid).
This patch makes Fitz no longer render such strokes and ensures that
MuXPS never emits them so that the desired behavior results (this is
the easier implementation since XPS rendering code renders stroked
paths in a single location whereas PDF rendering does it all over the
place).
See https://code.google.com/p/sumatrapdf/issues/detail?id=2339 for a
testcase.
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If we perform a linejoin that ends up being over an impossibly small
distance, we can get a rendering error. This is caused by trying to
calculate scale = linewidth/sqrtf(len), where len < FLT_EPSILON.
Avoid this by rearranging the code slightly - no extra calculations
required.
Also given that sn == bn at all times within the stroking code, just
remove bn.
Credit for spotting this problem goes to Simon for tracking the
problem with rounding_artifact_due_to_closepath.pdf. My fix just
fixes the problem at a lower level than his does.
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The bug fix added in the previous commit fails to work in this
case (hang-9527.pdf) because the matrix is not invertible and
hence the clipping rectangle ends up infinite. Spot this case
here and return early.
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The first file of this bug (hang-66.pdf) hangs while stroking a
VERY long line segment; so long that 'used' is sufficinetly large
that:
used += dash_segment_len
doesn't result in a change in the value of used. The fix is
to clip strokes to the edge of the gel's clip area, meaning
that this should never occur.
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