We are still using a single texture for each
glyph string.
Along the way, we drop the surface from the text node
and return gsk_text_node_draw to the way it was initially,
directly drawing on the provided cairo_t.
This commit takes several steps towards rendering text
like we want to. We use cairo to create a mask surface.
In draw(), we use it to paint individual glyphs with the
text color, unless we are dealing with color glyphs,
in which case we use the surface as source. The surface
will eventually be replaced by a font atlas texture.
This commit also simplifies the text node api to just
have a single offset, which determines the left end of
the text baseline, like all our other text drawing APIs.
We temporarily drop text node serialization, since it
will have to change anyway.
This is meant to cut down build time in flatpak and similar
situations. Since it produces technically incomplete builds,
we list these options in the status output at the end of
the meson run.
This fixes the proper dependencies getting set up for generating
the shaders and only the necessary things getting rebuilt on
resources changing in gsk.
We were only selecting a section’s button if the adjustment y coord was
within its heading, so scrolling slightly into it unchecked all buttons.
This also fixes how we could end up with the first 2 selected, somehow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787172
Add integration of the libcloudproviders DBus API to the
GtkPlacesSidebar by showing name and sync status of the cloud providers.
The exported menu is rendered as a GtkPopover.
The sidebar will be updated if the list of cloudproviders changes e.g.
by adding or removing an account. If any cloud provider changes detailed
information like sync status only the individual sidebar row gets
updated.
Co-authored-by: Carlos Soriano <csoriano@gnome.org>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Boles <dboles@src.gnome.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786123
Use opacity to differentiate unselected/hovered/selected buttons. It had
assumed bg < border < fg colours, which may be false, as in Adwaita:dark
This also means we do not need to special-case for the backdrop state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786956
I see 'out of memory' errors and crashes inside libvulkan when
creating nodes that have empty bounds and end up in the fallback
paths, like a shadow around an empty text node. Prevent this
by not creating text nodes in that case.
in a specific case, which was applying .slider as a class on the parent
switch, instead of correctly selecting on its child node named slider.
This makes the border on the outside of a switch in a selected listbox
row look better in the light variant. Since the code was never removed,
it was clearly meant to work, and making it work is a clear improvement.
Using this produced warnings about the Pango syntax of <Family> <size>
being deprecated, and the size being invalid due to no unit specified.
Also, that multi-word font family presumably wouldn’t work as expected.
This reverts commit 98e3018455.
As an English-speaker, I know nothing about complex grammar, and it’s
been brought to my attention that some languages might differ in the
translation of the same command depending on where it appears.
So, I’d better assume everyone else knows better than me. Apologies!
Currently, this information is not used since cairo_show_glyphs
deals with color glyphs for us. But when we get to uploading
glyphs to a texture atlas, we will need it to do the right thing.
We don't look at individual glyphs here, but just whether the
font has the has-color flag set. In practice, all glyphs in
such a font will be color glyphs, and we can avoid loading all
the glyphs this way.
The emoji chooser gets disposed already, because it is attached
to the toplevel as a popover. Doing it again when the object data
is cleared is leading to a crash.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787103
Copy the PangoCairoRenderer into GTK+, rename it to GskPangoRenderer,
and strip it down far enough to build without private pango apis.
This means we currently don't support hexboxes or shapes.
Currently, this lives in gtk, but it might be nicer to put it
in gsk eventually.
• Use disconnect_by_data() to catch both _adjustment_changed() and now
_adjustment_value_changed(), as the latter had been missed until now.
• Also disconnect from indicator_value_changed(), which was not done in
destroy() due to indicator_reset() and remove_indicator() disagreeing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775074
Do not connect to get_settings_for_screen() if we have no screen…
Use g_signal_connect(), not connect_object(), to match how set_screen()
makes this same connection, and how finalize() already disconnects it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705640
Since the move from button-press to gesture events, Shift-clicking did
not work to start a selection (from none) or truncate an existing one.
This was due to the code being copy-pasted around and some logic being
broken in the process. This makes both of those work as they should, by
shuffling it again so the end result is the same as before. Highlights:
(1) ::button-press if extending due to a single press would call
set_positions(tmp_pos, tmp_pos), which is what made the Shift+click to
create a selection work. That was lost. Add it back to make that work.
(2) ::button-press in the “Truncate current selection” branch would not
execute all the stuff around “extend_to_left”, as that was the else
case. So, set extend_selection = FALSE so we skip over that later on.
(3) BUT! This Truncate case never fired because it was in the else
branch of if (in_selection())! Of course, it must be in the true branch.
(4) The IM context was not reset if the Shift-click occurred within an
existing selection, only if it did not. In ::button-press this was the
first thing done if extending a selection, regardless. Make it so again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780750
Themes should not enforce min sizes on blocks in continuous mode; in
this case, the filled block should be as large as it needs to be to
reflect the current value, and no larger or smaller than that. So, the
fact that the minimal size was selected on just levelbar block is wrong:
we should also require the levelbar.discrete class to apply min sizes.
The widget should enforce whatever correct minimum size results from the
above fix, by reapplying commit 78b4885fe8
Except: we should not allocate/draw the filled block if the value is 0,
as in this case, the LevelBar should be empty, not have a min-size fill.
This partially reverts commit 96062ffeae,
as it makes sense to set min sizes for discrete blocks, so keep that in.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783649
This reverts commit 8c0e5adaab.
This is actually needed since GtkHeaderBar will allocate and snapshot
widget that coun_visible_children does not consider.
Under X, we were not setting the right drag cursor initially,
because at current_action == action == 0, initially. Fix this
by explicitly using the right cursor when grabbing.
Subsurfaces don't currently work with our new rendering,
and this makes popovers unusable. We can go back to using
subsurfaces for popovers when this is fixed.
.update_position() enforces that non-Wayland platforms must position a
Popover within its parent Window. We use the allocation of the Window
to translate the position and check for overshoot on each of its sides.
Calling Widget.get_allocation() of a CSD Window includes its shadows.
But shadows were not excluded from the area in which we can position.
Thus, Popovers could get positioned in the shadow of CSD windows, where,
at least on X11, no input is received. Therefore, positioning a Popover
over a shadow meant its child widgets within that area became unusable.
Fix by calling Window.get_shadow() and including it in the overshoot on
each side. This adjusts for how the allocation includes shadows, making
overshoots with and without shadows the same. Thus, we avoid considering
shadows as viable for positioning, favouring a side where input works.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786209
This prevents the load_fonts() function from switching to the "no fonts"
page and back when the model is reloaded. Given
GtkSettings::gtk-fontconfig-timestamp is 0 on Wayland and style changes
happen often, the stack change messes up popovers and pointer focus
on the fonts treeview and test entry.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784723 introduced support for
native file chooser dialogs on macOS, but due to the use of generics in
the patch, there will be compilation errors on pre-Xcode 7 platforms,
such as Mountain Lion and Mavericks.
I strongly recommend to revert this patch when the oldest supported
macOS release is bumped to Yosemite (10.10).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785306
Instead of gtk_widget_draw'in the inspected widget inside the
magnifier's ::draw handler, just create a new GtkSnapshot and snapshot
in its snapshot handler, similar to what GtkStack is doing.
gtk_widget_draw_internal is now only used inside gtkwidget.c, so remove
the prototype from gtkwidgetprivate.h. And since all incovacations call
it with clip_to_size=TRUE, remove that parameter.
We cargo-culted this from Autotools, but GCC on Windows supports the
same __declspec syntax as MSVC. The only difference is the additional
flag needed for GCC-like compilers.
