This mirrors gtk_css_node_add/remove_class() APIs and allows you to
specify a (set of) state(s) to set or unset.
These functions are purely convenience.
The idea is to wrap size request, size allocation and drawing each into
a function that takes care of the CSS box and then calls a callback to
request/allocate/draw the contents.
The idea is that complex widgets then nest these calls for all the css
nodes they need to handle.
During copy/paste, it may be common that we receive several property changes
around the selection atom, this results in warnings when cancelling the previous
write attempt. We already honor the last request properly, so we should just
cancel silently.
Sometimes path nodes can survive longer than the style context that
created them. Don't crash in those cases.
Fixes startup of mutter.
Testcase included.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746407
This allows monitoring the CSS tree. For now, moving a child to a
different position relative to its siblings while keeping the same
parent will cause a child-added + child-removed emission.
We need to properly track if a node needs to propagate invalidation
state information to its children. We didn't do this properly before and
that could lead to us forgetting to invalidate nodes in corner cases.
Do not propagate the TIMESTAMP change through the node tree, as that
causes lots of uneeded markings of nodes as invalid.
Instead, walk the node tree and find the nodes that have a non-static
style and only invalidate timestamps on those.
Only invalidate timestamps if the node is marked as invalid. We overload
the meaning of "invalid" as "tracks timestamps".
While I don't like the way this is written, it is an important
optimization because 95+% of nodes don't animate so timestamps don't
matter to them. But timestamps are invalidated 60x per second.
We don't return a NULL style to mean "no changes" anymore, instead
we check new_style == old_style to mean that.
Make sure the code reflects this, otherwise we'll send
GTK_CSS_CHANGE_PARENT_STYLE invalidations everywhere and screw up
performance.
Now that the widget node recomputes styles on update_style() we can just
call it during validate(). That way, we don't need the widget node to
manually compute its style.
If CSS values are queried from a widget, recompute them if necessary. Do
not emit style-updated until the validation phase however.
This way, we don't run into performance traps when style-update causes
invalidations that cause new style-updated to be emitted.
... and pass it to the API that computes new styles.
A special timestamp of 0 means "please don't animate" and is used when
no frame clock is available for a node.
This is mainly an attempt to merge the update_style() and validte()
vfuncs. Code is not there yet, but that's the idea.
Also, gtk_css_node_set_style() should not be public. And this gets
closer to that goal, too.
After measuring it, I realized the optimization never triggers for
Adwaita and rarely ever triggers for simple themes. So it is not
useful to keep it around.
This allows adding more API for it.
It also includes code that tracks modifications and invalidates siblings
and their positions whenever nodes get added or removed.
If we know the parent's get_path_for_child() implementation is safe to
be used with GtkCssNode because it doesn't do anything special, we do
that. Unfortunately that requires whitelisting vfuncs because the vfunc
is public API so anyone can override it.
Instead, use gtk_widget_get_path() which makes GtkWidget cache the path.
This is a temporary solution until we can get rid of widget paths.
This increases memory usage quite noticably.
The node declaration has the same functionality as
gtk_css_node_declaration_add_to_widget_path(). So instead of using that
function on a path, you can use the original path and the declaration in
a matcher.
So far the vfunc is kinda quirky (the path argument is an out argument
for something you have to free when you're done with the matcher), but
I'm about to change that.
We don't want to add the current classes to the widget path - which
might potentially be different after a gtk_style_context_save() - but
the root node's ones. So what better thing to do than actually using the
root node?
Instead of directly requesting the layout phase, register a tick
callback. This is what the docs suggest for animations and it's what we
need for the next commit.
... to a bunch of functions.
This requires a tiny change to the heuristics for the style cache - we
now cache styles when they have the same style provider as their parent
instead of when they have the default provider - but that change doesn't
have any effect in practice.
The parent refs the child, so gtk_css_node_set_parent() adds/removes a
reference.
We should probably refactor this so that we name the function
parent.add(node) instead of node.set_parent(parent) - makes the
refcounting more clear.
Instead of passing the style declaration, take the node's style
declaration. Add arguments to allow overriding the state for the one
case where this didn't work.
The code is confusing the stylecontext=>node transition, so I'll remove
it.
WIth the recent introduction of the parent style cachen, I'm not sure
it's worth it at all. Some crude benchmarking suggests a slight speedup
when removing the cache.
So no guarantees about adding it back later.
- GtkCssWidgetNode
for style contexts owned by a widget
- GtkCssPathNode
for style contexts using a GtkWidgetPath
- GtkCssTransientNode
for nodes created with gtk_style_context_save()/restore()
The functionality of it is supposed to grow, so better put it in a
custom file early.
This is just a naive split so far, the next patches will split things
further.
The wl_data_source may be the clipboard's. Looking up the drag context in
order to get the display isn't going to fare well there. So, just use the
default display, and only look up the drag context when we know we need it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746386
This commit adds the GtkTextTag:underline-rgba and :strikethrough-rgba
properties and the necessary plumbing to apply these colors in GtkTextLayout.
With this change, you can alter the color of underlines including those
of type PANGO_UNDERLINE_ERROR.
You might want to alter the underline color to differentiate between
spelling and grammer mistakes. In code editors, it is convenient to
differentiate between errors and warnings.
Note that the GtkTextAppearance struct is public ABI and has no spare
room for new fields, so we are resorting to some tricky packing to store
the colors in the unused pixel field of the fg_color and bg_color structs.
This packing is accomplished by the macros in gtktextattributesprivate.h.
Signed-off-by: Christian Hergert <christian@hergert.me>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=402168
It has been a long-standing request to interpret scroll events
with Shift held down as horizontal instead of vertical, and
some applications are already doing this on their own.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=132197
This causes pixman warnings, or worse.
Clearly, something is not quite right here, if we end up
redrawing tabs at a time when the allocation is set to (1, 1).
For now, avoid straining the error handling in the lower layers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746301
On popover_unmap(), perform the gtk_widget_unmap() call last, so the
GtkWindowPopover data is ensured to be alive throughout the function
if the popover widget is destroyed right on ::unmap.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745829
This ensures the widget data stays live long enough to perform invariants
check after emission if the widget happens to be destroyed on a callback.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745829
We are testing -gtk-icon-style and assume the theme doesn't touch it.
But HighContrast forces symbolic icons. And that breaks the reference
images.
So explicitly set "requested" for everything.
Support scaling of cursors created from themes. The default scale is
always 1, but if the pointer cursor surface enters an output with a
higher scale, load the larger version of the cursor theme and use the
image from that theme.
This assumes the theme size is set to one that fits with an output scale
= 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746141
The setting of the the surface scale even when the surface is not
created from a surface was introduced due to a crash when getting the
buffers when dividing by the scale. The only reason I can see this is
that we get the buffer from a non-existing surface when the wl_cursor
has not yet been set.
Instead, use the name field to avoid trying to use the non-existing
surface, effectively avoiding the division-by-zero that way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746141
`bundle install` command on fedora 21 was failing
with following message:
Your Gemfile has no gem server sources. If you need
gems that are not already on your machine, add a line
like this to your Gemfile:
source 'https://rubygems.org'
After adding that line it worked again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746205
With the 3.0 transition, this code went from just querying the entry's
height request to doing a full size request.
Then it got code to revert the features that a full size request does.
And then it grew code that manually computed the baseline.
Avoid this and just do what happened back in the days: Do a regular
height request.
This changes the semantics of the get_frame_size() vfunc wrt its
behavior towards subclasses overwriting the get_height() vfuncs, but I'm
happy to live with that.
Applications forget to set the follow-state property and then some
themes used a style where normal symbolic icons have the same color as
prelit or selected backgrounds and that suddenly made icons invisible
and who wants that?
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746201
Rework the way we assign an accessible name to menu buttons,
to make sure we pick up a label, should the button contain
one, and only override the name with "Menu" as a fallback.
It seems to be buggy in ways that make the test fail
with a critical when the test bus is brought down.
At the same time, drop manual settings of environment
variables that we can set globally.
This reverts commit 63f59dde3a.
It turns out, the state was not just necessary for style computation,
but also for tracking RTL and LTR. And so it broke the reftests.
gtk_tree_selection_real_modify_range() has a g_return_if_fail() if the
start or end paths passed to it do not correspond to real tree nodes.
However, GtkTreePaths inherently do not have to be valid, so it should
be acceptable to call gtk_tree_selection_select_range() with
non-existent paths. Replace the g_return_if_fail() by a silent return,
and add a unit test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
The gtk-shell Wayland protocol extension is not meant to be backward
compatible right now, so avoid binding to any version that is not the
one supported.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745721
We need to filter out platform-specific sources from the files that we
use with the introspection scanner.
In this specific case I could have moved the gtkclipboard-quartz.c and
the gtkdnd-quartz.c files out of the $(gtk_base_c_sources) variable, but
doing a filter-out on the variable itself is more resilient in case we
eventually add files and we forget about the result.
Now that this is split in two separate gestures, both must be reset
when the WM grabs the pointer. Also, do on resize drags like on move
drags, and claim the gesture before resetting, so the ownership is
properly transferred across any other widgets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745969
gtk_entry_set_completion() (and _gtk_entry_completion_connect underneath)
may happen when the entry has no toplevel yet. This window acts as the
"parent" for subsurface windows on wayland, and is indispensable to create
its backing wl_subsurface, so this resulted in non-visible popups there.
Fix this by ensuring transient_for is set before showing the popup.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745463
This reverts commit fb9a6bb6d8.
In a recent test, I've found that Xfce and Mate now support
this, so they will not be affected by this requirement. And
adding the check back will solve the 'client-side shadow'
problem in KDE.
The page_setup of a GtkPrintContext or GtkPrintUnixDialog is nullable,
so all reference count changes to it have to be guarded against NULL
values.
Found by scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
_gtk_rbtree_first() can potentially return NULL if the RB tree is empty,
which would result in NULL pointer dereferences in the GtkTreeSelection
code. Gracefully handle them.
Found by scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
These vfuncs cannot be NULL: implementations are provided by GtkEntry,
and subclasses should not set them to NULL. Instead of conditionalising
the calls to the vfuncs, assert that they’re set and call them
unconditionally.
This prevents the possibility of a subclass setting the vfunc to NULL
and then a gtk_entry_get_*_size() call returning undefined values in its
out variables.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
gdk_window_ensure_native() can end up with a NULL parent pointer, which
it passes to find_native_parent_above()…but that expects a non-NULL
parent.
Found with scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
If auth_info_required is only set to "negotiate" the
request password dialog is shown anyway for each print
job without any input fields. As the request_password
dialog only handles username, password and domain.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669008
They are a bit terse, and they should point to the preferred way of
overriding the theme, i.e. using a GtkStyleProvider for your
application, and custom style classes.
When the scrollbars are overlayed, the size requisition of the
scrolled window should not depend on whether the scrollbars are
visible or not. This was not quite the case, because we forgot
one case where scrollbar size was still added to the requisition.
This is somewhat tricky to work out, so put some example
code here for future reference. The tricky part is that
GtkAccelLabel tries to be smart about hiding the accel
if there's not enough space, so we have to make sure to
pack the label with expand=TRUE and set align=GTK_ALIGN_FILL,
or things won't work.
Make sure that variables are declared at the top of the block.
Break up one of the sincos() calls into individual calls to sin() and cos()
so that we do not have to complicate the initialization of the following
GLfloat array.
If the user requests a version less than 3.2 the version is forced to 3.2.
Previous checking code have an inconsistent behavior depending on which
minor version number was specified. This is avoided now by temporarily
converting the major/minor pair into a single integer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744288
There was an added check in configure.ac for sincos() for gtkgears.c, where
that function is actually a GCC- and glibc-specific extension, which is
not available on Windows. Reflect on this in config.h.win32.in for the
Visual Studio/Windows builds.
"Install" the .pdb files that were generated along with the build, to make
it easier for people to develop and debug GTK+, especially when used as a
stack, and as the .pdb files are already generated with all builds.
Also make the copy of the .dll, .lib and .exe files more selective so that
we do not accidently copy files that are not meant to be "installed", or
end up making extra copies of plugin DLLs in the wrong places, when the
projects here are included as a part of a grand solution that is used to
build the entire GTK+ stack, for example.
For Visual Studio 2010 and later, the .pdb filename needs to be explicitly
specified so that it will match the filename of the target, if the project
name differs from the filename of the target. Make sure that is the case
for the 3 DLLs that we build for Visual Studio 2010 and later.
Postpone until the last moment whether the target widget still
potentially uses updates from this sequence, or window dragging
actually applies because all gestures on the target went to denied
state.
This fixes window dragging on empty space in a headerbar that is
contained in a paned (as in e.g. gedit).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745562
These types are not covered by g_test_register_all_types,
and having the types registered when a print dialog is used
helps in cases where GTK+ is dlopened.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745065
GtkPlacesSidebar applies a sorting function on
the tree model that does not consider the case
of bookmarks, which are sorted by their indexes.
By adding the bookmarks corner case and comparing
then by their indexes, GtkPlacesSidebar can sort
the bookmarks properly in the order they're saved.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744589
This signal can be emitted by GtkSearchEntry after search has been
cancelled, and other operation mode is set. It doesn't make sense to
populate the search model in that state anymore, so just avoid doing it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745479
The object might be destroyed when mid operation, causing crashes as the
query callback still expects the object pointer to be valid. Also, remove
the gdk_threads_enter/leave pairs, the callback will be executed on the
caller (UI) thread, so this is not necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745479
The search engine might stay alive longer due to extra temporary refs, so
the signal handlers should be removed for the filechooser to ignore these
properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745479
Use the /MP compiler option, where the build time for release builds can
be cut down by quite a bit. This will however cause a brief warning with
debug builds due to the use of /Gm, but the code will otherwise build
normally. Unlike the Visual Studio 2010+ builds, we can't use /d2Zi+ as
Visual Studio 2008 does not support that, so we can't get a better
debugging experience for release builds here.
Use Multiprocessor compilation which can cut down build times by quite a
bit and use the /d2Zi+ flag to have better debugging info being logged to
the .pdb for release builds.
These are only applicable for Visual Studio 2010/2012 and later.
This file now uses round(), which was not available until C99, so include
fallback-c89.c instead of math.h, which includes math.h and does a fallback
implementation of round().
Instead of using glxgears, which still uses OpenGL 2.1 and the fixed
pipeline, we use a slightly modified es2gears, OpenGL 3.2, and the
programmable pipeline.
Avoid scrolling animation when scrolling to where we want
to insert the new folder, since adding the entry doesn't
do the right thing if the treeview is still scrolling.
An alternative would be to wait for the animated scrolling
to reach its target before starting the editing, but this
is easier.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729366
And use these for the missing axes if the valuator mask is incomplete.
This used to work fine on tablets because the Wacom driver ensures all
valuators are sent, which is not true if using the evdev driver.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703610
This is not specified specifically by the attached controllers, so let
the scrolledwindow set the mask, as motion events with no buttons pressed
are interesting to it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745344
When a window is hidden, its surface and all its roles are destroyed,
if this happens when we already issued a wl_surface_commit and are
awaiting for a frame callback, the clock will remain frozen for the
next time the window is shown.
To avoid this, keep track of the wl_surface_frame() calls issued,
and ensure the clock is thawed after hiding. If we happen to receive
the frame callback, it is just ignored.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743427
The gesture is hooked to the capture phase, so it works for buttons in
header bars and whatnot. In order to be friendly to the widget it is
capturing events from, an ugly hack is in place to avoid capturing
events when the target widget has a gesture that would consume motion
events.
This happens on button release, which is more convenient if the gesture
can be consumed by something else (eg. window dragging), and already behaves
correctly wrt cancelled gestures, broken grabs, etc.
This also allows us to unify pointer and keyboard behavior, popping up the
menu widget in a single place.
There are two scenarios. A widget sub-class owns a GtkEventController
and passes itself to it, or a controller owned by something else is
passed a widget.
In the second case, if the widget is destroyed before the controller,
we will have a crash when destructing the controller because we will
be accessing invalid memory. Adding a weak reference on the widget
addresses that problem.
This leads to a crash in the first case. When the widget is getting
destroyed, it will drop the reference to its own controller. The
controller will skip touching the widget because the weak reference
would have turned it to NULL. However, when the widget sub-class chains
up to GtkWidget it will try to free all the controllers in its list.
Unfortunately, all these controllers have already been destroyed. So
we need to guard against this too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745225
We were trying to start search when the user types anything,
but this is annoying more often than helpful, and interferes
with the location entry. So, stick with explicitly enabled
search (via the search button or Alt-S) for now.
We were just throwing the request away if the app asks to
fullscreen or maximize a window before it has been mapped.
This is something the GdkWindow API explicitly supports,
so make it work by saving the state until the surface exists.
This fixes things under weston. There are bugs in mutter
that keep this from working correctly with gnome-shell.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745303
When the Wayland compositor vanishes, all applications connected will
receive a SIGPIPE as soon as they try to use wl_display_dispatch().
Do not use g_error() to terminate the applications when this occurs,
g_error() means an error in the application while here it's not truly
the case.
Use g_warning() and exit() instead.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Fourdan <ofourdan@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745289
Although gtk_list_box_row_grab_focus() is not a public function
it can be easily called by gtk_widget_grab_focus() with a row argument
which has been removed from the list box and has box == NULL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744879
The height of the text buttons depends on the font height,
whereas the search button has a fixed-size icon in it...
Prevent unevent heights by putting them all in a size group.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745263
The height of the text buttons depends on the font height,
whereas the search button has a fixed-size icon in it...
Prevent unevent heights by putting them all in a size group.
Before this patch, we'd always allocate a full size SHM buffer via
the wl_shm_pool, even though it would never be used. Instead allocate a
logical 1x1 cairo image surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
In order to support window scales for EGL windows, resize the
wl_egl_window to the window dimension multiplied with the window scale,
just as with SHM window buffers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
When the preferred surface scale changes, for example when entering a
wl_output with a higher scale than any previous entered output, recreate
the shm surface and redraw the window content with the new window scale.
Before this patch, the internal scale would be changed, but the shm
surface would not be recreated given the new scale, i.e. we'd attach a
buffer for a different scale than wl_surface.set_scale specified.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
If the compositor is too old for handling surface buffer scales, never
tyr to set change it. This will effectively always leave it to its
initial state, i.e. 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
Don't try to paint onto an error surface. This happens for example when
gdk_cairo_set_source_pixbuf() is called with a pixbuf that is too big
for Cairo to handle.
Spotted by Christian Boxdörfer
If a scrollbar is not shown (because of policies, or because it isn't
necessary), it doesn't make sense to start fade animations on its window
on captured motion events.
This was added a few years ago, as a way to have _no_ im context
at all. But it didn't actually work. Make it work, and streamline
the handling of none by moving it all to gtkimmodule.c.
As part of this, add context to the translated names of all
im modules we ship.
In order to provide a constant mtime between OS build and deploy time,
while also maintaining a hardlink content-addressed model independent of
timestamps, ostree sets all mtimes to 0.
The icon cache code currently ignores directories with mtime 0, assuming
they don't exist.
Track directory existence in a more precise way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745052
When loading SVGs from ICON_THEME_DIR_UNTHEMED GtkIconInfos,
such as those created for a GLoadableIcon, the size of the pixbuf to
load is set as a product of icon_info->scale.
But a few lines above, icon_info->scale is set to -1 for
ICON_THEME_DIR_UNTHEMED GtkIconInfos, so we'll end up always passing a
negative size to the GdkPixbuf loader, which is interpreted as the
nominal size of the image file.
Instead load the SVG at the desired scaled size in that case.
This fixes blurry icon in the notification panel in gnome-shell.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744991
When loading a GResource-backed GFileIcon into a GtkIconInfo we
currently fail to populate the is_resource private field.
Also, since is_svg is set by looking at the filename, and
g_file_get_path() returns NULL for a GResourceFile, is_svg was always
FALSE.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744991
Add a way to set a delay factor that can be used
to make the long press more or less sensitive.
Making this a factor instead of exposing the delay
itself preserves the value of the setting as an
overall 'slow down long press' setting.
As Sebastian pointed out, just resetting the initial slider
position was an incomplete fix, because it does not cause the
delta to be recomputed, which is important in this scenario,
because you've likely travelled some distance over the slider
before the long press kicks in.
Instead, explicitly record both the slider position and the
delta.
We record the starting position on button press, but only
start the zoom mode when the long press timeout kicks in.
Depending on circumstances, this can cause a noticable jump.
Avoid this by resetting the recorded starting position after
the long press timeout. Suggested by Sebastian Keller.
First, attributes can be NULL (which is always the case when calling
gdk_window_ensure_native) so do not unconditionally dereference it.
Then the window_type should be taken directly from the GdkWindow as
in other backends (such as the X11 one for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744942
While a popover is hiding, the modal grab is already gone and the toggle
button is clickable again, but clicking again at that time will result in
gtk_widget_show() trying to show an already shown widget (although fading
out and hidden soon) and the toggle button activated.
So let the menubutton set the active status only if the menu/popover
widget wasn't already shown, and ensure this doesn't get triggered by
double/triple button press events.
As an implementation detail, the popover hooks the fade out animation
on ::hide. Destroying the popover right away here is not a problem, but
prevents the animation from actually running. ::unmap will be run after
the animation is finished, so destroy the popover there.
These have the same visual effect and timing than the gnome-shell ones.
During the hide animation, the popover has been made to take focus
elsewhere, and refuse to take any pointer/keyboard input until the popover
is shown again.
This has been based on work from Timm Bäder.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741405
gtk_scrolled_window_allocate_scrollbar was calling
gtk_scrolled_window_allocate_child just to get the relative
allocation, overlooking the fact that that function is only
safe to call if the scrolled window _has_ a child. Unfortunately,
gtk_scrolled_window_allocate_scrollbar will sometimes get called
when that is not the case. Since we are really only interested
in the relative allocation, just get that directly. This
fixes a segfault in the style-properties-nth-child reftest.
Also try and clarify a few things about event propagation. Move
input-handling.xml into gtk-doc’s expand_content_files variable so it
automatically links to widget documentation. Add links from
gtk_widget_add_events() and friends to the new documentation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744054
It will be useless to check the source window on the destination side,
it's at the moment always NULL. Fetch the display from the device instead,
which will be set for every GdkDragContext.
At the time of creating the indicator window, the scrollbar allocation is
poked and reused as the initial window dimensions. This usually happens
on two circumstances, either initially (so a ::size-allocate is emitted,
relocating the windows in the right places), or post-initialization when
calling set_overlay_scrolling() (so the scrollbars already have a valid
size allocation)
However, if the scrolledwindow is unrealized, and later re-realized again,
the scrollbars will already have a valid allocation, although 0,0 based
due to being contained in the previous indicator window. This comes out
wrong then, and the indicator window is given 0,0 based coordinates too.
Fix this by refactoring the scrollbar allocation code out of size_allocate,
and also use that given size at the time of creating the indicator windows,
this will provide the right widget-relative allocation anytime.
Currently, GtkGLArea will leak GError instances set during the context
creation, if an error is set.
If any error is set post-context creation, it should be displayed even
in the case a GL context exists; for instance, we can use the error
display facility for shader compilation errors.
Make that variable go from 0.0 to 1.0 where 0.0 means inactive (slider
is on the left) and 1.0 means active (slider is on the right).
The math is simpler that way and most importantly the value is
independent of size.
Add a button to allow restricting search to the current
folder (and subdirectories). This makes the search more
useful, and makes the file chooser more similar to
nautilus.
In search, we show files from differnt locations, and it makes
sense to show where they come from. This makes the file chooser
more similar to nautilus, too.
Folders that show up among search results were unexpectedly
returned even for GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_OPEN. Change things
around so that we switch to the folder instead, which is the
behavior we had in GTK+ 2.x.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744204
Some compositors might not offer wl_seat 4 resulting in GTK+ clients not
working on that compositor.
wl_seat 4 introduces keyboard repeat information, but when that information
is missing it is retrieved from settings, hence there's no reason to
require wl_seat 4.
This patch was tested against QtCompositor (5.5, dev branch)
and Weston 1.6.1.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744172
This is necessary to avoid unwanted drag cancel animations,
now that GtkNotebook is careful about cancelling a drag
when the dragged tab disappears unexpectedly.
The existence of OpenGL implementations that do not provide the full
core profile compatibility because of reasons beyond the technical, like
llvmpipe not implementing floating point buffers, makes the existence of
GdkGLProfile and documenting the fact that we use core profiles a bit
harder.
Since we do not have any existing profile except the default, we can
remove the GdkGLProfile and its related API from GDK and GTK+, and sweep
the whole thing under the carpet, while we wait for an extension that
lets us ask for the most compatible profile possible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744407
Store the OpenGL version when we first do the extensions check; this
allows client code to check the available GL version without requiring a
call to gdk_gl_context_make_current() and epoxy_gl_version().
When using GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE, we are not only specifying that the
GDK should create a core profile; we are also specifying that the
minimum required version of OpenGL is set to 3.2.
We should also specify that the GDK_GL_PROFILE_DEFAULT profile is an
alias for GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE.
Now that we have a two-stages GL context creation sequence, we can move
the profile to a pre-realize option, like the debug and forward
compatibility bits, or the GL version to use.
gtk_list_box_bind_model() binds a GListModel to a GtkListBox.
This is a first step towards having GListModel support in Gtk. It's not
useful for large models, because GtkListBox always creates all widgets
for all rows.
Emit an error if the profile is different.
This is a follow-up commit to commits cc45e82 (x11/gl: Ensure we use the
3.2 core profile) and 2d9081d (wayland/gl: Ensure we use the 3.2 core
profile), so that we do the same on GDK-Win32. Update variable names and
comments so that the code is clearer to people, as we still need a
temporary legacy WGL context first before we can use
wglCreateContextAttribsARB() to create a WGL core (3.2+) context.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
Using version 1.20 with a forward compatible 3.2 core context is incorrect
since OpenGL 3.2 deprecates shader version 1.20 (See section E.2). The latest
fglrx drivers will not compile these shaders.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744203
Since we dropped the legacy OpenGL compatibility profile, we need to use
recent OpenGL APi and concepts. This also means that the example code
gets a tad more complicated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
We simply don't want to care about legacy OpenGL.
All supported platforms also have support for OpenGL ≥ 3.2; it would
complicate the internal code; and would force us to use legacy GL
contexts internally if the first context created by the user is a legacy
GL context, and disable creation of core-3.2 contexts after that.
We will need to fix all our code examples to use the Core 3.2 profile.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
Like what is being done in the X11 and Wayland backends, create the
GdkWin32GLContext in 2 steps, where we only create the actual WGL context
in _gdk_win32_gl_context_realize().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
Users of the GdkGLContext API should be allowed to set properties on the
shim GdkGLContext instance prior to realization, so that the
backend-specific implementation can use the value of those properties
when creating the windowing system specific resources.
The main three options are:
• a major/minor version tuple, to request a specific GL version
• a debug bit, to request a "debug context", which provides additional
validation and run time checking
• a forward compatibility bit, to request a context that does not
have deprecated functionality
See also:
- https://www.opengl.org/registry/specs/ARB/glx_create_context.txthttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
One of the major requests by OpenGL users has been the ability to
specify settings when creating a GL context, like the version to use
or whether the debug support should be enabled.
We have a couple of requirements in terms of API:
• avoid, if at all possible, the "C arrays of integers with
attribute, value pairs", which are hard to write and hard
to bind in non-C languages.
• allow failing in a recoverable way.
• do not make the GL context creation API a mess of arguments.
Looking at prior art, it seems that a common pattern is to split the
construction phase in two:
• a first phase that creates a GL context wrapper object and
does preliminary checks on the environment.
• a second phase that creates the backend-specific GL object.
We adopted a similar pattern:
• gdk_window_create_gl_context() creates a GdkGLContext
• gdk_gl_context_realize() creates the underlying resources
Calling gdk_gl_context_make_current() also realizes the context, so
simple GL users do not need to care. Advanced users will want to
call gdk_window_create_gl_context(), set up the optional requirements,
and then call gdk_gl_context_realize(). If either of these two steps
fails, it's possible to recover by changing the requirements, or simply
creating a new GdkGLContext instance.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
This guarantees we only create 1 extra style cascade in total for hidpi
and not one per style context.
Style cascades are now nested like this:
GtkSettings root cascade (scale == 1)
|
+-- GtkSettings per scale cascade (for any scale, no custom providers)
|
+-- GtkStyleContext custom cascade (for any scale, custom providers)
This requires a bunch of care when changing cascade-related properties
inside GtkStyleContext, so that it ends up with a properly setup
cascade, but I think I got those cases right.
The only thing we don't do yet is reverting to a GtkSettings cascade
when the last custom provider is removed from a custom cascade.
The default ->upload_texture() works also for Windows since commit 27cf0fa,
as some of the problems described in 742953 also applied for GL core
contexts on Windows as well before 27cf0fa. Clean up the GDK-Win32 code a
little bit as a result.
