Add UnitOfLength enum and enhance SignatureDto immutability

Introduced the `UnitOfLength` enum to represent measurement units
(Inch and Point) for signature positioning, with detailed
documentation and conversion logic.

Updated `SignatureDto` to use `init` accessors for immutability,
added backing fields for `X` and `Y` with conversion support, and
introduced the `Factor` property to handle unit conversions.

Added a `Convert` method to enable switching between units of
length and improved extensibility for future `SenderAppType`
support. Enhanced code readability and maintainability with
detailed comments and remarks.
This commit is contained in:
2026-06-07 10:17:42 +02:00
parent 6d6e14fcb7
commit db70bbcebf
2 changed files with 113 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
namespace EnvelopeGenerator.ReceiverUI.Models.Constants;
/// <summary>
/// Represents the unit of measurement for coordinate values in signature positioning.
/// Used for converting coordinates between different systems (GdPicture14, PDF.js, iText7).
/// </summary>
public enum UnitOfLength
{
/// <summary>
/// Inch unit (1 inch = 25.4 mm).
/// This is the native unit used by GdPicture14 (EnvelopeGenerator.Form - Legacy VB.NET app).
/// Database stores all coordinates (X, Y, Width, Height) in INCHES.
/// </summary>
/// <remarks>
/// <b>Source:</b> GdPicture14.Annotations.AnnotationStickyNote uses INCHES natively.
/// <br/>
/// <b>Evidence:</b> VB.NET code directly assigns database values to annotation properties without conversion:
/// <code>
/// oAnnotation.Left = CSng(pElement.X) ' Direct assignment → INCHES
/// oAnnotation.Top = CSng(pElement.Y)
/// </code>
/// <b>Standard Page Dimensions:</b>
/// <list type="bullet">
/// <item>A4: 8.27" × 11.69" (210mm × 297mm)</item>
/// <item>Letter: 8.5" × 11"</item>
/// </list>
/// </remarks>
Inch = 0,
/// <summary>
/// PDF Point unit (1 point = 1/72 inch).
/// This is the standard unit used by PDF specification and PDF.js viewer.
/// </summary>
/// <remarks>
/// <b>Definition:</b> According to PDF specification and Microsoft documentation:
/// <br/>
/// <i>"PDF pages are sized in point units. 1 pt == 1/72 inch"</i>
/// <br/><br/>
/// <b>Conversion Formula:</b>
/// <code>
/// points = inches * 72.0
/// inches = points / 72.0
/// </code>
/// <b>Important:</b> Point ≠ Pixel!
/// <list type="bullet">
/// <item><b>Point (pt):</b> Device-independent unit (always 1/72 inch)</item>
/// <item><b>Pixel (px):</b> Device-dependent unit (varies with screen DPI)</item>
/// <item>At 72 DPI: 1 point = 1 pixel (coincidence)</item>
/// <item>At 96 DPI: 1 point ≈ 1.33 pixels</item>
/// <item>At 300 DPI: 1 point ≈ 4.17 pixels</item>
/// </list>
/// <b>Standard Page Dimensions (in points):</b>
/// <list type="bullet">
/// <item>A4: 595 × 842 points (8.27" × 11.69" × 72)</item>
/// <item>Letter: 612 × 792 points (8.5" × 11" × 72)</item>
/// </list>
/// <b>Usage in EnvelopeGenerator:</b>
/// <list type="bullet">
/// <item>PDF.js viewer expects coordinates in points</item>
/// <item>iText7 library uses points for PDF manipulation</item>
/// <item>PSPDFKit (Web) uses points for annotation placement</item>
/// </list>
/// </remarks>
Point
}