The linker on macOS does not support '=' in its command line; there's no
guarantee that we are using the correct compatibility versions compared
to the Autotools build, but for that we'll need to build GTK+ master on
macOS.
This property contains 5 integers, of which the last 2 respectively
contain the tool serial number and tool ID. We were only extracting the
first so far, but GdkDeviceTool also has API getters for the latter,
which remained 0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786400
They are not usually yellow anymore, the previous advice about how to
style them was for pre-3.20 versions, and the immediate replacement (CSS
class .tooltip) does not seem ready for primetime.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784421
Spooky action at a distance is not really allowed in Meson, so the rules
to generate the SPV files should go in their own directory.
Tested by: Rico Tzschichholz <ricotz@ubuntu.com>
The ComboBoxes were initially empty, rather than reflecting the initial
values of the properties. The CheckButtons were only correct by chance.
Fix this by setting the initial values on the widgets and binding them
to the properties using SYNC_CREATE, so the two are always synced up.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786209
No longer store variation sequences explicitly. Instead, put a 0
in the sequence where the modifiers will be inserted. This is more
compact, and it allows us to put variations directly into the
recent section.
Update the type of the recent-emoji setting to match these changes.
Add an "Insert Emoji" item to the context menu in entries.
We also add a show-emoji-icon property, which when set to
TRUE, will add an icon that can be clicked to bring up
the Emoji chooser.
When the popover is dismissed, we return the focus to
where it came from. However, by using gtk_widget_grab_focus,
we were messing up the selection if that widget happens to
be an entry. Special-case GtkEntry and use
gtk_entry_grab_focus_without_selecting to avoid this issue.
The json file is imported from the (MIT-licensed) emoji.json[0] node
module, which generates it from the emoji list published by the
Unicode Consortium.
This commit also adds a little tool to convert the data into
a compact GVariant, and the result of that conversion, which is
added to libgtk as a resource. The following commits will make use
of it.
[0] https://github.com/amio/emoji.json
We create various windows during the initial creation of display
objects, which causes some bootstrapping issues when we try to
find the default screen to get its root window. To work around this,
pass the display object into gdk_window_new.
This is not an API change, since gdk_window_new is no longer public API.
Interpret NULL as "root window" here - we only have one
screen nowadays, so there is no choice involved, and this
will let us avoid dealing with the root window in the
fontend code.
menu margins have been added has a hack to mitigate bug:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=591258 with gtk+4 this
doesn't work anymore on gtk+4, the margin should probably be moved
to the parent window node, but it's not selectable, commenting out
for now.
Since gtk+ draws more than the widget and allocates more size to it than
it knows about, this flag doesn't work anymore. Removing it (or setting
it to TRUE for widgets that used to set it to FALSE) fixes drawing
invalidation when these widgets get allocated a new size.
In gtk_container_real_set_focus_child(), we try to scroll to the
position of the new :focus-child if we have h or v adjustments.
gtk_widget_translate_coordinates() returns FALSE if neither widget is
realized or in other situations that cause output parameters x and y not
to be set. Thus, if the caller did not initialise x/y and uses them even
if the function returned FALSE, they are using uninitialised variables.
In gtk_container_real_set_focus_child(), we did not check the return
value but merrily went ahead and used x and y regardless. This is UB, as
revealed by Valgrind, as well as being pointless.
The trivial fix is to exit early if (!gtk_widget_translate_coordinates).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776909
Commit 885bcd9fe4 trampled the bit here
that is meant to translate between the nominated focus child and the
actual innermost one that is used for updating the h/v adjustments.
So, we need to save the passed focus child before diving into its
children, then translate and get allocations between them both. This
makes GTK+ 4 behave like GTK+ 3 again: instead of priv->focus_child and
focus_child, we now have focus_child and child, serving the roles of the
nominated focus child and its innermost focus child respectively.
This also ditches the unnecessary call to Widget:get_focus_child(), as
Container::set_focus_child() gets that same new child as an argument.
process-stop-symbolic is unintuitive if represented as a stop sign as in
Adwaita, and completely ambiguous if represented as a cross like the
window close button in other icon themes.
Instead, use application-x-executable, which is already used elsewhere
as a fallback if no specific icon can be found for the application.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784624
Don't beep when modifiers are released in entries.
This was an inadvertent change that snuck in with
the emoji support.
Also, don't beep while entering an emoji name.
There is entirely too much beeping here.
In GTK+ 2, the ch < 0x80 was ORd with klass->latin1_to_char, and that
was unconditionally set to TRUE in the class init function, so
effectively the ch < 0x80 never mattered before or served any purpose.
When klass->latin1_to_char was deleted from the class in commit
f760538f17, this check’s sense changed.
The resuls was that accel keyvals with gunichar value >= 0x80 stopped
being rendered as symbols, instead falling back to their keysym name.
Instead of recognisable symbols for these, we get raw, often obscure,
and untranslatable keysym names. This breaks accessibility as well as
client users who may be parsing such accels and migrating from GTK+ 2.
So, remove the < 0x80 to restore the behaviour from before said commit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783906
This commit adds some basic support for entering emoji by name
to GtkIMContextSimple. To begin an emoji sequence, use Ctrl-Shift-e
instead of Ctrl-Shift-u that is used for hex input. Otherwise, the
behavior is the same: you can can let go of the modifier keys and
end the sequence with space or enter, or hold on to the modifier
keys and end the sequence by releasing them.
Only a limited, fixed set of names is supported at this time, see
the GtkIMContextSimple docs for a full list.
• Add GtkLayout as a @See_also since it includes fixed-pos functionality
• Drop mention of the long-gone Linux framebuffer port
• Explain how to work around the problems with RTL text
Being addable to a ScrolledWindow is not interesting; now that SW
auto-adds a Viewport if needed, so can DrawingArea and any other widget.
Mention GtkFixed in case the reader just wants that bit of functionality
This adds support for the shortcut inhibitor protocol in gdk/wayland
backend.
A shortcut inhibitor request is issued from the gdk wayland backend for
both the older, deprecated API gdk_device_grab() and the new gdk seat
API gdk_seat_grab(), but only if the requested capability is for the
keyboard only.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783343
We wait for a few 100ms for rendering to settle in various WMs. So far
we only did that for windows that were controlled by the WM (aka
toplevels).
With modern compositing gnome-shell however, this now also applies to
override-redirect windows, so we now wait there, too.
This makes the reftests a lot slower, but they now actually work when
running make check in gnome-shell.
If query.return_type is not one we want, binding_compose_params() is
not called, and so params remains a NULL pointer. However, the code was
then unconditionally iterating it regardless. Don't if it is still NULL.
CID 1452218 (#1 of 1): Explicit null dereferenced (FORWARD_NULL)
15. var_deref_op: Dereferencing null pointer params.
This would only happen if the last element was deprecated, but it should
be avoided anyway.
CID 1388852 (#1 of 1): Out-of-bounds read (OVERRUN)
12. overrun-local: Overrunning array pseudo_classes of 16 32-byte
elements at element index 16 (byte offset 512) using index i + 1U (which
evaluates to 16).
This function clearly assumes the parameter children cannot be NULL, and
the call sites seem to perform enough checks to confirm this.
CID 1388869 (#1 of 1): Dereference before null check (REVERSE_INULL)
check_after_deref: Null-checking children suggests that it may be null,
but it has already been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
CID 1432024 (#1 of 1): Uninitialized scalar variable (UNINIT)
2. uninit_use_in_call: Using uninitialized value rect.x when calling
calendar_arrow_rectangle.