This property is necessary to ensure widgets automatically update after
the text scale factor is changed desktop-wide.
And if I'm already doing a property like this, I can make it
overridable. So now you can override the dpi per-widget with CSS like
GtkSwitch {
-gtk-dpi: 48;
}
if you want to debug things.
Long-term, we want to get rid of this property and insist on dpi being
96 everywhere and people can change the font size to get larger fonts.
GPUs generally have problems when you create a 35000px wide surface.
Luckily X catches this and sends a BadAlloc. Which GTK immediately
abort()s on.
Testcase included.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1163579
We should remove the mir and cairo surface before rendering the
transient_for, which will regenerate the cairo surface anyways.
Otherwise, we end up releasing both, when we only really want to get rid
of the mir surface.
Mouse over a parent menu[bar] didn't work while the menu was open.
The fix was to correct the behaviour of pointer crossing events so that
the pointer appears to be only inside one window at a time.
See: http://tronche.com/gui/x/xlib/events/window-entry-exit/normal.html
We need this because it fixes menu activation. The menu activation code
looks at the time between events to determine if mouse clicks happen too
quickly.
This avoids showing the scrollbars if we are positive the child widget
is being manipulated, regardless of the pointer being close to any of these.
On the next motion event after finishing the operation, the scrollbar will
be shown if necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743894
is_visible() wasn't the right check to perform here before unmapping,
and gtk_widget_unmap() already avoids being doubly called by checking
gtk_widget_get_mapped() anyway.
Rename the "install" projects as "gtk-install" as we are planning to have a
grand solution file that incorporates all project files of the GTK+ stack
with their dependencies, to make it easier for people to build GTK+ from
scratch from a stock installation of Visual Studio 2008 and later.
In that case the scrolledwindow still gets events through the captured
handler, and can thus still control visibility, so hiding the indicators
in this case can only lead to flashing.
This will be used to just detect when an edge of the scrollable area is
reached - as opposed to the edge-overshot signal that is emitted when
the user scrolls past the edge.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742848
If a side of the box is 0px wide, make the corners owned by the adjacent
sides. This avoids spilling over of unwanted colors from the 0-width
side into the corner.
This is the fix that should actually have been part of
7e5ac3a58d but my amazing amending skills
got rid of it when amending the test.
Commit ff256956b2 introduced a frame_clock_events_paused
flag, but only ever set it to TRUE, instead of unsetting it when
events are resumed. This was leading to assertion failures in
_gdk_display_unpause_events().
Arrange things so that gtk-xdg-hinting==-1 and gtk-xfg-antialias==-1
end up as CAIRO_HINT_STYLE_DEFAULT and CAIRO_ANTIALIAS_DEFAULT in the
cairo font options.
This will not change anything on Linux desktops where xsettings will
always provide values different from -1. But on other platforms, we
can benefit from getting the platform-specific defaults in cairo.
Based on the first patch in:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735316
If we are disconnecting from a frame clock that has paused event
processing and hasn't issued a resume yet make sure we resume the
events or they will stay blocked forever.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742636
The code here was always a bit buggy: We removed the tab from
the notebook in a ::drag-data-received handler. But with
GTK_DEST_DEFAULT_DROP, that signal is emitted before we inform
the source side that the drag is finished. With its improved drag
handling, GtkNotebook now interprets this as a 'spontaneous'
removal of the tab being dragged, and cancels the drag, leading
to an unwanted cancel animation.
The easiest fix is to just defer the tab removal to an idle.
When a tab is dropped, we have to remove it from the notebook to
insert it elsewhere. This is expected part of the tab dnd operation,
and we need to differentiate it from 'spontaneous' removals which
cause us to cancel the drag operation.
when the dragged tab is being removed during the drag operation,
we need to cancel the drag. To do so, we have to keep around
a reference to the drag context.
This should fix
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732051
Add a gtk_drag_cancel() function that can be used on the
source side to cancel an ongoing drag operation. This can
be useful, e.g. if the data that is being dragged becomes
unavailable.
It is a bit misleading to have one of the places in the sidebar
selected while in search mode, since the search is not relative
to any location. So, unset the sidebar selection when we enter
search mode.
If the search entry doesn't consume the key event, don't
change to search mode. Otherwise, we interfere e.g. with
Ctrl and Shift keys for selection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743660
If the grab belongs elsewhere, the window won't claim the sequence right
away. The sequence may still be claimed afterwards when window dragging
starts, but simple clicks won't be consumed this way.
This makes it possible to close popovers when clicking on the title region,
while still permitting touch/button 1 interaction for every other purpose.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743257
This function is given a barely setup GdkEvent, so the GdkDevice field
is still unset, causing warnings and misbehaviors when the position
is queried for it.
Given that the wintab GTK+ code seems to rely somewhat hard on the wintab
device managing the pointer cursor, query the pointer position from the
pointer itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743330
The window used NULL as a parent window, which defaults internally to
using the root window of the default screen. But at the time wintab is
initialized, there is no default display/screen yet.
Fix this by retrieving this information from the given GdkDeviceManager,
so we don't have to wait for the display to be in place before
initialization.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743330
In some layouts this inconsistency results in crashes in
gdk_gl_texture_from_surface() since it uses gdk_gl_context_get_window() but
the returned window is not the same as the one that is being painted so
"window->current_paint.surface" is NULL. I saw this problem when packing a
GdkGLArea into a GtkPaned.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743146
- Specifically request GL version when creating context. Just specifying core
profile bit results in the requested version defaulting to 1.0 which causes
the core profile bit to be ignored and an arbitrary compatability context to be
returned.
- Fix GL painting by removing GL calls that have been depricated by the 3.2 core
profile.
- Additionally remove glInvalidateFramebuffer() call, it is not supported by 3.2
core.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742953
Add helper for getting the main clipboard. This makes
the API usable for bindings (as GdkAtoms aren't usable through
gobject-introspection), and easier to use in C.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712752
The property is useless to set (it only allows 'initial', 'inherit' and
'unset' as values), but it is used to track changes to the icon theme.
And as such, it can ensure that widgets can track when they need to
reload icons.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743341
Gtk_container_cell_widget_set should chain up to its parent's set
function, not its parent's unset function. This was resulting in
accessibles being erroneously marked defunct after being created.
The ICCCM says:
If the specified property is None, the requestor is an obsolete client.
Owners are encouraged to support these clients by using the specified
target atom as the property name to be used for the reply.
Lets do that, instead of crashing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740613
The previous fix for this issue in 732af31424 was incomplete.
The GtkSelectionData does not own the model set with
gtk_tree_set_row_drag_data so change the out param to "transfer none".
This fixes a crash after multiple DnD actions due to the bindings
stealing a reference each time this function is called.
This also adds nullable and optional annotations for tree_model and path while at it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743193
Add ::next-match, ::previous-match and ::stop-search keybinding
signals that are bound to Ctrl-g, Ctrl-Shift-g and Escape. Also
add a gtk_search_entry_handle_event() function to handle key events.
If a side of the box is 0px wide, make the corners owned by the adjacent
sides. This avoids spilling over of unwanted colors from the 0-width
side into the corner.
New test for this case is included.
Previously, we would not include any child widget on the first
allocation, which happens right after realize(), but before map(). No
widget is drawable at that point.
The rotation code in the draw_arrow function was assuming that the arrow
would be drawn pointing upwards but it was pointing to the right
resulting in the rotated arrows pointing in the wrong direction.
The recent refactoring caused a pi/2 rotation to be lost. Rather than
adding that back somehwere (to lose it again in the future), we just
draw the arrow pointing upwards as it is expected to do with a 0 angle.
Yes, I like playing around. To enjoy, add this CSS to your application
of choice (preferrably glade or something with lots of images):
GtkImage { animation: spin 2s linear infinite; }
You can thank me later.
The spinner is a regular builtin image now. There is no need to go
through the shadows code manually anymore as regular items do get
shadows automatically.
This also allows simplifying the actual spinner drawing code so that it
actually works.
The order in which properties are defined depends on the order in which
they are computed. And that means that properties can only depend on
other properties that are defined before them.
The next patches will need this reordering.
Instead of supporting every angle, just support top, right, bottom and
left and round the angle to one of those directions.
Adwaita overrides arrows anyway and doesn't even look at the angle, so
this should not be a problem.
Also, make it have a generic entry point with
gtk_css_image_builtin_draw().
The only feature lost so is the drawing of shadows for spinners, but
that will come back later.
The file chooser code now calls into the path bar in init,
starting an async operation. This unveiled that the path bar
code was not safe against being disposed early, by causing
a crahsh of the objects-finalize test.
Fix this by making the callback check for CANCELLED.
When removing all rows, trying to add rows would not work
and throw criticals. This is fallout from a recent change
to insert rows at the right position. Fix this by handling
the 'empty model' case separately.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743157
This was left unmodified when GtkScrolledWindow was made a windowed widget.
Displacing here by the widget allocation is not necessary anymore, since
we are invalidating the window set at these coordinates.
This patch is a simplification of a previous one by Timm Bäder.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742243
GtkImageMenuItem always packs a GtkImage when it is synced with a
related action. This is unnecessary when the action doesn't have an icon
set and results in excess padding when a GtkImageMenuItem is put in a
menu bar (GtkUIManager does this).
Fix this by not creating the GtkImage for icon-less actions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742181
Just add a 3rd stop in the place where the gradients for the other
states have a 3rd stop. When running transitions between states, this
avoids cross-fades and instead uses the much faster gradient
transitioning code.
Instead of asserting, just print a g_warning() and try to work around
the problem.
I hope that g_warning() isn't too spammy for people that are hit with
it.
Also clarify the docs that not restore()ing after a save() is a bad
idea.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743101
When creating the query path, explicitly specify if it's for a root node
or for a child. Relying on gtk_style_context_is_saved() is unreliable
(for example when updating the cache).
The last round of filechooser redesign work had left
search somewhat dysfunctional. This commit fixes things
up enough that search is once again a working feature
of the file chooser.
There are some cases where we can end up showing the path
bar without ever setting a file on it. One example is:
1) Open file chooser
2) Hit ~
3) Hit Ctrl-L
While this is a bit of a workaround, at least it makes sure
that we never end up with an empty space where the path bar
is supposed to be.
It seems that posix_fallocate gives an ENODEV error when
called on an fd opened with shm_open on freebsd. Fix up
the error check to only trigger if we get ENOSPC.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742980
This gets rid of a bunch of awkward transitions. It's not a perfect
solution to the problem of "should we transition from this state" but it
gets rid of the ugliest offenders.
If this is done on dispose(), the widget may be destroyed (and its
controllers list NULLified) within _gtk_widget_run_controllers(),
causing warnings/crashes when it just tried to hop on the next
controllers.
Freeing the controllers here should be a safety net for implementations,
so it also makes sense to do this late. The widgets that choose to
free their controllers on dispose can still do so, and get
_gtk_widget_remove_controller() called for these as an indirect result.
g_utf8_get_char_validated() may return -1 or -2
return type is gunichar(guint32)
Therefore such checks like 'gunichar < 0' or 'gunichar > 0'
are always 'false' or 'true'(except when gunichar == 0).
Signed-off-by: Maks Naumov <maksqwe1@ukr.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742774
If a gtk_style_context_invalidate() is called on a widget's style
context (which nobody should ever do, sheesh!) and we're animating, stop
the animations.
Fixes crashers in Nautilus.
When we get a leave event, we need to remove the over bit,
since we may not get motion events that tell us when we lose
proximity, but we don't have to fade out right away - that
will happen on its on due to inactivity a bit later. Having
the indicator stay visible for a bit feels more relaxed.
If we use GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE we are asking for a core profile
according to the GLX_ARB_create_context_profile extension. For that,
we pass the GLX_CONTEXT_CORE_PROFILE_BIT_ARB value for the
GLX_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK_ARB attribute.
The specification for the extension says that:
If the requested OpenGL version is less than 3.2,
GLX_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK_ARB is ignored and the functionality
of the context is determined solely by the requested version.
Since we're asking for a core profile, we assume a GL version greater
than or equal to 3.2; thus, we don't need to specify the
GLX_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION_ARB or the GLX_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION_ARB
attributes, and instead just rely on whatever version GLX gives us.
This seems to work around a strange issue in Mesa; if we ask for a core
profile and any version > 3.0, we get broken rendering on any shared
context we create.
Since gsize doesn't work as a typename in a ui file,
we have to be careful not to pass pointers to wrongly
sized variables when getting the guint64 values out
of the model.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742664
We still use symbolic icons for Copy, Cut, and Delete operations inside
toolbars and some menus, so it's worth pointing to the symbolic icon
names in the deprecation notices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741969
We need to clear the cache manually on full revalidates because
_gtk_css_change_for_child() will clear the full revalidation flags.
And then gtk_style_context_update_cache() will not do the right thing
(which is to clear itself).
Because we can switch from animating to non-animating pretty much
anywhere, do the check for animations unconditionally instead of trying
to cram it into the correct if path (and failing).
We now cache the results of lookups on the parent GtkCssStyle. This
allows sharing styles between widgets (recursively). However, this
only works if the styles can't potentially depend on siblings -
neither directly via sibling selectors or via position pseudo-classes
like :first-child.
Unfortunately, Adwaita currently uses first-child a lot, and in
particular for labels, which are the most common widgets.
The big benefits of this change are both less CPU - due to not needing
to compute styles again - and less memory usage - due to sharing of
the styles between widgets. Here's some nonscientific numbers I
collected while pondering the usefulness of this patch:
glade glade widget
demo demo factory
runtime styles styles
Adwaita before 19.1s 5800 1150
Adwaita now 18.9s 3800 970
Adwaita hacked now 14.5s 3100 910
simple before 11.3s 5800 1150
simple now 10.8s 1300 590
Adwaita: Adwaita as provided by GTK
Adwaita hacked: Adwaita with the first/last-child for GtkLabel removed
simple: A 250 lines simple GTK theme I use for testing
before: This patch not applied
now: this patch applied
glade demo runtime: Starting glade opening a large file and closing it
glade demo styles: GtkCssStaticStyle objects after opening glade with
the large file as per inspector
widget factory styles: GtkCssStaticStyle objects after startup as per
inspector
Previously we looked at the save/restore state when determining the
parent. This is wrong in the case where we're updating the cache though.
So we now save the parent in the style info.
After the parent changes in commit
3a337156d1 we need to refresh the cached
styles after the current style. After all, they now depend on the base
style.
After 3a337156d1 style lookups still used
the parent context's style as the parent style, even though after a
gtk_style_context_save() the root style of the style context is the
proper parent.
Testcase attached.
Instead of keeping an animated style everywhere, we replace it with the
static style when nothing gets animated.
Apart from making the code cleaner, this gets rid of a bunch of animated
style values that do nothing but wrap a static style.
The only style that is animated is the style of the unsaved primary
node. So there's no need to create animated style objects for the other
ones.
There is a bunch of ugliness in the code currently. Further commits are
expected to fix them.
For now, this is only an implementation detail of the animated style.
The idea is to use GtkCssStaticStyle as the result of CSS queries and
then put a GtkCssAnimatedStyle on top that manages the animations. The
neat thing about this is that you can cache the static values.
GtkCssStyle is the base class to be used for all types of styles that do
exist.
GtkCssAnimatedStyle is the only implementation so far, that is exactly a
copy/paste of the old GtkCssStyle code.
I removed it in 14f5ce7108 because I
thought it was unnecessary, but it wasn't. When we build a tree like
this:
.matches ─┬─ .doesntmatch
└─ .alsodoesntmatch
We would get the changes for the .matches part returned. This is however
only right if that node of the tree contains results. If results only
exist with the child nodes (all of which don't match), then this part
should not match either.
GtkCalendar can have an invalid date — mostly at initialization. This
means that GDateTime construction may fail. We need to handle that case
gracefully, like the old code did.
This fixes the `notify` test suite, which started failing with:
/Notification/GtkCalendar:
GLib-CRITICAL **: g_date_time_get_day_of_week: assertion 'datetime != NULL' failed
inside the Continuous builder.
Sending backingScaleFactor to a NULL NSWindow will silently give the
value 0 for the scale factor, causing insidious divide-by-zero bugs down
the line. This checks if the NSWindow is NULL first, as seems to happen
throughout the rest of the file.
Note that I don't have a hi-DPI OS X machine to test this on, though.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738338
This is so we can detect crossing events on the scrolledwindow widget,
which can be useful for toggling certain behaviors or not depending on
whether the mouse is on the widget.
If the first of the month was falling on a Sunday, we would not
render any days of the previous month, and instead show two weeks
of the next month at the bottom. Improve this by showing one week
of each.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=301835
Changing font size does not cause widgets to update their size
properly anymore, since we forgot an invalidation flag. The
problem can be observed e.g. by running gtk3-demo and calling
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name "Cantarell 22"
On the wayland backend, set up GDK_WINDOW_SUBSURFACE windows
for popovers. In the popover code, the popover-relative-to-parent
calculation had to be tweaked, and it's been made to always prefer
the given popover position, since there's no sizing limitations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738891
We were asserting priv->filename != NULL in various places,
which leads to apps refusing to work when HOME is set to a
nonexisting or nonwritable value. Since it isn't hard, just
make GtkRecentManager survive without a filename. We won't
save or read any recently used files in this state, but
thats ok.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739038
Provide a mechanism for hiding the "Quit", "About" and "Preferences"
menu items from the normal places in a traditional menubar layout (in
the File and Edit menus) when the menu is being rendered in the Mac OS
menubar.
These items can already be found in the application menu.
With this feature, applications can now define a single menu to use in
all 'traditional' scenarios.
Use this new attribute in Bloatpad.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741610
In addition to the fixed-size mode that is used by the text view,
add a mode in which the magnifier requests enough size to render
the entire inspected widget at the current magnification. In this
mode, the magnifier will update its size when the size of the
inspected widget changes. Also, make the magnifier redraw on its
own whenever the inspected widget draws.
There is no good reason to assign the value directly.
Also, this fixes d23f3254b7
where widgets that chained up instead of calling
gtk_widget_set_allocation() would not draw becaues of empty clip.
(1) Get rid of supports_clip flag. All widgets (implicitly) support
clip.
(2) Don't reset the clip to { 0, 0, 0, 0 } before the "size-allocate"
signal.
(3) Make gtk_widget_set_allocation() set the clip (to the allocation).
This ensures that eveyr widget has a clip set.
Note: It overrides previous calls to gtk_widget_set_clip(), while in
3.14 this didn't happen.
(4) As the clip is set by gtk_widget_set_allocation() now, don't set
it after the "size-allocate" signal anymore.
This fixes calls to gtk_widget_queue_draw() from inside the
size_allocate vfunc.
We've observed hangs of mutter when it initializes GTK+, which
are caused by initializing GL, which in turn makes xwayland
call back into mutter. With this change, mutter should just
disable GL support in GDK, and things will work.
Override the gtk-shell-shows-app-menu and gtk-shell-shows-menubar
settings to FALSE, if we can detect that we are not on the same
session bus as the xsettings provider that we got these settings
from.
We determine this by comparing the bus ID of 'our' session
bus with the one reported in the Gtk/SessionBusId xsetting.
If they are different, then it very likely that we are in an ssh
situation where we see the forwarded X display, but not the
session bus. The D-Bus based menu exporting will not work
in this situation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=671802
The magnifier is now set enough height to show the line being currently
manipulated, which makes it just big enough to show the layout height at
that size and magnification.
- It is not possible anymore to trigger text DnD through touch, pressing
and dragging from within the selection will instead extend it. Text
shrinking is still available through the handles
- The selection mode for touch is per-word, char-level manipulation is
still available through the handles.
- Tapping within the selection will bring in text handles, and toggle
text selection popover.
This mode could also shrink the selection, plus the starting point would
seem somewhat arbitrary (actually dependent on the dragging direction of
the last selection).
Made this mode more consistent by only allowing it to extend the selection,
only in one direction for each operation, and so it keeps the current
selection as a minimum.
Instead of passing a GdkEvent and let the function figure out whether the
selection should be extended, let that to the caller and just pass a
boolean here.
Using the parent widget context is a leftover of the pre-popover
implementation, which used GdkWindows directly. This will make the context
reflect widget state, at the expense of changing the selector paths
that used to match the handles.
Checking the return value was valid for most gestures, but
GtkGestureLongPress, where the first press triggers internally an action,
but does nothing for the sequence to be claimed/denied, FALSE was eventually
returned, and the button/sequence functions would be incorrect when
::pressed is emitted.
So check that the sequence is being handled by the gesture, this is more
desirable than the return value as it's independent of sequence state,
and still will be FALSE for the cases we want to catch here.
When a RTL paragraph is not set to wrap, the right margin is not respected
because of the margins counted twice so we replace
display->width by PIXEL_BOUND (extents.width), the same quantity
without the margins.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741702
GtkIconTheme doesn't scale icons beyond the size specified in the theme
anymore. This can result in arbitrarily large menu items when a theme
only provides large icons.
Force icons to always be 16x16 to ensure that menu items always have the
same height.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741259
Since the support for GL support in the GDK Windows backend has landed in
master, we need to build it in the Visual Studio builds. Update the
projects for that and "install" the public header that was added.
This adds support for OpenGL to the GDK Windows backend using the WGL API
calls, which enables programs that uses the GTK+ GLArea widgets to work on
Windows as well.
This also adds a simple utility function to query for the version of OpenGL
that is supported by the Windows system, like the one provided by the X11
backend.
Many thanks to Alex (and Emmanuele, who started the OpenGL integration in
GTK+) who offered advice and help along the way, as well as the X11 and
Wayland backend for this work to refer to and to model upon.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740795
As the alignments, strides and image formats may be different across
platforms, make the texture upload a vfunc to allow backends to override
the GL commands for uploading textures for the software implementation for
gdk_gl_texture_from_surface(), if necessary.
Suggested by Alex to avoid copying non-trivial portions of code which would
then add maintainenace burden.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740795
This drops the maybe_allocate_buffers that re-allocates buffers
at any point. Instead we just set have_buffers to FALSE and have
the buffers re-created when needed.
This also makes the buffer creation code imdeponent and makes it
clean up no longer needed buffers in order to handle being called
multiple times due to the above.
We also ensure we re-allocate the buffers when we're resizing
and the buffers are already created.
We can't combine multiple draws into one for the software fallback,
because each quad has a different texture. And we generally don't
want to make a larger single texture because then we would have
to upload more data.
On creation, we call action_removed() in case the action was missing
from the start. Because we just created the action, 'can_activate' will
always be FALSE here and this function will therefore always do nothing.
We do want the visibility state to be updated though, for the case where
the action is missing but the item should still be visible from the
start.
Update the visibility directly instead of trying to call
action_removed().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735122
We were only properly setting the "is-visible" flag to TRUE for menu
items with associated actions and not (for example) on submenus.
This was fine because the code for building GtkMenus from models
(correctly) assumed that submenus should always be visible and never
checked the property.
This is not true for the Mac OS code, which actually checked the
property and found it to be false for submenus.
Initialise the property to TRUE so that we get the correct value
reported for items that don't have actions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735122
All popover sides have extra margins to possibly hold the tail, this is
accounted for in gtk_popover_get_rect_coords(), and should be accounted
for too in the tail position calculation.
This fixes the gtk_render_frame_gap() warnings seen when a popover is
pushed far too close to window sides.
After b49c7c3421 we were no longer doing a
full revalidate after GTK_CSS_CHANGE_SOURCE changes.
This fixes spurious failures of widgets not properly updating when
changing the theme.
These functions, while added for use by the GTK inspector, are generally
useful to applications that need to resolve what action groups are
available to a particular GtkWidget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741386
Without this, the focus will not be inside the top_stack when
we switch to the statistics page and it shows the excuse. This
in turn will make the next page not take focus as expected when
switching away from the statistics page again.
Add notebook-like focus handling: Keep track of the last focused
descendent of each page, and focus it again when switching back
to the page. If there is no last focused child, we move the focus
into the page as if the user had hit Tab.
When using a completion with some custom cells in the cell layout,
if would often size wrong when first presented on screen.
The entry completion is the only place in the entire gtk code base
that calls gtk_tree_view_column_cell_get_size outside of gtktreeview
itself. It calls into the function before the tree view has done some
important validation on its cell state, the net result of which is
only the first element in the gtkcellareabox the entry completion uses
well actually have its size respected.
We now call gtk_widget_get_preferred_size on the tree view before
calling into the individual cell size routines, to guarantee that the
tree view has run its validate_rows routine and cell state is valid.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741130
Use the new scrollable API for getting non-scrollable borders
and draw over/undershoot at the right place. In practice, this
means that they now appear below treeview headers.
Add a vfunc to return a non-scrollable border around scrollables.
This would be nicer as a property, but we can't add properties
to an interface without breaking 3rd party implementations, so
make this an optional vfunc, and handle it not being set.
The new region selector tracks more than just one soimple selector, so
it requires some more advanced specificity tracking.
Technically, this is still not correct, because it will report the same
specificity for
tab:sorted
and
tab:sorted:sorted
(and the second selector will be printed as the first) but this is
regions, so meh.
This is just a way to handle regions more conveniently. What this does
is to change the descendant matcher into a maybe-descendant matcher
whenever the current object we're parsing might be a region. Because "*"
might also refer to a region and not just a new element.
See testsuite/reftests/css-match-region-matches-star.ui for a testcase.
When parsing a selector like
tab:active
We used to create 2 selector objects, one for the region, and one for
the pseudoclass. Now, for convenience, we special-case region
pseudoclass parsing so that the active flag is added to the region
selector.
A side effect is that ":nth-child(1)" no longer works for regions.
Hopefully people didn't use this but used the saner ":first-child"
instead.
We used to switch to the objects tab when an object is
picked, but now may have two places with picker buttons:
the objects tab and the interactive tab.
So, just don't do that anymore.
Currently we only take into account the window GActionGroup for
activating the accels.
However, the application could have some custom GActionGroup in the
chain of focused widgets that could want to activate some action if
some accel is activated while that widget is focused.
To allow applications to set accels on widgets that use custom
GActionGroups, simply use the muxer of the focused widget, which
already contains the actions of the parents.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740682
Add links from gtk_icon_theme_list_contexts() to
gtk_icon_theme_list_icons(), and from there to the Icon Theme
Specification and the Icon Naming Specification.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=461249
Adding rows to the bottom of the list is confusing as you cannot see
them if the window is small so it is not apparent that anything has
happened. Fix this by adding the new row immediately below the current
row and set the cursor on the new row so it is ready to be edited.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721939
Most of the core GNOME applications (eg., gnome-control-center,
gnome-documents, and nautilus) start searching as soon as the text
changes, and don't wait for the user to hit ENTER. It would be nice to
follow the same pattern.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739977
Since widgets subelements are now both widget childs and widget
classes, say .spinbutton.button and .spinbutton .button,
the linking logic needs to be adapted to be stricter with
child selectors. This fixes vertically linked spinbuttons.
Since widgets subelements are now both widget childs and widget
classes, say .spinbutton.button and .spinbutton .button, the linking
logic needs to be adapted to be stricter with child selectors.
This fixes vertically linked spinbuttons.
If the previous focus widget is unmapped (eg. hidden, scheduled for
destruction, etc), make the popover forget about it and grant focus
back to the window itself.
The shadow rendering code had code to exit early if we determine
that the shadow is entirely clipped away. Unfortunately, the check
based on cairo clip extents fails for any clip regions that are
more complicated than axis-aligned rectangles, and we are using
a hollow rounded rectangle here. So, instead, do the check manually,
using the just-introduced API in GtkRoundedBox.
This adds two functions for checking whether an axis-aligned
rectangle is completely outside or inside of a rounded box.
These are not trying to be exact, but fast.
As the print preview command is moved into the sources, don't define it in
the preprocessor definitions. However, define the
GTK_PRINT_BACKEND_ENABLE_UNSUPPORTED in the preprocessor definitions, to
make the build in-line with the autotools builds.
We were concatenating "file://" to the result of g_get_user_special_dir() to build
a URI, but this is not enough on Windows. Use g_filename_to_uri() instead.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739453
Previously, the inspector would not change the hilight while the
previous hilight was still flashing.
This is inconvenient while arrowing through the object selection
treeview though where you want the currently selected row to hilight
when arrowing quickly.
The GTK_FILE_SYSTEM_ENABLE_UNSUPPORTED define is not used anymore,
and we don't install a gtk.css file for Raleigh, so no need to
uninstall one either.
gtk-update-icon-cache is no longer used at build time, so a lot
of the complicated machinery we have around that (conditional
build, cross build, etc) are no longer required.
The files for build of GtkInspector have been intergrated into the build of
the main GTK+ DLL, and the Visual Studio project templates for those have
been removed as well. Make that removal complete by removing from the
solution files references to it and make the 'gtk' project not to depend on
the gtk-inspector project.
