Difference between revisions of "Release notes/0.44"
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Revision as of 07:13, 20 October 2005
Inkscape 0.43
In brief
The focus of this release is on the exciting new features sponsored by Google via their Summer of Code program. However, we have quite a bunch of other stuff too. Here are the highlights:
- Connectors: A new Connector tool implements creation, editing, and autorouting (object-avoiding) of connector lines between objects. Indispensable for diagramming. (A Google SoC project.)
- Inkboard collaborative editing: You can now connect to other Inkscape users over the Net and edit a shared document together, watching others' changes and making yours! (A Google SoC project.)
- Pressure and tilt sensitivity: the Calligraphy tool can now use a tablet pen with pressure/tilt support to vary the width and angle of the calligraphic stroke.
- Better node editing: You can freely drag/bend/stretch a Bezier curve by any point (not only by a node), as well as add a new node at any point on the curve.
- New extensions for envelope distortion, whirling, and adding nodes.
- Improved precision, expanded limits, many usability improvements and bugfixes.
- [Google Summer of Code: Open Clip Art Library Browser?]
- [Google Summer of Code: dxf import?]
Connectors
- Inkscape now includes preliminary support for connectors. Connectors are lines drawn between objects, that stay connected to the objects as these objects are manipulated. Any object may have a "connector-avoid" property, which when set causes connectors to automatically route around the object.
- The Connector tool (Ctrl+F2 or the o key) is a new way of creating and rerouting connectors, as well as marking objects "avoided" for the purpose of routing connectors.
- A new connector can be drawn by clicking and dragging from any point on the canvas. The connector is finalized when the mouse is released. Connectors can also be created with two clicks, rather than click-and-drag, if this is preferred. In this case, click once on an empty point on the canvas to begin drawing the connector, then move the mouse to the new connector's target point and then click again to finalize the connector. Single clicking on a canvas object selects/deselects that object, just as in other tools.
- Connection point handles are shown while the mouse cursor is hovering over a non-connector object in the connector tool. Currently they are shown only at the center of objects. When creating a connector, if the connector is started or ended over a connection point then the connector will be attached to those that object. From then on the connector will be automatically rerouted whenever the attached object is moved.
- Connectors attached to objects are currently drawn to the bounding box of those objects. It is planned that they will be drawn instead to the edges of objects.
- A selected connector will show two endpoint handles. By clicking and dragging these, the connector can be rerouted and attached/detached from objects.
- The Make connectors avoid selected objects button marks all objects in the selection as "avoided", causing all current and future connectors to automatically avoid these objects.
- The Make connectors ignore selected objects button marks all objects in the selection as "ignored", causing all current and future connectors to completely ignore these objects. This is the default for all canvas items, i.e., no objects are automatically routed around by default.
Inkboard
A first release of the Inkboard collaborative editing system (also known as a "white board") is present in this version of Inkscape.
- Inkboard uses the XMPP protocol (used by Jabber) to link together Inkscape clients in a shared document session. Therefore, if you have a Jabber account, you can use Inkboard. (There are some exceptions to this; they are listed below.)
- Inkboard sessions may occur between two users or a group of users in a chatroom setting.
Inkboard usage
- You must first connect to a Jabber server before sharing a document. To do this, go to Whiteboard -> Connect to Jabber server. You will be prompted to enter a server name, your username, and password. You may specify a specific port to connect on, and whether or not you would like to connect via SSL.
- After connecting, you may establish a session with another user or a chatroom. To connect to another user, go to Whiteboard -> Share with user. Inkboard can import your Jabber contact list, and will present a list of online contacts to you. You may select any contact in the contact list, or enter a Jabber ID to connect to.
- Similarly, you can establish a connection with a chatroom by going to Whiteboard -> Share with chatroom.
- If you are contacted by another user, Inkscape will present a dialog telling you that you have received an invitation. The dialog contains the Jabber ID of the user contacting you, and offers you three choices: decline the invitation, accept the invitation, or accept the invitation in a new window.
- Inkboard can record a session's contents for playback at a later time.
- If you are establishing a session, click the Write session file checkbox in the share with user dialog to enable session recording. You will need to provide the name of a file to which the session contents can be written.
- If you are accepting a session invitation, click the Write session file checkbox in the invitation dialog to enable session recording. You will need to provide the name of a file to which the session contents can be written.
- To play back a session, go to Whiteboard -> Open session file.
- The Whiteboard -> Dump XML tracker menu item is intended for debugging purposes only.
Pressure and tilt sensitivity
Support for extended input devices has been added.