Add a default case to the switch which will bail out with
g_assert_not_reached(), which should reassure Coverity that the method
is always called with a valid value that is handled in the switch.
If value->values[i] is NULL, then values[i] was left uninitialised.
The code then reads each element of values[].
CID 1432029 (#1 of 1): Uninitialized pointer read (UNINIT)
11. uninit_use: Using uninitialized value values[i].
Our ::query-tooltip handler first checks whether the pointer is over any
of the icons, returning their tooltip if so, and if not chains up to
Widget::query-tooltip in order to show the text for the widget overall.
But ensure_has_tooltip(), which exists to update :has-tooltip based on
whether ::query-tooltip is needed, only set :has-tooltip to TRUE if any
icon had a tooltip, without caring whether the widget as a whole does.
That is asymmetrical and meant that if the Entry had a tooltip, but
subsequently all icons had their tooltips unset, :has-tooltip would be
set to FALSE, and hence the tooltip for the widget would become lost.
The fix is to set :has-tooltip to TRUE if the widget has a tooltip of
its own, and we only need to check the icons if that is not the case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785672
glib-mkenums is now done in Python, but since the Visual Studio build
environment (cmd.exe) does not support shebang lines, we need to call
the interpretor explicitly to run the script.
This means that we need to update on how we generate
gsk/gskenumtypes.[c|h] in our projects, as at this point GTK+-3.91.x
does not require a GLib installation that ships with the Python-fied
glib-mkenums. As a result, we adapt to this by first using Python
to call glib-mkenums. If this fails (where the output file becomes 0
in size), then we use PERL to call the glib-mkenums script. Note that
during the build this will cause a warning message to be displayed,
stating that '&' cannot be found, but due to the way Windows .bat script
are done, we need to live with that until a solution can be found on
this.
This is likely a problem that does not exist in the Meson builds, as
Meson will take care of calling the interpretor for us by looking at
the shebang lines for our case.
Also, clean up the .batin Windows batch script that is used to call
glib-mkenums by using a for loop in there.
Just to test tooltips in all cases; what was already here
should have been sufficient, but this doesn't hurt.
While here, also add some instructive placeholder text.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780938
Use conditionals to select the Python installation, so that we can stick
closer to the default Visual Studio versions used to compile each official
Python releases.
This means by default:
-2013 builds use Python 3.4.x, which is built with 2010
-2015 and 2017 builds use Python 3.6.x, which is built with 2015.
Also rename PythonPath/PythonPathX64 in the property sheets to
PythonDir/PythonDirX64 repsectively, as PythonPath is the envvar name
where additional Python modules is searched for, so we don't want to get
confused with it.
Last but not least, distinguish between the Python interpretors that are
used on x64 and x86/32-bit builds for generating the libgtk4.manifest
file and the gdbus-generated sources, for consistency reasons.
Refactor the code updating the active link under the current coordinates
into a separate function, and call it on GtkGestureMultiPress::pressed
so the link is updated on GDK_TOUCH_BEGIN. Based on a patch by
Jan-Michael Brummer <jan.brummer@tabos.org>.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776903
It is not necessary to (re)set the cursor on every crossing
event, and can probably yield the wrong results if there are
multiple master devices involved. Just set it on init(), and
let the inner machinery update the cursor whenever necessary.
This patch is an adaption of commit 0daf79676 in gtk-3-22, the
side effects are not as bad here because the cursor was already
being set on the widget specifically instead of the parent
widget's, but there's still some nonetheless (plus, it's simpler)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785375
This check must be done explicitly on Wayland as the master device for
tablet tools differ from the Core Pointer. This ensures that whenever a
tablet tool is inside a window and the cursor is programmatically changed,
it will be visually updated too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785375
Replace uses of VLAs (variable-length arrays) using g_newa(), since
Visual Studio builds will unlikely ever support VLAs (which became optional
in C11).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Adds support for creating scroll events from Wayland tablet wheel events.
Even though no Wacom tablet puck has a smooth-scrolling wheel, both event
types need to be generated to make the upper layers happy.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783716
If a tablet device is used to perform actions like window moving or resizing,
GTK must provide the correct implicit grab serial number over Wayland to Mutter
in order for the action to succeed. This commit adds tablet support to the
implicit serial getters.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777333
Since gtk_bin_add does a gtk_widget_set_parent call, we cannot use it in
a GtkBin implementation that has multiple child widgets and cares about
their order.
If a bad behaving application tries to make the window/display beep too
often, throttle the beep requests so that we don't end up filling the
Wayland socket queue.
The throttle is set to 50 beeps per second, which far more beeps than
will ever make any sense from a user experience point of view, but will
avoid terminating due to an excessive amount of requests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778188
So we can avoid creating a GtkCssPathNode in _init and then throwing it
away right after when using the _new_with_node constructor, which is the
one we use for all widgets.
Don't set the have_focused field of the window's toplevel to TRUE by
default and don't set the FOCUSED state in gdk_window_map. This a means
toplevel window's state is what the WM expects, and the FOCUSED state
will be set anyway when we map the window and receive a _NET_WM_STATE
message.
Since setting a clip is mandatory for almost all widgets, we can as well
change the size-allocate signature to include a out_clip parameter, just
like GtkCssGadget did. And since we now always propagate baselines, we
might as well pass that one on to size-allocate.
This way we can also make sure to transform the clip returned from
size-allocate to parent-coordinates, i.e. the same coordinate space
priv->allocation is in.
Remove the special case in gtkwidget.c where we didn't draw any css
background/border for popovers. Instead, rely on themes to not style the
popover node and add a contents gizmo that gets the actual css styling.
We then requeste enough space for the popover to draw both the contents
and the arrow on the side.
The reported minimum baseline is for the reported min height, but if the
css min-height is greater than that, we need to account for that fact
when saving the baseline.
Since the reported baseline is relative to the widget's origin, we also
need to add the top values for margin, border and padding to the
reported baseline.
We claimed the gesture previously to keep it from propagating to the
underlying entry, but now that the entry is in a box with the two
buttons, we can do this properly and restore the previous long-press
behavior.
It's getting harder and harder to find a dummy style property to use
here, so remove the test case since style properties should be going
away soon anyway.
Previously, we would request a size of 0×0 when the transition type was
NONE and the child un-revealed, making the revealer in this case a
gtk_widget_set_visible replacement. Instead, to the exact same thing we
do in the CROSSFADE case and request the child size instead. This also
keeps the revealer from under allocating the child when the transition
type is set to NONE.
Instead of hopping through 7 different functions to do that, just
remove all rows directly. This also mean we'll only remove rows and not
other children that've been added like placeholders.
Add :dir(ltr) where expected, i.e. everywhere we now have a widget but
had a gadget before.
Also, fix the expected output to expect mark subnodes in the order
specified in the GtkScale does, i.e.
├── mark
├── [label]
╰── indicator
for marks at the top of the scale and
├── mark
├── indicator
╰── [label]
For marks at the bottom of the scale.
Checking the given GtkAllocation against the current allocation insize
::size-allocate doesn't really work anymore. They are only different if
the content allocation (the one passed) and the widget allocation (the
current one) are different, so e.g. when the widget has padding >0
applied.
Since we get offset automatically to the widget allocation before
->snapshot is called, we still have to offset the difference to the
position of the content allocation.
We don't need to care in this case since the default values should
always be assumed to be 0, and setting a baseline of 0 is just wrong
when orientation == HORIZONTAL, it should be -1 (or unset).