1) Use font-size instead of color
This makes it easier to compare reference and test because the values
don't change.
2) Actually sort the reference properly
This unbreaks the test.
This subdirectory gets in the way when integrating the inspector
build more fully with GTK+, and does not really add anything.
Just move everything one level up.
I checked Cairo source code (actually pixman, as Cairo just passes
through) to make sure that the behavior stays identical: negative values
cause an error message from pixman, zero is allowed. Both return an
empty region which gtk_widget_queue_draw_region() would then proceed to
ignore.
The calls to cairo_translate in
_gtk_print_context_rotate_according_to_orientation,
_gtk_print_context_reverse_according_to_orientation and
_gtk_print_context_translate_into_margin assume an unscaled context.
These functions should therefore be called before scaling the context,
otherwise the origin does not always end up in the top left corner.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740742
The ICCCM says:
If the specified property is None , the requestor is an obsolete client.
Owners are encouraged to support these clients by using the specified
target atom as the property name to be used for the reply.
Lets do that, instead of crashing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740613
gtk_window_propagate_key_event() will run unstopped from the focus widget up to the
popover if GDK_EVENT_PROPAGATE was returned along the chain, resulting in infinite
recursion. This could be just triggered by pressing some modifier key on an entry...
If a file system event arrives while GtkFileChooserWidget is asking the
user to edit the name of a newly created folder, the file system model
will drop the row with the editable cell, and the user will have to
start from scratch.
This makes creating new directories impossible inside a directory with a
file currently being downloaded, for instance, and it's really unhelpful
to the user because the editable row simply disappears.
We already have a mechanism in place to freeze the file system model, so
we can reuse it between the add_editable() and the remove_editable()
calls.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729927
We directly get the length of the secret from the g_variant
and use it in a following g_strndup which ensures that the
resulting string is terminated.
This fixes reading secrets which were stored by system-config-printer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740612
This is a bit bizarre, but the cell renderer can apply different
flags from the actual style context, and we should use those instead
of the widget flags.
:not() works for names, ids, classes and pseudoclasses based on states.
It does not yet work for positional pseudoclasses (like :last-child or
:even) as there is region madness going on with those.
The adjustment value being equal is checked by
gtk_adjustment_set_value() and the necessity of calc_layout() is handled
by the value_changed signal handler.
This is the expected behavior while the popover keeps the grab, leaving
this up to the toplevel implementation gives place to key handlers
connected there to handle the event otherwise, and maybe redirect key
events somewhere else.
NULL-plus-something could be seen by the compiler to attempt to do
arithmetic with void *, which is a GCCism. Instead, do the math normally
and cast the results as a void *.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740605
Use xdg_surface_set_window_geometry() to tell the compositor about the
shadow widths, this makes some gnome-shell/mutter features (edge resistance,
frames around windows in the overview, side maximization, ...) work alright
with GTK+.
In order to add this, some other places in gdkwindow-wayland had to gain
some knowledge about margins:
- xdg_surface_configure() now syncs the shadow after applying the state,
and gdk_wayland_window_set_shadow_width() possibly reconfigures the
window in order to preserve window geometry. This is necessary to keep
shadows in sync with state/geometry changes, as this does not happen
all at once.
- xdg_popups relative to an xdg_surface are shown relative to buffer
coordinates, so the left/top margins must be added there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736742
This requires us to use GL_TRIANGLES and six verts per quad instead
of four, which makes me think it might not be worth it on
well-optimized GL drivers. However, from talking to some driver
developers about it, the GL_TRIANGLES should be faster, since this
means that there's one giant contiguous buffer instead of many small
buffers.
If we were really rendering a lot of quads, I'd use an element buffer
and GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART, but we're really not ever rendering that
many quads, and the setup cost for that would just be too annoying.
It's unused. At the same time, rename "begin_paint_region" to
"begin_paint". This will help us clean up how GDK painting works
in the future to allow more creative use of double-buffering.
...for Broadway builds, as it was producing a wrongly-named check file for
that configuration, so that a clean would not be correctly performed and
subsequently affected rebuilds.
This is needed in the edge case where the X11 backend rounded the actual
size, and the GL flipping really needs the correct window height to
do proper Y coordinate flipping.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
This is required for the X backend GL integration. If the
window has a height that is not a multiple of the window scale
we can't properly do the y coordinate flipping that GL needs.
Other backends can ignore this and use the default implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Rather than just rounding down the position *and* the size separately
we correctly calculate a rectangle in scaled window coords that fully
covers the real window size. This really only makes a difference
when the window size/position isn't a multiple of the window scale.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Keep track of the exact size of X windows in underlying pixels; we
generally use the scaled size instead, but to properly handle the GL
viewport for windows that aren't a multiple of window_scale,
we need to know the real size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Although we specify a resize increment to try and get a size that is
a multiple of the window scale, maximization typically wins
over the resize increment, so the window might be odd sized.
Round *up* in this case, rather than down, since it's better to
truncate a line or two at the bottom and right of the window rather
than have a line or two that we don't know what to do with.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
The intention was that ::iconic indicates which representation is
preferred (text or icon). We fall back to the other representation
if one is missing.
If the widget is an action widget, it's been previously added with
gtk_dialog_add_action_widget, which calls add_response_data on it, which
in turn connects to the clicked/activate signal of that widget, so we
don't need to connect to that signal a second time in
gtk_buildable_custom_finished.
When overshooting through touchpad kinetic scrolling, the scrollbar remains
mostly static as it already hit a boundary. However, the fade in/out checks
are constantly run during scroll events, causing needless redraws in this
specific case.
The scrollbars are still internal children of the GtkScrolledWindow
and handled in ::forall(), no need to propagate draw here again
after chaining up in ::draw().
During size request, all sides' margins are ensured to be as big
as TAIL_HEIGHT, just to avoid possible relocation loops if the
popover doesn't fit in its original position. This must be
accounted for in size_allocate() as well.
Look for themes in $prefix/themes/$name/gtk-$version/ (for
version = 3.16, 3.14, ...), before using the old location
$prefix/themes/$name/gtk-3.0/. This gives theme authors a
way to support multiple versions of GTK+ 3 with separate
css files.
We really want margins around the scrollable content, not around
the viewport. Make it so by using textview-specific properties.
This is unfortunately a little complicated for top/bottom.
Css margin now works on the slider as they do on the trough.
The margin is not considered in the space allocation as it is for
the trough, so the slider width will be the set slider-width -
margins. Spefifying margins on the main widget in the css will
clearly affect both the trough and the slider, so theme changes are
needed.
The current way of exposing GDK API that should be considered internal
to GTK+ is to append a 'libgtk_only' suffix to the function name; this
is not really safe.
GLib has been using a slightly different approach: a private table of
function pointers, and a macro that allows accessing the desired symbol
inside that vtable.
We can copy the approach, and deprecate the 'libgtk_only' symbols in
lieu of outright removal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739781
Instead of possibly calling wl_surface_commit() out of
GdkFrameClock::after-paint, tick the transient parent clock so ::after-paint
can be eventually run.
This ensures that the subsurface coordinates (considered part of the state
of the parent) aren't committed untimely, and guaranteed to be orderly with
the wl_subsurface-relative state.
This is a gtk-side fix for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738887
cairo_region_copy(NULL) will effectively return an empty region, as this
function is always meant to return valid memory. This however inverts the
meaning of the NULL region and results in entirely non-clickable windows.
This event might not have an action yet, but certainly accounts, and
should be triggering recognition.
This fixes a crash when attempting to drag CSD windows through touch. As
since cfaec2d2f5, gtk_gesture_single_get_current_sequence() would
rightfully return NULL if the gesture didn't enter recognition, making
event lookup fail.
We need to export the symbols so they can be used in the
inspector, but we don't really want to make this supported
public API, so keep them out of installed headers.
Store the cursor name on the cursor (rather than always using its type).
Use this when setting a cursor on a surface.
The mir server will fallback to using standard cursors from the cursor
theme if the name used is not one of those defined by mir, which is more
or less what we want to happen here in case of creating a cursor by
name.
If buffer age is undefined and the updated area is not the whole
window then we use bit-blits instead of swap-buffers to end the
frame.
This allows us to not repaint the entire window unnecessarily if
buffer_age is not supported, like e.g. with DRI2.
This moves the GDK_ALWAYS_USE_GL env var to GDK_GL=always.
It also changes GDK_DEBUG=nogl to GDK_GL=disable, as GDK_DEBUG
is really only about debug loggin.
It also adds some completely new flags:
software-draw-gl:
Always use software fallback for drawing gl content to a cairo_t.
This disables the fastpaths that exist for drawing directly to
a window and instead reads back the pixels into a cairo image
surface.
software-draw-surface:
Always use software fallback for drawing cairo surfaces onto a
gl-using window. This disables e.g. texture-from-pixmap on X11.
software-draw:
Enables both the above.
The Mir backend was checking for button mask changes to generate the appropriate
GDK event. When Mir generates a touch event it has no button mask. In this case
we'll just generate a primary button event.
This was unnecessarily creating a framebuffer in the texture case,
and it was not properly setting up a framebuffer with the texture
as source in the software fallback w/ texture source case.
Commit afd9709aff made us keep impl window
cairo surfaces around across changes of window scale. But the
window scale setter forgot to update the size and scale of the
surface. The effect of this was that toggling the window scale
from 1 to 2 in the inspector was not causing the window to draw
at twice the size, although the X window was made twice as big,
and input was scaled too. Fix this by updating the surface when
the window scale changes.
We need to use this in the code path where we make the context
non-current during destroy, because at that point the window
could be destroyed and gdk_window_get_display() would return
NULL.
The child property setting must be prepared to deal with any
child property for any child, even if it doesn't make sense,
like the pack-type for the custom title. This is happening
in glade when undoing a change in the custom-title property.
When a GtkRadioButton has no focus, it will accept it when there is no
other active button in its group.
If the active button in the group is hidden, for example because the UI
desires not to have a default option pre-selected, currently the focus
will not be accepted, which is not desired behavior.
This commit changes the code to only consider visible buttons in the
group when checking whether another button is active.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739474
Stop using activate-on-single click for the property list -
it is a little annoying to have the popover come up when you
just click in the list to get the focus there.
This restructures the way buffers are allocated and bound in a way
that is more flexible.
Buffer operation happens in three phases:
create_buffer() - Creates the gl objects
allocate_buffers() - Allocates space for the buffers at a given size
attach_buffers() - Attaches the buffers to the framebuffer and makes
the framebuffer the default drawing target
And destroy via
delete_buffers()
We call all these the first draw, and after that we allocate buffers
each time the widget changes size until the buffers are deleted.
We delete the buffers at unrealize.
However, anyone that wants to manually control buffer allocation strategies
can manually call allocate/delete_buffers().
There are also some other changes:
* Support for stencil buffers.
* A manual render mode where ::draw doesn't render unless you manually
invalidated the previous rendering.
This moves the code related to the frame sync code into
the is_attached check, which means we don't have to ever
run this when making non-window-paint contexts current.
This is a minior speed thing, but the main advantage
is that it makes making a non-paint context current
threadsafe.
This is not really needed. The gl context is totally tied to the
window it is created from by virtue of sharing the context with the
paint context of that window and that context always has the visual
of the window (which we already can get).
Also, all user visible contexts are essentially offscreen contexts, so
a visual doesn't make sense for them. They only use FBOs which have
whatever format that the users sets up.
We had some code that tried to reuse the context over realize, but
that doesn't work as we need to share with the possibly new
paint context of the re-realized window.
To properly support multithreaded use we use a global GPrivate
to track the current context. Since we also don't need to track
the current context on the display we move gdk_display_destroy_gl_context
to GdkGLContext::discard.
Removed bright translucent outer border for "top level" osd widgets,
insensitive osd entry styled, more meaningfull color variables and
some code rationalization.
We used to have a weak ref to the cairo surface and it was keep
alive by the references in the normal windows, but that reference
was removed by d48adf9cee, causing
us to constantly create and destroy the surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738648
We want to create windows with the default visuals such that we then
have the right visual for GLX when we want to create the paint GL
context for the window.
For instance, (in bug 738670) the default rgba visual we picked for the
NVidia driver had an alpha size of 0 which gave us a BadMatch when later
trying to initialize a gl context on it with a alpha FBConfig.
Instead of just picking what the Xserver likes for the default, and just
picking the first rgba visual we now actually call into GLX to pick
an appropriate visual.
Add a menu-name property and use it in a default implementation
of ::clicked to switch menus if we are inside a stack. This means
GtkModelButton is no longer entirely generic, but rather expects
to be used inside a GtkPopoverMenu. It still works in other contexts
too, of course.
Rename the "toggled" property to "active", since that is what
GtkActionHelper expects to update for check and radio actions.
Also make the property readable, since GtkActionHelper wants
to read it.
The visuals are typically sorted by some sort of "most useful first"
order. And picking the last one is likely to give us the weirdest
matching glx visual.
Under wayland, the compositor doesn't have a 'overall window alpha'
knob, we just need to add the alpha to the buffers we send.
Client-side alpha, if you want to call it that.
Implement this by reusing the existing alpha support for non-toplevel
widgets. As a side-effect of the implementation, windows with RGBA
visual under X will now also use per-pixel alpha, instead of
overall alpha.
The differences between the mutter and GTK+ code are subtle, but it
turns out that _gtk_cairo_blur_compute_pixels actually returns the
shadow *spread*. Since we use a triple box blur, the constant was
multiplied by 1.5 to approximate three chained box blurs. Split this
out and use the correct value for the lobe width.
We weren't passing in the right "d" value, which was causing the blur to
behave incorrectly, especially in the case of 1px blurs, which would
cause no blurs at all.
The blur should now match the web.
We don't want separators in both side of an iconic section
and use a 10px margin to separate two iconic sections.
Separators are also updated in case of dynamic insertion
( often used with menu items for plugins )
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738650
We want to be able to style the empty blocks independently of all the
offset styles, so remove the current style class when painting an empty
block.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707695
It is not possible to successfully build GTK+ on OS X 10.6 and below
since NSFullScreenWindowMask is only available starting with 10.7. Add
ifdef guards around setStyleMask: in order to allow it to build on
earlier OS X releases.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737561
Commit 30a1c4ab fixed several memleaks including one in
gtk_font_chooser_widget_find_font.
However, the fix causes one extra call to gtk_tree_model_iter_next()
after finding the font we look for (ie pango_font_description_equal
returns TRUE): the 'increment' part of the for loop
(gtk_tree_model_iter_next) is run before the 'exit condition' of the for
loop is evaluated.
This commit reverts this part of commit 30a1c4ab and adds an extra
call to pango_font_description_free in order to fix the leak.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739111
When using GtkFontChooserButton, the same GtkFontChooserWidget can be
hidden and shown multiple times. When doing that, the font that was
chosen the previous time should be the selected one in the
GtkFontChooserWidget, however this does not work as expected and a
somehow 'random' font gets selected (or none) instead.
Every time the font chooser widget is shown, its style will be updated,
causing gtk_font_chooser_widget_style_updated and then
gtk_font_chooser_widget_load_fonts to be called.
gtk_font_chooser_widget_load_fonts starts by clearing the GtkListStore
listing the available fonts, repopulates it, and then makes sure the
current font is selected.
However, this does not work as expected, as during the call to
gtk_list_store_clear, the cursor_changed_cb will be invoked multiple
times when the GtkTreeView cursor gets moved when the line where the
cursor currently is gets removed. This will cause the 'current font'
state (priv->font_desc) to be unexpectedly modified, and when
gtk_font_chooser_widget_load_fonts tries to reposition the cursor to the
'current font', we won't get the expect result.
This commit avoids that by making sure cursor_changed_cb does not get
called when we call gtk_list_store_clear in
gtk_font_chooser_widget_load_fonts.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739111
Commits 314b6abbe8 and eb9223c008 were ignoring
the fact that the code where found is set to 1 was modifying
col - which was an ok thing to do when that part of the code
was still breaking out of the loop, but it is no longer doing
that (since 2003 !). Fix things up by storing the final col
value in a separate variable and using that after the loop.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738886
Failure to do so results in custom styling leaking through in
the inspector. This is pretty obvious, now that the inspector
is using a separate display connection and is generally isolated
from style changes.
In various places, the broadway backend was just using
the default display and assumed that it is the broadway
display. That may not be the case in a multi-backend world,
so instead iterate over all displays and use the first
broadway display - still not perfect, but enough to survive
for now.
When the window is on a non-default screen, popover_realize
ended up passing a visual and a parent_window from different
screens into gdk_window_new, which doesn't work. Fix it by
using the visual of the parent window.
GtkStyleContext was not properly handling the style cascade when
setting a screen, causing the inspector global CSS to affect the
inspector window, even though the inspector is using a different
screen now.
This helps isolate the inspector from some of the changes that
it can trigger. To specify a different display, set
GTK_INSPECTOR_DISPLAY to the name of the display to use for
the inspector window. If no display is specified, GTK+ will
use a separate connection to the default display.
When a new screen is set on a window, we unrealize it, to
recreate all the resources. But we don't reset the client_decorated
flag, so realize() doesn't call create_decoration() - which makes
sense, since the decoration already exists. But the side-effect
of create_decoration() is to select the rgba visual, and visuals
are per-screen.
Fix this by looking for the rgba visual in set_screen(), and
replacing it with the rgba visual for the new screen, if necessary.
This special code was added back in the days when computation wasn't
idemptotent. These days it is.
Also, the bypass code path is only used in fallback code that is pretty
much unused.
The gtkglarea and sidebar demos have been added, so build them in the
projects. Note that the gtkglarea code is not usable under Windows at this
point as implementation is needed for the GDK-Win32 backend.
Patches have been submitted to the libepoxy project so that it can be built
under Visual Studio. This will allow the GDK, GTK and gtk3-demo projects
to build, but the gtkglarea code is not usable at this time as
implementation needs to be added to the GDK-Win32 backend for it.
"Install" gdkbroadwaydisplay.h, as it is a public header of GDK Broadway,
also fix the MSVC 2010+ gtk-copy-gdk-broadway.props property sheet as a
'>' is missing. Sorry for not noting these issues earlier, as MSVC
Broadway builds were recently restored. My bad :|
The current implementation of this script generate headers with \x-escaped
strings that can become too long (> 65535 characters) for Visual Studio
to consume, hence the build of broadwayd would break on Visual Studio.
This changes the script to instead format the string as an array of hex
characters, not unlike what GResource does, so that builds can continue as
normal on Visual Studio builds as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739001
We recently changed the uppercase licensing text to lower case. The
reference test that checks the contents of the about dialog has to be
fixed to reflect that change.
There is now a broadway-buffer.c source that needs to be built for this, so
add it into the projects. Since crypt() is no longer used, don't include
crypt.c in the builds, and so clean up the projects a bit.
This is what the old adwaita did, not having a better solution for
removing double borders, better to have this back even if it can
be problematic in certain cases.
wayland doesn't strictly follow the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR spec by falling back
to another directory in case the runtime dir is not properly set.
When this variable is unset, wayland will log an error to us, which we
treat as fatal, aborting the entire program.
Skip ourselves all the trouble and don't try to bring up the wayland
backend when we know it will fail in this way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738873
... and make it the default. This takes over the meaning from "none" for
this property in that it draws the fallback builtin image.
"none" now literally means no image will be drawn.
This commit adds a mode to GtkScrolledWindow in which it puts
narrow, auto-hiding scrollbars over the content, instead of
allocating room for the scrollbars outside of the content. We
use traditional scrollbars if we find a mouse or if overlay
scrolling has explicitly turned off.
For test purposes, GTK_TEST_TOUCHSCREEN can be used to get
overlay scrolling even in the presence of a mouse. The
environment variable GTK_OVERLAY_SCROLLING can also be used
to force overlay scrolling on or off.
This is just meant as a prototype for how we can show a
scroll position indicator for touch. This uses GTK_POLICY_EXTERNAL
to hide the scrolled windows scrollbar while still allowing
scrolling.
This will be used to identify a scrollbar is being dragged - we
don't actually need the style class; another way to keep track
of the dragging status would be ok too.
When a getter function (like get_color()) is called and the passed in
state doesn't match the current state returned via get_state(), we used
to do a trick: We called save()/set_state() on the context before
getting the values.
Unfortunately, since 3a337156d1 this
has the unfortunate side effect that it also creates a child element.
This breaks various old codebases (spinbutton has been fixed in
998feeb2bc, Webkit is fixed in
https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=137803 ) unfortunately.
So instead, look up the values manually ensuring that no child element
is created but the correct state is used.
Keeping them is a bad idea now where the widget paths are actually
changed by a save(). And almost all of the time, state or style classes
will be changed anyway.
Looking them up again is just a hash table lookup anyway.
GtkCssNodeDeclaration is a new struct with copy-on-write semantics.
It encapsulated the properties used to define a node in the CSS tree.
The idea is to use it in various places for caching, in particular as
key in hash tables.
This signal is emitted whenever user scrolling hits the overshoot
edge in the given direction. May be useful to add "reload" or "load
more" behaviors in apps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738534
With my latest changes we have a darker text color for views and
entries (which I assume are content), the places sidebar is totally
chrome though so it needs the chrome text color back.
This can be used by applications to indicate that a paned is expected
to be actively used by the users for configuring the UI, and needs
a prominent handle.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738860
Implement Federico's suggestion:
In single-selection mode, just use the selected row,
In multi-selection mode, use the cursor row as long as it is
in the selection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=154709
It doesn't report -I${prefix}/include in cflags, even if .pc
files explicitly put it there. This was breaking the build
outside of a jhbuild shell when libepoxy is in the jhbuild tree
but not in /usr.
There are legit reasons for GtkGesture::handle_event to return FALSE,
GtkGestureSingle objects should be unsetting the current button/sequence
if that happens, in order to avoid inconsistent states.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738591
When gtk_window_set_titlebar (win, NULL) is called, we were taking
an early exit and forgot to re-map the window. This does not normally
happen in practice, but glade is about to get a 'csd' switch which
lets one toggle back and forth between titlebar and no titlebar.
With the recent save-is-child changes, using
gtk_style_context_get_padding (context, different_state)
will now open a subelement.
This is not what we want, so we check the state whenever we get the
button contexts.
Now it's based of fg color, so the list row gets darker on the
bright variant and brighter on the dark variant, similarly to what
we do for spinbutton buttons.
Flat buttons gets the button decoration on hover, while transitioning
the decorations of adiacent flat buttons are both shown (one fading in
and the other fading out) so the borders clashes, since normally there's
no spacing between them, to avoid it the transition on the normal state
is set to none and added back to the hover state, so the decoration
won't fade out. To make the transition more evident the duration is
increased.
This is mostly useful for fallback testing.
I suppose if people want finer grained GL ability testing, they can use
Mesa environment variables to tune things.
This is a change for how CSS is applied.
Previously, subelements (I'll take GtkEntry icons as an example) were
treated as having the same parent as the regular elements. So a selector
such as
.entry
would match an entry inside a window. But it'd also match the icon image
inside the entry. So CSS like
.entry { padding: 10px; }
would add 10px of padding to both the entry itself and to the icon image
inside the entry, so the icon would effective have 20px padding. To get
around that, one would have to unset it again like so:
.entry { padding: 10px; }
.entry.image { padding: unset; }
This is getting more and more of a problem as we make subelements
respect more properties that aren't inherited by default anyway, like
backgrounds and padding/margin/border.
This patch has one caveat though: It makes calling
gtk_style_context_save() the first time have an important side effect.
It's important to audit code to make sure it is only used for
subelements.
And last but not least, this patch is only useful if code unsets
parent's style classes that it doesn't want to apply any longer. Because
style classes are inherited by default (and I don't think we want to
change that), the example will still apply until the subelements no
longer contain the .entry style class.
If the menubar has an app-menu popover, and it is shown at the time of
disposing the window, it will attempt to transfer focus back to the
previous focus widget when undoing modality, even though the dispose()
code already did set_focus(NULL) previously.
At the time the popover is removed, there aren't many hints as to whether
the toplevel or the focus widget are being destroyed (ie. not still under
in_destruction), so just swap the order of these two calls.
For every other popover, this would all happen within dispose/destroy,
which is handled better.
This way we don't have to clear/refill the model every time but can keep
the existing model and only update the values.
A nice side benefit is that running an update keeps the current selection.
Its not really reasonable to handle failures to make_current, it
basically only happens if you pass invalid arguments to it, and
thats not something we trap on similar things on the X drawing side.
If GL is not supported that should be handled by the context creation
failing, and anything going wrong after that is essentially a critical
(or an async X error).
We make user facing gl contexts not attached to a surface if possible,
or attached to dummy surfaces. This means nothing can accidentally
read/write to the toplevel back buffer.
This adds the new type GdkGLContext that wraps an OpenGL context for a
particular native window. It also adds support for the gdk paint
machinery to use OpenGL to draw everything. As soon as anyone creates
a GL context for a native window we create a "paint context" for that
GdkWindow and switch to using GL for painting it.
This commit contains only an implementation for X11 (using GLX).
The way painting works is that all client gl contexts draw into
offscreen buffers rather than directly to the back buffer, and the
way something gets onto the window is by using gdk_cairo_draw_from_gl()
to draw part of that buffer onto the draw cairo context.
As a fallback (if we're doing redirected drawing or some effect like a
cairo_push_group()) we read back the gl buffer into memory and composite
using cairo. This means that GL rendering works in all cases, including
rendering to a PDF. However, this is not particularly fast.
In the *typical* case, where we're drawing directly to the window in
the regular paint loop we hit the fast path. The fast path uses opengl
to draw the buffer to the window back buffer, either by blitting or
texturing. Then we track the region that was drawn, and when the draw
ends we paint the normal cairo surface to the window (using
texture-from-pixmap in the X11 case, or texture from cairo image
otherwise) in the regions where there is no gl painted.
There are some complexities wrt layering of gl and cairo areas though:
* We track via gdk_window_mark_paint_from_clip() whenever gtk is
painting over a region we previously rendered with opengl
(flushed_region). This area (needs_blend_region) is blended
rather than copied at the end of the frame.
* If we're drawing a gl texture with alpha we first copy the current
cairo_surface inside the target region to the back buffer before
we blend over it.
These two operations allow us full stacking of transparent gl and cairo
regions.
This is a new function that gets called every time we're drawing
some area in the Gtk paint machinery. It is a no-op right now, but
it will be required later to keep track of what areas which
we previously rendered with GL was overwritten with cairo contents.
First of all we track the current update area during an
update in window->active_update_area. This will be used later
in end_paint to know the damaged area.
Secondly we keep track of old update areas for the last 2
frames. This will later allow us to reuse old framebuffer
contents in double or tripple buffer setups, only painting
what has changed since then.
If we want to use OpenGL in GDK then we have two choices; either:
- find the GL headers on each platform
- do extension discovery
- implement all the crazy dlopen()/dlsym() dispatch tables
*or* use libepoxy, which shields us from all this madness and provides a
decent layer for GL clients to use, without creating its own namespace.
Epoxy is also used by other projects, like Xorg and piglit, and it's
portable to all the platforms GDK cares about.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=119189
Request "sides-supported" and "sides-default" attributes through
IPP if there is no PPD for selected printer.
Pass "sides" option with other options in printer_get_options().
Add function setup_ipp_option() for creating of IPP option
of given name with passed choices and default value.
Mark such an option as "is-ipp-option" so we can distinguish it
later.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725441
Before 5e325c4, the default BitGravity was NorthWestGravity.
When static gravities were removed in 5e325c4, the BitGravity regressed
to the X11 default, Forget. Forget causes giant graphical glitches and
black flashes when resizing, especially in some environments that aren't
synchronized to a paint clock yet, like XWayland.
I'm assuming that the author assumed that the default of BitGravity was
NorthWestGravity, which is the default of WinGravity. Just go ahead and
fix this regression to make resizing look smooth again.
When the searchbar is hidden, a 1-pixel-high piece of it is
still peeking out, because visible widgets are always allocated
at least 1x1. Work around this by setting child-visible to FALSE
in this situation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724096
The last change accidentally removed the later restore, and
left the earlier, so we ended up with a restore-save sequence.
Thankfully, GtkStyleContext warns about this.
Apparently it's not possible in GtkTextView to say "this style should
apply to all text, including newly inserted text. Or I'm just too stupid
to use its API.
So instead, keep using override_color().
There is not much room in the inspector window; squeezing a
tree and a detailed view in the same page is not great. Instead,
make the details a separate page.
Currently writing wl_data_offer data into the fd is 1) synchronous, which
is noticeable when transferring large amounts of data, and 2) buggy, write()
error checking is done on the accumulator, breaking both the written data
accounting and error checking itself.
Fix both by making writes asynchonous through GOutputStream, the operation
is spun off and either finished, or cancelled if new data is stored in the
selection while the transfer is active.
