gtk_widget_set_parent() will map the widget if the parent is mapped
and the widget is both visible and child-visible. As we currently
only set the child visibility after adding the child, we immediately
map all children that are added to a mapped stack, even when they
are not actually shown. Avoid this by setting the child visibility
before adding the child, so widgets are only mapped when shown.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766737
When starting a rubberband selection from an empty area, we could run
into crashes if the selection moves over the rows and then back out
to unpopulated area. Handle this case without crashing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766336
If the popover's relative-to widget is unparented/reparented, we end
up unparenting/reparenting the popover as well. In that case, at the
moment of reparenting, the widget might have been visible (and is
thus mapped again), but priv->window hasn't been set yet.
We must first set priv->window, and then call gtk_window_add_popover(),
that way gtk_popover_map() has its prerequisites straight.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766323
This only used by luck before. We are changing a property from the
::notify handler for that property. Now that GtkRevealer is notifying
the property when it stops animations on unmap, we end up in a life
lock situation where we never make it out of the notify queue.
Fix this by not restarting the animation if the widget is unmapped.
This is required for proper integration with any other library/application that
may perform wayland API calls and poll() the wayland fd from multiple threads.
Using wl_display_dispatch{_queue}() is thread-safe if not mixed with custom
poll() usage, which GSource/GMainContext does.
Essentially, the problem is that multiple threads polling and reading
the same fd is extremely racy. Use the wayland provided API for allowing
concurrent access to the wayland display fd.
See the wayland man pages for wl_display_prepare_read(),
wl_display_cancel_read() and wl_display_read_events() for more details.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763852
When we are beginning to calculate the height, if the vscrollbar_policy
is not GTK_POLICY_NEVER, and there is no min-content-height, then we
need some small non-zero value to get started. The idea is to always
ask for at least enough to fit the horizontal scrollbar.
Simply put, this should be the mirror image of the corresponding width
calculation code.
Those who got used to the buggy behaviour might notice that their
GtkScrolledWindows are not as tall as they used to be.
Fall out from 55196a705fhttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766530
Warn about the situation when we've found a resource or file path,
but gdk-pixbuf fails to give us a pixbuf. This generally means that
either pixbuf loaders are not found or the shared-mime database
is missing.
At one point, the sidebar was using gtk_treeview_set_tooltip_column,
which expects tooltips to be markup. With the listbox-based sidebar,
we don't do that anymore. So don't escape the tooltip text.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766175
Children tend to call back into the scrolled window while being removed
and that doesn't work too well if the scrolled window is destroyed
already as Christian Hergert found out.
Depending of float rounding during target calculation, the size of the
GtkRevealer can be set to zero will the animation is not finished.
If the GtkRevealer is in a GtkPaned, it will be hidden and so the animation
will be stopped before it is finished.
In this case, force the emission of the child-revealed signal to let
client code know the animation is finished.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765973
Use .marks-before/after to indicate the presence of marks.
As Lapo points out, compatibility with the previous names
is not really that important, since everything else changed
around it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766440
It turns out that it is too hard (and in some cases, impossible)
to get this information from node positioning, so bring back the
.scale-has-marks-above/below style classes on the main node.
This should allow us to fix the 'pointy sliders'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766440
The GdkDragContext should only listen to GDK_GRAB_BROKEN events sent to
its own pointer device. It turns out that the passive key grabs mistake
GDK into sending a GdkEventGrabBroken on the master keyboard, which the
DnD machinery mistakes as a signal to cancel the operation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766442
Cancelling the gesture causes the last_event pointer to become
invalid. Make a copy of the event so we can keep using it
regardless of the gesture state.
(cherry picked from commit 358eec2972)
Split out the part where we generate/update the caches for the GSchemas
and the icons, so that it is easier to ensure that things continue to
function correctly when we have GlibEtcInstallRoot != CopyDir.