This is optional for positive margins as they just increase the widget
allocation. However, with negative css margins, the allocation is
smaller than the clip.
This fixes scale sliders leaving a small trail behind.
This fixes the expansion not working. As a GtkBin, GtkExpander can only
have one child and if that's a GtkBox (and not the one added through
gtk_expander_add), things go wrong.
always initialize clips to the (content) allocation, don't walk up the
widget hierarchy in gtk_widget_set_clip, implement
gtk_widget_size_allocate in GtkSeparator. This way we don't end up using
uninitialized clip values.
The entire clip handling is up for major rework since we can't and don't
want to force every single widget to call _set_clip in size-allocate
implementations.
If widgets chain up in their size-allocate implementation, they pass the
content allocation and not the widget allocation which will cause the
wrong allocation to be set.
We need to adjust the passed for_size to fit into the content allocation
of the widget.
That also means that we can't call gtk_widget_measure(widget) inside
gtk_widget_measure(widget) since now the for_size will be adjusted
twice.
Events that get to gtk_main_do_event() have the toplevel GdkWindow
as event->any.window. Also, ensure that coordinates fall within
sensible places of the windows, since those might have shadows,
headerbars and whatnot on wayland.
That means the whole hierarchy is getting destroyed, leaving those
behind incurs not only in a leak, but also on weak refs (and unintended
repick) to happen in the wrong moment.
Showing all the different errors and warnings when renaming and creating
files/folders without potentially resizing popovers on every keystroke
requires us to know the size of the error messages beforehand, so pack
all of the possible error messages and warnings in labels and those into
a stack. This way we can also neatly crossfade transition between them.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775636
GdkPixdata is deprecated. Warn when the application tries to load
pixdata embedded resources. The application developer will have to
remove the "to-pixdata" keyword from the GResource definition file.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781583
The glib-genmarshal tool from GLib 2.54 added various command line
arguments that allow us to remove a bunch of as hoc manipulations of
the generated marshaller source files. The marshal generator tool can
now include an header in the source, and undef the G_ENABLE_DEBUG
pre-processor symbol for us. It can also generate the prototypes of the
marshallers in the C source, and avoid a 'missing-prototypes' compiler
warning.
Use the new predictable request object path and connect
to the Response signal before issuing the portal call.
This avoids a race that is pretty unlikely to hit in
the filechooser case.
Wacom tablets often have a "pad" device which houses multiple buttons. At
present, these devices are incorrectly marked as GDK_SOURCE_PEN which can
cause problems for some software.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782040
Commit b52966a318 stopped the parser from
handling various deprecated pseudoclasses, which were aliases of others,
but it did not update the documentation to reflect that they were gone.
The label measuring code was only determining baselines
when the label was set to wrap, which does not seem right.
Non-wrapping labels have a meaningful baseline as well,
report it back.
When there is no externally allocated baseline, we should
do the same thing that GtkBox does, and determine one from
the children that want baseline alignment.
This commit adds a GtkCenterBox::baseline-position property
with setters and getters.
By relying on GtkSpinButton default activation behavior, the
collate icon doesn't get updated when a new number is typed
in the copies spin button.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759308
Add beginning double asterisks and function names. Correct the parameter
names (next/previous_child -> next/previous_sibling). Make the documentation
of the two functions more similar.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783445
The imcontext internals have been changed to use set_client_widget
instead of set_client_window in order to remove API dependency on
GdkWindow. Update the Windows IME support so that the code will
continue to build and work.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
The callback function that is used by VkDebugReportCallbackCreateInfoEXT
is decorated with VKAPI_CALL (which is __stdcall on Windows). This is
not detected on x64 Windows as __stdcall is not really meaningful on x64
Windows, and VKAPI_CALL expands to nothing on non-Windows.
As __stdcall functions are treated differently on 32-bit Windows, the
32-bit compiler does require that the function be declared as __stdcall
so that things will compile, link and run properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id-773299
Under Wayland, when multiple keys are pressed and the user releases a
key, key repeat should continue unless the key released is the one
currently repeating.
In the case of:
- key1 press
- key1 repeat
- key2 press -> key1 repeat stopped
- key2 repeat
- key2 release
The behavior should be to cancel keyboard repeat, though key1 is still
held down. This is consistent with prior X11/XWayland behavior.
The following also must work:
- key1 press
- key2 press
- key2 release
- key2 press
- key1 release
- key2 should continue to repeat
The fix for bug #778019 should continue to work:
- key1 press
- key1 repeat
- key2 press -> key1 repeat stopped
- key1 release
- key2 should repeat
The choice to change the counter nkeys to the flag repeat_active
helps to solve the second test case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781285
begin_resize_drag() and begin_move_drag() check for xdg_surface being
not null, but those apply on xdg_toplevel so they should check for
xdg_toplevel being non-null instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781945
When an event is received while a tooltip is showing, the GtkTooltip's
event handling code can end up calling gdk_window_set_transient_for()
from gtk_tooltip_set_last_window().
The Wayland GDK backend will try to automatically create a subsurface
in gdk_wayland_window_set_transient_for() but if the parent surface is
gone meanwhile, this will will cause a crash when trying to create a
subsurface from a parent with a null surface.
Checking for the parent is not sufficient, we ought to check for the
parent surface as well to avoid the crash.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782283
Applications can specify the type hint as utility even on toplevel
windows.
When that toplevel is also marked as a transient for another window,
GDK Wayland backend would translate that as an xdg_popup which is not
appropriate.
While utility temp windows should remain mapped as subsurfaces (such as
the ones used by treeviews), regular windows should not translate as
neither a subsurface nor an xdg_popup.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781945
The code used SIGDN_URL to get an URL for the selected item, but Windows URLs
are a mix of unicode and percent encoded characters in the locale encoding
and not something GFile can understand. The result is a garbage file
path.
Instead use SIGDN_FILESYSPATH to get a real file path if available.
Also checks the return value of g_utf16_to_utf8 because file paths on
Windows can contain lone surrogates which would make the conversion fail.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783347
Another selector forces round corners for headerbars in a stack, and it
has higher priority than the selector covering the non-stack case from
commit 796f9b5bfb. Totem’s MainToolbar
happens to be in a stack, and we should maintain symmetry here anyway.
So, as window classes .maximized and .tiled are excluded from this other
selector, the newly handled .fullscreen case must be excluded here also.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770513
Totem uses a fullscreen window with a headerbar at the top, and without
this change, that headerbar has rounded corners, which look different
from a maximised window and let video content show through beneath.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770513
There is no need to have every application log a warning when the
Wayland display server goes away, and we are using _exit instead of
exit elsewhere.
This is also what the X11 backend does (see gdk_x_io_error).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745289
As we now refrain from sending the crossing events if there's an
implicit grab, those events must be sent on button release when
the implicit grab is broken.
Check the grab widget (both explicit and implicit) and check for a cursor
from the target widget up to this grab widget. If the target widget is
outside the grab widget, only the grab wigdet's cursor will be checked.
This also means that we have to ensure the cursor is updated on button
releases, as an implicit grab being deactivated must trigger a cursor
lookup from the target widget.
In these situations we must perform the "is it claimed" check before removing
the (touch)point, as doing so when the gesture is empty will be too late if
the gesture actually claimed input.
This just applied to child windows, but now GDK should just take care of
toplevels, which shall get crossing events from the windowing when the right
conditions apply.
Removing this code fixes confused crossing state in widgets and messed up
window_under_pointer tracking (Which now is meant to be toplevels) when any
of the remaining child GdkWindows trigger these crossing events.