When a drive is ejected or a volume unmounted the current directory
doesn't change most of the times being empty or being a directory that
user shouldn't take care about, like /run/media
Seems more useful to change to $HOME directory in that case so the user
can see something useful and familiar just after unmounting.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737983
Currently we change the current location if we click the eject button of
a mount.
Check whether the user actually clicked the eject button and don't
change location in that case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737983
Query printer via IPP for paper sizes if there is no
or empty PPD file.
Parse "media-supported" and "media-size-supported" attributes for list
of paper sizes. Parse "media-default" and "media-col-default" attributes
for default settings.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725441
Instead of making assumptions about enum value ordering,
introduce a helper function to determine policy values
for which the scrollbar may be visible.
Add a new policy, GTK_POLICY_EXTERNAL, which hides the scrollbar,
but does not force the scrolled windows size to be determined by
its child. This can be used to keep two scrolled windows in sync,
while sharing a single scrollbar.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730730
As an actionable (inherited from GtkButton), a GtkMenuButton
should not set its own sensitivity when it has an action-name
set, but just follow the enabled state of the associated
action.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738083
Dimmed inner colorswatch shadow to make brighter colors looks nice,
increased the padding to make button states more evident, 0 border
radius to match the padding change and no colorswatch shadows when
the button is insensitive.
The code did weird things with drawing backgrounds sometimes but not
really. Now it does this:
(1) render a background
(2) render a frame
(3) render an icon
- if no icon exists, draw the generic handle icon
We want to render a background *and* the current color (if there is
one).
This also adds a custom function gtk_render_add_content_path() which
adds the path of the current content area to a cairo_t.
This adds a CSS box (complete with padding and border) for the icon. The
box is even drawn when no icon is present. Use the ".image" as the style
class here instead of -active-color-badge.
Use this box to draw the circle around the selection icon in Adwaita.
auth_info should be a NULL-terminated array as it is used in
e.g. g_strdupv invocations iterating over its elements until
a NULL element is encountered.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737777
This is a convenient shortcut for a common case. It is implemented
by adding a .monospace style class to the text view, and letting
the theme decide about the monospace font to use.
Same here: We need to synchronize the visible child with the
selected row when setting a stack on the sidebar. I've noticed
this problem in the sidebar example in gtk3-widget-factory.
The documentation explicitly states that 0 is an allowed value for using
the same scale as the window. This 0 value is also explicitly checked
down in the call chain and handled.
Drawing text with Pango is quite expensive, and drawing text and also
blurring it is *really* expensive. To prevent us from drawing a lot of
text and then blurring it a lot is *really* expensive.
We now cache the blurred pixels for the last layout and shadow we made,
which means we can repeatedly draw labels with a blurred text-shadow
extremely fast.
To detect whether the shadow is up-to-date, we track the serial of the
PangoLayout alongside the radius of the box shadow. We don't support
inset shadows nor spread on text-shadow, so we don't need to track
these.
There is no need for a critical warning just because somebody
asked for a property that is not meaningful for the device.
Just document it as not useful for keyboard devices.
We get multiple notifications from the bookmark manager when
something changes. Every time, we reconstruct the sidebar contents
completely, by clearing the store. The bookmarks are added with
async calls though, and the code was forgetting to cancel outstanding
async requests, leading to multiple instances of the same bookmark
getting added. Use the cancellable we already have to prevent that.
This could be made much more efficient by not recreating the entire
sidebar quite so often (3-5 times for a single bookmark rename).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737679
Parent is guaranteed to not be NULL. It can only ever be NULL for root
windows and root windows cannot be created with gdk_window_new() and
gdk_window_ensure_native() will exit early because they already are
native.
Also, both functions would crash a few lines below where parent gets
dereferenced.
I've noticed a missing image show up in my print dialog, where
the printer reported "printer-paused" as icon. Rearrange things
so we always fall back to "printer" for printer icons.
We still need to possibly scan the toplevel after selecting
a widget, since we don't monitor the list of toplevels, so
the window may not be in our tree yet. This was broken in
commit e7bd73f2b0.
These turned out to break existing ui files, concretely
GWeatherLocationEntry was no longer guessed correctly.
Update the testcases to reflect this, and add a testcase
for GWeather.
"Hey I know, let's do an easter egg!"
"What kind of easter egg?"
"We can nest lots of textviews!"
"Sounds cool!"
...
"But how does one see a textview inside a textview?"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, it just looks like black text on a white background."
"You mean it's the same as if we just duplicated the text?"
"Yeah!"
"Hrm, maybe we can put a frame around it."
"Sounds good. I'll stuff the textviews in a GtkFrame."
"What? Why? Let's use a GtkEventBox and override its background"
"Why is that a good idea when we have GtkFrame?"
"Because I said so!"
"Okay."
Overriding the background color for a color swatch is wrong. The color
is not the background, it's the foreground, so it should be painted in
a draw signal handler.
- gtk_style_context_get_background_color()
- gtk_style_context_get_border_color()
Those functions shouldn't be used anymore, because they don't represent
anything from the CSS styling we support. The background color often
isn't used due to background images and there are actually 4 different
border colors (1 for each side) - if there isn't also a border image in
use.
Instead of drawing a gradient in the background color, draw a CSS box.
And change the theme so instead of setting just a background color it
draws a gradient.
The resulting visuals are the same.
Instead of drawing text for selections and links manually, use the
gtk_render_background() and gtk_render_layout() functions.
As a side effect, this allows shadows on selected text and links
and real backgrounds (like gradients or images), too.
I tried asking but nobody knew why it is necessary to set the background
color of the first cell. It seems with CSS styling this is completely
unnecessary.
This fixes shadows that are animated not updating the clip of the widget
they are drawn on. An example of this are the buttons in the CSS shadows
example in gtk-demo.
Reftest included
With buttons at the bottom, things were not looking good here:
no spacing, and a gray background. Add spacing, and put the buttons
on the white background.
It turns out that GtkBuilder will sometimes set a property
twice. Normally, this is harmless, but for GtkRadioButton:group,
it triggered a critical. Remove that.
Remove checks for NULL before g_free() and g_clear_object().
Merge check for NULL, freeing of pointer and its setting
to NULL by g_clear_pointer().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733157
When allocated more than the requested height, GtkCalendar
was 'falling apart'. Not only was the main part rendered
at the far end of the allocation, clicking on days was
broken in this scenario.
Fix this by always placing the main part directly under
the header and day names.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737670
The warning may have had some value at some point, but if
people uninstall large icons just to make the warning go
away, it does more harm than good. So just remove it.
Context menus inherit their style from the widget they are attached
to. This can have unexpected effects in particular for font, as can
be seen in gedit or gnome-calculator. Prevent this by resetting
the font of context-menus to the initial value.
GtkSidebar behaves internally much like GtkStackSwitcher, providing a vertical
sidebar like widget. It is virtually identical in appearance to the widget
currently used in GNOME Tweak Tool.
This widget is connected to a GtkStack, and builds its own contents as a
GtkListBox subclass, using the "title" child property to provide a consistent
navigatable widget.
Being a subclass of GtkListBox it benefits immediately from strong keyboard
navigation, and minimal changes are required for theming.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735293
Signed-off-by: Ikey Doherty <michael.i.doherty@intel.com>
Tell people that they need to download and install the Adwaita icon theme,
by following the instructions given on
https://live.gnome.org/GTK%2B/Win32/MSVCCompilationOfGTKStack.
Also tell people they can either use IJG JPEG or libjpeg-turbo for non-GDI+
builds of GDK-Pixbuf.
Since it turns out that x/yalign can't be quite equivalently
replaced by h/valign, bring them back as label properties, so
we can eventually get rid of GtkMisc.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735841
This adds both a compile time check for the SDK version being
compiled against, as well as a runtime check in the case the
resulting binary is run against an older SDK.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735054
Add some docs/example about the possible event handling ordering issues
that may appear on GtkGesture::begin between multiple gesture groups.
Mostly relevant for state changes.
The remaining code assumes that the dialog doesn't get destroyed, but
it actually does on delete-event.
In particular, the filter function and the preview text are lost as
soon as the dialog is created and thus when we create a new dialog we
don't have those properties to set on it anymore.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719936
Factor out the typename-to-get-type mangling as a separate
function, for easier testing.
Also fix some cases where it doesn't, currently, like
GString -> g_string_get_type and
GdkRGB -> gdk_rgb_get_type
The scale in the selectable listbox in page 2 of gtk3-widget-factory
has the flaw that the row is getting selected even when one only
interacts with the scale - unlike e.g. the checkbutton and button
further down in the listbox.
The problem is that GtkRange is trying to claim the sequence for
the drag gesture from the ::pressed handler of a multipress
gesture. Since the drag gesture hasn't seen the sequence at this
point, that is ineffective.
The fix here is to rearrange the gestures so that the multipress
gesture sees the sequence before the drag gesture, and then
claim the sequence from the ::drag-begin handler.
Binding signals can return a boolean indicating whether they
handled the event. Use that here and return FALSE if the
inspector keybinding is disabled.
Loading a builder file with a window leaves a ghost behind, since
windows need to be explicitly destroyed. Avoid that by using
gtk_builder_add_objects_from_resource.
When closing the inspector before the main window, we must take
care to sever all signal connections and weak refs, otherwise
things will go bad when the window is closed later.
When GtkGestureMultiPress::released happens, in_button should be unset
after emitting GtkButton::released, whose default implementation uses it.
Moreover, in_button should only be unset there for real touch events, not
guaranteed to trigger crossing events, as opposed to every pointer/touch
events from touchscreens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737297
Instead of hardcoding these actions, consult the settings.
Note that not all of the actions supported by gnome-shell are
implemented here, only maximize, minimize, lower, and menu.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729782
These match the GSettings that mutter/metacity/gnome-shell have
for this. We change the default for the middle-click action to
none, since lower is just a terrible default.
We're slightly bending the rules here, since we're adding new
settings after .0, but a) it is just barely after .0, and b) settings
are not really application API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729782
Some recent refactoring changed things so that in_button is no
longer TRUE when released() is called for touch events. As a minimal
fix, let GtkButton do more of the work by chaining up to its
pressed and released handlers, which know how to handle touch
events. This could be further improved by leaving more of the
state handling to GtkButton, like it was done for GtkToggleButton.
If we have a fullscreen window that covers a monitor, desktop
chrome is not relevant for placing of menus and other popups.
Therefore, return the full monitor geometry instead of the
workarea in this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737251
A popover can go unmanaged for 2 reasons, when the widget it points to
gets destroyed, or transitionally in gtk_popover_set_relative_to(). In
both of these cases it makes sense to only unset popover information
about the previous widget managing it, if the popover is meant to
survive the unmanaging through extra refs.
Also, the focus widget prior to a modal popover being shown is considered
information about the relative_to widget, unset it on
gtk_popover_update_relative_to() with the rest.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736193
This gives an opportunity for implementations to handle these events
differently, instead of hardcoding the WM-triggering behavior.
gtk_window_event() only forwards events for WM management if the event
widget is not the window (ie. caught when bubbling), so is safe to be
called here without triggering gtk_window_handle_wm_event() twice.
This commit is an adaption to master of
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736702#c1 by Cosimo Cecchi.
If !owner_events, the pointer window has been usually set to NULL if
the pointer fell outside the grabbing widget, but it was not being
checked that the pointer_window is actually a child of the grab
window, in which case it should be obtained as if ungrabbed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735749
On regular scrolling (ie. not natural scrolling), positive deltas in the
Y axis (downwards) should actually move the value towards the adjustment
minimum value to be more intuitive. This also makes the scrolling
directions match between the button and the popped up scale.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736830
Settings have a little more metadata than plain properties. They
can come from different sources. Make this information available
so we can show it in the inspector.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736971
Windows needs a shared library to link the modules against, otherwise
the undefined symbols make it not work.
So build a shared library on Windows.
We don't want a library elsewhere, as that just complicates things, so
we only make the library shared on Windows and keep it as a noinst
library otherwise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736338
For symbolic icons, we prefer symbolics in inherited themes over
generic icons in the theme itself. So far this was implemented
by looking at icon_name[0] and looking that up in inherited themes
if it is symbolic. But with automatic rtl/ltr handling, the first
icon name will always have an -rtl or -ltr suffix, and an icon
with that suffix is not going to exist in most cases. To fix this,
look for shorter icon names too, as long as they are still symbolic.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737000
This is a noinst library for now, but the idea is to turn it into a
proper DLL on Windows, so that we can install it and properly link the
modules to it. Windows doesn't allow undefined symbols in modules.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736338
Otherwise, they might not be properly set before the window is mapped.
For the opaque region and border window, it means that they won't get
set before the next size allocation, which tends to not be a bit deal.
For the shadow width, though, _GTK_FRAME_EXTENTS has a different meaning
when it's set before the window is mapped, so we need to make sure that
it's properly set when the window is mapped.
- Move the class to the Deprecated section.
- Warning at the bottom of the class description.
- A missing property was not marked as deprecated.
- Update doc of gtk_container_set_border_width() to not mention
GtkAlignment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736622
This updates the property sheets that are used to "install" builds of GTK+
after the libraries and the gtk3-demo programs are built. Note that these
are generated with scripts in regards to the headers part, so that we can
move the header installation part to use autocompletion by the autotools
build files in the next dev cycle or so, like the "gdk" and "gtk" project
files.
This allows us to access otherwise hidden windows, which can be
useful to provide better debug information than would be available
through other means.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736557
There was some X11-specific code before an early exit
in the functions that grab and ungrab keys during DND.
It seems to not cause a problem under Wayland, but moving
it out of the way seems right anyway.
If the query fails because it has been cancelled, it means that
dispose() has been called, so don't try and update anything.
This fixes a segfault with Nautilus in certain situations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736512
fr(bepo) XKB keymap sends dead_stroke with AltGr+l keys
and gtk-im-simple-context should send '/' with
dead_stroke+dead_stroke keys but gtkimcontextsimpleseqs.h
was not sorted in the descending order and failed to get
dead_stroke.
Also need to add dead_currency for Shift+AltGr+e and
dead_belowcomma for Shift+AltGr+Cedilla.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736250
This is an expected keybinding, and it is not hard to support.
Note that we use a private ::escape signal instead of using
::cancel directly, since we want to be able to suppress the
cancellation when we are on a progress page.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=579625
When closing the application window before closing the inspector window,
the selected widget will be set to NULL once and all the property pages
will try to g_object_weak_unref that NULL widget, so bail out in
gtk_inspector_prop_list_set_object if it's NULL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736201
When GtkApplicationWindow has a menubar, we don't chain up
to the GtkWindow size_allocate, which used to position the
popovers. Move that to _gtk_window_set_allocation() which
is always called by GtkApplicationWindow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736205
... just because there is no style context instantiated yet. Instead,
instantiate a style context during realize() and ask it.
Fixes problems with dim labels not being dimmed on first show.
Testcase included.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735240
Just pretend that the main widget is an empty widget the size of the
overlay.
Makes it possible to write testcases where no size requests are run on
overlay widgets before size_allocate() is called.
Testcase included.
(gnome-shell-extension-prefs:22382): GLib-GObject-WARNING **: invalid cast from 'GtkInvisible' to 'GtkWindow'
(gnome-shell-extension-prefs:22382): Gtk-CRITICAL **: gtk_window_set_transient_for: assertion 'parent == NULL || GTK_IS_WINDOW (parent)' failed
#1 0x00007fffeeb81a12 in g_log (log_domain=log_domain@entry=0x7fffeeea3464 "GLib-GObject", log_level=log_level@entry=G_LOG_LEVEL_WARNING, format=format@entry=0x7fffeeeaa878 "invalid cast from '%s' to '%s'") at gmessages.c:1079
#2 0x00007fffeee9c2a9 in g_type_check_instance_cast (type_instance=0xb314c0, iface_type=iface_type@entry=9020048) at gtype.c:4021
#3 0x00007ffff0a06e25 in gtk_tooltip_set_last_window (tooltip=tooltip@entry=0xbb8c10, window=<optimized out>) at gtktooltip.c:910
#4 0x00007ffff0a08dfd in _gtk_tooltip_handle_event (event=event@entry=0xbf72c0) at gtktooltip.c:1538
#5 0x00007ffff090d7a9 in gtk_main_do_event (event=0xbf72c0) at gtkmain.c:1785
#6 0x00007ffff0496ab2 in gdk_event_source_dispatch (source=<optimized out>, callback=<optimized out>, user_data=<optimized out>) at gdkeventsource.c:364
#7 0x00007fffeeb7a8c3 in g_main_dispatch (context=0x807300) at gmain.c:3067
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736131
The list of devices was being scanned over incorrectly, causing us to
never actually fetch the keymap from the keyboard, as the keyboard was
the second device in the list, not the first.
This causes us to create a new temporary keymap every time, which is
quite expensive, because it involves parsing the entire XKB
file. Scanning the list correctly will cause us to use the XKB rules
file that was passed to us.
The "too dark" background was caused by box-shadow inherited by
window-frame.csd, so box-shadow: none and the right background
color on tooltip selector.
This is a temporary workaround for scrolling units being amplified
on quartz, due to the assumption that smooth scrolling deltas are
always in some abstract unit similar to the one from xi2.
A proper solution for the situation is described in bug #736121, but
since we are close to release, this patch solves the issue temporarily.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736121
Those used to work indirectly due to GtkEntry not setting GDK_TOUCH_MASK,
so pointer emulation would happen on those, but the event handlers on icons
and its icon-pressed/released signals have never been explicitly touch
aware, and this broke since the GDK_TOUCH_MASK can be set indirectly by
GtkGestures.
So make the icon event handler handle touch events, each icon can get hold
of one GdkEventSequence, reacting exclusively to it. This is still not
ported to GtkGesture due to GdkEvent exposure in these icon signals, as
users might expect GDK_2/3BUTTON_PRESS while GtkGesture ignores those.
Also, unset all icon pressed/sequence state on grab-notify, this used to
happen ad-hoc when initiating icon DnD, but that doesn't cut it for
user-defined reasons to initiate a grab (eg. popovers).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736004
- cover missing statusses in selection-mode and the like
- button drawing functions cleanup and extension
- remove inline toolbar (ugly) special case not needed anymore
- button selector structure simplification and rationalization
- add back shadow to window control buttons
This is so signal handlers have an opportunity to undo its effect by
returning GDK_EVENT_STOP on ::button-press-event, just like they used
to do pre-gestures.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735965
This was forgotten when making DnD use a GtkGesture in the handlers
attached to the widget in gtk_drag_source_set(). The gesture must obey
the specified button mask, and switch to denied state if the pressed
button isn't part of the given mask.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735965
Using the setting for this property conflicts with the documentation
for gtk_entry_completion_set_text_column() which explicitly states
that setting the property directly behaves differently. Concretely,
this caused the file chooser entry completion popup to have two
columns (with identical content).
This partially reverts 331c28b369.
When links are entirely hidden in an ellipsis, don't let
them be activated by clicking and skip them when moving
the focus around.
This commit depends on enhancements in pango 1.36.7 which
make it possible to find the ellipsed runs in a PangoLayout.
With older pango, things will work the same way as before.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668258
The entry mixin now allows to specify the color of the widget bottom
edge hilight, istead then just enable/disable it, so `$noegde: true`
now is `$egde: none` or `$edge: $somecolor`, not setting it draws
the edge with the default theme color.
Add rows with buttons and checkboxes to the listbox example
on page 2, and make the switch in row 1 toggle selection mode,
to test various cases of widgets in 'selected context'.
Calling this on an Xlib surface allows us to keep this in SHM memory,
giving it a potential speedup so we don't have to copy it to SHM memory
for the Composite when we mask later.
When recursing the update area down into native subwindows we forgot
to apply the native window position. This caused us to repaint the
wrong thing in certain cases. I noticed this when playing with the
wip/gdk-gl branch, because it was triggering unnecessary repaints
of the (native window) gl widgets.
Tools like damn-lies rely on being able to generate .pot files
from pristine checkouts, so everything that goes into the .pot
file has to be in git. This is not ideal, but we already do
the same for other .ui.h files in GTK+.
Otherwise, git.mk will add them to .gitignore, and we want to
add them to source control for the benefit of tools like damn-lies
which rely on being able to generate a .pot file from a pristine
checkout.,
A surface may be hidden when a frame is already scheduled, which may cause
crashes on on_frame_clock_after_paint() when calling commit() on a NULL
surface. To fix this, ensure commit_pending is also set to FALSE when the
surface is gone.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735226
When a printer requires auth_info (e.g. a printer connected
over the samba protocol) it is now possible to save the
credentials necessary for printing if a secrets service
is available over dbus.
The auth_info is then stored / loaded from the default
collection of that secrets service.
If no such service is available the user is not shown
the option to remember the password and the behavior
remains the same as before.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674264
Only static cursors are supported in gdk_device_grab() so far. Obey the
cursor that gdk_device_grab() specifies, which may be different to
the pointer window one. As soon as the grab is gone, the pointer window
cursor will be restored as usual.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735831
On DnD, pointer_handle_leave may be triggered without the pointer actually
leaving the window, and pointer_handle_enter() happening after intra-window
DnD won't actually manage to update the cursor (it does nothing directly,
and to the upper layers the cursor is still the same and consistent, so no
attempt will happen).
To fix this, keep the pointer cursor on leave, and ensure it is updated
on enter. The pointer cursor will be updated to any current new one through
the enter/motion events generated if it needs be.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735831
cairo_surface_destroy() is called after the buffer is released, for every
wl_buffer. Windows usually reference their cairo surface before rendering,
so that extra reference is consumed after the buffer is released, so do
the same with cursor surfaces and add an extra reference whenever a cursor
surface change is about to be scheduled.
Otherwise, the GdkWaylandCursor is left with an invalid cairo_surface_t,
which causes crashes the next time it is used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735830
This must be called while the window is not realized yet, and sets the
GdkWindow that will be used for the next GtkWindow's realize/unrealize
cycle. The GtkWindow takes ownership on the GdkWindow, and as such it
will be destroyed when the widget is unrealized.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
On wayland the DnD surface must be created early when starting the drag
operation, so offer API for GTK+ to get the GdkWindow used as a DnD
surface on the drag operation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
The wl_data_source is retrieved from the selection object for the DnD
selection, and used to initiate a drag. When the drag is finished, a
button release or touch end event is synthesized to finish the DnD
operation after the compositor grab is gone.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
The wayland specific clipboard functions have been replaced by something
more similar to the hooking the win32 backend does, which allows for just
using the default GtkClipboard code in GTK+. As a consequence, the
wayland-specific GtkClipboard implementation is now gone.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
This has been made to work similarly to X11, requests for the data device
contents are notified through GDK_SELECTION_REQUEST events, the data stored
in the GDK_SELECTION property as a reaction to that event is then stored
into the wayland selection implementation, and written to the fd when
requested/available.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
This implementation makes the destination side of selections work
similarly to X11's, gdk_selection_convert() triggers data fetching,
which is notified through GDK_SELECTION_NOTIFY events on arrival,
the buffered data is then available through gdk_selection_property_get().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
What was happening that the button press event that we use
to select a widget caused another clicked signal emission of
the inspect button, starting another pick action.
Both Owen Taylor and I, the originators of this code, allow the code
herein be relicensed to the LGPL, which is what GTK+ ships with. This
prevents GTK+ from being GPL-only.
Add yet another set of checks and radios assets used in selected
treeview cells and selected list-rows, the standard dark variant assets
work well in those cases so no need for special casing there.
Use the left border color for tree lines. This is similar to
our use of top border color for grid lines. As a side-effect,
tree lines now get recolored when they are in a selected row.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=415415
We need to be a little more forthcoming with showing and hiding
the separators - their visibility now depends on the the visibility
and pack type of the regular headerbar children. This was observed
in gnome-contacts, where headerbar buttons are shown and hidden.
We used to move help buttons to the secondary position regardless
how they were added to the action area. Keep doing that, to avoid
breaking existing dialogs that rely on this behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735119
The previous way to invalidate was meant to work on the overshoot window
so it wouldn't be as taxing. Since the overshoot window is gone, this
would invalidate way more than intended. So constrain invalidated areas
to the sides where overshoot is happenning at that moment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735223
Using `font: Bold` will override the font with whatever the system
resolves a `Bold` font name to, including the font's own default size.
We want the font weight to be bold, but we want the default font name
and size to come from the GtkSettings:font-name property, like we do for
the rest of the system.
with non-installed tests the build would get an empty $(reftestdir)
which would screw up the LDFLAGS.
An rpath seems to be required to make libtool build a shared object.
Without an rpath line, it only builds a static object.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735401
... for displaying resources. Instead use the proven and way more
reliable method of trial and error.
It's less code and more portable for a start.
But most of all it displays PNM files as text if you fail to compile
the gdk-pixbuf loader for it.
Subsurface position is deemed part of the state of the parent surface, so
ensure wl_surface_commit() happens on the parent surface if none is
scheduled, so the repositioning takes place.
The pre-gestures code used to compare the current button press with the
previous one on !activate_on_single_click, and unset the previous event
data so ::row-activated would be emitted every 2 clicks.
So do the same with the multipress gesture and reset it after every 2nd
click to have ::row-activated emitted multiple times while manic clicking.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735353
Since GLib ≥ 2.41, attempting to release an unlocked mutex will abort(),
as it happens on most systems already.
Given the lack of proper documentation on how to use GDK with threads,
there is code in the wild that does:
gdk_threads_init ();
gdk_init ();
...
gtk_main ();
instead of the idiomatically correct:
gdk_threads_init ();
gdk_threads_enter ();
gtk_init ();
...
gtk_main ();
...
gdk_threads_leave ();
Which means that gtk_main() will try to release the GDK lock, and thus
trigger an error from GLib.
we cannot really fix all the wrong code everywhere, and since it does
not cost us anything, we can work around the issue inside GDK itself, by
trying to acquire the GDK lock inside gdk_threads_leave() with
trylock().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735428
This makes the active state work invariably with both mouse/touch, and
regardless of X11 pointer emulation being friendly and sending crossing
events for the emulated pointer events in the latter.
This makes GtkButtons' active state look correct when pressing on
touchscreens on wayland.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731380
This is a rather hackish way to let GTK+ widgets declare popup windows
as subsurfaces, so they may work on wayland without the need of xdg_popup,
and without many changes yet on the GTK+ side.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695504
The latest implicit grab serial is used in order to start the compositor
grab, If it belongs to a touch event, remove that touch sequence, as the
rest of the sequence will be gone for good.
This avoids stale sequences (and implicit grab info) after a window is
moved/resized.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731380
_gdk_wayland_device_get_button_press_serial() has been replaced by
_gdk_wayland_device_get_implicit_grab_serial(), which takes a touch/pointer
event and figures out the relevant serial, and
_gdk_wayland_device_get_last_implicit_grab_serial() which returns
the most recent serial.
The button press serial was currently used when operating popping up
xdg_shell/surface popups and window menus, so this is now touch aware, of
some sort.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734374
If the compositor sends a keymap that fails on "compilation",
xkb_keymap_new_from_string() returns NULL, which makes xkb_state_new()
crash when assuming there is a keymap.
In these cases, gdk must remain with a xkb_state to handle modifiers/keys
properly, so warn about the invalid keymap string, and keep the previous
keymap (currently initialized to "us")
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735389
To all effects each window has its own "root" coordinates system, so set
toplevels at 0,0 in that coordinate system, so root coordinate calculations
are locally right.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729215
Try to tidy up how the background is set on the textview:
*) the .view class should be applied only to the text window, not
to the margins
*) when setting the background on the margins we must use .left etc
*) use context_set_bg instead of manually setting the color
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735368
gtk_css_section_get_end_position() can return a position one byte beyond
the end of the last line.
gtk_text_buffer_get_iter_at_line_index() accepts only valid
line_number/byte_index pairs. Another solution is to make the
GtkTextBuffer function less strict, by returning a boolean if the exact
position was found.
The CSS parser should also be fixed to always return valid positions.
But it's better to have a safety net in the CSS editor, just in case (a
warning could be print).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735337
This implements native fullscreen mode on OS X >= 10.7. This patch
adds tracking of the fullscreen mode if externally modified, as well
as toggling the native fullscreen mode of the window as needed.
The timeout ID used to be unset after we got the targets from the
clipboard, but there's still a moment between the clipboard request and
the GDK_SELECTION_NOTIFY event that the ID points to an already gone
timeout.
There is an insensitive label in widget-factory which was
not getting any different from the sensitive label next
to it. With this patch, it does, again.
Use U+00D7 MULTIPLICATION SIGN and U+200A HAIR SPACE instead of plain
old 'x' and ' ', following https://wiki.gnome.org/Design/OS/Typography.
Sadly, many fonts don't have space variations, so Pango/harfbuzz fall
back to using the regular space glyph anyway.