- The Calligraphy tool now has optional pressure and tilt support from an input device such as a tablet. Pressure can be used to alter the width of the pen and tilt can be used to alter the angle of the pen's nib.
- A standard input device dialog has been added (in File menu). Input device settings are saved to and loaded from the preferences.
Node tool
- Clicking on a selected path selects the two nodes closest to the click point. Shift+click adds or removes these two nodes to the node selection (when only one path is selected; otherwise Shift+click works as in Selector).
- Double click or Ctrl+Alt+click anywhere on the selected path (even if it is under other objects) creates a new node at the click point, without changing the shape of the path. (Previously, you could only add a node in the middle of a segment by using a toolbar button.)
- You can now edit the selected path (even if it's under other objects) by dragging any curve point, not only node(s) as before. In many cases it's a much more convenient way to reshape paths than anything available before. When you drag a curve close enough to one of the nodes, only that node's handle(s) are affected; if you drag a point midway between two nodes, both nodes' handles are adjusted.
- When mouse is over a draggable path, the cursor is changed to include a hand.
- As in Selector, if you press Shift before starting to drag, you always get a node selection rubberband rectangle (even if you start on a path [but not a node!]).
- After duplicating (Shift+D) an endnode, the selected node is always the new endnode, so you can move it at once.
- Selected nodes are made a little larger than non-selected ones.
Extensions
- Add Nodes: Adds nodes to the selected paths. Each segment of the selected path is subdivided into ceil(Length/Max) equal length segments. Lengths are measured in SVG User Units calculated from the path data and does not take into account any transforms.
- Whirl: Twists the selected paths around the specified center point.
- Summer's Night: Linearly distorts a path into the destination quadrilateral. The destination quadrilateral is specified by a four node path (closed or not). To use, draw and position a four node path. Select the four node path first and then add to selection the path you wish to distort. The original position of the four nodes is considered to be clockwise around the bounding box of the path to distort beginning in the upper left corner.
- The Wavy extension is renamed to Function Plotter and got many fixes and improvements. Importantly, now you don't have to provide an analytic formula for the derivative; instead, check the "Calculate the first derivative numerically" checkbox and it will itself calculate the angle at each node. In the function/derivative formulas, you can use functions from the <a href="http://docs.python.org/lib/module-math.html">math</a> and <a href="http://docs.python.org/lib/module-random.html">random</a> Python modules. As before, you need to have a rectangle selected before calling this extension.
- [svgslice?]
Misc new functionality
- Improved support for viewBox: If the root <svg> element of your document has width/height attributes set in percentage units and there's a viewBox on that element, then:
- The canvas size is set to the value of the viewBox attribute.
- Changing the canvas size in Document Preferences sets the viewBox, without touching the width/height values.
- This does not affect regular documents created in Inkscape, but makes it easier to edit other SVG files that use viewBox.
- The new command line parameter,
--export-area-snap
, used with bitmap export to snap the export area outwards to the nearest integer SVG user unit (px) values. If you are using the default export resolution of 90dpi and your graphics are pixel-snapped to minimize antialiasing, this switch allows you to preserve this alignment even if you are exporting an area (for example, with --export-id or --export-area-drawing) which is itself not pixel-aligned.
- When saving as Postscript, you now have the option to convert or not convert texts to paths (previously only available for EPS export).
Interface and usability
- [Menu configurability and sensitivity - ted]
- The Icon Preview has been improved. A toggle has been added to switch between previewing the entire document or just the current selection. A larger 128x128 size has been added to the defaults. The sizes are now read from the preferences file and can now be customized.
- Rectangles and ellipses now use different handle shapes, so it's much easier to see which handle does what. The two square handles change the size of the object, while the two round handles adjust the rounding corners (in rects) and arc/segment ends (in ellipses).
- The controls for the Rectangle tool now include W and H fields for setting the width/height of selected rectangle(s) numerically.
- In the controls of Rectangle and Ellipse tools, the "Not rounded" and "Make whole" buttons are now grayed out when the selected object cannot use the corresponding function (i.e. when a rect is already not rounded and the ellipse is already whole, which are the defaults).
- When editing text in Text tool, keypad + and - keys type the corresponding characters if NumLock is on (otherwise they zoom in and out as before). (Still does not work on Windows.)
- In Text tool, Ctrl+Up and Ctrl+Down now move one paragraph up or down correspondingly.
- The Calligraphic tool, in addition to the Ctrl+F6 shortcut, has a new one-letter shortcut, `c'.
- The Pen, Pencil, and Calligraphy tools finally have mouse cursors of their own.