For some reason this wasn't done on windows with an impl, but it totally should.
Probably hidden by grabs in menus and somesuch being done on a child window.
We already issue the first _get_parent call before even entering that
loop, so make sure `parent` is not NULL. This happens when event_widget
is already a toplevel, and this change fixes row-dragging in treeviews.
Drop the in_widget flag since motion events the listbox receives are
always inside the listbox. Also drop the manual coordinate translation
code using GdkWindows.
We don't draw or size-allocate the titlebar when the window is
fullscreen or undecorated, so reflect this by setting it to
!child_visible. This can happen when changing the value of the decorated
property while the window is shown.
Instead of delegating on the parent shell of a menu item/shell on a variety
of situations, Simplify event handling so:
1) Menu item selection is handled entirely on GtkMenuItem through crossing
events.
2) The deepmost menu shell handles clicks inside and outside of it.
This avoids the rather hard to follow gtk_widget_event() calls going on all
throughout the handling of crossing and button events, and makes menus work
again.
As event->any.window is the toplevel, this is not useful anymore to
determine the window/widget that is the target for this event. Add
helper functions to attach user data to GdkEvents so the target
widget can be stored on the gtk/ side.
These calls should be made private with the rest of GdkEvent related
API.
It's not necessary anymore for clipping nor receiving events. So just
remove it. The event handling code was expecting events in bin_window
coordinates, and have been updated to relying on widget-relative coords.
We can just replace window comparisons with coordinate matching, the
cursor corresponding to edges is now set in a capture-phase motion
handler, as cursors aren't set on GdkWindows anymore.
It's not necessary anymore to receive input events. The pan gesture has
been set on the capture phase as the child widgets may capture during
bubbling.
There should be no circumstances where an implicit grab is requested but
no focus exists, there's however circumstances (like windowing grabs taking
input to a different window) where we might get implicit grabs being undone
when then new window didn't create a focus for the pointer itself.
Only if they fall outside the grab widget, in that case the widget holding
the implicit grab won't be receiving events anymore, so we can just undo
it.
We now rely on toplevels receiving and forwarding all the events
the windowing should be able to handle. Event masks are no longer a
way to determine whether an event is deliverable ot a widget.
Events will always be delivered in the three captured/target/bubbled
phases, widgets can now just attach GtkEventControllers and let those
handle the events.
Those are now needless and wrong, as we get guarantees that handled
events will contain widget-relative coordinates. A side effect is
that these events are very possibly not explicitly sent to the
GdkWindow that implementations expect, any extra checks performed
through gtk_gesture_set_window() will be wrong, so the function has
been dropped entirely.
And refurbish cursor management to be set on the GtkWidget. The
input window is not needed anymore to receive events either.
This is no longer set through the GdkWindow, so use the private
GtkWidget API.
The event shall no longer be "directed" to the event window, but the
widget. Getting a enter/leave event is enough now to know whether the
pointer is inside or outside the widget.
Unlike GTK+ grabs which are global to all/one device, the implicit grab
is per focus, which means each may have implicit grabs on different or
the same widget.
Now that gtk_main_do_event() is able to handle pointing events in toplevel
coordinates, forward all of these as is. Just minimal handling is still done
on the gdk side for GDK grab accounting, and toplevel tracking for each
pointer.
Implement target finding per-pointer/touchpoint through GtkPointerFocus and
_gtk_toplevel_pick(). Focus changes are handled through the emission of
crossing events between the old target and the new one.
Each toplevel will keep its own tracking of the current ongoing foci,
add the plumbing that will allow to create/update/remove those as they
come and go.
These objects (tied to a toplevel) track the focus of a pointer/touchpoint.
The info in these basically consists of current toplevel coordinates and the
current target widget.
This function will be useful in other places, such as determining the
widgets that must receive crossing events after pointer picking points
to another widget.
Aborting the application makes it look like an application bug, when
it is the expected thing to do when the Wayland display server goes
way. eg., when the user logs out. The log level is also demoted to
avoid a storm of warnings in the log from all applications whenever
this happens.
This is also what the X11 backend does (see gdk_x_io_error).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783047
The :last-child selector supposed to reset the border was
overridden by the :hover selector. This is fixed by moving the
:last-child selector after the overriding one.
Thanks to Sebastian Keller for spotting.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779078.
…erties clobbered by commit c92b7d4224.
That and its counterpart were for removing :expand and :fill child props
from GtkBox, but they ended up catching these for GtkToolItemGroup too.
While GtkToolItemGroup still has these, we may as well keep demoing them
Fix the sizing and spacing, blue tags for the bright variant,
similar to what gnome-documents was shipping, and inverted gray
tags for the dark variant, not vanishing on hover.
It was only testing the default configuration, where overlay scrolling
is on and both scrollbars use POLICY_AUTOMATIC. We should also test the
other 3 configurations that are available by including non-overlay
scrollbars and/or those that use POLICY_ALWAYS.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
POLICY_AUTOMATIC means scrollbars are only shown when needed, i.e. when
the size of the window is not large enough to show the entire child. So
when measuring the preferred size, such scrollbars should be ignored.
But measure() added size for *any* non-overlay scrollbar of the opposite
orientation, e.g. for horizontal size, it added the width of vscrollbar.
So we requested for child + bar, & having enough for child meant that the
policy hid the bar, leaving extra space empty below/right of the child.
Fix this by only adding size for such bars if they use POLICY_ALWAYS.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
• Only calculate the specified dimension – rather than measuring both &
discarding the other (which will often be recalculated right after)
• Only measure a given child scrollbar if it may be visible, not always
• Move variables into narrowest scopes & otherwise improve readability
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
Some files that this script will process might have UTF-8 items in
there, which can cause problems on Python 3.x as it is more strict and
careful on unicode issues. Fix this by:
-Doing what we did before on Python 2.x
-Opening the file with encoding='utf-8' on Python 3.x
The user data passed when exporting a Wayland window was supposed to be
freed using the destroy_func, as is commonly done. This was previously
broken, as the user data was just NULL:ed when exported, and only
actually destroyed when unexporting before having exported.
While e016d9a5db fixed this, it introduced
a regression, as GtkWindow was nice enough to free the memory anyway
after having received the exported handle, causing it now to double
free.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782109
Otherwise in GC-ed environments the `g_source_remove` call during
disposal might be called on an already removed source, which results in
unnecessary console output.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778301
Use the gravity enum values when converting to gravity. It doesn't fix
anything, since the enum values were identical, but it makes a coverity
warning go away.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780301
5bb12474d9 removed the dnd window movement code to let
the gdk backends handle the window movement instead. While this
works for X11/wayland the win32 backend still uses the unmanaged
interface and expects the window movement to be handled on the gtk
side. This restores the functionality in case the dnd is unmanaged.
This fixes the drag window on Windows being stuck in the top left
corner instead of following the drag position.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781737
Creating with `gtk_popover_new_from_model` should be exactly the same as
if via `gtk_popover_new` plus `gtk_popover_bind_model`.
Also remove the style if the model is unbound at any point.
Try text/plain;charset=utf-8 first, before falling back to
X11-isms like UTF8_TEXT. This makes things work on Wayland
compositors that don't carry a heavy X11 legacy around.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781814
The `-export-dynamic` flag is a libtool-specific flag; since we're not
using libtool with Meson, we should instruct the C compiler to use the
appropriate linker flag instead.
Copy the location of the test data and binaries from the autotools
build, even though it's not really correct; currently we install the
test data under libexecdir, but it should live under datadir, and we
should use `G_TEST_DIST` to figure it out.