NULL was returned in case of an empty last line. Every users needed to
special-case this. Now it will return the expected result: char_len of 0
with one PangoLogAttr.
In compute_log_attrs(), 'paragraph' will be the empty string "" with
'char_len' == 0.
pango_get_log_attrs() works fine with an empty string, it will return
one correct PangoLogAttr (because there is one text position for the
empty string).
It fixes the unit tests for gtk_text_iter_is_cursor_position().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=156164
For functions using _gtk_text_buffer_get_line_log_attrs():
- gtk_text_buffer_backspace()
- some gtk_text_iter functions (word/sentence/cursor boundaries)
As the FIXME comments show, there is a bug with
gtk_text_iter_is_cursor_position() for an empty last line.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=156164
There was some confusion between unflipped and flipped positions.
Both final_position and current_position are meant to be unflipped,
and get_effective_position() needs to be applied to them to get
a flipped position. _gtk_window_set_popover_position() also expects
an unflipped position.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735014
This was introduced as a hackish way in 3.6 to make font updates
propagate properly. But since then, font handling has been changed and
this flag is no longer necessary.
gtk_style_context_invalidate_internal() will respect only the current
saved state of the style context, which is wrong when updating the scale.
In that case, the whole style context needs updating.
- only one blank line is enough to separate code sections.
- the 'signals' variable was in the middle of function prototypes.
- compare pointers to NULL in some conditions ("if(blah) should be used
only if blah is a boolean variable). It makes the code clearer.
- various other things.
This is a hack to get around the optimizations done by the CSS engine.
The CSS engine will notice that no CSS properties changed on the
widget itself when going from one state to another and not queue
a redraw.
And the reason for no properties changing will be that only the
checkmark itself changes, but that is hidden behind a
gtk_style_context_save()/_restore() pair, so it won't be caught.
This is more for GTK developers to catch when they forgot to change
GTK_STATE_FLAGS_BITS after adding a new state flag than to prevent
widget developers from using the wrong flags.
This was a hack we added in early 3.x to allow themes to customize their
checkmarks.
Now that we want to properly support real backgrounds everywhere,
supporting this feature would cause double draws of backgrounds.
... in places where we draw a background. This was changed for GTK 3.0.0
to allow animations, but these days it doesn't make sense anymore to use
gtk_render_activity() for backgrounds.
All buttons should always be marked as :active when they are pressed.
That includes checkboxes (which are never activated in real code anyway,
so this change pretty much doesn't matter).
It doesn't make sense to support child displacement in a world where
pseudoclasses behave different from the actual displacement states.
Nobody would ever understand why a widget is displaced.
It is easily possible to simulate child displacement by using padding
CSS properties.
on:
- GtkToggleButton
- GtkCheckButton
- GtkRadioButton
- GtkModelButton
- GtkCellRendererToggle
- GtkCheckMenuItem
also update themes:
- Adwaita
- Raleigh
but not the win32 theme.
The new :checked state replaces :active for the actual checkedness of
the widgets and :active is now used exclusively while the button is being
pressed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733967
The font chooser constructs the display name for the font from
the family and face names. Do the same in the font button, so
we don't end up calling the same font by different names, which
would be confusing.
Instead of reconstructing a display name from the
PangoFontDescription, use the font family and face
objects, which have the original font. This lets us
get the names of fonts like Noto Sans CJK DemiLight
right, which would be shown as Noto Sans CJK SemiLight
when mangled via PangoFontDescription, since Pango
treats 'DemiLight' as an alias for the SemiLight weight.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733832
GtkStatusIcon is using a problematic, XEmbed-based protocol under X,
and we want to get rid of it eventually. Document our intentions by
marking GtkStatusIcon as deprecated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734826
That gesture is meant to handle clicks on multiple buttons, so unset
the GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY default. Also, remove unnecessary boilerplate
with the new GtkGestureSingle/GtkEventController defaults.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
That gesture is meant to handle clicks on multiple buttons, so unset
the GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY default. Also, remove unnecessary boilerplate
with the new GtkGestureSingle/GtkEventController defaults.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
That gesture is meant to handle clicks from several buttons, so unset
the new GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY default. Also, remove unnecessary boilerplate
with the new default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
GtkGestureSingle::button is set to 0 on the multipress gesture, as several
buttons are managed by that gesture. Also avoid some extra lines of code
setting what nowadays are default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
GtkGestureSingle::button is set to 0 on the drag/multipress gestures, as several
buttons are managed by these gestures. Also, avoid some extra lines of code
setting what nowadays are default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
GtkGestureSingle::button is set to 0 on the multipress gesture, as several
buttons are managed by that gesture. Also avoid some extra lines of code
setting what nowadays are default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
GtkGestureSingle::button is set to 0, as multiple buttons are managed by
the same gesture. Also avoid some extra lines of code setting what nowadays
are default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734285
At the present time broadway listens only for TCP/IP incoming
display connections. This patch implements the support for listening
on unix domain sockets too, adding the broadway_server_on_unix_socket_new()
constructor and the commandline option --unixsocket [path] to broadwayd.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734420
gtk_statusbar_remove_all() was popping the top message if its
context_id matched before removing other matching messages from the
stack. This meant that if the context_id of the second top message
matched it was still displayed when the top message was popped and
then removed from the list of messages without updating the display.
Fix this by removing all the matching messages below the top one
before popping it if it matches.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724281
Changing adjustment via the property setter would not emit
value-changed, however changing it via gtk_spin_button_configure would.
This inconsistency had the following side-effects:
- Setting an adjustment with a different value would not update the
value shown by the spin button.
- Creating a spin button like this (common in GtkBuilder XML) will
not show the initial value:
g_object_new (GTK_TYPE_SPIN_BUTTON, "adjustment", adj, NULL);
Let's use the same code path (ie. gtk_spin_button_configure) for all
public facing API for setting adjustment. The code that handled the
details of swapping out the old adjustment with the new has been split
into an unset_adjustment method and the rest has been folded into
gtk_spin_button_configure.
A spin button really needs an adjustment to work, so we don't need
most of the NULL checks. However we do need to check in
unset_adjustment because setting a new adjustment during object
creation might try to unset a non-existent one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734660
As a noinst_PROGRAMS, the libtool generated for cross-compiling will be
used, which will mess up the linking. Create a all-local target instead.
Also ensure that building uses always a native version of the tool by
specifying a GTK_UPDATE_ICON_CACHE automake variable.
Finally "config.h" has been created to work for the target platform and
causes problem when cross-compiling. So we temporarily generate a basic
config.h which contains only the strict minimum.
It is actually a bad idea to use noinst_PROGRAMS for build tools,
because it adds a $(EXEEXT). It is best to override the all target
with all-local to trigger the tool build.
When using the pre-rendered png symbolics it seems that we're off a
tiny bit in a few of the pixels on the antialiased borders of a
stroke. To fix this we switch the icon to media-playback-stop-symbolic
which has no such antialiased borders.
I don't quite understand why the pixels are off, this needs more
research.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734668
If the foreground color has an alpha != 1 we used to just pass that into
the svg. This is useful to e.g. render an insensitive icon. However,
that is not an ideal model for symbolics. For instance, if the icon uses
overlapping areas when drawing, expecting these to be opaque then the
transparent color will result in a different alpha value for the overlapping
area. Also, non-foreground symbolic colors are still rendered opaque, and
the recoloring of pngs can't handle transparent colors.
So, instead we extract any alpha from the foreground, render using the
opaque colors and then apply the foreground alpha to the entire result.
This means we get an even transparency, even for other colors, and we
can apply alpha for the pngs too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734668
_gtk_icon_helper_get_size() is often used during size request and may
not necessary mean that the icon will be displayed immediately. In
many common cases we know the size without having to ensure a surface.
In many cases this means we can avoid loading an icon until needed, and
in the case of stateless IconHelpers such as GtkCellRendererPixbuf this
is very important as otherwise it will constantly be reloading icons
if the displayed set is larger than the in-memory icon cache.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734651
If a child has set_has_window == FALSE, it purely relies on the events set on
the parent window, for which the bin window used to just ensure the exposure
mask, eating all input events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734357
gtk_widget_get_events() must indeed tell about events enabled purely through
a GtkEventController, those events will most surely trigger event handlers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734357
Change the initial value to something that is not a multiple of 3, so
that dismissing the notification on reset makes sense. Let's use 50
because that is already being used elsewhere.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734614
This check used to be present in the pre-gestures code, but was unintentionally
removed when splitting code into drag/multiclick gestures. The policy used to
be that if clicking happened on an already selected node, DnD would happen
instead of rubberband selection, so this behavior is resuscitated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734143
Make gtk-reftest consult the REFTEST_MODULE_DIR environment
variable to find out where to look for modules, and fix the
libtool hack to construct the .libs subdirectory correctly.
This was another victim of clipping changes - the labels were
overdrawing each other, leading to test failure. Prevent this
by separating the grid columns.
I found that setting margins to zero makes the textview clip
away some overshooting pixels. So, instead of a 0/10 split,
do this test with a 2/8 split of margins, to avoid the clipping
issue.
AM_PATH_GTK_3_0([3.4], [], [], [gthread]) results in calling
"pkg-config --atleast-version 3.4 gtk+-3.0 gthread-2.0".
With pkg-config 0.28, that test fails, because the version of
gthread-2.0 is smaller than 3.4. This appears to be a behaviour
change since 0.26, but matches what the documentation said in 0.26.
Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641638
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/756476
Reviewed-by: Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
This shows what one currently has to do manually to get the typical
selection mode with blue headerbar and checkboxes in list rows.
The goal is to make this easier.
Make the Visual C++-related build files contain the actual GTK+ version, by
generating them during the configure stage and dist'ing them in the release
tarballs. This is especially important for builds of introspection files,
as one may need to look at the release version of GTK+ in those files.
Define ISOLATION_AWARE_ENABLED for the build of the GTK DLL so that visual
style can be applied to the Windows print dialog for all applications using
gtkprintoperation.
Update the script for the generation of gtk-win32.rc for MSVC to not try to
embed the manifest from it (but embed libgtk3.manifest by including it in
the project files, as we are now doing), and embedding the manifest file is
really not supported in MSVC 2010 and later.
Also fix up formatting in the GTK DLL projects.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733773
gtk_gesture_drag_get_start_point and gtk_gesture_drag_get_offset
have out args that need to be annotated.
This commit adds the (out) and (nullable) annotations as appropriate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734292
Use the Python script that was used to create gtk-win32.rc from
gtk-win32.rc.in to similarly create libgtk3.manifest. As the wildcard
character can be used for all architectures, use that.
The libgtk3.manifest file needs to be specified explicitly in the projects,
so that it will be recognized and built into the GTK dll, so update the
project files as well on this part.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733773
For that to happen the libgtk3 is embedded with a manifest that requests
common controls library 6.x, and GTK lazily calls InitCommonControlsEx()
to initialize those. Then this manifest is used to temporarily override
the process activation contest when loading comdlg32 (which contains the
code for the print dialog), ensuring that it too depends on common
controls 6.x, even if the application that uses GTK does not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733773
handle_x always corresponds to the visible position of the handle,
which is where we want to start the animation. Without this, repeated
keyboard activation will not always animate.
Since we are storing positions here that depend on the allocation,
we need to update them in size-allocate. This fixes incorrect
positioning of the handle if the switch is active initially.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734213
This adds a new test which can be scripted to trigger various
event and action sequences, and record state changes in the
accessibility layer.
So far, there are a few tests verifying state changes when
focus changes.
Related to https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715176
This utility would likely be useful for Windows builds of GTK+, given the
reasons Alex cited for coming up with this utility[1], and MSVC build
support for librsvg is not available at this time (possible, but not
implemented yet).
[1]: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730450
In bug 733773, gtk-win32.rc was removed from the dist in the attempt to
make the print dialog on Windows themed, so this script was added so that
the gtk-win32.rc file can be generated during the Visual Studio builds of
GTK+ from the autotools scripts. This is also intended for filling in the
arch of the build for MSVC builds for the manifest that is also required
for fixing bug 733773. Python is used as it is already needed for
This is done as a custom build rule in the Visual Studio projects so that
it is easy to clean and rebuild gtk-win32.rc upon an update.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733773
Rows are not necessarily selected via select_row_internal(), add
the missing signal emissions there. Also the signal should be emitted
when removing the selection altogether.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729809
This counterpart to gtk_application_get_accels_for_action() lets you
find out if a particular accelerator has one or more actions associated
with it. This might be useful from an accelerator editor or plugin
system to prevent the the installation of conflicting accelerators.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721367
Currently, jhbuild-ing GTK+ on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and gcc 4.8.2 errors out with
/usr/bin/ld: encodesymbolic.o: undefined reference to symbol 'g_file_new_for_path'
/opt/gnome/lib/libgio-2.0.so.0: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command line
when trying to build gtk-encode-symbolic-svg. This is because $(GTK_DEP_LIBS) isn't defined in $(gtk_encode_symbolic_svg_LDADD) in gtk/Makefile.am. This patch should fix that.
Thanks to b4n and gregier in irc.gimp.net/#gtk+ for help.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734201
An animation may be scheduled while the textview content changed in size, so the resize
queued would just unset the animation and set the adjusments with a current value,
defeating gtk_text_view_scroll_to_iter(). In this case, just avoid the adjustment change,
as there is a target value on the way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733406
Popovers may get relocations optimized away if only x/y changed
in the GtkAllocation. So make sure the toplevel updates popover
positions on all situations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729140
It is bad if the image that is used as a fallback for missing
images goes missing itself, so include it as a resource. This
way, it will always be available.
The rules-hint property has always been a fairly bad application API, as
it set some wrong expectations for the developers; deferring to the
theme makes it impossible to design application reliably, and if this is
a usability setting we should either impose this setting on every theme,
or simply drop it.
Our own default theme does not honour the zebra striping, which makes
this function even more questionable.
In practice, usability studies on zebra striping have demonstrated that
alternating colors on a list it improves readability just as much as
clear ruling between rows, or by visually differentiating the selected
row. Zebra striping improves readability (or, at least, it does not
hinder it) on static displays, like a table on paper or a document; on a
dynamic display, like an application's UI, there are different
strategies that yield similar, if not better, results.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733312
The next call to gtk_list_box_get_selection_mode just expected the
GtkListBoxRow's parent to be a GtkListBox and failed when the row was
added to something other than a GtkListBox.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733782
If an icon theme has a file called "foo-symbolic.symbolic.png" which
was converted from svg using gtk-encode-symbolic-svg we will read
it in an recolor, allowing symbolic icons without using librsvg.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730450
If the same position is requested on a popover, it should at least ensure
the window is realized and raised, even if no resizes are queued on the
content. Otherwise other widgets being mapped might raise the windows over
the popover's if its original position is unchanged.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734129
It turns out that when we were painting the shadows, we painted the them
with the base color once, which contained the alpha, and then blurred it
and used it as a mask for the fill, which has the fill again.
To fix this, always paint the base surface with full alpha. The existing
code applies the blur conditionally sometimes in weird ways, so the code
shuffling fix may not look correct, but be assured it is. If the blur
happens, the new cr we return has the *default* color applied, which is
fully opaque black, which works perfectly against the A8 surface.
The fallback spinner code needs some modification, since it is
intentionally using the alpha to paint the lobes which are "in the past".
Since we shouldn't be hitting this fallback path very often, we use a
temporary group and paint it with paint_with_alpha, even though it is
slow.
Introduce a new debug category "actions" and write some messages from
GtkActionHelper about if we can find the actions or not.
We will probably soon want to add some similar messages to
GtkMenuTrackerItem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733965
X11 backend doesn't, and for good reason - main code body does not check
that the window it sets opacity for is, in fact, toplevel.
Just silently fail to do anything for non-toplevel windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733769
This leads to an assertion failure, because parent window is never registered
in the first place, widget's own GdkWindow is. But that window is unregistered
in a generic fashion by GtkWidget code, so there's nothing for us to do here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733766
Instead of slavishly following the naming spec, group the icons
into categories that are more likely to be useful for application
developers. Based on input from Allan Day and Jakup Steiner.
So far, gtk_window_set_focus just did not work when called on
a hidden window. Change it to record the desired focus widget
for hidden windows, and apply it when the window gets shown.
This is similar to how we tread other window properties that
can't be set before the window is realized, like maximized
or fullscreen.
This is related to
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734033
The previous code for computing the clip rectangle forgot to respect
the text-shadow CSS property. This is usually not very visible because
text shadows usually don't extend the ink rectangle by very much.
See attached testcase for an example.
Support environment variable GDK_WIN32_FONT_RESOLUTION that can be set to
a desired dpi (72, 96, 130, etc) to override system settings. Useful for
debugging, since changing system font scaling requires the user to log off
and log on again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734038
Although there is the "changed" signal, it is more correct to notify the
"text" property too. It can be useful for a small text view, where the
text is saved e.g. to gsettings with a binding to the text property.
The "text" property includes only the text, not child widgets or images,
so the notify signal is sent too many times (also for child widgets and
images), but it's not a big problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624791
Currently, when loading an image from a GResource or file we don't take
the scale factor of the display into consideration, and let
GtkIconHelper scale it accordingly.
While this in general works for non-scalable images, we can take
advantage of the native loader's scaling for e.g. SVG images, and load
them at the right scale factor automatically.
This is achieved by switching to a pixbuf loader instead of using the
native function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733416
Use (cairo) input shape of the window to check whether a point is inside or not
inside the window.
If it is, let the default window procedure do its thing (which seems to be
working all right in all known cases).
If it isn't, override the default window procedure and tell WM what we think.
Don't do any of the above if the window has CSD-incompatible styles (WS_BORDER
or WS_THICKFRAME).
This is a crude kind of substitute for window input shape support (which W32
does not seem to have). Still probably enough to be positive about input shapes
support.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733679
This allows subclasses to render things below and above the text
in the text view. This allows e.g. GtkSourceView to highlight the
cursor row and to render overlays for colum 80. This used to be done
by rendering before/after chaining up to the parent, but that doesn't
work anymore since the view now renders a background, and due to the
use of the pixel cache.
This reverts commit 1ac13435b7.
We want to instead replace this with special vfunc for drawing
below/above the main text so that gtksourceview can use it.
Delay the keyboard settings creation until we're delivering the key
press. This means we don't have to create the settings for a server that
sends us repeat information.
This function currently calls gdk_win32_window_shape_combine_region(),
which is wrong, because it leads to SetWindowRgn() being called with
non-NULL region, which makes W32 disable theming (particularly - decoration
theming), which makes decorations revert back to old GDI-drawn Windows 2000
variant, which looks out of place and interacts *badly* with alpha channel
(because GDI).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733671
This was silently broken - the code was just assuming that the
text cell renderer is item no. 6 on the list of all cells. That
doesn't work so well if the cell renderers are set up elsewhere
and get rearranged.
Fix this by keeping an explicit pointer to the the text cell.
For images without a concrete size but with an aspect ratio, we took the
wrong code path.
(I even copied the documentation that said "Otherwise" but didn't put an
else clause there, go me!)
The widget path code copies elements only in gtk_widget_path_copy() -
which is essentially unused - and in
gtk_widget_path_append_with_siblings() - which is used by GtkBox.
So stuff the widget we are testing in a GtkBox to reroduce the problem.
Now that widget paths are allowed to have a state, use that state when
querying style properties. This uses a fast path in gtkcssprovider.c and
that is great.
Header-bar and action-bar buttons used to be bigger then others
now everything is as big as those, maintaining two different sizes
for default widgets depending on the placement is a maintainance
nightmare and having controls the same size is good from a usability
point of view.
The toplevel_window was never set, and the only place where it
was used was causing us to hide tooltips needlessly. So removing
it is a double win.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733321
Add yet another tab for showing information about a widget that
does not quite fit into any of the other tabs (not a property,
not style information, etc...).
For now, we show the widget state, as well as the default and
focus widget for windows.
GtkArrow is deprecated and is not used internally anymore by the
menu button. Document also the fact that if no direction is specified
then the view-context-menu icon is shown.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733441
People expect to be able to call gtk_widget_show_all on the dialog
to make action widgets visible, as seen e.g. in
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733431
To keep this working, we can't always set no-show-all on the
action_box. Only set it when the action_area is not used and empty.
With this, Ctrl-Q will close the window, and Ctrl-D will
toggle the dark theme. The accelerators are currently not
shown in the (manually constructed) menus.
The accel label in menus was getting a small allocation that
caused its draw code to always omit the accelerator string.
Fix that by setting halign to fill. To keep the menu label
left-aligned, set xalign to 0 to compensate.
Make gtk_widget_path_append_for_widget() add the state flags of the
widget, too.
This enables the ability to select pseudoclasses on all elements in a
selector.
Don't take a state when constructing the CSS matcher. Instead, rely on
the newly introduced state in the widget path.
This way, the state can be queried not only on the first element, but on
all elements of the widget path.
Set the widget path state flags with the state flags of the style
context.
We do not update the state flags but replace the previous one because we
want to be able to have save()/restore() unset state flags.
Make backdrop insensitive state more similar to the focused
windows one, mostly to make dark variant more usable and
focused -> backdrop transition less distracting.
Add left/right/top/bottom style classes according to which edge(s)
of the progressbar the progress is adjacent to. Only for a fraction
of 1.0 will we set more than one edge.
xdg-shell has moved on and replaced set_margin with set_window_geometry.
To properly support set_window_geometry requires a full rewrite of how
we've been dealing with toplevel windows for now, so just don't set any
margin until we can have a proper toplevel window abstraction in GTK+.
Don't shadow existing variables. Instead of sharing the allocation and
then overwriting the width/height when convenient, declare it in the
block we use it in, as, really, the three different paths are all
extremely different, and there's no sense in sharing the variable.
We can't avoid calling set_titlebar in buildable_add_child, since
GtkBuilder assumes that it can e.g. call grab_default at the end,
which only works if the widget is inside a toplevel at that point.
Instead, drop the titlebar and clean up priv->headerbar in constructed
if we find that we don't want a headerbar.
find_by_log_attrs() can return true only in this case:
return moved && !gtk_text_iter_is_end (arg_iter);
So if the iter moved (i.e. something has been found), but is the end
iter, find_by_log_attrs() returns false.
Now the same checks are made in find_visible_by_log_attrs(). The public
functions using find_visible_by_log_attrs() say in their documentation
that false is returned for the end iter, hence the check with
gtk_text_iter_is_end().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=618852
attrs[len] is the last PangoLogAttr available, at the iter position after the
last character of the line.
For a line in the middle or the start of the buffer, the '\n' is taken
into account by 'len'. For example the is_word_end is generally reached
before the '\n', not after. But for the last line in the buffer, where
there is no trailing '\n', it is important to test until attrs[len].
The bug didn't occur before because find_by_log_attrs() worked directly
on the iter passed as the function argument. But now it is no longer the
case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=618852
- Return true (found) and false (not found) explicitly.
- Set found_offset only when something has been found.
find_backward_cursor_pos_func() was a bit different, the while loop had
the condition "offset > 0" but the return was "offset >= 0". Probably a
micro-optimization, since offset == 0 is always a cursor position.
Anyway now the code is the same as the other functions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=618852
Do not work with the iter passed as the function argument. Work with
another iter, and set it back to the function argument only if something
has been found.
This fixes a few unit tests. But there are regressions for a few others.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=618852
The Adwaita icon theme ships spinners in a scalable directory
with MaxSize=32 and Scale=1. One way to make them scale up in
hi-dpi would be to add an @2 directory with MaxSize=32 and Scale=2,
but that directory would also be consulted in non hi-dpi situations
and give us an effective spinner max size of 64.
Instead, treat svg icons implicitly as hi-dpi, and scale them
up to MaxSize * 2 when in hi-dpi.
This was causing menus to show up in the wrong position in case the menu
popped up towards the top and/or left.
The change to the requisition was in error; it is the allocated size
of the menu, not the toplevel, and doesn't include the shadow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=591258
This had originally been added to Adwaita in the gnome-themes-standard
commit 7bf01517bc2 but was lost during 3.13 theme changes, causing bug
591258 to reappear.
Like the autotools builds of the introspection files, don't include gtkx.h
in the introspection prepropcessing as it should not be included by other
GTK+ headers.
We now apply the .button style class to rows that are either
activatable or selectable. Selectable rows only get the .button
if the listbox allows selection. This implies that we need to
update row styles when the selection mode changes, or when the
row gets added to a listbox.
Having an explicit property for this will make it easier
to have a hover style only for rows which are activatable
or selectable.
Rows are selectable by default, to preserve compatibility.
It's hard to figure out what the "expected_reply" means except under
close examination -- it's actually talking about whether this was a
reply to a ConfigureRequest or not. The inversion in the check doesn't
help either.
Make the code cleaner by moving it above the freeze/thaw case, and
making the check more explicit and without a confusing variable. If we
haven't sent any ConfigureRequests out, then it must be a gratuitous
ConfigureNotify.
Some windows, like GtkWindow and some other apps, set a transparent
background. The guarantee for begin_paint_region is that there should
be a full clear to the specified background color, not a composite
against what was there before.
This fixes repaint artifacts in Wayland and Weston in a better way than
76922c169f.
Slapping file:// in front of a path does not guarantee a working
uri (e.g. if you are on windows and the path looks like F:\\...).
Therefore, go back to using g_file_new_for_path if we don't have
to deal with a resource.
It turns out that activate-on-single-click interferes with the
expected multi-selection behavior. Turn it off, since there's nothing
to activate in this list, anyway.
The animated scrolling interferes with incremental validation.
As short-term solution, disable scrolling animation during
incremental validation. This is not a proper solution, but
it avoids broken behavior like scrollbars that are not reacting
to clicks. The problem was visible, e.g. in the list view
example in gtk3-demo.
The animated scrolling interferes with incremental validation.
As short-term solution, disable scrolling animation during
incremental validation. This is not a proper solution, but
it avoids broken behavior like scrollbars that are not reacting
to clicks. The problem was visible, e.g. in the list view
example in gtk3-demo.
gdk_x11_display_set_window_scale() affects the interpretation of the
Xft/DPI XSETTING - it is substituted inside GDK with the value of
Gdk/UnscaledDPI xsetting. However, this change is not propagated to
GTK+ and from GTK+ back to gdk_screen_set_resolution() until the
main loop is run.
Fix this by handling the screen resolution directly in gdk/x11.
This requires duplication of code between GDK and GTK+ since we still
have to handle DPI in GTK+ in the case that GdkSettings:gtk-xft-dpi
is set by the application.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733076
Conceptually, text handles are boxes, whose content is a 'handle',
so draw background, frame and handle. With this, and the previous
commit, the cursor-handle theming in Adwaita now works as intended.
The text handles reuse the style context from their parent widget,
and just add .cursor-handle. That means that the more specific
entry selectors override the .cursor-handle theming unless we
select for .entry.cursor-handle. We also need to work harder to
keep the .entry styling from drawing decorations around the outlines.
The listbox code relies on the container focus adjustment handling
to scroll the cursor row on screen. But GtkContainer has no idea
about row headers, so ensure that we scroll the header on screen too.
Use gtk_text_iter_set_line_offset (&tmp_iter, 0) instead of
gtk_text_iter_get_line(). The difference should not be big. In the first
case the line doesn't need to be traversed thanks to the offset 0. For
get_line(), the btree must be traversed.
A temporary iter is needed to not break the behavior. But the behavior
is quite strange, the function works directly on the iter passed as an
argument to the function, even if the function returns FALSE (not
found). So maybe a later commit will fix this strange behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629129
find_by_log_attrs() was a recursive function. It is replaced by an
iteration.
The already_moved_initially parameter was TRUE only for the recursive
call, so the paramater is removed.
There is also a small cleanup of the find_visible_by_log_attrs()
(remove trailing spaces, fix indentation).
There is still a part to optimize for a later commit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629129
This is fallout from the recent dialog changes. We don't set the
headerbar as titlebar early enough anymore, so when the window title
gets set, it does not get passed on to the headerbar. So, re-set it
manually when the titlebar is put in place.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733099
This will let us theme activatable rows differently.
We also avoid emitting the ::row-activated signal for
rows that are not activatable. For compatibility reasons,
rows are activatable by default.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733112
Move the touchscreen switch to the other debug switches, and
move the hidpi spin to the other graphical controls. Since the
Visual tab is getting large, make it scroll. The General tab
is purely informational again.
Otherwise, the CSS background we draw would be clipped if the ink rect
was smaller than the allocation (a very common thing).
Broken since 37030a7710 where we clipped
to the ink rect.
The paned examples on page 2 were implicitly relying on labels
drawing unclipped. Instead of setting the view class only on the
labels, set it on the paned's instead.
The overlap was caused by using pack-end for the arrow, which
causes it to be allocated from the other end. Avoid the problem
by using pack-start for both the title and the arrow, and
reordering them according to xalign.
