/* ============================================================================== This file is part of the JUCE library. Copyright (c) 2020 - Raw Material Software Limited JUCE is an open source library subject to commercial or open-source licensing. By using JUCE, you agree to the terms of both the JUCE 6 End-User License Agreement and JUCE Privacy Policy (both effective as of the 16th June 2020). End User License Agreement: www.juce.com/juce-6-licence Privacy Policy: www.juce.com/juce-privacy-policy Or: You may also use this code under the terms of the GPL v3 (see www.gnu.org/licenses). JUCE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, AND ALL WARRANTIES, WHETHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR PURPOSE, ARE DISCLAIMED. ============================================================================== */ namespace juce { //============================================================================== /** A component for showing a splash screen while your app starts up. This will automatically position itself, and can be told to delete itself after being on-screen for a minimum length of time. To use it, just create one of these in your JUCEApplicationBase::initialise() method, and when your initialisation tasks have finished running, call its deleteAfterDelay() method to make it automatically get rid of itself. Note that although you could call deleteAfterDelay() as soon as you create the SplashScreen object, if you've got a long initialisation procedure, you probably don't want the splash to time-out and disappear before the initialisation has finished, which is why it makes sense to not call this method until the end of your init tasks. E.g. @code void MyApp::initialise (const String& commandLine) { splash = new SplashScreen ("Welcome to my app!", ImageFileFormat::loadFrom (File ("/foobar/splash.jpg")), true); // now kick off your initialisation work on some kind of thread or task, and launchBackgroundInitialisationThread(); } void MyApp::myInitialisationWorkFinished() { // ..assuming this is some kind of callback method that is triggered when // your background initialisation threads have finished, and it's time to open // your main window, etc.. splash->deleteAfterDelay (RelativeTime::seconds (4), false); ...etc... } @endcode @tags{GUI} */ class JUCE_API SplashScreen : public Component, private Timer, private DeletedAtShutdown { public: //============================================================================== /** Creates a SplashScreen object. When called, the constructor will position the SplashScreen in the centre of the display, and after the time specified, it will automatically delete itself. Bear in mind that if you call this during your JUCEApplicationBase::initialise() method and then block the message thread by performing some kind of task, then obviously neither your splash screen nor any other GUI will appear until you allow the message thread to resume and do its work. So if you have time-consuming tasks to do during startup, use a background thread for them. After creating one of these (or your subclass of it), you should do your app's initialisation work, and then call the deleteAfterDelay() method to tell this object to delete itself after the user has had chance to get a good look at it. If you're writing a custom splash screen class, there's another protected constructor that your subclass can call, which doesn't take an image. @param title the name to give the component @param backgroundImage an image to draw on the component. The component's size will be set to the size of this image, and if the image is semi-transparent, the component will be made non-opaque @param useDropShadow if true, the window will have a drop shadow */ SplashScreen (const String& title, const Image& backgroundImage, bool useDropShadow); /** Destructor. */ ~SplashScreen() override; /** Tells the component to auto-delete itself after a timeout period, or when the mouse is clicked. You should call this after finishing your app's initialisation work. Note that although you could call deleteAfterDelay() as soon as you create the SplashScreen object, if you've got a long initialisation procedure, you probably don't want the splash to time-out and disappear before your initialisation has finished, which is why it makes sense to not call this method and start the self-delete timer until you're ready. It's safe to call this method from a non-GUI thread as long as there's no danger that the object may be being deleted at the same time. @param minimumTotalTimeToDisplayFor how long the splash screen should stay visible for. Note that this time is measured from the construction-time of this object, not from the time that the deleteAfterDelay() method is called, so if you call this method after a long initialisation period, it may be deleted without any further delay. @param removeOnMouseClick if true, the window will be deleted as soon as the user clicks the mouse (anywhere) */ void deleteAfterDelay (RelativeTime minimumTotalTimeToDisplayFor, bool removeOnMouseClick); protected: //============================================================================== /** This constructor is for use by custom sub-classes that don't want to provide an image. */ SplashScreen (const String& title, int width, int height, bool useDropShadow); /** @internal */ void paint (Graphics&) override; private: //============================================================================== Image backgroundImage; Time creationTime; RelativeTime minimumVisibleTime; int clickCountToDelete; void timerCallback() override; void makeVisible (int w, int h, bool shadow, bool fullscreen); JUCE_DECLARE_NON_COPYABLE_WITH_LEAK_DETECTOR (SplashScreen) }; } // namespace juce