overleaf/services/web/public/coffee/ide/review-panel/controllers/ReviewPanelController.coffee
2016-10-13 14:22:23 +01:00

56 lines
2 KiB
CoffeeScript

define [
"base",
"utils/EventEmitter"
], (App, EventEmitter) ->
App.controller "ReviewPanelController", ($scope, $element, ide) ->
$scope.reviewPanel =
entries: {}
scroller = $element.find(".review-panel-scroller")
list = $element.find(".review-entry-list")
# Use these to avoid unnecessary updates. Scrolling one
# panel causes us to scroll the other panel, but there's no
# need to trigger the event back to the original panel.
ignoreNextPanelEvent = false
ignoreNextAceEvent = false
$scope.scrollEvents = new EventEmitter()
scrollPanel = (scrollTop, height) ->
if ignoreNextAceEvent
ignoreNextAceEvent = false
else
ignoreNextPanelEvent = true
list.height(height)
scroller.scrollTop(scrollTop)
scrollAce = (e) ->
if ignoreNextPanelEvent
ignoreNextPanelEvent = false
else
ignoreNextAceEvent = true
$scope.scrollEvents.emit "scroll", e.target.scrollTop
$scope.$watch "ui.reviewPanelOpen", (reviewPanelOpen) ->
return if !reviewPanelOpen?
setTimeout () ->
$scope.$broadcast "reviewPanel:toggle"
if reviewPanelOpen
scroller.on "scroll", scrollAce
$scope.onScroll = scrollPanel # Passed into the editor directive for it to call
else
scroller.off "scroll"
$scope.onScroll = null
# If we listen for scroll events in the review panel natively, then with a Mac trackpad
# the scroll is very smooth (natively done I'd guess), but we don't get polled regularly
# enough to keep Ace in step, and it noticeably lags. If instead, we borrow the manual
# mousewheel/trackpad scrolling behaviour from Ace, and turn mousewheel events into
# scroll events ourselves, then it makes the review panel slightly less smooth (barely)
# noticeable, but keeps it perfectly in step with Ace.
ace.require("ace/lib/event").addMouseWheelListener scroller[0], (e) ->
deltaY = e.wheelY
# console.log "mousewheel", deltaY
scroller.scrollTop(scroller.scrollTop() + deltaY * 4)
e.preventDefault()