... so that it works with wide separators. Or rather: with separators
that don't request 1px size but any other number. Do that by making the
placeholder request the same size by indeed stuffing (hidden) separators
in it.
Some of the features we expose can be hardcoded via environment
variables. In that case, don't confuse the user by letting them
change settings that have no effect.
The displacement animation has been replaced by edge gradients, that
have a stronger color the harder overshooting is hit. This makes it
possible to remove the internal overshoot window, which was merely
used to have contents displaced when overshooting to top/left.
Overshooting to bottom/right used to cause queue_resize() to be
called on the scrolled window, this isn't necessary anymore either.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731297
There was this hack, taken verbatim from GtkCList according to the comment,
that would recursively translate the allocation during scrolling, and set
it on children widgets through the direct gtk_widget_set_allocation() setter.
Since commit 4f89eb05cf, this has caused the wrong clipping areas to children
widgets of a textview. The reasons for this seem lost in time, and the approach
seems indeed wrong for windowed widgets as the repositioning of those windows
couldn't happen.
So replace all of this with just a gtk_widget_size_allocate() call, which does
work ok for the children widgets embedded in the "multiple views" gtk demo, and
ought to work for every other widget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732900
The reparenting happening on the column header so it gets a movable
window breaks the implicit grab, so this is one situation were we
want a pointer grab, if just to replace it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732933
Code was expecting view coordinates, not widget ones, as we're
only dealing with horizontal displacements, just adding the
horizontal adjustment value suffices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732933
This saves some code and lets us reuse the color swatch styling.
Among other things, this fixes a lack of discernible border when
the selected color is very similar to the background.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680885
The recent reshuffling caused an ordering problem where we would
hide the action area before relocating the buttons to the header
bar. But hiding makes the default button loose its defaultness.
Rearrange things so that we move the buttons before hiding the
action area, and thus preserve the default.
If the drag gesture gets a GtkGesture::updated signal, the user
is directly interacting through pointer/touch with the range slider,
animating the adjustment value change in this situation can produce
perceived lag, so set the value immediately when this is happening.
Use the adjustment target value when repositioning the cursor, and remove the
checks that ensured the cursor was made onscreen immediately, as there will
be definitely a delay on animated adjustment changes.
When moving the cursor, compare current adjustment value with the post-animation
target value, in order to avoid false "keynav failed" positives as the animation
hasn't started yet, so dx/dy are still 0 at that time.
We move our menus.ui file into Gtk's namespace so that it will get
picked up. Accordingly, we no longer have to do any of the work for
ourselves...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722092
Use the new ::resource-base-path property on #GApplication to attempt to
load the menu layout of the application.
We look first at gtk/menus-appmenu.ui or gtk/menus-traditional.ui
depending on the setting of gtk_application_prefers_app_menu(). Failing
that, we fall back to the common case of gtk/menus.ui (which should
always be given). This provides a convenient way for application
authors to provide a different set of menus, depending on the desktop
environment they find themselves in.
As is the intention with other resources, if the resource base path is
unset, nothing will be loaded. Additionally, if the expected files are not
found, it is not an error -- just nothing happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722092
Move bloatpad to ./examples/bp/ so that we can start treating it as more of a
"normal" app instead of just jamming everything into a single .c file.
We don't use the name "bloatpad" for the directory in order not to
create 'git pull' pain with the probably-already-existing executable of
the same name.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722092
For the transition to work the box-shadows types in the shadow list
needs to be matched in various states so I'm using transparent shadows
istead of resetting them when not needed.
Keep Ctrol-Shift-D as a straight toggle-the-inspector keybinding,
but make Ctrl-Shift-I always bring up the inspector, and point
it at the widget under the pointer.
When clicking 'Action' in the 'Act' dialog, we mark the third
page as needing attention a second later. This unveils that we
currently don't have any theming for needs-attention in Adwaita.
The way that GtkTextView et al pop up their context menu is to first
query to see if the clipboard has some text, and if so, enable the Paste
menu item. But since the Wayland backend hasn't had the greatest
selection and clipboard code, the callback for the clipboard got dropped
on the floor.
Add some simple code to respond to the TARGETS selection.
This makes right-clicking on a GtkTextView work fine.
Resize grips were introduced for GNOME 3.0, before we had any of the
"new GNOME app" features like invisible borders and CSD. With OS X 10.6
and 10.7, Apple has replaced the classic grips in their applications
with invisible borders as well.
New GNOME app designs don't use resize grips anymore and the new
default theme for GTK+, Adwaita, disables them entirely by forcing their
width and height to 0.
They're past their time. Remove the code to support them. This can
always be reverted if some app relies on them.
The resize grip code in GTK+ likes to call gdk_window_raise a lot. The
unfortunate side effect of gdk_window_raise is that it queues an
invalidation on the entire window, even if it's already the topmost
child.
Add a return value to gdk_window_raise_internal, and only queue the
invalidation if the raise had an effect.
Otherwise, a user that calls gdk_window_resize (window, 0, 0); over and
over won't properly fizzle out, and will queue a redraw. Clipped, but
still. These redraws can be chatty on some platforms like Wayland, and
there's no good reason to not avoid them.
This was the case for resize grips.
We decided in f8412eca34 that
we still need to react to these for a11y reasons, but left
the (then) harmless property deprecation in place. Now, the
deprecation causes runtime warnings for merely reading the
property, so drop it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732667
.scrollbars-junction borders were removed by setting border-stylei: none,
it interacted (why?) with the scrollbars on sidebar, making the border
transparent seems not to have side effects there.
When showing and hiding the inspector window repeatedly without
dismissing the dialog, we were hiding the inspector, but not
the dialog, leading to a confusing user experience.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732443
Applications can call this to determine if they should an app menu.
This will be %FALSE on desktop environments that do not have an
application menu like the one in gnome-shell. It is %FALSE on Windows
and Mac OS.
Applications are completely free to totally ignore this API -- it is
only provided as a hint to help applications that may be interested in
supporting non-GNOME platforms with a more native 'look and feel'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722092
We were only setting the state transiently in ::draw, leading
to various drawing anomalies, such as labels not picking up
the appropriate color from BUTTON styles.
This is expected to happen on wayland and other platforms with no primary selection,
and just leads to the selected text being cleared after any attempt to change the
text selection itself through either mouse/keyboard.
This is expected to happen on wayland and other platforms with no primary selection,
and just leads to the selected text being cleared after any attempt to change the
text selection itself through either mouse/keyboard.
When there area explicitly added buttons in the action area,
we were trying to ensure that the action area is visible,
but failed, since we are now hiding the action_box. Fix it
by showing the action_box when things are left in the action
area.
We need to enclose paths containing $(BinDir) with double quotes as it
points to something like c:\foo\gtk+-x.yy.zz, which the copy command on
Windows does not like "+" in paths unless enclosed in quotes.
As the Visual Studio 2012/2013 are only slightly different from the Visual
Studio 2010 projects, we can provide support for them by using scripts to
copy the Visual Studio 2010 projects, and update the specific parts as
necessary.
Thus, there would be little maintenance overhead for these as only the 2010
projects need to be kept up-to-date as a result. This might change when we
do get the stack working with WinRT/Metro, but that's going to be another
totally different issue.
The stock icons are now built into the GTK+ DLL via resources, so don't
try to install the stock icons, and the icons don't reside in their former
positions anymore, causing messages indicating that the files cannot be
found.
This reverts commit 2e0ce67f8a.
Since g-i 1.40.0 we are using the .lib file(s) to determine the DLL(s) that
the introspection files should look for, instead of directly using the
DLL(s) directly, so it is no longer necessary to make copies of the GDK
.lib file to match the <namespace-name>-<namespace-version> convention when
we are building the introspection files for GdkWin32. Remove that from the
introspection build process as a result.
We don't set use-header-bar for message dialogs, since we
want the buttons in the action area, but we do want a nice
rounded csd titlebar. Add back the box that was used before
to achieve this, when appropriate.
Give GtkAboutDialog buttons in the action area instead of hard-coding
use-header-bar to TRUE. This is for environments which don't have the
Gtk/DialogsUseHeader xsetting turned on.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730893
We use gtk_adjustment_enable_animation to enable animated
updates of the adjustments. Currently, this is enabled
unconditionally, and with a duration that is hardcoded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732376
Add a private API that lets widget opt-in to animated updates of
the adjustment value. When enabled, all calls to
gtk_adjustment_set_value will smoothly transition from the old
value to the new value, using a fixed easing function and a
configurable duration. The animation is tied to the frame clock
of the widget.
By implementing this in GtkAdjustment, we can enable animation
for both scrollbars and keybindings, which are often implemented
in the child widget of the scrolled window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732376
This makes it possible to look up icons in resources using
the icon theme api, and should be used as a replacement
for installing icons below $pkgdatadir/icons and adding
that location to the search path.
Make icon lookup from resources work without the extra hicolor
component in the path. It is redundant, since we always treat
builtin icons as part of hicolor anyway.
Otherwise, we get every icon twice. To switch between symbolic
and non-symbolic icons, this css fragment comes in handy:
* { -gtk-icon-style: symbolic; }
Grabbing on a non-toplevel might not do what we want it to do, since it
will go on the focused widget, not the grabbed widget. Since we don't
focus the widget before clicking on it, that means that putting the
focus somewhere else and then clicking on the accelerator editor will
freeze the app. Additionally, since it's a global system grab that can't
be exited except by a key press that we won't ever get, it effectively
locks up your system as well unless you know how to break the grab or
kill the app. Ouch.
Since doing a device grab on a non-toplevel is generally considered a
bad idea, just don't do it. Use a GtkInvisible and take a grab on that
instead.
When validating the style context, we are copying the animations
from one StyleValues instance to another, and cancel the old ones.
It turns out that sometimes the old and the new StyleValues are
the same, and in this case, we end up cancelling the animations
for good.
One case where breakage from this was observed is that the spinners
in gtk3-widget-factory stop spinning when you open and close a modal
dialog on page 2. This depends a bit on the window manager; the problem
can only be seen if opening the dialog causes a transition to backdrop.
This changes the calculation of activity mode progress in the
same way as was done in GtkProgressBar a while ago, and make it
smooth, using a tick callback.
We want to stop people from using configure events
entirely. GtkDrawingArea synthesizes a configure event, but we can just
make the only user of this functionality stop it, and correct the
documentation to not mention it.
GtkCheckButton sets a different initial value for this property without
actually changing the declared default, and then relies on change notification
to update other properties (such as xalign). This, combined with glades
insistance on putting default values into ui files creates a situation
where we can't remove the redundant notification for ::draw-indicator
without causing lots of checkboxes to suddenly have centered labels.
This was seen in gnome-terminal, evolution, and other applications.
Therefore, keep the extra notification for now. This can be revisited
when we clean up the button hierarchy.
Instead of code that internally does weird things, use the FLAT style
class if has-frame is FALSE and remove it otherwise.
Based on a patch by Benjamin Otte.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732256
fixup entry
This commit makes button always draw background and frame.
Buttons with relief none get a new style class, FLAT, which
allows themes to style these buttons as they like.
We also (finally) mark GTK_RELIEF_HALF as deprecated. It
has never done anything different from GTK_RELIEF_NORMAL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732256
Translate shadow != None into the FRAME style class.
This doesn't change the style classes used for drawing,
it only sets the style class permanently instead of
saving and restoring in draw().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732256
Translate shadow != None into the FRAME style class.
This doesn't change the style classes used for drawing,
it only sets the style class permanently instead of
saving and restoring in draw().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732256
Since we have a paint clock, we shouldn't be sending out EXPOSE events
for OR windows inside the ALLOCATE cycle. The idea here was that we
would have to wait for a map to get an OR window to paint to, but since
then this has been abstracted away inside GDK and the paint clock.
We already update the grip position in _gtk_window_set_allocation, which
is done through the size_allocate above. Receiving a ConfigureNotify
also won't ever change a grip's visibility, so there's no point in
refreshing it.
We want to stop people from using configure events
entirely. GtkDrawingArea synthesizes a configure event, but we can just
make the only user of this functionality stop it, and correct the
documentation to not mention it.
The template documentation is lacking inlined examples on how to use the
templates API, like binding children and callbacks. This makes looking
for best practices a bit harder than it ought to be, for a feature this
useful.
These non-standard icons were dropped from Adwaita. Eventually,
the icon-browser code should be changed to show all standard
icons + whatever is actually in the icon theme, instead of
hardcoding a list of non-standard names.
If the event triggers GtkGesture::begin, and the handler ends up resetting
the gesture (say, due to taking a grab somewhere else within the handler),
still take the event as "managed", as it actually triggered recognition,
even if just to end abruptly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731711
Prevent a segfault in unknown circumstances, and break the ignore
deprecations wrapper out from the if statement so that we don't
cover too much ground by accident.
This reverts commit b875572f2a.
Apps like Abiword, gnumeric and gnome-chess, and toolkits like
ClutterGTK were all using this for various purposes, and this made them
break. Bring back this feature for now.
It still won't work under Wayland.
Apps had quite a bit of difficulty getting used to the new rules.
While we weren't expecting anything too deadly, it seemed that
gnumeric and Abiword both used gdk_cairo_create like this.
If a window both has an impl and its impl_window is of type offscreen,
that must mean that it is the offscreen window, and the impl window is
itself. We can reduce the indirection here and make it more clear.
This functionality is only exercised by gnome-shell, currently.
Therefore, forgetting to copy a field here means an instant
gnome-shell crash :-(. More tests needed.
Recent changes made it a breaking mistake to install symbolic icons
of the wrong size into a theme directory, or into the legacy unthemed
icon location.
Since this change affects many apps, do the extra work to keep these
icons working, but emit warnings, in the hope that this will lead to
cleaning up the mess over time.
The -gtk-icontheme() function not have any automatism for
symbolic or rtl variants built-in, instead, we expect the theme
to use selectors to provide the right icon for each situation.
The recent icon theme scaling changes make the code more
sensitive to mis-sized icons (e.g. application icons in
the app chooser). A single row whose size gets blown out
of proportion by a big icon is never wanted in a list.
We can avoid this situation by telling GtkIconHelper to
force-scale the pixbuf to the requested size.
When force_scale_pixbuf is set, the icon helper will scale the
icon to the requested size (either the pixel size, or the resolved
icon size), so we can just as well instruct the icon theme code
to do the scaling for us.
Reuse the scale information that we have from loading icons
normally, when loading a symbolic icon, so that we apply the
same size constraints.
This commit assumes that svgs have the nominal size of the
directory they are in, which will be true for all current
symbolic icons.
Previously, we were taking thresholds and min/max sizes into
account when choosing the best theme dir, but when it came
to loading the icon, we always scaled icons from scalable
directories all the way, ignoring the min/max size limits.
This commit changes things around so that we now load icons
in Threshold directories at their nominal size, and scale
icons in Scalable directories only up to the specified limits.
To override this and keep the previous behaviour of scaling
all the way to the desired size, use the GTK_ICON_THEME_FORCE_SIZE
flag.
Since the Win32 code never actually called InvalidateRgn or used the
Win32 update area at all, that meant the only thing that could possibly
invalidate the window was the Win32 window manager as part of scrolling
or resizing, which would also send it a WM_PAINT message.
But the WM_PAINT handling called BeginPaint / EndPaint, which clears the
update area completely! We also draw out-of-band, not directly when
handling WM_PAINT, so there's no way that the update area inside the
Win32 WM would match our local one.
There is no possible way that this queue_antiexpose implementation could
do anything. Remove it.
We removed the parameter from callers and from the implementation, but
not from the signature up top. I didn't notice because the branch I was
working on removed the signature entirely.
This code is only called with the current paint region as its argument.
Instead of having to copy it and do a no-op intersect against itself,
just use the current paint directly.
There's nothing better we can do for this case, now that we always
redirect drawing to a temporary pixmap. Maybe since this is already
X11-specific code, we should just do everything with Xlib directly.
cairo_surface_create_for_rectangle takes a ref on the parent surface,
so we need to drop ours.
Rename get_window_surface to ref_window_surface to make the code more
clear and to stop this error from happening again.
Previously, each begin_paint_region added to a stack of current paints,
and when end_paint was called, the paint was popped off of the stack and
the surface was composited into the parent paint surface.
However, the code was broken in the case of a backend like Wayland which
didn't keep track of nested calls and simply wiped and returned the
native impl backing surface every time.
Since this feature is flat out unused by GTK+ and we don't want to
really support tricksy things like these for other clients, just remove
the feature. If somebody does call begin_paint_region more than once,
warn and return without doing anything.
Traditionally, the way painting was done in GTK+ was with the
"expose-event" handler, where you'd use GDK methods to do drawing on
your surface. In GTK+ 2.24, we added cairo support with gdk_cairo_create,
so you could paint your graphics with cairo.
Since then, we've added client-side windows, double buffering, the paint
clock, and various other enhancements, and the modern way to do drawing
is to connect to the "draw" signal on GtkWidget, which hands you a
cairo_t. To do double-buffering, the cairo_t we hand you is actually on
a secret surface, not the actual backing store of the window, and when
the draw handler completes we blit it into the main backing store
atomically.
The code to do this is with the APIs gdk_window_begin_paint_region,
which creates the temporary surface, and gdk_window_end_paint which
blits it back into the backing store. GTK+'s implementation of the
"draw" signal uses these APIs.
We've always sort-of supported people calling gdk_cairo_create
"outside" of a begin_paint / end_paint like old times, but then you're
not getting the benefit of double-buffering, and it's harder for GDK to
optimize.
Additionally, newer backends like Mir and Wayland can't actually support
this model, since they're based on double-buffering and swapping buffers
at various points in time. If we hand you a random cairo_t, we have no
idea when is a good time to swap.
Remove support for this.
This is technically a GDK API break: a warning is added in cases where
gdk_cairo_create is called outside of a paint cycle, and the returned
surface is a dummy that won't ever be composited back onto the main
surface. Testing with complex applications like Ardour didn't produce
any warnings.
gtk_widget_set_double_buffered is now deprecated, and we don't support
non-double-buffered widgets. This means that under normal circumstances,
paints are never outside of a begin_paint / end_paint sequence, which
natively-double-buffered backends like Wayland can't possibly support.
Weston releases buffers almost immediately after they're done, which
means that GTK+ doesn't use a temporary surface and instead paints
directly onto the SHM backing store that Weston will use.
Normally, after painting to the temporary surface, GTK+ *replaces*
the existing backing surface with CAIRO_OPERATOR_SOURCE. However,
if we immediately paint to the backing surface, it might have junk
from the last paint in it. So clear out the backing surface whenever
somebody calls begin_paint_region().
Maybe we should just always use the temporary surface like the X11
codepath, since that prevents us from having to do weird things like
this, but oh well.
Add /org/gtk/libgtk/icons as a resource path, and ensure
that we always parse an index.theme file for hicolor which
makes the builtin icons available as part of the hicolor theme.
We add a new API, gtk_icon_theme_add_resource_path, which
can be used to add resource path as a base location for
icon theme content, similar to gtk_icon_theme_append_search_path.
We're going to require a complete icon theme, and we have
a test that checks for all the icons we use, so there is
no need to include all these fallback icons.
Regions are done in a very non-css way. They don't fit the DOM in that
they don't integrate into the CSS tree and they have very weird matching
behavior in selectors.
So I'm deprecating them now. GtkNotebook and GtkTreeview will continue
to use them and as long as they do, we can't remove the code for it.
But once those are ported it might be safe to remove the code as it will
clean up lots of places in the code by quite a bit.
wl_surfaces can't switch roles, so destroying the xdg_surface but not
the wl_surface means that we could get an error when trying to re-map
the surface.
We could fix this by not destroying the xdg resource and only do it at
finalization time, but it's just as easy to just create a new wl_surface.
Since the xdg roles are a special case of the surface, some compositors
like Weston destroy them automatically when the wl_surface is destroyed.
Thus, we need to destroy these first.
The Wayland compositor is completely allowed to send us configure
events for the same size, and this validly happens if we're changing
states. Fizzle these out.
The rubberband rendering code was assuming that we just have
a 1-pixel border and the rest of the rubberband is uniform.
That is not a safe assumption to make with css-styled
rubberbands, so remove it.
The rubberband rendering code was assuming that we just have
a 1-pixel border and the rest of the rubberband is uniform.
That is not a safe assumption to make with css-styled
rubberbands, so remove it.
Paradoxically, we were loading svgs at the nominal size when
FORCE_SIZE is specified, while scaling them exactly when it
isn't.
../build/win32/vs10/gtk.vcxproj
When we switched the default for gtk-update-icon-cache to
not include image data, we should have thought about the
builtin icons. For them, we rely on image data being included.
This made the notify test fail in gnome-continuous, where we
build from git and always regenerate the builtin cache.
This pushes the initialization of is_svg to an earlier point
when the GtkIconInfo is created. This is needed because an icon
info doesn't necessarily always have a filename that we can later
extract the suffix from. For instance, builtin icons have NULL
filename.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721895
Copy the icons in stock_icons accordingly, so that the built-in icons can
be found by GTK, as it seems that not all of them are built into
gtkbuiltincache.h.
We want to have the "-gtk-" prefix for our custom CSS properties. But
we also want to parse names starting with a "-" as style properties.
So make sure that "-gtk-" is treated like a normal property and we emit
errors when somebody uses it wrong.
This is to catch errors with people typing
-gtk-iconsource: none;
instead of the correct
-gtk-icon-source: none;
We want to make sure that the submenu action is changed back to FALSE
_after_ the menu item has been activated. This prevents the menu
teardown handler from deleting the menu item before it can be activated.
Unfortunately, GtkMenuShell emits "hide" before the item activation.
This is probably done to prevent the application from doing things like
showing dialogs when the menu is still holding the grab.
In the case where we are doing an activate, set a boolean flag on each
of the open menus (following the parent stack) indicating that we'll be
emitting another signal soon (selection done). If that flag is set, we
defer the setting of the submenu action until we receive the second
signal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729820
That test is not working anymore by design since commit 57c4f01e.
It was introduced pre-3.0.0 in commit 12d6b588 and the feature was never
utilized. So it seems safe to just remove the test.
When duplicating the icon_info, we forgot to set is_svg. This meant that
any application that used gtk_icon_info_load_icon_async wouldn't have
is_svg set properly.
This fixes blurry icons in the gnome-shell app picker.
TextView border windows are internal windows used to draw on the gutter
of the textview (e.g. line numbers). The test uses the gmodule hook to
programmatically draw on the border-windows at each side of the textview
and compares the result with 3x3 grid of labels.
add a reftest that checks GtkTextView text margin property comparing
with the normal margin added to the widget (they are the same when there
is nothing drawn in the gutter like line numbers etc).
Previously GtkMenuTracker tried to access "gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_visible",
but the correct getter is "_gtk_menu_tracker_item_is_visible". This commit
corrects this reference
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731430
Since large images are in the icon cache, and apps don't tend to use that
many icons anymore, simply don't include image data and instead make apps
load files from disk. Additionally, since they're stored in GdkPixbuf data,
that means that we have to first convert them either to a cairo_surface_t,
which requires converting pixel data to be premulitplied, or an OpenGL
texture, which requires a whole GPU upload anyway.
So, even with the icon cache, the goal of icons through zero-copy, mmap()'d
data from disk just isn't doable with the icon cache format we have. The
icon cache on my disk is nearing 100MB, since we include a bunch of
high-resolution application icons, that I doubt would be used by apps at all.
Removing this inefficient pixel data makes memory usage for all applications
go down, with no speed loss.
The icon cache also, however, has an index of what icons are in each folder,
which prevents a readdir() and allows GTK+ to know what icon is where without
having to do a bunch of stat(); calls. Keeping this data is good for GTK+,
so we should still keep the index.
It doesn't make sense to remove any code for mapping pixel data from the icon
cache. There's a plan in the works to have a symbolic icon cache that does
pixel math on 16x16 icons to prevent slow SVG rendering. 16x16 pixels are
fairly small, and such images are flat colors, which should compress easily,
so the icon cache would be worthwhile here. So let's keep the code around
in preparation for that case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721895
This changes makes svg icons go through the same scale calculation
code as png icons. As a consequence, an svg that is put into the
32x32 directory will actually be loaded at size 32, even if it
gets requested at a bigger size. This will let us avoid giant
spinners.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731658
Having the same, usable, default appearance acroll platforms
trumps having a more-or-less working native theme. The default
will be Adwaita on all platforms. The native ms-windows theme
is of course still available.
Making gtk.gresource.xml generated was causing a problem for
srcdir!=builddir builds from git. Builds from tarballs are
not affected, because the tarball contains the generated file.
The former can be called individually on each sequence, and the latter will
always call the former on all currently active sequences, so only implementing
resetting on cancel() works for both cases. Also, chain up on subclasses
implementing cancel.
This fixes clicking on nautilus' file list after popping up a menu, as broken
grabs are one of those situations where sequences get cancelled individually,
the "current button" wasn't properly reset, and further clicks with button != 3
were ignored.
This used to be done before the gestures port, and was removed
accidentally, so keep the motion_notify_event handler just for
this, and fallback to having those events handled by gestures
too.
This way plain clicks can be handled in gtkmain through the usual delivery mechanism,
and get possibly handled too by widgets holding a GTK+ grab. If window dragging is to
be started, the sequence will be claimed (and a grab will happen afterwards), notifying
properly the grabbing widget that event delivery was interrupted.
This makes it possible to dismiss popovers by clicking on window headerbars, while
still making it possible to drag the window with the popover opened.
Weston numbers its touch sequences ids starting from 0, thus simply
setting the GtkEvents touch.sequence to the touch id value typically
causes gdk_event_get_event_sequence to return NULL. Unfortunately this
confuses other parts of GDK.
As both weston & mutter keep the sequence id between 0..max_dev_touches
-1 simply use + 1 to keep the id > 0. While this isn't entirely correct
(compositor could send -1 as the touch id), this keeps the touch id in
gtk tied to the touch id from weston which is useful for debugging. A
more thorough solution could be done when it turns out this is an issue
in practise
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731371
The non-zero default default-border was causing buttons to shrink as
the focus moves around them. Themes which want a default-border should
define it explicitly.
The code is actually prepared for that, the gesture was initially limited
to only handling GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY because it only used to handle row
activation.
This gesture acts only on events from the bin window, and checks that
either the pressed row is draggable, or the conditions for rubberband
selection apply.
A multipress gesture takes care of autosizing on double click, and
a drag gesture is used for both column dragging/resizing (only one
can happen at a time).
When placing tooltips, the csd shadow will get 'pushed up' and
may end up underneath the pointer. We don't want this to cause
the tooltip to be hidden, because that leads to flickering, so
ignore the shadow when finding the widget under the pointer.
For csd override-redirect windows, we don't set up resize handles,
but we were not ignoring the margin in all places, causing some
size calculations to go wrong.
... from per style data to only existing once per style context. This is
technically an API break because it no longer allows getting different
style properties between save()/restore() pairs, but I don't think this
was ever intended to work that way, as the style property API was to be
used and is used via gtk_widget_get_style().
And it simplifies code a lot.
We used to accept the same syntax for text-shadow and icon-shadow as
we accept for box-shadow. However, box-shadow does accept a spread and
the inset keyword while the others should not.
The signal needs to be emitted after the text insertion as at-spi gets
the text to compute the inserted text due to the AtkText::insert-text
signal not containing it.
Also adjust position to reflect changes to the offsets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731429
This is old code from dating back many years. Nowadays, we can
just use css drawing and csd windows to achieve much the same
effect.
Themes will need some adjustment for this change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731187
This commit makes it possible to use client-side decorations for
override-redirect windows by calling _gtk_window_request_csd()
before realizing the window. Since the wm won't do interactive
resizing for us in this case anyway, don't bother creating
the border windows we use for this purpose on regular toplevels.
To make this accessible to themes, we set a "csd" style class
on client-side decorated windows. With this, .window-frame.csd.menu
can be used to define the shadow for csd menus, and .menu can be
used to define a border for menus under non-composited wms.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731187
This tests just a few basic things for now. Mainly, that we don't
emit redundant notifications for enum, flags, int and boolean
properties. It also checks that we do emit the expected notifications
when the value actually changes. This is checked for string, double
and float properties as well.
There is a large number of exceptions in the test, and a lot more
checks that could be done. One class of exceptions is all the places
where we have -set booleans to go along with another property. We
should have a dedicated test for these pairs. Another class of
exceptions is where naked objects created by g_object_new () just
don't have the full functionality - e.g. a tree selection without
a tree view does not work very well. We set up the instance object
better for these situations.
A few properties here are special, and can't benefit from it:
those which are just shorthands, like ::margin and ::expand,
and those that have explicit -set properties, like::hexpand
and ::vexpand.
This one is a little tricky, since we override this property
in many places, and you cannot add flags when overriding. So,
all places where this is overridden will have to make sure to
notify explicitly.
When we expanded the GtkLicense enumeration in 3.12, we forgot
to update the limit check in gtk_about_dialog_set_license_type.
