Because:
1. it uses experimental API, that was changed int 1.5.0-beta03 after 1.4.0
2. we have a policy to use only release versions in the examples
Temporarily, will made a fix in support/1.5.0 branch
* Simplify resource management for iOS
Introduces new a new task 'sync<FRAMEWORK_CLASSIFIER>ComposeIosResources',
which collects resources from all source sets, included in iOS targets.
With this change:
* CocoaPods integration does not require any configuration or calling 'pod install' after changing resources.
* Important: existing projects need to remove 'extraSpecAttributes["resources"] = ...' from build scripts, and rerun `./gradlew podInstall` once!
* Without CocoaPods, the resource directory should be added to XCode build phases once.
Resolves#3073Resolves#3113Resolves#3066
* Redesign chat example
* Minor typography improvements
* Code cleanup
* Update examples/chat/iosApp/iosApp/iosApp.swift
Co-authored-by: Ivan Matkov <ivan.matkov@jetbrains.com>
* Use JPG instead of PNG
* Turn background in to a JPG
Add raw PXD file.
* Remove TEAM_ID
* Move to sp sizes
* Make Android text consistent with iOS variant
* Prefer light color scheme to prevent unwanted text color switch
* Remove PXD
---------
Co-authored-by: Ivan Matkov <ivan.matkov@jetbrains.com>
- add zoom field, which is the same across different screen/window sizes
- scale is not the base state now, it is derived from the current zoom and the current screen/window size. it now represents the end scale of the image
- drag amount is still independent of scale/zoom (if we drag by 5 pixels, the image moves by 5 pixels)
- offset is still limited by the area and the current scale
* ImageViewer - limit zoom by the window/screen size
- add zoom field, which is the same across different screen/window sizes
- scale is not the base state now, it is derived from the current zoom and the current screen/window size. it now represents the end scale of the image
- drag amount is still independent of scale/zoom (if we drag by 5 pixels, the image moves by 5 pixels)
- offset is still limited by the area and the current scale