# Authors: see git history # # Copyright (c) 2010 Authors # Licensed under the GNU GPL version 3.0 or later. See the file LICENSE for details. from ..utils.geometry import Point class Stitch(Point): """A stitch is a Point with extra information telling how to sew it.""" def __init__(self, x, y=None, color=None, jump=False, stop=False, trim=False, color_change=False, tie_modus=0, no_ties=False, tags=None): Point.__init__(self, x, y) self.color = color self.jump = jump self.trim = trim self.stop = stop self.color_change = color_change self.tie_modus = tie_modus self.no_ties = no_ties self.tags = set() self.add_tags(tags or []) # Allow creating a Stitch from a Point if isinstance(x, Point): point = x self.x = point.x self.y = point.y def __repr__(self): return "Stitch(%s, %s, %s, %s, %s, %s, %s, %s, %s)" % (self.x, self.y, self.color, "JUMP" if self.jump else " ", "TRIM" if self.trim else " ", "STOP" if self.stop else " ", "TIE MODUS" if self.tie_modus else " ", "NO TIES" if self.no_ties else " ", "COLOR CHANGE" if self.color_change else " ") def add_tags(self, tags): for tag in tags: self.add_tag(tag) def add_tag(self, tag): """Store arbitrary information about a stitch. Tags can be used to store any information about a stitch. This can be used by other parts of the code to keep track of where a Stitch came from. The Stitch treats tags as opaque. Use strings as tags. Python automatically optimizes this kind of usage of strings, and it doesn't have to constantly do string comparisons. More details here: https://stackabuse.com/guide-to-string-interning-in-python """ self.tags.add(tag) def has_tag(self, tag): return tag in self.tags def copy(self): return Stitch(self.x, self.y, self.color, self.jump, self.stop, self.trim, self.color_change, self.tie_modus, self.no_ties, self.tags) def __json__(self): attributes = dict(vars(self)) attributes['tags'] = list(attributes['tags']) return attributes