Fixes#1467 "Double tapping PineTimeStyle steps style button sends watch to sleep"
Double tap is disabled on the color settings screen by checking if the Rnd button is visible, but this didn't work for the options screen as the Rnd button isn't visible. I've changed it to check if the Close button is visible instead, which is used on both settings screens, and resolves the bug. I also changed the button used to disable the long press behaviour which was an as-yet-undiscovered bug which would have allowed the long press action to be used when the options screen was visible.
Previously, the LVGL driver for the filesystem was initialized in the class FS. However, since 6f942e2, the order of the initializations was incorrect : the driver was initialized (FS::LVGLFileSystemInit()) before LVGL (LittleVgl.Init()), which means that the driver registration was probably dropped when LVGL was initialized.
The LVGL driver is now initialized in LittleVgl.Init(), which seems to make much more sense, since all LVGL drivers are initialized there. This way, we ensure that the initialization of the drivers is consistent.
LVGL is only a part of the main DisplayApp. Other "DisplayApps" can be
implemented without LVGL.
DummyLittleVgl isn't needed anymore and has been removed
The DisplayApp class isn't used in the Screen base class and most
screens, so requiring it is pointless.
In this commit, DisplayApp pointers were added to screens which use it
and the explicit Screen constructor was removed in those screens.
Long pressing will change the value by 1000, whereas clicks will change
it by 500. This allows setting more precise values, while also making it
easier to set any value.
The time used to be yellow while paused. Changing it to white made the
paused state less distinct. Blinking the time while paused makes the
state distinct again.
Replace separate SettingSetDate and SettingSetTime with a combined screenlist.
Add DotIndicators. Similar to PageIndicator, but for use when separating screens instead of pages of a list.
Co-authored-by: Riku Isokoski <riksu9000@gmail.com>
Each opened app (screen) is pushed on a stack, which is then popped from
when returning instead of hard coded "previous apps". Return swipe and
refresh directions are automatically determined from the app transition.