- The canvas width/height fields in Document Preferences are never grayed out. Instead, the menu of the canvas sizes scrolls itself to "Custom" or to an appropriate standard size as you edit width/height.
- Shape editing handles now snap to grid/guides [only for rectangle so far - cth103]
- Pattern move handle is restricted to horizontal/vertical when Ctrl is pressed.
- In Selector, dragging the rotation center handle snaps to the edges and central axes of the selection's bounding box.
- In Pen tool, while you are drawing a path, the statusbar displays the distance and angle of the current mouse point from the last created node of the path. This makes it easy to create a path from the given lengths and angles of linear segments. When you are dragging to create a curve handle, statusbar also displays the length and the angle of the handle.
- A new preference option, Compass-like angle display (Steps tab), allows you to have absolute angles specified in a compass notation (0 at north, 0 to 360 range, increasing clockwise) instead of the default trigonometric notation (0 at east, -180 to 180 range, increasing counterclockwise). This affects the statusbar angle display for path segments and handles in Pen and Node tools.
- Pen and Pencil tools now display helpful statusbar hints when the mouse is over one of the end anchors of the selected path.
- The precision of most editable length fields is increased from 0.01 to 0.001.
- The minimum zoom is extended from 4% to 1%.
Packaging, documentation, examples
- [The new Windows package - Adib]
- The About dialog now more closely resembles the stock Gtk About dialog. A full list of Authors and Translators, as well as the license is now viewable.
Translations
- The OSX package now includes interface translations and reads the OSX user language setting, as specified in System Preferences, to use the corresponding translation language.
SVG CSS compliance
Important bugfixes
- The systematic error when scaling objects with stroke via the Selector controls panel (W and H fields) is fixed.
- Due to a bug, Inkscape tended to replace relative paths to embedded images by absolute, which made them fail when moving a document to another computer; this is fixed.
- The precision of most boolean operations and offsets is improved, especially noticeably for small paths.
- In text on path, in some cases letters were distributed unevenly along a curve; now fixed.
- Searching by text in the Find dialog (Ctrl+F) was broken, now fixed.
- Some of the stock markers were missing in the marker menus in the Fill & Stroke dialog.
- The bounding box of a stroke with markers now includes the markers.
Internal progress
- Source documentation: the big goal is to have a brief description for classes and most functions in every source file; this now holds for more than 100 files of the 1350 files in the source code. The doxygen index file now shows many useful links to external documentation and a categorification of main directory files which should be useful for beginners in particular.
- Removed trailing fractional zeros in SVG for cleaner and more compact markup - pjrm
- C++ Encapsulation: the View class hierarchy has been reimplemented in C++, after separating the widget classes from each class. The number of dependencies on the central file desktop.h (about 100) was reduced by half.
Known issues
Windows 95/98/ME support
- Due to a bug in GTK 2.8, this version of Inkscape will not work on Windows 95/98/ME. Please don't send us crash reports from those platforms. We hope to be able to resume support for these platforms in the future, but no specific committments can be made at this point.
Problems on Linux under KDE/Baghira
- It is known that inkscape and several other Gtk programs have problems running on Linux under the KDE GUI when the Baghira theme and the package gtk_qt_engine are installed. If you experience inkscape crashes on KDE, please try to install a theme different from Baghira, or deinstall the gtk_qt_engine package from your system.
Pressure and tilt sensitivity
- Pressure sensitivity and tilt do not currently work on OSX, due to a limitation of the OSX version of X11.
Inkboard
- Imported bitmaps are not transmitted to other users in a whiteboard session.
- At present, Inkboard relies on Loudmouth to provide Jabber connectivity, which means that it is limited to Linux builds of Inkscape. Inkboard is currently being redesigned to use a cross-platform Jabber client; this redesign will be present in a future release.
- Inkboard cannot yet connect to Google Talk clients, because it expects the "server" portion of a Jabber ID to be the same as the server that it contacts (which is not the case for the Google Talk network). This will be remedied in a future release.
- Inkboard's handling of concurrent modifications is still very rough. Future releases will make this more robust.
See http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=93438&atid=604306 for a full list of known issues. If you find a bug not listed here, then please report the bug: see instructions at http://inkscape.org/report_bugs.php (the Report Bugs link from http://inkscape.org/).
Previous releases
- ReleaseNotes042 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes042)
- ReleaseNotes041 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes041)
- ReleaseNotes040 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes040)
- ReleaseNotes039 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes039)
- ReleaseNotes038 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes038)
- ReleaseNotes037 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes037)
- ReleaseNotes036 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes036)
- ReleaseNotes035 (http://inkscape.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ReleaseNotes035)