The `state` subdirectory is missing.
The common compiler and linker flags control, among other things, the
default visibility of symbols; without them, we leak symbols that ought
to be private.
GSK has various enumeration types that are currently not used; while
they may go away, currently they are built and introspected. If we want
the introspection machinery to work, and still use static libraries to
build GDK and GSK into the GTK shared library, then we need to reference
the get_type() function of these enumeration types somewhere, to avoid
the linker discarding it, and thus breaking the build.
As luck would have it, we have an autogenerated bit of C that refers to
all the get_type() functions in the library; if we add the GSK types to
it, then we get the reference we're looking for, and the build succeeds.
We need to reference the types file directly, because it won't be copied
into the builddir by Meson — except for GTK, which needs to generate its
own types file using configure_file().
We're mixing a lot of styles in the Meson build files. This is an
attempt at making everything slightly more consistent in terms of
whitespace and indentation.
If glslc is found, rebuild the shaders from GLSL to SPIR-V; otherwise,
we're just going to use the built files we have committed in the source
repository.
When building GTK+ straight from the repository without any assistance
from packaging tools, we need to trigger system-wide updates, like the
icon theme cache update, or the schema compilation.
We can build the name of the input and output files for the Wayland
protocols we use from the protocol name, stability, and version. This is
similar to how the autotools build does it, except much more clear and
without shelling out twice to sed just to resolve the Makefile rule.
We need to check if the linker flags we use are available, depending on
the platform, and we need to ensure that the shared library is
versioned appropriately.
GTK symbols are not visible by default, and only the ones annotated with
_GDK_EXTERN (and wrapper macros) are exported. We need to define
_GDK_EXTERN during the configuration, depending on the platform and
compiler we use.
The autotools build checks the version of GLib we are depending on in
order to generate the appropriate GLIB_VERSION values for the
min-required/max-allowed defines.
We have to work around some ordering problems here. We still
manage to keep most of the guts in modules/input/meson.build,
so it's not too ugly overall.
(The autotools build solves this with a 'make -C ../../input/modules'
inside gtk/Makefile, but that's not something we can or want to do.)
Remove workaround for gcc bug (Meson does that now), and
construct the right config.h defines for the headers on
the fly instead of listing them in the build file, which
is more error prone.
Add back dependencies on libgdk_dep and libsk_dep which are declared
dependencies. We removed this before because these declarations had
link_with: lines that dragged in the static libgdk.a and libgsk.a libs
which are linked into libgtk-4.so anyway and thus shouldn't be used
when linking internal exes/tools against libgtk-4. Remove the static
libs from the declared dependencies and have libgtk link those in
explicitly, so that the declared deps now just provide all the built
dependencies and include dirs and such for declared libgtk_dep users
such as the internal exes/tools, which want all the generated gsk/gdk/gtk
headers to exist before attempting to compile anything against the
gtk+ headers.
gdk and gsk are no longer separate libs but part of gtk now, so any
Gtk+ user should just link to gtk, there's no need to additionally
link against all those static helper libs that go into the gtk lib.
This means we need to specifically add confinc to include_directories
in more places to make sure the right config.h (i.e. ours) gets
included and not a subproject's like graphene's config.h.
Not dragging in static libs also fixes the issue of all executables
having to be relinked for any and all changes. With this change
it's super-fast now and can be skipped for most changes that don't
touch the external ABI.
gdkprivate-wayland.h includes generated wayland client protocol
headers and is included from gdkdisplaymanager.c, so we need to
generate those client protocol headers first also when building
main gdk itself.
This is how it's done in the autotools build. Also avoids problems
with multiple source files having the same name (gdkeventsource.c).
Also move broadway backend code into broadway subdir.
Almost all of these tests include gtk/gtk.h so we need
to dep on libgtk not just libgdk. Otherwise compilation
fails because graphene.h include can't be found.
Add libgdk_dep as dependency to the libgtk_dep declare_dependency(), so
that the generated gdk includes are generated before anything is built
that tries to include gtk headers (such as various tests that don't depend
on gdk directly).
This is needed for the Meson port, a file name .c that's included
and shouldn't be compiled into an object is difficult to manage
otherwise. And it's not actually a valid .c file anyway.
This was only every implemented under X11, and with CSD,
this is clearly in the application realm. We should not
pretend that we can support it on the toolkit level.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775061
We used to inject the inclusion of the generated header file into the
generated body of the marshallers source code in order to avoid compiler
warnings about missing prototypes. The glib-genmarshal utility has been
fixed in GLib to include the prototype in the generated source, so now
we're going to trip -Werror=redundant-decls.
With Wayland, GDK_DEBUG=events would log key events but not explicitly
state whether the event is a key press or release, or if it's
originating from a key repeat.
Add some more verbosity to make sure these informations are logged on
key delivery when GDK_DEBUG is set.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781767
The rect parameter in gtk_gesture_multi_press_set_area is annotated as
nullable and the code handles the rect==NULL case, but the
g_return_if_fail kept that case from ever happening.
Turns out that the destination is the last parameter, not the first one.
This fixes the flickering in the first page of the widget-factory when
using the expander on page 2.
It is generally a good idea to license individual files under the
same terms as the project license (in particular when the mismatch
boils down to having copied the wrong license header), so relicense
the code under the LGPL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781422
In the else branch of the if statement before this one, we're assigning
*smallest = *widest anyway, so this if statement is never true. Move it
to the if block before instead, where it can apply.
gtk_widget_set_parent (via gtk_widget_reposition_after) will queue a
resize on the parent widget automatically when adding a child widget, so
unparent should do the same
The center widget in GtkBox was only introduced to use it in
GtkActionBar. However, the implementation there is much more complex
than it needs to be, so move the center widget into GtkActionBar instead
and later remove it from GtkBox.
This replaces all internal gadgets with widgets.
Remaining problem: "block" nodes have a min-width of 32px in Adwaita,
but when allocated in continuous mode, the levelbar doesn't care and
underallocates them.
GtkGizmo is the easiest possible widget to implement. It does nothing
except give its creator a way to control measure/size-allocate/snapshot,
so it can be used in a variety of use cases.
Insert the css node before setting a parent widget on the column button,
so the gtk_widget_set_parent won't attempt to add the css node as child
of the parent widget css node.
Translating it seems pointless if we can use a non-translatable example
such as gnome.org instead of foo.example.com.
This will help to make changes in here without breaking string freeze.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781622
We were send the "open-location" signal without mounting first the
location if necessary, making the open in tab/window context menu not
work for those.
This patch makes sure we mount the location before emitting the signal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771269
Because the network monitor can perfectly be NULL,
the tests were failing on that for GtkPlacesView
always tries to disconnect this handler.
Fix that by only disconnecting the handler when
the network monitor exists.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781195
GtkPlacesView exposes local access points and network
shares transparently by using the 'network:///' URI,
which is handled by GIO.
Currently, however, it doesn't monitor the network
for new available points, such as computers that just
join the network. It may happen too that the backend
won't find all the networks before the network enumeration
finishes.
Fix that by keeping a file monitor inspecting the network
uri, and update the places list when that happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781162
Instead of the deprecated g_object_newv().
This requires some internal surgery to create our own vector of names
and values, but it does not functionally change anything.
GLib 2.53 deprecated g_object_newv() and GParameter. If we want to stop
using those types without resorting to pretty convoluted pre-processor
dancing, we will need to bump up the dependency inside GTK+.
GLib has deprecated GParameter and g_object_newv(); until we switch to
the new g_object_new_with_properties() API, and bump GLib required
version, we should simply ignore the compiler warnings.
