2624a6e998
This theming engine uses a bytestring (but supports anything indexable, as long as the index results are a byte long), stored as `wasp.system._theme`. It has a default value, which should not change anything about the way this looks currently. The theme can be set via `wasp.system.set_theme`, but this should *ONLY* be used in `main.py`. `wasp.system.set_theme` will return True if it was successful, or False if the theme is of an old format. Using an old format theme will *not* crash the watch, but will use the default theme instead. To theme this, one has to use tools/themer.py (use flag -h for complete explanation) to generate a bytestring that's added in main.py (see diff). The bytestring is then loaded into 'wasp.system._theme'. Theme values can be looked up by apps by using `wasp.system.theme("theme-key")`. Theme keys appear in the function body of `wasp.system.theme()`. I've took the liberty of converting existing apps to use this method, and it seems to work well. A test theme is provided in `tools/test_theme.py` Signed-off-by: kozova1 <mug66kk@gmail.com> |
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intelhex@c9beea9f10 | ||
micropython-font-to-py@5975b35883 | ||
nrfutil@8c2f9e3439 | ||
ota-dfu@3d6fd30d33 | ||
pynus@5572b01b26 | ||
hex2c.py | ||
hexmerge.py | ||
preprocess.py | ||
rle_encode.py | ||
test_theme.py | ||
themer.py | ||
wasptool |