Doing reset() on the text widgets after commit and delete_surrounding
is still too eager for some IMs (e.g. those that expect being able
to commit text while keeping a preedit buffer shown).
However, reset() is more of a "synchronize state" action on Wayland,
and it is still desirable to do that after changes that do come from
the IM (e.g. requesting the new surrounding text and cursor/anchor
positions). Notably here, the text_input protocol may still come up
with a preedit string after this state synchronization happens.
Shuffle the code so that the text widgets do not reset() the IM
context after text is deleted or committed, but the Wayland IM does
apply its practical effects after these actions happen. This keeps
the Wayland IM fully up-to-date wrt text widget state, while not
altering the ::commit and ::delete-surrounding-text behavior for
other IM context implementations.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5200
Fixes: 5b78fe2721 (gtktextview: Also reset IM context after IM...)
Fixes: 7c0a395ff9 (gtktext: Also reset IM context after IM...)
Fixes: 52ac71b972 (gtktextview: Shuffle the places doing IM reset)
Fixes: 9e29739e66 (gtktext: Shuffle the places doing IM reset)
The lookup order tests were relying on out
debug spew using g_log, so they can redirect
the output by setting a log writer function.
Rewrite this to use g_test_subprocess() and
parse stderr.
Introduce GDK_DISPLAY_DEBUG() and GDK_DEBUG() and
the helper function gdk_debug_message(). This is
meant to clean up the mess of our current debug
statements which wildly mix g_message, g_print
and g_printerr.
Check that the touchpad gesture event has a matching number of fingers before
updating the GtkGesture point tracking, instead of afterwards. Avoids pointless
tracking of these touchpad events when we know beforehand that the gesture
will never be activated by the touchpad events.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5199
The old wiki page has a couple issues:
* It's out-of-date, not having any notes for GTK4 specifically,
and it doesn't link to `gvsbuild`, which (I believe) is
the current official (and best) way to build GTK with MSVC.
* It's "locked", so it's harder for contributors to update. This
is OK, except for one spicy detail:
* It's not clear how to contribute/report issues on the locked wiki
pages, so out-of-date information falls off the radar.
Regardless :) the gtk.org GTK for Windows docs are a much better
springboard, in my opinion.
gi-docgen is supposed to be ran natively on the build machine, without
native: true dependency() searches for gi-docgen on the host system.
When it doesn't find it, it falls back to a subproject even if gi-docgen
is available on the build machine.
also make gtk_doc require introspection