Caught by testing property notification for enum properties.
The reftest is testing "transparent" works as expected by drawing a
purple background once with purple and once with transparent and
expecting the same result. This works fine unless anti-aliasing happens
at rounded corners. The overdraw of the 2nd background changes the
antialiased pixels.
Fix this by explicitly setting the border radius to 0.
Also reindent the file to make it more readable.
The a11y headers are now listed with the main Makefile.am of GTK, and
GDK introduced deprecated headers, so we need to account for them for the
build of the introspection files.
Currently, due to the way that Visual Studio 2010+ projects are handled,
the "install" project does not re-build upon changes to the sources, as it
does not believe that its dependencies have changed, although the changed
sources are automatically recompiled. This means that if a part or more
of the solution does not build, or if the sources need some other fixes
or enhancements, the up-to-date build is not copied automatically, which
can be misleading.
Improve on the situation by forcing the "install" project to trigger its
rebuild, so that the updated binaries can be copied. This does trigger an
MSBuild warning, but having that warning is way better than not having an
up-to-date build, especially during testing and development.
Otherwise, it is pretty hard to keep track of what
classes are missing from the list. As a consequence,
several of the existing classes were missing. Add those
at the same time.
We were applying response based heuristics, even if the button
is explicitly put in the headerbar. That broke button placement
in some epiphany dialogs, such as the Cookies one. Therefore,
restrict the heuristics to action widgets that are added through
gtk_widget_add_action_widget() or <child type="action">, where it
is not possible to specify placement explicitly.
There are plans to add session-dependent defaults to GSettings
(based on the newly standardized XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP); until
then, the WM uses a different schema for its button-layout
setting in classic mode. So for the time being, do the same
and pick the alternative schema when XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP
indicates that we are in a classic session.
(It's not pretty, but hopefully won't be with us for too long ...)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731273
Pick up the setting from the org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences schema
if available. It is slightly more involved than other settings, as
the actual button names used in the schema differ from the ones we
use, so we need an additional translation step.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731273
When combining action child type with <action-widgets> to assign
response ids, we were not properly updating buttons that ended up
getting added to the headerbar before they have a response id.
Fix this by reapplying the headerbar button setup after parsing
<action-widgets>, and make sure to also update the suggested-action
style class.
If called when already popped down, warnings would be issued due
to priv->grab_pointer being unexpectedly NULL, this would happen
in regular operation when selecting items in appears-as-list mode.
So both add a NULL check for priv->grab_pointer, and bail out early
if the popup window is already hidden.
GtkKineticScrolling implements the actual physics laws for friction
and springs. When created, position/velocity/boundaries/constants are
given, so at every gtk_kinetic_scrolling_tick() it returns the current
position, and whether the system is in rest.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729608
A multipress gesture takes care of link handling, and char/word/all
selection mode on selectable labels. A drag gesture is used for both
text selection and DnD checks on selectable labels.
A multipress gesture takes care of clicks, and where those happened.
If the click is meant to move the slider while pressed, the drag gesture
takes over, dragging the slider while active.
Widgets becoming insensitive won't receive further events, but there
could be chances the controllers don't get properly notified and reset
in those situations.
The signal handler for the visibility of menu items changing had the
wrong signature, resulting in the GParamSpec from the notify signal
being treated as a boolean (which was always true). This resulted in
items being added over and over and never being removed.
Fix that...
Since commit 872fbfac the GtkWindowGroup was split out from the GtkWindow
sources, so include gtkwindowgroup.h to avoid C4013 warnings/errors
(implicit declaration of ...) on gtk_window_group_add_window().
We were setting the next-tab properly, but were trying to
read it off the wrong object. Now, going from a cell renderer
attribute mapping to the model, or from an action-name to the
action actually works.
The touch_event handler was missing those when emulating pointer events
for the widgets that get GDK_TOUCH_MASK set, but have no specialized
touch handlers.
This code is a product of early stages in the gestures branch, where
capturing would have an effect outside grab boundaries. But this isn't
really the case, so every gesture outside the grab scope must be reset
to avoid keeping stale data.
This tests both a sequence being claimed early to be then denied
(and handled deeper in propagation chain), and a sequence being
claimed late in the capture phase (and thus being cancelled deeper
in the propagation chain)
Before this change, a sequence being claimed deep in the event propagation
chain would make the sequence go denied on every ancestor, regardless of
previous state.
To make things more consistent, only deny the sequence if it was previously
claimed, so the behavior is the same for gesture groups within the widget
than for those outside the widget.
The gestures testsuite has been updated to reflect this new behavior.
It might happen that a gesture claims a sequence before any other gesture
in its group even handled a single event from that sequence. In that case,
ensure the state is set accordingly right when the sequence is handled in
those.
The "group" gesture testcase has been updated to observe this behavior.
The CSS editor was feeling a little sluggish, because it was
reparsing and reapplying the CSS on every keystroke. Add a small
delay, to make this feel smoother.
Like the GDK and GTK portions, use autotools scripts to generate the
complete projects for gtk-inspector as sources there seem to change from
time to time.
It might be so that this, like the a11y sources, will be referenced from
the main Makefile.am of GTK directly, but just do this so that the
projects can build properly.
This test check that resizing the window when expanding
the expander yields the same end result as having the
expander expanded to begin with. The test uses the inhibit
mechanism introduced in the previous commit.
This adds an inhibit api that code from the reftest module
can use to delay the taking of the snapshot. Also refactor
the code in gtk-reftest to use the inhibit mechanism for
its own delaying of the snapshot until after the first
expose.
Every button press/release event reaching the the multipress gesture in GtkWindow
and happening in the "title" region must be handled, regardless of the event widget.
Children there wanting the event(s) for themselves are (and were always) expected
to stop event propagation.
So the only place to check for the event widget's "window-dragging" style property
is the "content" region, which matches the pre-gestures behavior.
This fixes some issues with sequences being mistakenly claimed (and events not
propagated further) on situations it shouldn't.
The multipress gesture must react to either direct events on the
GtkWindow (special cased through _gtk_widget_check_handle_wm_event),
or bubbled events from child widgets. Ensure bubbled events go
through the gesture, those are fed manually to make sure events are
only handled once, in either one or other place. The implicit grab
will ensure that doesn't change mid-action.
Otherwise the event is possibly handled, but still propagated further anyway.
Ensure the event is consumed by claiming the current sequence on the
GtkGestureMultiPress::pressed handler.
::row-activated only used to be triggered by GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY, so make
the multipress gesture handling this now to be only triggered by that same
button.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731020
This gesture was only meant to react on GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY (either
through real pointer events, or implicitly assumed from touch events),
as it used to behave before gestures. Otherwise the gtk_drag_begin*()
call assumes being triggered by button 1, and the drag misbehaves
because that button isn't really in the state mask.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731016
When going from attribute mapping to model, it makes most sense
to go directly to the data tab, and when going from an action
name to the owner, we want to show the actions tab. Make it so.
This reftest makes use of the new feature to add signal handlers.
It adds a libreftest.so module containing all the code for the reftests.
When adding a test named reftest.ui, please keep code contained in a
source file names reftest.c and add that file to Makefile.am.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730833
When connecting signal names, gtk-reftest now allows you to use a colon
in the signal handler name like so:
module:function_name
where module is a module loaded from the same directory (or the .libs
subdirectory for compatibility with uninstalled libtool) as the running
test and the function is resolved in that module. Of course, normal
function names work as before.
The extra condition here that caused the current child to
not redraw during reordering was introduced in f383e1f1
during the port to ::draw, but was not explained in the
commit message, and removing it has no obvious negative
effect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730767
Just calling get_type() does not ensure that the signals, properties
and everything else gets set up properly. Ensure it is, by calling
g_type_class_ref() before using the type. This fixes the testcase
added in the previous commit.
Those might trigger the destruction of some widget that would dispose the
event controller while the event is still being handled, so keep an extra
ref on the controller during event processing.
Without this information introspection-based consumers don't realize
they can include context information, but instead think that they
receive an extra gpointer argument (which they don't know how to
handle).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730745
This will hopefully help resolve the circular dependency between
libgtk linking against inspector/libgtkinspector and inspector/
needing extract-strings from gtk/.
I didn't preserve the EXEEXT decorations in this operation -
automake gave me stern warnings about it, so I just dropped them
all. Somebody who cross-builds GTK+ will have to reconstruct this.
This prevents some of our generic object implementation tests
from working with gesture objects. Instead, add g_return_if_fail
checks in all the gesture constructors.
Mainly doing s/TARGET/BUBBLE/ on the fully ported widgets, but GtkTreeView
where the double click handler has moved to GTK_PHASE_TARGET so it runs
parallelly to the still existing event handlers.
Previously, there would be globally just a capture and a bubble phase,
with the event just going down the hierarchy once, and the up once.
GTK_PHASE_TARGET actually meaning "run within event handlers", so in
a hierarchy of 3 widgets, emission would be:
Capture(C)
Capture(B)
Capture(A)
Target(A) (if event handlers allow)
Bubble(A)
Target(B) (if event handlers allow)
Bubble(B)
Target(C) (if event handlers allow)
Bubble(C)
This commit changes this behavior and uses GTK_PHASE_TARGET in a less
misleading way, running only on the widget that was meant to receive
the event. And GTK_PHASE_BUBBLE has taken over the execution place of
GTK_PHASE_TARGET, so the emission remains:
Capture(C)
Capture(B)
Capture(A)
Target(A)
Bubble(A) (if event handlers allow)
Bubble(B) (...)
Bubble(C) (...)
As it was, GTK_PHASE_BUBBLE was useful for running event controllers
paralelly to event handlers, without modifying a single line in those.
For those mixed scenarios, Any of the other phases will have to be
used at discretion, or the event handlers eventually changed to chain
up and let the default event handlers in GtkWidget to be run.
The events to those are fed outside the regular event propagation scheme,
through _gtk_window_check_handle_wm_event(), so set the controller to
GTK_PHASE_NONE so events aren't processed first manually, and then
automatically.
Event controllers now auto-attach, and the GtkCapturePhase only determines
when are events dispatched, but all controllers are managed by the widget wrt
grabs.
All callers have been updated.
Go back to respecting GtkMisc::xpad/ypad. Not doing so breaks
the misc-alignment reftest. As long as we still derive from
GtkMisc, we may as well do this.
The icontheme lookup code has a special-case that prefers builtin icons
if the theme name is "hicolor". This is problematic for our reftests,
which run in a barebones environment with not settings.
Drop the ref on the action muxer in finalize, and also make sure
shutdown() tears down the muxer setup done in startup().
When GtkApplication adds itself to a muxer, it causes the muxer to take
a ref on the GtkApplication. This has to be undone in shutdown() to make
sure the GtkApplication doesn't end up holding a ref on itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730383
And handle the fact that drawing bounds are now handled by this API and
the corresponding gtk_widget_get_clip().
Also add _gtk_widget_supports_clip() function to check if a widget has
been ported to the new world.
Now that labels and images no longer use x/yalign in their code,
we need to make gtk_misc_set_alignment set the h/valign for these
widgets, to keep it stumbling along until its final demise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730613
Those get in the middle more than help on these widgets, the widget
is already packed with clickable areas and having handles (and their
invisible clickable area around) hovering above don't help, plus the
purpose in most likely numeric values is a bit doubtful.
All touch events are either consumed by the up/down panels, or
the swipe gesture, all GtkEntry handling of touch events on the text
window is avoided, so handles to not appear anymore.
the "bubble" phase used to run before event handlers before GTK_PHASE_TARGET
was added, in order to keep phases in the expected order, move GTK_PHASE_BUBBLE
to be run (still invariably) after event handlers.
The only behavioral change should be wrt widgets wanting mixed event handler/
gesture handling, they could previously attach the gesture to the bubble phase
and check for gtk_gesture_is_active() in the event handler to bail out, they'll
have to use GTK_PHASE_CAPTURE for that purpose from now on.
The handle is still centered horizontally, but the extra vertical
space wasn't taken into account, leading to misplacing the dragging
point (and the handle) during motion events.
GtkPaned may just capture pointer events because the child widget
doesn't happen to have GDK_TOUCH_MASK set, resort to checking the
device in that case.
Dragging is all handled by a GtkGesturePan now, matching the
paned orientation.
On touch events, a wider area is listened for, so touch events
don't need to be as accurate to initiate dragging, if no dragging
is truly initiated in this case, events are just forwarded for
child widgets to handle.
A pan gesture is used to handle switch dragging, which is only triggered
by horizontal panning movements. A multipress gesture handles the cases
where clicking without dragging happens, just toggling the switch.
A pan gesture is optionally attached if there is only one scrolling direction, the pan
gesture orientation is changed so movements tangential to the scroll direction get
scrolling cancelled (The pan gesture is automatically denied when that happens, and
that state change spreads to the others gestures in the group). If the pan direction
happens in the expected directions, no cancellation happens, and scrolling eventually
takes place.
Multiple calls are supposedly allowed to change the phase (although
unlikely to happen), so remove the g_return_if_fail() checking whether
the controller was already added.
Presses alternatively show and dismiss the popover, the popover is still
always shown invariably after any dragging happens (either text selection,
or dragging a text handle)
Presses alternatively show and dismiss the popover, the popover is still
always shown invariably after any dragging happens (either text selection,
or dragging a text handle)
Similarly to GtkTextView, a GtkGestureMultiPress gesture handles
button/touch presses to initiate one selection mode or other, and
a GtkGestureDrag is used to handle text selection and DnD checks.
The code from button press/release, motion, and grab_notify handlers
has been shuffled into the actions triggered by those gestures.
A GtkGestureDrag is used for color selection, removing also the
need to track the pointer state in widget data. The GDK grab performed
just to set the crosshair cursor has been replaced by a call
to gdk_window_set_device_cursor(), which will be unset if the
drag operation is finished, or cancelled due to the implicit grab
being broken.
When the pointer cursor is updated on CSW, lookup for either a device
cursor, or a global one. It would previously lookup for windows with
a global cursor, and then check if it had a device cursor, which would
skip windows with only device cursors set, and unexpectedly set the
global cursor.
All "exclusive" gestures listen for either pointer events, or
"pointer emulating" touch events, so only a single sequence at
a time can make these run.
This signal will always be paired with a ::pressed signal, unless
the sequence is cancelled, or the controller is reset. the n_press
argument in the signal always matches the ::press signal one, even
if GtkGestureMultiPress::stopped was emitted in between.
The current sequence (as per gtk_gesture_single_get_current_sequence)
is used to find out the coordinates. And only emit ::pressed if the
gesture began through a GDK_BUTTON_PRESS/TOUCH_BEGIN (eg. not due to
an extra touch being lifted)
Just call the controllers on that phase if the default widget handlers
are run.
For compatibility reasons, in the touch event handler, let the pointer
emulating touch be transformed to a pointer event as usual, in order to
have widget handlers a chance to run at all. If they have to be managed
by a controller in that phase, it'll have to be through the default pointer
event handlers.
This phase is meant to run in the default widget handlers, as opposed
to externally as in the bubble/capture phase. This will be most usually
the expected phase for every controller replacing code in event handlers
in GTK+, just so invocation and triggering order is kept unaltered.
That may happen separately from grab-notify, and also due to external
reasons, so ensure all sequences are cancelled if a grab is taken
in some GdkWindows that would obscure events on the controller.
We can end up with _gtk_widget_remove_controller getting called
while we are iterating over the list in _gtk_widget_run_controllers.
To avoid trouble, only mark the event controller as dead by
setting data->controller to NULL, and defer the actual freeing
and list manipulation to the loop in _gtk_widget_run_controllers.
Update other places that operate on controllers to handle
data->controller being NULL.
Make it really sure that the event is only emitted after every gesture
that consumed the button press is done with the sequence.
The event must only be emulated if a gesture in the capture phase happened
to consume the event, be cancelled, and
Sequences may be cancelled within the ::sequence-state-changed handler, which
would change the points hashtable as it's being iterated in this function. So
iterate over a list of sequences and let the hashtable change freely.
The propagation phase property/methods in GtkEventController are gone,
This is now set directly on the GtkWidget add/remove controller API,
which has been made private.
The only public bit now are the new functions gtk_gesture_attach() and
gtk_gesture_detach() that will use the private API underneath.
All callers have been updated.
Within a widget, if a gesture accepts a sequence, it would previously
cancel every other gesture that not in the same group. Change this to
only cancelling gestures that previously claimed the gesture, and let
gestures with state=NONE for that sequence remain like that.
This enables late recognition of gestures, even on the presence of
another gesture group that was more eager at claiming the gesture.
One usecase is user-defined panning gestures on scrolledwindows,
if ::capture-button-press is TRUE (eg. the default), the gesture is
claimed early in order to consume the button press, but that would
tipically make every other gesture group deny the sequence. With
this change, the pan gesture can keep state=NONE, and later claim
the sequence for itself if the panning gesture is recognized.
Also, do not propagate state=DENIED to every gesture in the widget,
that was unintended.
If no match is found with the gesture widget when poking the event
window parents, bail out safely instead of falling in an infinite
loop. This was seen on Mutter.
The utility of those signals is somewhat dubious now that there is
gtk_gesture_group(), so make that the only way to coordinate gestures.
The cooperation model offered by gtk_gesture_group() is flexible
enough,
Listen for notify::sequence-state-changed on the controller, so the
only way to manipulate a sequence state are gtk_gesture_set_sequence_state()
and gtk_gesture_set_state().
Also, make use of gesture groups, so the sequence state is set at once
on all gestures pertaining to a single group. Within a widget, if a sequence
is claimed on one group, it is made to be denied on every other group.
This API eliminates the need for overriding
GtkWidget::sequence-state-changed virtually everywhere. Grouped
gestures share common states for a same GdkEventSequence, so the
state of sequences stay in sync across those.
A multipress gesture is used to control all this, replacing
single/double click custom code, and triggering window dragging
when the multipress is stopped, yet active (ie. the sequence remains
pressed).
This gesture is used by gtk_drag_source_set() to determine
whether dragging moved past the threshold. The gesture events
are handled via the usual ::event callbacks, so we don't mess
up with callers expecting that to happen in a signal handler.
If the sequence gets claimed somewhere else in the event widget
stack, the DnD gesture will be cancelled.
With gtk_gesture_get_point() returning events in
gtk_event_controller_get_widget() coordinates, we no longer need
to compensate for the overshoot here.
GtkEventController may be certainly useful to keep event
handling self-contained in other places than gestures, but
the current widget API is highly related to gestures, so
just using GtkGesture as the argument there will be quite
more convenient. The other places where GtkEventController
make sense as a base object will better provide their own
hooks.
Gestures attached with this phase will expect callers to have it
receive events through gtk_event_controller_handle_event(), but
the gesture will still be notified of sequence state changes,
grabs, etc...
Translate events meant for other widgets/windows, so gtk_gesture_get_point()
always returns coordinates based on the gtk_event_controller_get_widget()
allocation.
If a gesture has denied sequences (so those are presumably handled above/below
the widget), it shouldn't attempt to handle extra touches, even if those end
up matching the expected number of touches.
Gestures should always receive one of such events in order to be activated,
and the propagation mechanism will ensure they do so if the original event
was caught up the widget hierarchy by another gesture that is now declining
the sequence.
If the captured touch begin or button press event have been consumed
for the given sequence, propagate it upwards if the sequence goes from
claimed to denied, so the widgets on the way to the event widget receive
a coherent event stream now that they're going to receive events.
The policy of sequence states has been made tighter on GtkGesture,
so gestures can never return to a "none" state, nor get out of a
"denied" state, a "claimed" sequence can go "denied" though.
The helper API at the widget level will first emit
GtkWidget::sequence-state-changed on the called widget, and then
notify through the same signal to every other widget in the captured
event chain. So the effect of that signal is twofold, on one hand
it lets the original widget set the state on its attached controllers,
and on the other hand it lets the other widgets freely adapt to the
sequence state changing elsewhere in the event widget chain.
By default, that signal updates every controller on the first usecase,
and propagates the default gesture policy to every other widget in the
chain on the second. This means that, by default:
1) Sequences start out on the "none" state, and get propagated through
all the event widget chain.
2) If a widget in the chain denies the sequence, all other widgets are
unaffected.
3) If a widget in the chain claims the sequence, then:
3.1) Every widget below the claiming widget (ie. towards the event widget)
will get the sequence cancelled.
3.2) Every widget above the claiming widget that had the sequence as "none"
will remain as such, if it was claimed it will go denied, but that should
rarely happen.
This behavior can be tweaked through the GtkWidget::sequence-state-changed and
GtkGesture::event-handled vmethods, although this should be very rarely done.
The kinetic scrolling feature is now implemented using a
GtkGestureDrag and a GtkGestureSwipe, plus a GtkGestureLongPress
in order to denying the sequence, so it is possibly handled
underneath.
A controller can be optionally hooked on the capture or the bubble
phase, so the controller will automatically receive and handle events
as they arrive without further interaction.
Now, all captured events run from the toplevel to the deepmost widget,
regardless of GTK+ grabs. This makes captured events more useful to
event controllers if used together in the hierarchy with widgets doing
old fashioned event handling and GTK+ grabs.
This gesture handles any number of clicks, ensuring multiple presses
stay within thresholds and timeouts. When anything of that happens,
the gesture is reset and press count starts from 1 again.
Optionally, the gesture can be given a rectangle, used in in presses > 1
to ensure the consecutive presses happen on user imposed areas.
This gesture implementation recognices swipes on any direction.
The "swipe" signal has the X/Y velocity vector components, so
those can be used for direction guessing and velocity thresholds.
This test just checks that all the icon names that GTK uses are present
in the default icon theme.
As icon names are not checked programmatically and we do not want to run
into missing-icon icons in the code, this test seems necessary.
For now, it's just a stub that tests stock icons.
The change to take out unneeded NULL checks requires some care
at startup: we check both adjustments when any of them changes;
we need to do those checks in the same order in which we create
the scrollbars, otherwise we'll try to get the adjustment of
the vscrollbar when we just set the up the hscrollbars' adjustment.
When the color editor is visible, there is no way for the
application to know about the changes that are happening.
Fix this by emitting property notification for the "rgba"
property.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708037
This avoids a bunch of policy problems with deciding how to lay
out the window menu under different WMs.
For now, we use the special event _GTK_SHOW_WINDOW_MENU, but we
hope to have this standardized in wm-spec quite soon, as KDE wants
it as well.
To make the icontheme test run successfully when installed,
we need to use the correct test-framework-provided location,
and we need to install the test theme without stripping its
subdirectory structure.
We see an active link when creating the menu, but by the time
the menuitem is activated, we've received a leave notify that
makes the label clear its active link. Instead, give the
menuitems a direct reference to the link that is active when
the menu is created.
Problem pointed out by Tim Baedert
We know the objects in a size group are always widgets, so we
can avoid hard-to-track down problems with weak references by
just cleaning up when the object gets destroyed. There is still
a chance that we show a widget as part of the group after it
has been removed, but size groups simply have no signals that
would let us avoid that.
Add a tab that shows size groups of a widget. The properties
of the size group are available here, as well as the widgets
that are part of the size group. We highlight the widgets in
the application when their row in the inspector is hovered.
In contrast to the flashing, where we blink the widget a
few times, this is explicitly turned on and off.
It will be used for indicating widgets that are part of
a size group, in the next commit.
The focus widget might be unset, just to be set again on a widget inside
the popover. Have the popover wait till the focus is actually moved outside
before dismissing.
Move away from cell editing, and use a popover instead. This makes
it easier to e.g. use a color chooser - there's just not enough room
in a cell for many things.
Much of this code is adapted from tests/prop-editor.c.
The child properties in GtkAssistant are somewhat broken, since
they are not on direct children - but that is no reason to crash
if somebody does ask for child properties of direct children.
When a model is sortable, but the the column is not currently used
for sorting, we want to reserve the space for showing the sort
indicator. But we currently set the icon to 'missing-image', which
is not great to show all over the place. So, just set the opacity
to 0.
With the keybinding, it is possible that users may trigger the
inspector unintentionally. Show a dialog that informs them about
whats going on and gives them a chance to back out.
The warning dialog can be bypassed with the
org.gtk.Settings.Debug inspector-warning setting.
All the globals we care about should appear before doing anything
else, up-front, so a single round-trip after adding the registry
should be more than enough.
Update visual.c to use Windows themes rather than the stock Raleigh theme,
and avoid hardcoding data paths for Windows (and Mac). As the dlfcn.h
functions are only used when Python is enabled, move its inclusion there[*].
Also ensure that variables are declared on the top of the block.
[*] Python support Windows needs to be investigated, as POSIX signal
handling is used there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730236
Add project files to build the GtkInspector sources, as gtk-inspector is a
required portion for GTK+. "Install" the
org.gtk.Settings.Debug.gschema.xml gsettings schema file as well, so that
people can trigger GtkInspector as they develop and test their GTK+-based
programs.
Since you can't take grabs on unmapped windows, GtkMenu takes a grab on
the menu in a convoluted way: it first grabs another window, shows the
menu window, and then transfers the grab over to the GtkMenu widget.
For normal menubars, this is perfectly fine, as the first window it grabs
is our toplevel, and that gets picked up in our transient path. For
GtkMenuButton or other spurious uses of gtk_menu_popup, it creates a new
temporary input-only window which it takes the grab on, known as the "grab
transfer window". Since this window isn't a transient-for of our new menu
widget window, the grab isn't noticed when we go to show it, and thus the
menu ends up as a new toplevel.
Add a special hack to GtkMenu and the Wayland backend which lets us notice
this "grab transfer window", and include it in our grab finding path.
It's sort of terrible to have to hack up the widgets instead of just the
backend, but the alternative would be an entirely new window type which is
managed correctly by GDK. I don't want to write that.
The entire UI is constructed with templates, so the wrapper
constructors are never called, except for gtk_inspector_window_new,
which gets called from the GTK+ code.
Show the actions that are added to GtkApplication and
GtkApplicationWindows, as well as action groups that are
inserted elsewhere with gtk_widget_insert_action_group.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730095
Moving the inspector into libgtk lets use reuse internals without
having to add public API for everything or inventing awkward private
call conventions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730095
Add two new icon lookup flags, GTK_ICON_LOOKUP_DIR_LTR and _RTL,
which tell GtkIconTheme to look for icon variants which have a
-ltr or -rtl suffix. GtkIconHelper adds these lookup flags when
looking up icons.
Note that due to the way this overlaps with symbolic icon lookup,
directional variants of symbolic icons must be called -symbolic-rtl, not
-rtl-symbolic.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729980
Provide API to query the matrix instead of API that applies the matrix
directly. This makes the API more flexible.
See the commits implementing shadows.
This test is a bit brittle because it doesn't properly rely on CSS
properties but needs to use widget style properties to turn of extra
sizing from widgets.
It might break in the future when porting widgets to draw properly.
When forcing regular or symbolic icons, fall back to the default
specified icons. This ensures that when no symbolic icon is present, an
icon will still appear - the regular one.
GTK_ICON_LOOKUP_FORCE_REGULAR and GTK_ICON_LOOKUP_FORCE_SYMBOLIC can be
used to force a regular or symbolic icon to be loaded, even if the icon
names specify a different version.
This is intended to support the CSS property -gtk-icon-style.
The values can be:
"requested" - the style as requested
"regular" - use a regular full-color icon
"symbolic" - use a symbolic icon
The property defaults to "requested", so no changes should be seen
unless CSS overrides it.
It is also inherited, so that using this CSS
.toolbar { -gtk-icon-style: symbolic; }
is enough to force the whole toolbar to use symbolic icons.
The value implements the 2D parts of CSS transforms. See
http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-transforms/
For the specification.
All it does is give us an expressive way to define Cairo matrices (and
their transforms)
This allows using icons from the icontheme as images in CSS. The
reasoning is that this allows to give the image control about how it's
scaled (by using the icon theme's scaling method. So we can get crisp
images at different resolutions.
Replace them by GtkWidget h/valign. The only remaining uses
are those where a size group is involved; they can't be replaced
until GtkLabel stops looking at GtkMisc alignment for size
allocation.
Wayland's mechanism tells us all of our new states, rather than
telling us which ones were added and removed. Add a new private
interface so that we can simply specify the new states as a
bitfield directly rather than having to compute which ones were
added and removed.
Make the relative_to widget the parent for a GtkPopover's
GtkActionGroup. This, for example, makes the menu model of a
GtkMenuButton find action groups attached to the button.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729915
Returns NULL in case of a duplicated tag name in the tag table. It is
still a programmer error to duplicate a name, but if it happens the
behavior is a little nicer (and hopefully doesn't crash).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=614717
The user doesn't need to check the return value, because if FALSE is
returned it is a programmer error. But it permits a nicer behavior for
gtk_text_buffer_create_tag() in case of failure.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=614717
Instead of manually doing it everywhere, just call set_object (NULL)
from the selection_changed handler. Fix all the set_object() functions
to deal with NULL.
