Justin Luth da86bfd89e tdf#160349: add .uno:ChangeTheme to notebookbar to toggle dark mode
A temporary (ugly, but appropriate) icon has been assigned.

The toggle can be customize-assigned to keyboard, menu, and toolbar,
and can be found by searching for "Dark Mode".

In the menu, it is checked when in Dark mode,
and in the toolbar it is "depressed" or highlighted as active.

Dark mode has been added to the view tab of notebookbar.ui.
I added it as NOT VISIBLE, for several reasons.
- dark mode is rather new and not so stable, so don't over-promote it.
- notebookbars cannot be infinitely customized by the end user,
  so developers have to add all items. Users only enable or disable.
- toggling dark mode really ought to be done at the OS level,
  and typically should be a one-time setting,
  therefore not appropriate to waste precious toolbar space.

The primary benefit of making it available in the menu
is for QA testers who want to easily switch back and forth.
WARNING: by customizing the notebookbar, you prevent seeing
any future NBB changes made to the program
(until you reset to defaults or blow away the user profile).

Dark Mode can easily be added to a menu, toolbar or keyboard shortcut
by the end user, so I didn't bother adding it anywhere else.

To avoid completely cluttering up this commit,
I only added Dark mode to the main notebookbar.
Once this commit has been finalized,
the other writer-apps and notebookbars can
also gain this command.

Change-Id: Ia7594ad81e305ead922abd0ad7b41d6fc0413053
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/c/core/+/166781
Reviewed-by: Heiko Tietze <heiko.tietze@documentfoundation.org>
Tested-by: Jenkins
Reviewed-by: Justin Luth <jluth@mail.com>
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LibreOffice

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LibreOffice is an integrated office suite based on copyleft licenses and compatible with most document formats and standards. Libreoffice is backed by The Document Foundation, which represents a large independent community of enterprises, developers and other volunteers moved by the common goal of bringing to the market the best software for personal productivity. LibreOffice is open source, and free to download, use and distribute.

A quick overview of the LibreOffice code structure.

Overview

You can develop for LibreOffice in one of two ways, one recommended and one much less so. First the somewhat less recommended way: it is possible to use the SDK to develop an extension, for which you can read the API docs and Developers Guide. This re-uses the (extremely generic) UNO APIs that are also used by macro scripting in StarBasic.

The best way to add a generally useful feature to LibreOffice is to work on the code base however. Overall this way makes it easier to compile and build your code, it avoids any arbitrary limitations of our scripting APIs, and in general is far more simple and intuitive - if you are a reasonably able C++ programmer.

The Build Chain and Runtime Baselines

These are the current minimal operating system and compiler versions to run and compile LibreOffice, also used by the TDF builds:

  • Windows:
    • Runtime: Windows 7
    • Build: Cygwin + Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10
  • macOS:
    • Runtime: 10.15
    • Build: 12 (13 for aarch64) + Xcode 14
  • Linux:
    • Runtime: RHEL 8 or CentOS 8 and comparable
    • Build: either GCC 12; or Clang 12 with libstdc++ 10
  • iOS (only for LibreOfficeKit):
    • Runtime: 11.4 (only support for newer i devices == 64 bit)
    • Build: Xcode 9.3 and iPhone SDK 11.4
  • Android:
    • Build: NDK r23 and SDK 30.0.3
  • Emscripten / WASM:
    • Runtime: a browser with SharedMemory support (threads + atomics)
    • Build: Qt 5.15 with Qt supported Emscripten 1.39.8
    • See README.wasm

Java is required for building many parts of LibreOffice. In TDF Wiki article Development/Java, the exact modules that depend on Java are listed.

The baseline for Java is Java Development Kit (JDK) Version 17 or later.

If you want to use Clang with the LibreOffice compiler plugins, the minimal version of Clang is 12.0.1. Since Xcode doesn't provide the compiler plugin headers, you have to compile your own Clang to use them on macOS.

You can find the TDF configure switches in the distro-configs/ directory.

To setup your initial build environment on Windows and macOS, we provide the LibreOffice Development Environment (LODE) scripts.

For more information see the build instructions for your platform in the TDF wiki.

The Important Bits of Code

Each module should have a README.md file inside it which has some degree of documentation for that module; patches are most welcome to improve those. We have those turned into a web page here:

https://docs.libreoffice.org/

However, there are two hundred modules, many of them of only peripheral interest for a specialist audience. So - where is the good stuff, the code that is most useful. Here is a quick overview of the most important ones:

Module Description
sal/ this provides a simple System Abstraction Layer
tools/ this provides basic internal types: Rectangle, Color etc.
vcl/ this is the widget toolkit library and one rendering abstraction
framework/ UNO framework, responsible for building toolbars, menus, status bars, and the chrome around the document using widgets from VCL, and XML descriptions from /uiconfig/ files
sfx2/ legacy core framework used by Writer/Calc/Draw: document model / load/save / signals for actions etc.
svx/ drawing model related helper code, including much of Draw/Impress

Then applications

Module Description
desktop/ this is where the main() for the application lives, init / bootstrap. the name dates back to an ancient StarOffice that also drew a desktop
sw/ Writer
sc/ Calc
sd/ Draw / Impress

There are several other libraries that are helpful from a graphical perspective:

Module Description
basegfx/ algorithms and data-types for graphics as used in the canvas
canvas/ new (UNO) canvas rendering model with various backends
cppcanvas/ C++ helper classes for using the UNO canvas
drawinglayer/ View code to render drawable objects and break them down into primitives we can render more easily.

Rules for #include Directives (C/C++)

Use the "..." form if and only if the included file is found next to the including file. Otherwise, use the <...> form. (For further details, see the mail Re: C[++]: Normalizing include syntax ("" vs <>).)

The UNO API include files should consistently use double quotes, for the benefit of external users of this API.

loplugin:includeform (compilerplugins/clang/includeform.cxx) enforces these rules.

Finding Out More

Beyond this, you can read the README.md files, send us patches, ask on the mailing list libreoffice@lists.freedesktop.org (no subscription required) or poke people on IRC #libreoffice-dev on irc.libera.chat - we're a friendly and generally helpful mob. We know the code can be hard to get into at first, and so there are no silly questions.

Description
wangxin的loongoffice仓库
Readme 3.8 GiB
Languages
C++ 82.4%
Java 5.3%
Rich Text Format 2.3%
PostScript 1.9%
Python 1.9%
Other 5.7%