The addition of GdkMonitor broke the quartz backend. This patch restores
that support by adding a new class GdkQuartzMonitor, and by modifying
the existing classes GdkQuartzDisplay and GdkQuartzScreen where
necessary.
It should be noted that this patch is essentially a refactor as no new
functionality that will impact the user has been added or removed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779184
Instead of using Ruby/Sass to generate the CSS from SCSS files, we can
use the faster and more lightweight libsass/sassc binary.
We can keep the CSS files in Git to make it easier to dist GTK+, but we
can add rules to ensure they get rebuilt if the source SCSS changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780041
Instead of creating a GtkWindow, connecting to ::draw and drawing the
surface in there, then adding that window to another GtkWindow... just
use a GtkImage. This also gets rid of a bunch of utility functions used
only in gtk_drag_set_icon_surface.
When the blend modes were ported to use gsk defines, some
dashes were accidentally turned into underscores. It also
turns out that we were expecting 'saturate' instead of
'saturation' as per the css spec. Fix that as well.
If the widget isn't drawable anyway, just return;
If the widget needs an allocate, print a warning, since it indicates a
problem in the widget workflow (e.g. forgot to size_allocate a child
widget).
This maches the previous checks in gtk_widget_draw (with the same
problems).
When the GtkWidget hierarchy does not match the GdkWindow hierarchy, the
GtkWidget code may find a common ancestor that cannot be found while
traversing the GdkWindow tree using gdk_window_get_parent().
This happens with for example on Wayland, a GtkPopover has another
GtkPopover as parent, in this case, the GdkWindow parent is the root
window, whereas the GtkWidget parent is the other GtkPopover.
That confuses the gtk_widget_translate_coordinates() logic which will
bail out in this case and won't return the translated coordinates.
Make gdk_window_get_effective_parent() aware of subsurfaces and use the
transient_for which represents the actual parent (whereas the parent
might be pointing to the root window).
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774148
For some reason, we are seeing damage being NULL here.
While that should never be the case, crashing on it is
unkind and makes the Wayland experience unusable.
The TextIter is passed by pointer for efficiency. We neither need to
modify it, nor should we leave it possible to accidentally do so. So,
it should be passed as a pointer-to-const.
We do not need to go through the heavyweight process of constructing a
TextLineDisplay just to get the direction out of it, when we can simply
use TextIter API to get the text and then get its direction using Pango.
Adapted from a patch by Mehdi Sadeghi for GtkSourceView:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779081#c20
Add a documentation annotation saying that set_page_ranges transfers
ownership of the GtkPageRange array.
Add a g_free() call to fix a memory leak when set_page_ranges is
used repeatedly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780234
Since the later gtk_style_context_add_class doesn't care about the order
of the style classes, we can as well just prepend style classes to the
list and avoid the squared behavior when appending to a linked list.
Explain where the adjustment comes from, clarify some of the wording
about how its fields influence the scrollbar, and also note that the
steppers may not be present, since they aren’t in our default themes.
If the child added is not a Scrollable, it gets wrapped in a ViewPort –
which is. So it is impossible to end up with a non-Scrollable child.
Just check we have /any/ child where needed, which is semantically nicer
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
• intro: Clarify that external policy and/or adjustments can be used.
• add(): Don’t waffle on about having to add a ViewPort since we handle
that transparently for the user, so they can add() any widget.
• Adjustment stuff: most of this was repeating the docs for Scrollbar,
so just refer the user to that. Also, mention how
policies NEVER and EXTERNAL interact with all this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
has_tooltip_widget was assigned twice in immediate succession.
return_value is not used anywhere else in this function since commit
14a864c8b5 and does not need a default
value anymore, so move it to the inner scope and don't init to NULL.
hide_tooltip gets overriden in any case 2 lines down, and return_value
isn't used later in that function. The second assignment was introduced
in ef1da5f6c2, directly below the first
assignment.
shade/alpha/mix() take colour(s) and a number that is the ratio by which
to transform them. It was written here that these shall be passed in the
order (number, colour). That was wrong: they must be passed in the order
(colour[s], number) to work, and for the Inspector not to flag an error.
gtk_shader_builder_add_define should check both define_name and
define_value for not-NULL and not-empty, but the second precondition
check checks define_name again for not-empty-ness.
If you set GTK_INSPECTOR_RENDERER to the same type of
values that GSK_RENDERER takes this can change the renderer
used for the inspector. This is useful if you're debugging
one renderer and don't want to affect the inspector.
We can e.g. get the entry dispose()d and a focus_out event after that
(because the toplevel unsets the focus which previously was the entry).
We then later use priv->current_pos in a call to pango API which makes
sure the given index is valid for the given layout. Since we lazily
create a GtkEntryBuffer in get_buffer() and a PangoLayout lazily in
gtk_entry_create_layout, these 2 are always valid but don't match
priv->current_pos in this situation.
Fix this by resetting priv->current-pos in dispose().
The :label-widget is drawn before the child, so put the controls that
set the alignment of the :label-widget before those that pad the child.
We set (horizontal|vertical) padding, not "[xy]thickness". Also change
to "label [xy]align" & use grid spacing, not spaces at end of Labels.
This was ruined, with only 1 of the 8 subwindows rendering any content.
This commit fixes the responsible errors in the embedded GtkBuilder UIs:
• Fix broken replace by commit fb3d9022ad
of HBox with a Box having a broken orientation <property>
• Replace VBox and [HV]Paned with GtkOrientable successors (properly!)
• Remove use of Button:use_action_appearance, as this no longer exists
This commit also adds error reporting, in case other errors creep into
the GtkBuilder UI definitions, plus cleanup for the Builders and Windows
Since margin-left and margin-right are gone, we don't have to care
about the difference between them and start/end anymore and we can just
save start as left and end as right.
Instead of mentioning the old _get_preferred_xxx functions, mention
measure() and print the for_size value as well. The orientation is given
by printing either "width" for GTK_ORIENTATION_HORIZONTAL or "height"
for GTK_ORIENTATION_VERTICAL.
There are GtkGestureSingle subclasses that can be made to handle multiple
fingers (GtkGestureSingle is a subclass of GtkGesture, and not the
opposite, after all). And GtkGestureSwipe already tries to handle
GDK_TOUCHPAD_SWIPE events, except this event handler silently ignores
those.
Falling back to the GtkGesture generic handler which already
handles touchpad gesture events fixes this.
Make sure to clear up the number of keys being pressed on enter/leave so
that we don't end up with leftovers if a new window is mapped by a
keyboard shortcut.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779374
The key repeat is stopped as soon as a key is pressed, so if the user
quickly presses a key while another is already pressed and being
repeated, key repeat gets cancelled:
- key1 press
- key1 repeat
- key2 press -> key1 repeat stopped
- key1 release
- key 2 is not repeated even though it's kept depressed
This is a different behavior from X11, which confuses migrating users.
To mimic the X11 behavior, keep track of the number of keys pressed
simultaneously and cancel key repeat only when none is pressed.
This way, if a user pressed a key while another one is being repeated,
the new key press can possibly be repeated as well.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778019
When resizing an xdg_popup immediately after the initial mapping, there
is a race condition between the client and the compositor which is
processing the initial size given by the xdg_positioner, leading to the
xdg_popup to be eventually of the wrong size.
Only way to make sure the size is correct in that case is to hide and
show the window again. Considering this occurs before the initial
configure is processed, it should not be noticeable.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772505
This reverts commit 901e5ff3a3.
