Summary:
Show an icon for each notification which has an icon.
Show a toolbutton which can be used to reply to notifications which offer a quick reply.
Reviewers: #kde_connect, albertvaka
Reviewed By: #kde_connect, albertvaka
Subscribers: albertvaka
Maniphest Tasks: T4674, T4658
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6058
- FileTransferJob is now nonblocking.
- Files are stored based on the image MD5.
- Some improvements in displaying the notification, e.g. title is only
displayed when different than the app name.
- Most of the notification display code moved to the Notification class.
REVIEW: 130050
Allow to inject keypress events to remote peers (most notably Android devices)
Notes / open issues / possible improvements:
- For the json-payload I used the syntax of the key-events as sent by mousepad-plugin with the addition of a "sendAck"-flag. If "sendAck" is set to true the remote peer should echo a key-event if it could be handled, thus allowing the local client to find out whether the key was accepted. For performance reasons, it's allowed to send multi-char strings in the "key" property (performs much better if you send a whole string via "echo '...' | kdeconnect-cli ..." e.g.)
- kdeconnect-cli: For now takes a string and transforms it into single key-events for visible characters only. In a first implementation I used a kbhit() helper that used termios.h to catch and relay keypresses interactively (including some special-events), which was not optimal. A better approch might be to use linux input-api directly. Would this be an option regarding cross-platform compatibility or can I assume to develop for Linux only? Being a command-line guy, I'd really like to have a fully featured kdeconnect-cli interface ;-)
- Factor out the Qt::Key-to-internal keymap to some core-helper because it corresponds to the mapping in the mousepad-plugin?
- The plasmoid is not perfect as it is: A single line containing a non-echoing TextField (i.e. it eats all the KeyPress events), and only ack-ed keypress-packets from the peer device are injected if they contain visible keys. Advantage: the user sees whether his key-presses are accepted by the peer device. Disadvantage: The echoed text does not correspond 1:1 to what is shown on the peer's display, user might be confused when typing without success. I played around with different variations each of which with its proper shortcomings:
1. An echoing Textfield for typing: Has the advantage that the user can directly see what he is typing, which makes interaction in the typing field easier, BUT messes up interaction if the Editor on the peer is changed silently and does not notify the user if his keypresses are not handled by the peer.
2. A non-echoing TextField for typing PLUS a readonly one for printing visible echoed keys. Disadvantage: same as for the previous one and uses more space on the plasmoid.
Comments? Ideas?
REVIEW: 129727
BUG: 370919
Summary:
Don't use QDBusConnection::ExportAllContents
No need to make connect and receivedPackage public slots (they're are the
parent's already)
Fixes T4975
Test Plan: Rough manual test
Reviewers: #kde_connect, albertvaka
Reviewed By: #kde_connect, albertvaka
Maniphest Tasks: T4975
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3871
This was very poorly implemented and can't stay as it is right now:
- Every second or so the art image was being loaded from disk, scaled,
base64 encoded and sent over the freakin network!
- The Android interface didn't take into account small screens, and
adding the image would cut stuff out of the screen.
- Didn't manage "edge cases" like playing a song without cover after one
with cover (previous image was still being shown) or changing players.
This reverts commit e66096d05a.
# Conflicts:
# plugins/mpriscontrol/mpriscontrolplugin.cpp