Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ilia Denisov f6e4a4f6bd feat(ui): map canvas follows light/dark theme; fix invisible gear control
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The map view now selects a DARK_THEME or LIGHT_THEME palette from the
resolved app theme and threads it through every primitive builder, so
the canvas, planets, ship groups, cargo routes, battle/bombing markers,
fog, reach + selection rings, pending-Send tracks, and the pick overlay
all switch with the rest of the chrome. A theme flip remounts the
renderer preserving the camera — Pixi bakes the background at init and
every primitive bakes its colour at build, so a live re-tint is not
possible on the same instance.

This also fixes the reported bug: the gear-popover trigger and the
loading overlay hardcoded a dark navy background, so in light theme the
gear was invisible (dark icon on dark chip) until hover flipped it to a
white chip. Both now use the --color-surface-overlay token and read
correctly in both themes.

The light palette mirrors the dark one role-for-role, darkened /
saturated for contrast on a light background while keeping the incoming,
battle, and bombing accents vivid. The values are a first pass meant to
be refined during the F8 manual-QA loop.

Removes the now-dead "Phase 35" references from the code and lifts the
map-recoloring prohibition from the design-system / renderer docs; the
battle scene stays a fixed-palette data-viz surface.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 08:49:37 +02:00
Ilia Denisov a08f4f55b0 fix(ui-map): cut the visibility fog with an inverse stencil mask (Safari pan perf, stage 2)
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Tests · UI / test (pull_request) Successful in 1m56s
Stage 1 (render-on-demand) removed the idle / whole-system freeze, but
panning a loaded map with "visible hyperspace" on stayed heavy in Safari:
the fog still cut its visibility holes by opaque overpaint — on KNNTS041
that is ~260 near-world-sized opaque circles blended over the fog every
rendered frame, a fill-rate cliff for Safari's WebGPU / Apple's tile-based
GPU.

Replace the overpaint with an INVERSE stencil mask: setVisibilityFog now
draws the FOG_COLOR rectangle(s) into fogLayer and collects the visibility
circles into one Graphics set as fogLayer.setMask({ mask, inverse: true }),
so the fog shows everywhere except the union of the circles. Per-frame cost
drops from dozens of blended opaque circle fills to one rect fill + a
stencil pass (no colour writes), which Apple's TBDR GPU handles cheaply,
and the fog stays fully vector — crisp at any zoom.

fogPaintOps and its unit tests are unchanged (the circle ops now feed the
mask instead of an overpaint). Verified with a high-contrast screenshot
during development (fog field with a correct circle-union hole) plus the
existing fog / render-on-demand e2e green on chromium + webkit.

Docs: renderer.md fog section + PLAN.md Phase 29 decision 9.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 16:53:54 +02:00
Ilia Denisov 53b892ae00 fix(ui-map): move fog overlay to a viewport-level layer below the copies
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Two regressions surfaced once visible-hyperspace toggled on a real
dev-deploy map:

1. On the zero-turn map the bg holes painted ON TOP of the planet
   glyphs — every LOCAL planet looked like a hollow circle of
   background colour instead of the planet pixel inside an
   unfogged area.
2. On a legacy report with a drive tech that pushes the visibility
   radius well past the world dimensions the bg circles overlapped
   to cover the entire viewport. Combined with the wrong z-order
   the result was a uniformly black canvas with every primitive
   hidden.

The per-copy implementation added the fog container via
`copy.addChildAt(container, 0)` and trusted Pixi v8 to insert the
container at the start of the copy's children. Whether by a Pixi
quirk or by some interaction with how `populatePrimitives` orders
its `c.addChild(g)` calls, the fog ended up rendering after every
primitive in practice — the symptoms above are a perfect match for
that ordering.

Restructured the fog rendering so the z-order is structural
rather than relying on `addChildAt`:

- A single `fogLayer: Container` is added to the viewport BEFORE
  the nine torus copies. Pixi renders viewport children in order,
  so the layer is guaranteed to paint first; every copy renders
  on top.
- `fogPaintOps` now emits world-space coordinates with wrap
  offsets baked in (9 fog rects + 9 bg circles per visibility
  entry in torus mode, 1 + N in no-wrap mode). The renderer
  populates `fogLayer` with one `Graphics` per op — no per-copy
  iteration on the fog side.
- The previous `fogGraphics: Container[]` closure state is gone.
  Each `setVisibilityFog` flip drops every child of `fogLayer`
  and rebuilds it. The dispose path drops the children
  eagerly before `app.destroy({children: true})` walks the tree.

The fog-paint-ops test exercises the new contract: the no-wrap
path keeps one rect + N circles, the torus path expands to nine
rects + nine wrapped circles per entry (including the seam-fix
case at x = 950).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 00:26:06 +02:00
Ilia Denisov 00e84579ca fix(ui-map): split fog overlay into per-shape Graphics + torus-wrap circles
Tests · UI / test (push) Successful in 3m23s
Two visible regressions in the in-game map's fog overlay surfaced
on dev-deploy:

1. With three LOCAL planets close together, only the last planet
   glyph stayed visible inside the bg holes — the other two were
   obscured. The previous implementation stacked the fog rectangle
   plus every bg circle onto a single `Graphics` via repeated
   `g.rect(...).fill(...).circle(...).fill(...)...`. Pixi v8's
   multi-shape Graphics is supported in theory, but in practice
   only the last shape's fill seems to land, dropping the earlier
   bg holes (and the planet glyphs on top look like they vanished
   along with their hole). Splitting each op onto its own
   `Graphics` inside a per-copy `Container` removes the ambiguity
   — one shape, one fill, one render pass.

2. A planet near the right world edge produced a "sector" — the
   bg circle painted into the area past the seam, but the
   neighbouring tile's fog rectangle then overpainted that bleed,
   leaving a quarter-circle hole. In torus mode each visibility
   circle is now drawn at the nine wrapped positions
   (`(dx, dy) ∈ {-1, 0, 1}²`); the wrapped copies in the
   neighbour-tile-aligned positions keep the hole continuous
   across the seam. No-wrap mode keeps a single emission per
   circle, because wrapped circles would leak into the visible
   world rectangle as unwanted holes.

The `fogPaintOps` helper now takes the wrap mode as a parameter;
`tests/fog-paint-ops.test.ts` covers the torus expansion
(nine-wrap product per circle, the seam-fix case at x = 950) and
re-asserts the no-wrap path.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 00:04:35 +02:00
Ilia Denisov 7ade838df8 test(ui-map): unit-cover the fog overlay's layered-overpaint contract
Tests · UI / test (push) Successful in 2m49s
Lifted the Phase 29 fog draw sequence out of `setVisibilityFog`
into a pure `fogPaintOps` helper that returns an ordered list of
fill operations (one fog rect, then one background-coloured
circle per visibility entry). The renderer now dispatches each op
straight onto a Pixi `Graphics`; the indirection lets the layered-
overpaint contract be tested without booting Pixi.

`tests/fog-paint-ops.test.ts` covers: empty input → no ops; single
circle → fog rect + bg circle in that order; multiple circles → N
bg circles after the fog rect; overlapping circles emitted
independently (the rendering order unions them); zero / negative
world dimensions → no ops.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-19 23:42:39 +02:00