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imgui/examples/example_apple_metal/Shared/ViewController.mm

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#import "ViewController.h"
#import "Renderer.h"
#include "imgui.h"
#if TARGET_OS_OSX
#include "imgui_impl_osx.h"
#endif
@interface ViewController ()
@property (nonatomic, readonly) MTKView *mtkView;
@property (nonatomic, strong) Renderer *renderer;
@end
@implementation ViewController
- (MTKView *)mtkView {
return (MTKView *)self.view;
}
- (void)viewDidLoad
{
[super viewDidLoad];
self.mtkView.device = MTLCreateSystemDefaultDevice();
if (!self.mtkView.device) {
NSLog(@"Metal is not supported");
abort();
}
self.renderer = [[Renderer alloc] initWithView:self.mtkView];
[self.renderer mtkView:self.mtkView drawableSizeWillChange:self.mtkView.bounds.size];
self.mtkView.delegate = self.renderer;
#if TARGET_OS_OSX
// Add a tracking area in order to receive mouse events whenever the mouse is within the bounds of our view
NSTrackingArea *trackingArea = [[NSTrackingArea alloc] initWithRect:NSZeroRect
options:NSTrackingMouseMoved | NSTrackingInVisibleRect | NSTrackingActiveAlways
owner:self
userInfo:nil];
[self.view addTrackingArea:trackingArea];
// If we want to receive key events, we either need to be in the responder chain of the key view,
// or else we can install a local monitor. The consequence of this heavy-handed approach is that
// we receive events for all controls, not just Dear ImGui widgets. If we had native controls in our
// window, we'd want to be much more careful than just ingesting the complete event stream, though we
// do make an effort to be good citizens by passing along events when Dear ImGui doesn't want to capture.
NSEventMask eventMask = NSEventMaskKeyDown | NSEventMaskKeyUp | NSEventMaskFlagsChanged | NSEventTypeScrollWheel;
[NSEvent addLocalMonitorForEventsMatchingMask:eventMask handler:^NSEvent * _Nullable(NSEvent *event) {
BOOL wantsCapture = ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
if (event.type == NSEventTypeKeyDown && wantsCapture) {
return nil;
} else {
return event;
}
}];
ImGui_ImplOSX_Init();
#endif
}
#if TARGET_OS_OSX
- (void)mouseMoved:(NSEvent *)event {
ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
}
- (void)mouseDown:(NSEvent *)event {
ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
}
- (void)mouseUp:(NSEvent *)event {
ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
}
- (void)mouseDragged:(NSEvent *)event {
ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
}
- (void)scrollWheel:(NSEvent *)event {
ImGui_ImplOSX_HandleEvent(event, self.view);
}
#elif TARGET_OS_IOS
// This touch mapping is super cheesy/hacky. We treat any touch on the screen
// as if it were a depressed left mouse button, and we don't bother handling
// multitouch correctly at all. This causes the "cursor" to behave very erratically
// when there are multiple active touches. But for demo purposes, single-touch
// interaction actually works surprisingly well.
- (void)updateIOWithTouchEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
UITouch *anyTouch = event.allTouches.anyObject;
CGPoint touchLocation = [anyTouch locationInView:self.view];
ImGuiIO &io = ImGui::GetIO();
io.MousePos = ImVec2(touchLocation.x, touchLocation.y);
BOOL hasActiveTouch = NO;
for (UITouch *touch in event.allTouches) {
if (touch.phase != UITouchPhaseEnded && touch.phase != UITouchPhaseCancelled) {
hasActiveTouch = YES;
break;
}
}
io.MouseDown[0] = hasActiveTouch;
}
- (void)touchesBegan:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
[self updateIOWithTouchEvent:event];
}
- (void)touchesMoved:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
[self updateIOWithTouchEvent:event];
}
- (void)touchesCancelled:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
[self updateIOWithTouchEvent:event];
}
- (void)touchesEnded:(NSSet<UITouch *> *)touches withEvent:(UIEvent *)event {
[self updateIOWithTouchEvent:event];
}
#endif
@end