harbour-fernschreiber/qml/components/ImagePreview.qml

86 lines
2.9 KiB
QML
Raw Normal View History

/*
Copyright (C) 2020 Sebastian J. Wolf and other contributors
This file is part of Fernschreiber.
Fernschreiber is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Fernschreiber is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Fernschreiber. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
2020-10-31 22:49:03 +03:00
import QtQuick 2.6
import Sailfish.Silica 1.0
import WerkWolf.Fernschreiber 1.0
Item {
id: imagePreviewItem
Reduce ChatPage.qml jit compile time First of all: Take all measurements I mention with a grain of salt – all of them are rough and not necessarily measured more than a few times. All times were measured on an Xperia X run via SDK. Visiting a chat page can take a long time, especially before the qml is cached by the engine. When opening it for the first time after application launch, it sometimes takes >1000ms from onClicked (OverviewPage) to Component.OnCompleted (Chatpage). Subsequent activations take roughly 470-480ms. With these changes, I was able to reduce these times to ~450ms for the first, ~100ms for subsequent activations of the ChatPage on my test device. Things changed: - The components for displaying extra content to a message are (mostly) gone and replaced by a single Loader. This Loader does not use sourceComponent to trade the initial compilation boost for a neglegible bit of runtime penalty. - Connections were consolidated - I was surprised how costly the inclusion of the RemorseItem was (compiling ~75ms, initializing up to ~20ms for every delegate). So I traded a bit for a compromise. deleteMessageRemorseItem is now defined on the appWindow level, where it gets a bit mitigated by the animations at application start. Also, only one deletion at a time is now possible. We can easily revert this change, but I thought it worthwhile despite its drawbacks. - profileThumbnailComponent is now defined directly as sourceComponent, removing the need for its id. Probably didn't do anything. - InReplyToRow had width: parent.width, so I removed horizontalCenter. Also probably didn't change compilation time at all. - Another compromise I was willing to take – your opinion may differ: The PickerPages took ages (~200ms) to just parse/compile inside those Components, so I replaced them with the "string notation" of pageStack.push. Drawback: The first time a picker gets activated, you'll see how slow it is. Subsequent activations aren't that bad – also for the other pickers.
2020-10-30 22:36:32 +03:00
property ListItem messageListItem
property MessageOverlayFlickable overlayFlickable
property var rawMessage: messageListItem ? messageListItem.myMessage : overlayFlickable.overlayMessage
property var photoData: rawMessage.content.photo
readonly property int defaultHeight: Math.round(width * 2 / 3)
Reduce ChatPage.qml jit compile time First of all: Take all measurements I mention with a grain of salt – all of them are rough and not necessarily measured more than a few times. All times were measured on an Xperia X run via SDK. Visiting a chat page can take a long time, especially before the qml is cached by the engine. When opening it for the first time after application launch, it sometimes takes >1000ms from onClicked (OverviewPage) to Component.OnCompleted (Chatpage). Subsequent activations take roughly 470-480ms. With these changes, I was able to reduce these times to ~450ms for the first, ~100ms for subsequent activations of the ChatPage on my test device. Things changed: - The components for displaying extra content to a message are (mostly) gone and replaced by a single Loader. This Loader does not use sourceComponent to trade the initial compilation boost for a neglegible bit of runtime penalty. - Connections were consolidated - I was surprised how costly the inclusion of the RemorseItem was (compiling ~75ms, initializing up to ~20ms for every delegate). So I traded a bit for a compromise. deleteMessageRemorseItem is now defined on the appWindow level, where it gets a bit mitigated by the animations at application start. Also, only one deletion at a time is now possible. We can easily revert this change, but I thought it worthwhile despite its drawbacks. - profileThumbnailComponent is now defined directly as sourceComponent, removing the need for its id. Probably didn't do anything. - InReplyToRow had width: parent.width, so I removed horizontalCenter. Also probably didn't change compilation time at all. - Another compromise I was willing to take – your opinion may differ: The PickerPages took ages (~200ms) to just parse/compile inside those Components, so I replaced them with the "string notation" of pageStack.push. Drawback: The first time a picker gets activated, you'll see how slow it is. Subsequent activations aren't that bad – also for the other pickers.
2020-10-30 22:36:32 +03:00
width: parent.width
height: singleImage.visible ? Math.min(defaultHeight, singleImage.bestHeight + Theme.paddingSmall) : defaultHeight
Reduce ChatPage.qml jit compile time First of all: Take all measurements I mention with a grain of salt – all of them are rough and not necessarily measured more than a few times. All times were measured on an Xperia X run via SDK. Visiting a chat page can take a long time, especially before the qml is cached by the engine. When opening it for the first time after application launch, it sometimes takes >1000ms from onClicked (OverviewPage) to Component.OnCompleted (Chatpage). Subsequent activations take roughly 470-480ms. With these changes, I was able to reduce these times to ~450ms for the first, ~100ms for subsequent activations of the ChatPage on my test device. Things changed: - The components for displaying extra content to a message are (mostly) gone and replaced by a single Loader. This Loader does not use sourceComponent to trade the initial compilation boost for a neglegible bit of runtime penalty. - Connections were consolidated - I was surprised how costly the inclusion of the RemorseItem was (compiling ~75ms, initializing up to ~20ms for every delegate). So I traded a bit for a compromise. deleteMessageRemorseItem is now defined on the appWindow level, where it gets a bit mitigated by the animations at application start. Also, only one deletion at a time is now possible. We can easily revert this change, but I thought it worthwhile despite its drawbacks. - profileThumbnailComponent is now defined directly as sourceComponent, removing the need for its id. Probably didn't do anything. - InReplyToRow had width: parent.width, so I removed horizontalCenter. Also probably didn't change compilation time at all. - Another compromise I was willing to take – your opinion may differ: The PickerPages took ages (~200ms) to just parse/compile inside those Components, so I replaced them with the "string notation" of pageStack.push. Drawback: The first time a picker gets activated, you'll see how slow it is. Subsequent activations aren't that bad – also for the other pickers.
2020-10-30 22:36:32 +03:00
Component.onCompleted: {
2020-08-29 17:58:48 +03:00
if (photoData) {
// Check first which size fits best...
var photo
for (var i = 0; i < photoData.sizes.length; i++) {
photo = photoData.sizes[i].photo
if (photoData.sizes[i].width >= imagePreviewItem.width) {
break
}
}
if (photo) {
imageFile.fileInformation = photo
}
}
}
TDLibFile {
id: imageFile
tdlib: tdLibWrapper
autoLoad: true
}
Image {
id: singleImage
width: parent.width - Theme.paddingSmall
height: parent.height - Theme.paddingSmall
readonly property int bestHeight: (status === Image.Ready) ? Math.round(implicitHeight * width / implicitWidth) : 0
anchors.centerIn: parent
fillMode: Image.PreserveAspectCrop
autoTransform: true
asynchronous: true
source: imageFile.isDownloadingCompleted ? imageFile.path : ""
visible: status === Image.Ready
opacity: visible ? 1 : 0
Behavior on opacity { FadeAnimation {} }
MouseArea {
anchors.fill: parent
onClicked: {
pageStack.push(Qt.resolvedUrl("../pages/ImagePage.qml"), {
"photoData" : imagePreviewItem.photoData,
"pictureFileInformation" : imageFile.fileInformation
})
}
}
}
BackgroundImage {
visible: singleImage.status !== Image.Ready
}
}