Instead of translating between the sorting proxy and the underlying
file system model at all the DirectoryView API boundaries, just hand
out indexes into the sorting proxy model.
The only thing those indexes are used for on the outside is to
retrieve a GUI::FileSystemModel::Node for an index, so add a nice
helper on DirectoryView that turns a ModelIndex into a Node&.
The Node API was obnoxiously requiring you to pass the model into it
all the time, simply because nodes could not find their way back to
the containing model. This patch adds a back-reference to the model
and simplifies the API.
This patch begins the process of converting FileManager's desktop mode
to using the DirectoryView class.
This will allow us to share most of the code between the two different
runtime modes of FileManager.
We lose a bit of functionality in this patch, but we'll bring it back!
Instead of SortingProxyModel having a column+order, we move that state
to AbstractView. When you click on a column header, the view tells the
model to resort the relevant column with the new order.
This is implemented in SortingProxyModel by simply walking all the
reified source/proxy mappings and resorting their row indexes.
This removes one major source of confusion in DirectoryView. It's still
weird that we mix sorting model indexes with filesystem model indexes
a bit willy-nilly but we'll improve that separately.
We should stop accessing the FileSystemModel outside DirectoryView.
This whole app is pretty badly factored, due to LibGUI being in its
infancy while it first developed.
Since the vast majority of message boxes should be modal, require
the parent window to be passed in, which can be nullptr for the
rare case that they don't. By it being the first argument, the
default arguments also don't need to be explicitly stated in most
cases, and it encourages passing in a parent window handle.
Fix up several message boxes that should have been modal.
By adding a special LauncherType::Application we can still
get meta data for the application, but also know that we should
consider executing that binary as the default action. LaunchServer
will not do this for us, as it should probably not be allowed to
run arbitrary binaries that haven't been registered as handlers.
And move canonicalized_path() to a static method on LexicalPath.
This is to make it clear that FileSystemPath/canonicalized_path() only
perform *lexical* canonicalization.
Moves DirectoryServices out of LibCore (because we need to link with
LibIPC), renames it Desktop::Launcher (because Desktop::DesktopServices
doesn't scan right) and ports it to use the LaunchServer which is now
responsible for starting programs for a file.
We also clean up some old references to the old G prefixed GUI classes
This also fixes a potential bug with using: C_OBJECT_ABSTRACT(GAbstractButton)
instead of C_OBJECT_ABSTRACT(AbstractButton)
This patch implements basic drag & drop file management in a narrow set
of cases. You can now drag & drop a file onto a folder in the same
directory, and the dropped file will be copied into the directory.
We'll need to support a lot more variations of this, but this is nice!
When a single item is selected and it happens to be a symlink pointing
somewhere, we now show where it points to in the status bar. :^)
There is a big ugly FIXME here about how DirectoryView has to work
around the fact that there's a GSortingProxyModel attached to the table
view widget.
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
This new view, backed by a GColumnsView, joins the existing table and icon
views :^) Even though it displays a file tree, its data is provided by the very
same GFileSystemModel that the other two views use.
This commit also includes my attempt at making an icon for the new mode.
We used to have two different models for displaying file system contents:
the FileManager-grade table-like directory model, which exposed rich data
(such as file icons with integrated image previews) about contents of a
single directory, and the tree-like GFileSystemModel, which only exposed
a tree of file names with very basic info about them.
This commit unifies the two. The new GFileSystemModel can be used both as a
tree-like and as a table-like model, or in fact in both ways simultaneously.
It exposes rich data about a file system subtree rooted at the given root.
The users of the two previous models are all ported to use this new model.