Index: chrome/browser/views/find_bar_host.cc |
=================================================================== |
--- chrome/browser/views/find_bar_host.cc (revision 30929) |
+++ chrome/browser/views/find_bar_host.cc (working copy) |
@@ -4,8 +4,10 @@ |
#include "chrome/browser/views/find_bar_host.h" |
+#include "app/gfx/path.h" |
#include "app/slide_animation.h" |
#include "base/keyboard_codes.h" |
+#include "base/scoped_handle.h" |
#include "chrome/browser/browser.h" |
#include "chrome/browser/browser_process.h" |
#include "chrome/browser/find_bar_controller.h" |
@@ -23,6 +25,8 @@ |
// static |
bool FindBarHost::disable_animations_during_testing_ = false; |
+using gfx::Path; |
+ |
namespace browser { |
// Declared in browser_dialogs.h so others don't have to depend on our header. |
@@ -252,6 +256,116 @@ |
*bounds = browser_view_->GetFindBarBoundingBox(); |
} |
+void FindBarHost::UpdateWindowEdges(const gfx::Rect& new_pos) { |
+ // |w| is used to make it easier to create the part of the polygon that curves |
+ // the right side of the Find window. It essentially keeps track of the |
+ // x-pixel position of the right-most background image inside the view. |
+ // TODO(finnur): Let the view tell us how to draw the curves or convert |
+ // this to a CustomFrameWindow. |
+ int w = new_pos.width() - 6; // -6 positions us at the left edge of the |
+ // rightmost background image of the view. |
+ |
+ // This polygon array represents the outline of the background image for the |
+ // dialog. Basically, it encompasses only the visible pixels of the |
+ // concatenated find_dlg_LMR_bg images (where LMR = [left | middle | right]). |
+ static const Path::Point polygon[] = { |
+ {0, 0}, {0, 1}, {2, 3}, {2, 29}, {4, 31}, |
+ {4, 32}, {w+0, 32}, |
+ {w+0, 31}, {w+1, 31}, {w+3, 29}, {w+3, 3}, {w+6, 0} |
+ }; |
+ |
+ // Find the largest x and y value in the polygon. |
+ int max_x = 0, max_y = 0; |
+ for (size_t i = 0; i < arraysize(polygon); i++) { |
+ max_x = std::max(max_x, static_cast<int>(polygon[i].x)); |
+ max_y = std::max(max_y, static_cast<int>(polygon[i].y)); |
+ } |
+ |
+ // We then create the polygon and use SetWindowRgn to force the window to draw |
+ // only within that area. This region may get reduced in size below. |
+ Path path(polygon, arraysize(polygon)); |
+ ScopedRegion region(path.CreateNativeRegion()); |
+ |
+ // Are we animating? |
+ if (find_dialog_animation_offset_ > 0) { |
+ // The animation happens in two steps: First, we clip the window and then in |
+ // GetDialogPosition we offset the window position so that it still looks |
+ // attached to the toolbar as it grows. We clip the window by creating a |
+ // rectangle region (that gradually increases as the animation progresses) |
+ // and find the intersection between the two regions using CombineRgn. |
+ |
+ // |y| shrinks as the animation progresses from the height of the view down |
+ // to 0 (and reverses when closing). |
+ int y = find_dialog_animation_offset_; |
+ // |y| shrinking means the animation (visible) region gets larger. In other |
+ // words: the rectangle grows upward (when the dialog is opening). |
+ Path animation_path; |
+ SkRect animation_rect = { SkIntToScalar(0), SkIntToScalar(y), |
+ SkIntToScalar(max_x), SkIntToScalar(max_y) }; |
+ animation_path.addRect(animation_rect); |
+ ScopedRegion animation_region(animation_path.CreateNativeRegion()); |
+ region.Set(Path::IntersectRegions(animation_region.Get(), region.Get())); |
+ |
+ // Next, we need to increase the region a little bit to account for the |
+ // curved edges that the view will draw to make it look like grows out of |
+ // the toolbar. |
+ Path::Point left_curve[] = { |
+ {0, y+0}, {0, y+1}, {2, y+3}, {2, y+0}, {0, y+0} |
+ }; |
+ Path::Point right_curve[] = { |
+ {w+3, y+3}, {w+6, y+0}, {w+3, y+0}, {w+3, y+3} |
+ }; |
+ |
+ // Combine the region for the curve on the left with our main region. |
+ Path left_path(left_curve, arraysize(left_curve)); |
+ ScopedRegion r(left_path.CreateNativeRegion()); |
+ region.Set(Path::CombineRegions(r.Get(), region.Get())); |
+ |
+ // Combine the region for the curve on the right with our main region. |
+ Path right_path(right_curve, arraysize(right_curve)); |
+ region.Set(Path::CombineRegions(r.Get(), region.Get())); |
+ } |
+ |
+ // Now see if we need to truncate the region because parts of it obscures |
+ // the main window border. |
+ gfx::Rect dialog_bounds; |
+ GetDialogBounds(&dialog_bounds); |
+ |
+ // Calculate how much our current position overlaps our boundaries. If we |
+ // overlap, it means we have too little space to draw the whole dialog and |
+ // we allow overwriting the scrollbar before we start truncating our dialog. |
+ // |
+ // TODO(brettw) this constant is evil. This is the amount of room we've added |
+ // to the window size, when we set the region, it can change the size. |
+ static const int kAddedWidth = 7; |
+ int difference = (new_pos.right() - kAddedWidth) - |
+ dialog_bounds.width() - |
+ views::NativeScrollBar::GetVerticalScrollBarWidth() + |
+ 1; |
+ if (difference > 0) { |
+ Path::Point exclude[4]; |
+ exclude[0].x = max_x - difference; // Top left corner. |
+ exclude[0].y = 0; |
+ |
+ exclude[1].x = max_x; // Top right corner. |
+ exclude[1].y = 0; |
+ |
+ exclude[2].x = max_x; // Bottom right corner. |
+ exclude[2].y = max_y; |
+ |
+ exclude[3].x = max_x - difference; // Bottom left corner. |
+ exclude[3].y = max_y; |
+ |
+ // Subtract this region from the original region. |
+ gfx::Path exclude_path(exclude, arraysize(exclude)); |
+ ScopedRegion exclude_region(exclude_path.CreateNativeRegion()); |
+ region.Set(Path::SubtractRegion(region.Get(), exclude_region.Get())); |
+ } |
+ |
+ // Window takes ownership of the region. |
+ host_->SetShape(region.release()); |
+} |
+ |
gfx::Rect FindBarHost::GetDialogPosition(gfx::Rect avoid_overlapping_rect) { |
// Find the area we have to work with (after accounting for scrollbars, etc). |
gfx::Rect dialog_bounds; |