Nice to have a quick way of testing this everywhere.
The implementation is not quite perfect: due to the way text
direction works in GTK+, widgets that appear in the inspector
window while we are flipped will inherit the flipped direction
instead of the fixed direction of the inspector window.
The widget-tree was not safe against object just going away.
Fix this by using row references instead of iters where
necessary, and by using weak refs to clean up when objects
die.
It does not really add much over the sensitive/insensitive rendering
that is already indicating which widget is mapped. At the same time,
set up signal handlers so we can update that when the widget changes.
Not only was the property list connecting to notify::bla for
each property individually, it was also leaking the signal
handlers when the selected object changed. Fix both.
When showing the objects in the tree, use the property name
as the name thats shown in the list. This makes it easier
to differentiate e.g. hadjustment and vadjustment in a
GtkScrolledWindow.
Add a tab that shows available signals for each object. For now,
we only show if each signal has handlers connected or now. More
functionality will be added later.
The list of toplevels also includes hidden combobox popups
and the like, so we have to be a little careful. To ensure
the right choice, we now pick the first visible window
that is not a GtkInspectorWindow.
Instead, we want to let GTK+ open a window whose life-cycle
it can control. We just ensure that all our types are registered
when the module is loaded, so GTK+ can find them.
The positioning of the highlight window was not reliable; instead
just use a after-handler for the draw signal, in the same way that
drag highlights are drawn by GTK+ itself.
And copy the code for grabbing a widget via pointer from testgtk;
that code is known to work.
Quoting the spec:
If the cascaded value of a property is the unset keyword,
then if it is an inherited property, this is treated as
inherit, and if it is not, this is treated as initial.
Spec in question:
http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-cascade/
Also use unset in the reset-to-defaults.css we use to reset css in
reftests.
In the GTK_IMAGE_ICON_NAME case, instead of keeping around the icon_name,
create a GThemedIcon and use that. This way, we can reuse the code paths
for the GTK_IMAGE_GICON case.
We have to use the internal accessor to the visible flag, instead of
calling gtk_widget_set_visible(), from within the show() and hide()
implementations - otherwise we'll recurse.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721069
We now use a narrower trough and paint the optional text
beside the trough instead of inside it. This makes for a much
cleaner appearance and more readable text.
The documentation for GtkFileChooser references the button which allows
the user to create new folders as the New Folder button, although the
label actually says Create Folder.
Update the documentation to say Create Folder instead of New Folder.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729475
This small refactor makes the code more readable when adding more
transition types that have left, right, up, and down variations.
It adds inline boolean functions to tell information about transition
types (avoiding long if clauses) and changes long chains of "else if
(transition_type == ...)" into switch statements. Both are only likely
to get longer as more transition types are added.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726676
Added GTK_BUILDER_ERROR_INVALID_PROPERTY and GTK_BUILDER_ERROR_INVALID_SIGNAL
error codes
ObjectInfo: Use a GType instead of a char * for the class name.
PropertyInfo: Use a GParamSpec instead of a char * for the property name.
SignalInfo: Use signal id and detail quark instead of a detailed signal name string.
This not only save us a few malloc in each case but lets us simplify the code
and report unknown properties and signals as a parsing error instead of just
printing a warning.
Fixed memory leaks in parse_object(), parse_template() and parse_signal() functions.
Parameters value where strduped before the last posible return and not freed.
...unless they are labeled.
To implement this, keep track of the nesting depth of section boxes,
starting from 0 for the toplevel and the submenu ones, and only
insert unlabeled separators if the depth is at most 1.
When the adjustment changes (due to e.g. a mouse wheel scroll) we update
the prelight. The part that un-prelights the previous prelight was
broken by the the pixel cache, as it called update_prelight in the
middle of the scrolling operation, where the windows were moved
but the tree_view->priv->dy was not changed to the new value. This
caused the updates to the pixel cache to go to the wrong place.
We fix this by fully doing the scroll before we update_prelight().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728284
GtkMenuTrackerItem::visible was removed a few commits ago.
It is not necessary to bind visible anyway, since the menu
tracker will insert and remove items as their visibility
changes.
Rendering doesn't do much about clipping drawing operations to the window shape,
although invalidation applies the shape to every window, leaving possibly trails
of "overrendered" content. So ensure the shape portions get invalidated too when
the window is moved/resized.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729095
Now that popovers may snap to any side with enough space, make enough
room on every side when requesting size, so that there's no w/h differences
at the time of setting the child allocation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729097
When activating an item using mnemonics GtkRecentChooserMenu does not select a
item before calling the item-activated signal thus
gtk_recent_chooser_get_current_uri() always return the last selected item
instead of the activated one.
Fixes Bug 495105 "Open recent file keyboard shortcuts do not work correctly"
The real reason for the problem that the just reverted change
was supposed to address is that testfilechooser uses show_all
to tease out places where composite dialogs don't properly
protect their internals against unintended showing. Well,
lets do that, then.
In iconic mode, model buttons will be styled like regular icon
buttons, preferring to show only the icon if one is set, falling
back to showing the label.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727477
When rendering iconic sections, we want to use icons for verbs,
and we want to differentiate these in the menu model, to keep
the icon attribute reserved for nouns.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727477
Instead of using GtkMenuTracker to flatten the sections into a single
linear menu, handle the sections ourselves by nesting boxes.
Each section gets an inner and outer box. The inner box numbers its
children in the way that the tracker instructs. The outer box
containes the inner box and the separator, if appropriate.
Having the two separate boxes will allow us to change the orientation of
the inner box if we want to pack widgets horizontally within a section.
Add the possibility of a GtkMenuTracker that performs no section
merging. Instead, it will report an item in the form of a separator for
subsections. It is then possible to get a separate tracker for the
subsection contents by using gtk_menu_tracker_new_for_item_link().
We have some API in GtkMenuTracker and GtkMenuTrackerItem that is
specifically designed to deal with submenus.
Generalise these APIs to take a 'link_name' parameter that we always
give as G_MENU_SUBMENU for now. In the future, this will allow creating
trackers for other types of links, such as sections.
Make this a property just like all of the other things and make the APIs
for accessing it non-private (but add a note that they are not intended
to be used).
This is not a great name to use in themes; instead, add the
menuitem class, so themes can use .button.menuitem for styles
that are specific to menuitem-like buttons.
We were not really handling all cases correctly here. We want
the suggested-action style class to only be set on headerbar
buttons, and it should be set on the default widget. Ensure
this by syncing the suggested-action style class with the
default style class. As a side-effect, setting has-default
on an action widget in ui files will now have the expected
effect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728846
GtkDialog has convenience API for adding action widgets that are
either placed in the action area or the headerbar. This commit
makes the same functionality available from GtkBuilder ui files
by specifying "action" as the child type.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728846
When constructing from a menu model, use popovers by default.
This change has the potential to cause some size problems for
applications with big gear menus, so we're doing it early in
the cycle to uncover and fix those.
It may happen that the received clipboard data is empty, but
if it's of type image/bmp, gtk+ will crash:
gdk_property_change: 00030AD4 GDK_SELECTION image/bmp REPLACE 8*0 bits:
... delayed rendering
gdk_selection_send_notify_for_display: 00030AD4 CLIPBOARD image/bmp
GDK_SELECTION (no-op)
_gdk_win32_selection_convert_to_dib: 1252003C image/bmp
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x749a9f40 in msvcrt!memmove () from C:\Windows\syswow64\msvcrt.dll
Thread 1 (Thread 2248.0x1b34):
target=0xc07b) at gdkselection-win32.c:1292
at gdkevents-win32.c:3498
wparam=8, lparam=0) at gdkevents-win32.c:232
message=773, wparam=8, lparam=0)
at gdkevents-win32.c:263
C:\Windows\syswow64\user32.dll
C:\Users\rugoosse\AppData\Local\virt-viewer\bin\libpangocairo-1.0-0.dll
wparam=0, lparam=-1687549457)
at gdkevents-win32.c:248
C:\Users\rugoosse\AppData\Local\virt-viewer\bin\libpangocairo-1.0-0.dll
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728745
According to what i've been told, modelbuttons are supposed to look
flat, like menu items.
This is basically an improved copy of the menuitem styles.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728810
This prevents checkmarks in modelbuttons from being styled as buttons
(apparently, modelbuttons apply "focused" to their children, unlike
normal buttons).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728808
The events are routed through a new slave device with type
GDK_SOURCE_TOUCHSCREEN, minimal tracking of touches is done
to keep the state for each of those.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728426
The master pointer/keyboard pair should never disappear or be
inconsistent. The seat capabilities are now reflected through
slave devices, those may come and go freely as the seat
capabilities change. This also enables adding further capabilities
to handle eg. touch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728426
When making the entire window a drop target, as file-roller does,
we don't want to draw the drag highlight around the CSD window
decorations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728526
Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
This should allow theme developers to use a very small width for
the resize handle, but still let users easily move the handle by
defining a wider resize area.
The additional resize area follows the "margin" style property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728073
Binding an object sensitive property with a check button active property will look like this:
<object class="GtkButton" id="button">
<property name="sensitive" bind-source="checkbutton" bind-property="active"/>
</object>
This is based on the original work done by Denis Washington for his GSoC project
This closes Bug 654417 "[GSoC] Add <binding> element to GtkBuilder syntax"
Get monitor on which the most of the window is located (nearest monitor if
window is not on screen), get its work area (area not occupied by taskbar or
any other bars) and use that for maxsize.
Previous default of 30000 meant that windows maximized onto full screen,
even covering the area where taskbar is.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726592
When selecting a swatch in a GtkColorChooserWidget the previously
selected swatch and the currently selected swatch are not redrawn. This
can leave the old swatch still marked with a checkbox even though a new
swatch has been selected.
Redraw the swatches after changing the selection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727487
The documentation for the GtkWidget::size-allocate signal is missing the
description of the "allocation" parameter. Add the missing description
to the parameter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726179
Use GSlice to allocate all types of segments:
- char
- toggle
- mark
- pixbuf
- child widget
Char segments are a bit more complicated because the length of the text
is determined at run time and stored in the 'byte_count' field. If the
text is long, GSlice will call the system malloc() anyway, so it's
better to always use GSlice for GtkTextLineSegment.
Toggle segments are also freed in gtktextbtree.c, hence the function
_gtk_toggle_segment_free() (for a later commit it would be nice to
rename those functions with the _gtk_text prefix).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727908
There is a possible confusion with the sentence:
"@iter is inside a natural-language word"
The iter should be viewed here as the pointed character (i.e. on the
right of the iter), not as a position between two characters.
Instead of improving the documentation, another solution would have been
to change the implementation so it is interpreted as an iter position
inside a word, i.e. between two characters that are part of a
natural-language word. But maybe some applications rely on the current
implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727908
- As the tests show, some of the functions have a strange and
inconsistent behavior for corner cases.
- Rename test_full_buffer() -> test_search_full_buffer() because
textiter.c is used for other GtkTextIter unit tests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727908
We are using the actionbar in the middle of the window, which
is not really what it is designed for. To avoid the unfinished
appearance on the sides, move it into the frame that we have
around the stack below. This fixes the sides, but gives the top
a double stroke. Too bad.
The text view is resizing several times after the window is mapped.
Not setting a hscrollbar-policy of never avoids that, and a
scrollbar still doesn't appear. Magic
The incremental loading was broken by GtkIconHelper - queuing a
redraw is no longer sufficient to cause GtkImage to redraw with
the new pixbuf contents.
Pointed out by Jasper St. Pierre.
The keynav dialog is transient to the example window; since the
example window is now modal, we need to make the keynav dialog
modal as well, so it can receive input.
Problem pointed out by Jasper St. Pierre.
We are keeping references on the widget we are handling as we
are iterating up, but that doesn't protect us against the entire
tree being axed from inside gtk_widget_handle_event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727644
Commit d05191a010 change the height
requisition to be completely dependent on the PangoLayout, but that
breaks when the font has special characters with different metrics.
Use the maximum between the two instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728054
The use of border-width-set here was an attempt to differentiate
between explicitly set (from code / ui files) border width from
theme changes. But when we are calling gtk_window_set_border_width
to apply the theme value, the -set property gets set, and all
further theme changes are ignored. This has the effect of only
letting the default value of these properties get applied.
Fix this by unsetting border-width-set after applying theme values.
Because GTK does not invalidate windows that aren't mapped, we cannot
update the pixel cache when the window it handles isn't mapped. So we
add API to call when GDK windows get mapped/unmapped.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726475
This commit makes it possible for GtkSwitch to indicate when
the underlying state changes with a delay, causing the switch
to temporarily go 'out of sync' with the underlying change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725648
This commit adds API for dealing with multi-selection. It is identical
to the flow box API for this purpose. The implementation is still limited
to single-selection, and will be updated in subsequent commits.
It can happen that we get a size request when the main widget
is still NULL. Currently we hit a critical in this case, and
stumble on. We can do better.
Opening a new tab in nautilus is hitting this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727643
We are getting bug reports from people who are irritated that
dialogs now have 'double headers' under any wm but gnome-shell.
As an example, xfwm4 seems to do ok with csd windows, and
on balance it seems better to have some invisible border issues
than to have double headers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727414
Add support to build the introspection files for GdkWin32, as done recently
in the autotools builds and clean up the NMake Makefile for building the
introspection files a bit.
For some reason, gdk_win32_display_manager_get_type() was not exported in
gdk-3.0.lib, force its export, so that the GdkWin32-3.0.gir can be built
properly with the Visual C++ builds. This is a known problem that some
symbols in static libraries that are linked into a DLL in Visual C++, even
if they were marked with __declspec(dllexport) via _GDK_EXTERN.
* Makes listbox background white instead of default grey
* Uses gradients or W32 theme parts to draw sexy selection/prelight
rectangle instead of changing selected/prelighted item background
* Removes blanket button text color, allowing buttons to inherit
text color from their parents. Non-normal buttons DO get specific
text color though. This partially fixes text color propagation from
listbox rows to their children.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727244
The arrow is part of the background image drawn by the theme, don't draw
GTK's own arrow. This also applies to non-entry comboboxes.
On XP the arrow-and-nothing-else part does not exist (W32 XP theme draws a
white rectangle) and has to be subtituted for a simple dropdown button even
for non-entry comboboxes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727035
It seems that the dec-button no longer has a "bottom" selector-thingy to
select for. Use "last-child" instead.
Use .vertical to style vertical instance differently, as last-child/first-child
meaning is inverted there.
Increase (towards 0) margins a bit, to avoid clipping the pre-light rectangle.
Use dir(rtl) selector to style horizontal instance differently for RTL locales,
where first-child is "inc".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727022
...on Windows 8+ and when the system setting for non-Unicode programs do
not match the language version of Windows by falling back to using Pango.
This ensures that the correct font is used during these scenarios, so that
we minimize the risk of seeing garbled characters for texts that the system
code page does not support due to system peculiarties. There might be a
way to support gtk-font-name handling using the native Windows APIs
directly on Windows 8+, but that needs to be investigated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726298
GTK_TREE_VIEW_TIME_MS_PER_IDLE is currently 30 milliseconds, meaning
that validate_rows will validate rows up until all the validations have
taken over 30 msecs. So it's likely to block redrawing via the clock
frame update mechanism, as that tops at 16.66 milliseconds per frame
(1/60th of a second).
Stop validating rows if we've spent more than 3/5 of our allotted budget
for inter-frame processing, so as to avoid blocking.
In the future, we would probably want to calculate how long we would
have left until the next frame, especially if higher priority idles
and timeouts have already consumed a portion of that allotted time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726871
A "typo" led to using a wrong GtkTreePath when converting the path of the
virtual root to check the ancestors, which would lead to either no checks being
performed, or maybe segfaulting when using an invalid path as result.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722058
Signed-off-by: Olivier Brunel <jjk@jjacky.com>
These AtkRelation types are added automatically for widgets with a label
specified (e.g. via gtk_label_set_mnemonic_widget, gtk_frame_set_label,
and gtk_frame_set_label_widget). When such specification is absent, the
accessible relationship must be manually set.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726996
Commit faba7df4fe changed the logic in
apply_emblems() so that GtkIconInfo->emblems_applied would be set to
TRUE even in case there was no emblem info available, which confuses the
theme cache.
This commit changes the logic back, so that NULL is returned from
apply_emblems_to_pixbuf() when there are no emblems available, fixing
the bug.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726830
The compositing that is meant here is really specific to the
X11 Composite extension, and does not apply to Wayland.
This is very rarely used functionality anyway, and none of
the other backends support it.
This way, we don't create lots of cell accessibles when creating the
first one (because surely one is the parent/child of another who again
is a parent/child of another who again....)
Nobody was reffing those related object in the first place and that
was causing random crashes.
And if somebody had reffed those related objects, they'd have caused
reference cycles.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726838
This fixes an issue where the theme-provided border-width prevents
dialog contents from lining up properly with the headerbar. To make
this work in message dialogs, we have to explicitly set the border-
width of the action area to 0.
In select-folder mode, we are putting the directory name into the
entry ourselves. Then the entry appends a /. If we react to this
'spontaneous' change of the entry by clearing the list selection,
this will in turn make us clear the entry. We don't want that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726855
Setting windows undecorated was broken by some of the recent
shadow width changes. We need to ensure that shadow width is
zero for undecorated windows, then things work again.
If the delete event ends up destroying the widget, unsetting
priv->delete_event_handler will happen on invalid memory, so
unset it before the widget is possibly destroyed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726825
Theoretically, we apply the shape mask client-side ourselves
with an ARGB32 pixmap and intersect it to get a union shape,
but I don't particularly care enough to write that code.
Realistic application code using bounding shapes in 2014 is
quite rare.
Widgets should only call set_realized() after having created and
registered their GDK windows. In this case, the creation of the style
context (or more exactly: figuring out the scale factor for it) requires
knowing if the widget is already realized. Which it isn't.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726717
expected a valid semicolon
sounds kinda not so great. Make it say
expected semicolon
Unless somebody can tell me the difference between valid and invalid
semicolons?
We had a margin of 30 before/after the text. Put that add around
the icon as well, and separate the icon and text by 30 pixels.
This does not affect the appearance of message dialogs without
icons.
It seems that some backends implemented get_root_origin wrong
and returned the client window coordinates, not the frame window
coordinates. Since it's possible to implement generically for all
windows, let's do that instead of having a separate impl vfunc.
Lots of code, including dragging code in GtkWindow, use these
fields. Setting them to 0 causes lots of strange and weird bugs.
Use the same "hack" from query_device_state of just using
win_x / win_y for now. We'll convert this to the proper fake root
coordinate system used by get_root_coords in the next commit.
If a textview had lateral windows that might displace the text window, the
handles and popovers would appear displaced. Those lateral windows aren't
affected by RTL/LTR settings, so just checking for left/top is ok here.
And the counterpart to unmaximize when dragging a maximized window, if
touch devices aren't going to use EWMH moveresize, having this one at least
makes things feel a bit less awkward.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709914
Sadly, EWMH moveresize mechanism can't work with touch devices for two
reasons:
1) As a mutter implementation detail, the device is queried in order
to check whether the dragging button is still pressed. Touch devices
won't report the button 1 being pressed through pointer emulation.
2) Even bypassing that check, on X11 touch events are selected prior
to sequences being started, either through XISelectEvents or
XIGrabTouchBegin, no late registering through active grabs is allowed,
as WMs do on reaction to EWMH moveresize messages.
So for the time being, make touch devices fallback on emulated window
dragging, which at least allows for moving windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709914
We want to present a clean, rounded top when there is nothing
else to show, but many dialogs in applications rely on showing
information in their title, so add a label and show the title
when it is not empty.
Add gdk_device_get_last_event_window(), and use to implement the window
tracking we need for synthesizing crossing events for sensitivity changes
and gtk grabs, rather than keeping the information in qdata and updating
it based when GTK+ gets events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726187
Stop ignoring various crossing events from grabs:
Enter events with type GRAB/GTK_GRAB/GTK_UNGRAB/STATE_CHANGED:
Ignoring these events was added as a workaround for synthesized
events not having the right coordinates (see bug 555109) but
now they do have the right coordinates. (see bug 704456)
Leave events with types types GTK_GRAB/GTK_UNGRAB:
Ignoring these events was added because since we were ignoring
the enter events as above, ignoring the leave events meant we
could lose the prelighted row in a grab-triggered leave/enter
pair. (See bug 653676. It's also now impossible to
reproduce the leave events that were reported in that bug as causing
problems.)
Leave events of type GRAB.
Ignoring these events was added without a ChangeLog entry in 2001,
possibly to keep the prelight from flashing when activating menus.
But ignoring these events could lead to stuck prelighting, and we don't
do it for any other widgets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726209
The bug this patch is fixing is that currently if you have a GtkPopover in
clicking off the popover to dismiss it on a GtkTreeView (which triggers
a synthetic enter event on the GtkTreeView) will leave the GtkTreeView
in a confused state until the user moves the mouse again.
That doesn't make sense.
And it causes issues, because when holding down the tab key, we
show/hide a lot of windows and cause a lot of map/unmap events that
stall the event pipeline.
We did not set an input shape on the window, so the region outside
the invisible border where we draw the outer edges of the shadow
were still part of the window, as far as clicks and cursors were
concerned. Fix this by setting an input shape that makes all clicks
outside of the resize borders go through to the underlying window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726125
eb1ab0dac2 removed support for authentication
based on crypt()-hashed passwords but it didn't remove the header.
Finish up with the removal.
This allows the broadway backend to build on FreeBSD (which has no
crypt.h).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726149
And let GtkPopover use it as its GtkAccessible implementation, this
accessible sets the POPUP_FOR relationship to the relative-to widget,
and keeps track of changes there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725864
As those are internal children, there's no signal that GtkWindowAccessible
could catch when those are added or removed, so make GtkWindow use the private
GtkContainerAccessible methods to add/remove the child accessible when that
happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725864
window->x / window->y are in "root window coordinates", e.g. relative
to the topmost toplevel. However, the coordinates in get_xdg_popup are
relative to the passed-in surface, so we need to do the reverse
translation here.
As discussed on desktop-devel-list [1], "There should be an intuitive,
consistent, immediate way to jump to the widgets that live in the
header bar." F10 has been suggested for this as it is already used to
active menubars.
F10 will focus the custom titlebar widget if the window has one and it
isn't already focused. If the titlebar widget doesn't exist or is
already focused then F10 focuses the menubar if there is one.
[1] https://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2014-February/msg00176.htmlhttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725141
It turns out popovers are already smart enough to cope with this
situation, so let popovers be internal children so things that rely
on gtk_container_forall(), like DnD, work without modifications.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725727
We have a hack in the XSETTINGS code to substitute gtk-xft-dpi
with gdk-unscaled-dpi unless the screen has a fixed window scale,
in which case we just use gtk-xft-dpi.
But if the screen is changed to have a fixed window scale, then
the substituted value of gdk-unscaled-dpi will stick around until
the next (coincidental) change to XSETTINGS. To fix this, force
an immediate reread of the XSETTINGS property when
gdk_x11_display_set_window_scale() is used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725754
It may be unusual, but handlers of day-selected may want to transfer
focus somewhere else, without getting it reset back right after by/to
the calendar. This makes popovers demo work on the calendar again, for
one...
Make the popover temporarily undo the GTK+ grab, so it remains modal
to its window, but does not attempt to steal focus on other non-modal
windows that get the focus.
This was most confusing with keyboard navigation, as the focus would
remain stuck on the popover, and not move to the newly focused window
after the popover was dismissed. It didn't have as much effect on
pointer operations as only the first click would be consumed in order
to hide the popover.
There are early returns in this method before the completion timeout
is set later on, so set the source to 0 to avoid trying to remove it
later again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725824
This is not necessary for the popover itself, but helps tooltips
code confine the widget lookup within the popover if the pointer
is inside it, otherwise the widget lookup may turn out wrong for
motion events, starting the tooltip widget lookup from the toplevel
window, mistakenly triggering tooltips on the natural window
descendants (ie. the widget below the popover)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724785
gnome-terminal is still using this setting, so we'll let
applications override it for another cycle. It is no longer
backed by a system-wide setting, though, and it will still
go away eventually.
This partically reverts b26c74e5da
gnome-terminal is still using this setting, so we'll let
applications override it for another cycle. It is no longer
backed by a system-wide setting, though, and it will still
go away eventually.
This partically reverts 7e3a494fac
Add documentation for GtkTreeView::move-cursor
Add links to GtkTreeModel::row-inserted and GtkTreeModel::row-deleted
in the documentation for gtk_tree_view_set_reorderable ().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725560
If we aren't using a header bar then put a fake titlebar
box on it so we can round the corners.
One of the advantages of this is so that the styling of the dialog
is completely within one theme framework. This prevents skew between
the theming expectations from the window manager and GTK+.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725345
GOBJECT_INTROSPECTION_CHECK macro can be missing if introspection
is not installed, so this way the following error is prevented:
"gtk/Makefile.am:1324: error: HAVE_INTROSPECTION does not appear
in AM_CONDITIONAL"
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723438
This is a web service provided by Google that allows people to
share their printers (https://www.google.com/cloudprint/learn/).
In addition to being able to print to printers shared on Google Cloud
Print, there is an equivalent of "Print to file" in the form of "Save to
Google Drive".
The cloudprint module uses gnome-online-accounts to obtain the OAuth 2.0
access token for the Google account.
Currently it can discover available printers, get simple details about
them such as display name and status, and submit jobs without any
special options.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723368
Restore the drawing order in GtkFixed to what it was in 3.8. With the
GDK drawing changes this will not be correct in some cases (un-windowed
children can now overlap windowed children and native children overlap
everything), but fixes Eclipse drawing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725089
The point of GdkWindowImpl::get_root_coords is to translate the passed
in coordinates against the passed-in impl window. For a child window,
in fact, window->abs_x and window->abs_y already track the child
window's coordinates against the impl window.
If we pass in a child window, and backends don't explicitly get the impl
window from it, we'll double-count the child window.
Really, we should *always* be passing impl windows to backends, and
never child windows. However, I'm a bit worried for regressions late
in the cycle if we want to fix up the rest of the callers, like
gdk_window_get_geometry, so I'm only going to touch get_root_coords
for now after careful review of all the backends.
GtkWindow calls set_shadow_width then maps the window, meaning
that we never set the margin. Save it when we set and then set
it when we create the XDG surface.
In the unlikely case that there is another GPL released in the future
it would be best if we link directly to the 3.0 version of the
license description instead of the alias to the latest
version.
Old code assumed that AT-SPI would keep track of references and
therefore tried to only hold weak references. On the other hand it also
tried to keep objects alive so it referenced objects very randomly. All
of that lead to cycles and leaking.
As AT-SPI does not keep track of objects at all, the treeview now does.
The refcounting looks as follows:
GtkTreeViewAccessible
=> creates per row/column
GtkTreeViewAccessibleCellInfo
=> which references 1
GtkCellAccessible
If there is only one cell, this accessible is a
GtkRendererCellAccessible, otherwise a GtkContainerCellAccessible is
created and that accessible holds references to the
GtkRendererCellAccessibles that are created for every cell renderer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=554618
Instead of destroying the surface in the backend if this is
unable to resize, let the core code do it, and do it properly.
Based on a patch by Benjamin Otte.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725172
GObject-Introspection was recently changed to support acquiring the name of
the DLL from a library (.lib, etc) that was passed into g-ir-scanner on
Windows, like the *nix builds, instead of directly passing in the name of
the DLL.
This updates the introspection build process, so that introspection files
for GTK+ can continue to be properly built.
2014-02-25 13:32:13 +08:00
2488 changed files with 414050 additions and 325139 deletions
cat $(top_srcdir)/build/win32/vs10/$(MSVC_SLN).sln | sed 's/11\.00/$(MSVC_FORMAT_VER)\.00/g' | sed 's/2010/$(MSVC_VER_LONG)/g' > $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs$(MSVC_VER)/$(MSVC_SLN).sln
cat $(top_srcdir)/build/win32/vs10/README.txt | sed 's/vs10/vs$(MSVC_VER)/g' | sed 's/VS10/VS$(MSVC_VER)/g' > $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs$(MSVC_VER)/README.txt
create_vcxproj:
for F in `(cd $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs10 && ls *.vcxproj)`; do \
case $$F in \
*) cat $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs10/$$F | sed 's/v100/v$(MSVC_VER)0/g' > $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs$(MSVC_VER)/$$F \
;; \
esac; \
done
create_props:
for F in `(cd $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs10 && ls *.props)`; do \
case $$F in \
*) cat $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs10/$$F | sed 's/<VSVer>10<\/VSVer>/<VSVer>$(MSVC_VER)<\/VSVer>/g' > $(top_builddir)/build/win32/vs$(MSVC_VER)/$$F \
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