This causes criticals in e.g. the Text View: Multiple Buffers demo.
More work is required to get a fix for Bug 778853 that does not cause
anything else to regress.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
The fact that it doesn’t reuse the existing GtkLabel if present is not
immediately obvious to users (or is it just me?), so clarify that the
pre-existing :label-widget, if any, is always removed and replaced.
It was only testing the default configuration where overlay-scrolling is
TRUE and the policy is POLICY_AUTOMATIC. We should also test FALSE and
POLICY_ALWAYS. This commit adds those tests and makes the !overlay &&
POLICY_ALWAYS case pass by excluding the size of the relevant scrollbar,
as we are only interested in whether the content size is as requested.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
POLICY_AUTOMATIC means scrollbars are only shown when needed, i.e. when
the size of the window is not large enough to show the entire child. So
when measuring the preferred size, such scrollbars should be ignored.
But measure() was adding size for bars for which policy_may_be_visible()
was TRUE, which it returns for POLICY_ALWAYS (good) & _AUTOMATIC (bad).
So we reserved space for child plus scrollbars, & because we have enough
space for the child, POLICY_AUTOMATIC hides the scrollbar, leaving the
extra reserved space empty at the right/bottom sides of the child. This
is very noticeable/inconvenient for non-overlay, automatic scrollbars.
Fix this by only requesting size for scrollbars that use POLICY_ALWAYS,
rather than basing the decision on policy_may_be_visible().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778853
Using Ctrl + left/right to skip between words, or left/right to cancel a
selection, were causing movement on the screen in the opposite direction
of the glyph on the key. This was surprising and awful UX for RTL users.
This is based on a patch covering the former case by:
Author: Mehdi Sadeghi <mehdi@mehdix.org>
Date: Sat Feb 18 02:16:00 2017 +0000
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=136059
Using Ctrl + left/right to skip between words, or left/right to cancel a
selection, were causing movement on the screen in the opposite direction
of the glyph on the key. This was surprising and awful UX for RTL users.
This is based on a patch covering the former case by:
Author: Ori Avtalion <ori@avtalion.name>
Date: Tue Apr 20 08:06:23 2010 +0000
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=136059
It was "Missing name of pseudo-class", but the real problem is exactly
the opposite: we /have/ been given a name, but it is not a valid one.
Change it to "Invalid name of pseudo-class" to minimise confusion.
gboolean ret for whether gtk_text_iter_backward_line() moved the iter
was declared but not used anywhere. I presume it was meant to be
checked, and it passes now, so let’s do it.
the scrollbar passed in better be either priv->hscrollbar or
priv->vscrollbar. Ensure that by using a simple else instead of an
else-if and a g_assert.
When a widget is created, its default scale is the scale of the
primary screen (for instance 2). But once parented to another widget
its scale factor should be the one of its parent (if parented to a
widget on a screen at scale factor 1, it should be 1).
The problem is that we don't emit the notify::scale-factor signal when
reparenting happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776821
Otherwise we wait for the next gdk_drag_motion() call, which will
happen on the next motion event, making the drag window briefly visible
on the 0,0 root coordinates.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778203
gtk_text_iter_backward_line() checks the value of
real->line_char_offset without previously calling
ensure_char_offsets (real) to make sure the former
is up-to-date.
As a consequence of this, when gtk_text_iter_backward_line()
is called after a gtk_text_buffer_insert_range() in the
first line of buffer, the iter is not moved to the start of
the line, and the return value is wrong.
Fixed by adding the ensure_char_offsets() call.
A test case for this bug is added to the textiter gtk testsuite.
priv->trigger_event is never set, so it is always NULL. This means the
gtk_menu_popup*() methods use the current event. The only way to get any
other event to combobox_menu_popup() was from the button-press-event
handler I just removed, which would end up being the current one anyway.
So, bin priv->trigger_event & explicitly pass NULL to gtk_menu_popup*().
gtk_show_uri_on_window() will pass enough information for Portal helpers
to allow dialogue parenting in Flatpak, gtk_show_uri() won't, so
deprecate it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778678
Update the autotools scripts to support Visual Studio 2017 builds by
copying the Visual Studio 2013 projects and updateing the items as
necessary to obtain the Visual Studio 2017 projects.
Note that the format of the toolset string changed, so allow one to
pass in and thus use a custom toolset string, otherwise the default
toolset string will be generated as it was before.
Note also the Visual Studio 2017 aims to be compatible with Visual
Studio 2015 on the CRT level, so binaries built with 2017 should
work without problems with the binaries built with 2015.
We can't pass the same string to two different snapshot states since
removing one of them will free the passed string, so just create another
one for the second state.
Clamping the anchor values as introduced in commit 9a5ffcd to fix bug
777176 breaks menu positioning.
By keeping the anchors rectangle size greater than zero, we end up
deducting some positive value from the original position, so there is no
need to clamp() actually, keeping the values positive is enough and
avoids the issue with menu positioning on the menubar.
An additional benefit is to make the code a lot simpler.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778009
Since GtkTreeMenu became a private class only used by GtkComboBox, all
this test actually did was to show a ComboBox constructed with a custom
CellArea. Now that the latter is no longer possible, the test just shows
a handful of settings that do nothing. Just test GtkComboBox directly.
Currently hiding destroys the wl_surface and all related interfaces,
(including the gtk_surface1) so the next time the GdkWindow is mapped,
we don't bother to set the DBus properties. Toggle the check off so
it's actually issued again after the GdkWindow gets a gtk_surface1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773686
The new CSS border-spacing does what Grid::(row|column)_spacing and
Box::spacing already did, i.e. controlling the space added between child
widgets, so it’s not a replacement for Container::border-width.
Now that priv->area is guaranteed to be constructed by us, and not
passed in by a user, we can move it to the .ui file and stop manually
managing its lifetime altogether. And once the area is there, we can
move the menu there too (and stop pointlessly destroying/rebuilding it).
We already have cell_layout_is_sensitive() to get whether at least one
cell in a Layout is sensitive, which we need because CellLayout/View
do not implement foreach(). So, since we wrote that, we can use it to
check our CellArea too, instead of doing foreach with a custom callback.
It was looping over all items, not breaking out when it found the first
selectable one, and then selecting the _last_ selectable one (if any)
found. So, it did exactly the opposite of its name. This made me quite
baffled when opening a submenu with right-arrow put me at its last item.
Originally, the loop set to_select and broke if the current item was
selectable and not tear-off, meaning that it would correctly select the
first suitable item. However, when tear-off functionality was removed
in commit 4ed9452e90, so was the break.
combo_box_popdown() currently skips popping down our menu if it is NULL.
But the required call to this at end-of-life was in destroy(), by which
point dispose() already NULLed the menu, so Menu::popdown() would never
run, even if it should. Fix this by trying popdown() earlier in unmap().
Also, add a converse assurance that we don’t popup() while not mapped.
Even once we remove all the now-pointless NULL checks, destroy() was the
wrong place to call combo_box_popdown(), and unmap() is the right place.
gtk_init() removed its support for supporting arguments, so we ought to do
likewise for Windows, which actually defines items that call gtk_init()
the old way (and also get rid of argument support in those functions,
since the direction is to not support them).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Commit fdc0c6426b removed the appears-as-
list style property, & hence the ability to put the ComboBox into list
mode – but it left behind a pile of hijinks that were only used in said
mode & so were now doing absolutely nothing. This commit deletes those.
While doing that, I got carried away…so this also stops pointlessly type
checking popup_widget, as that can never be anything but a GtkTreeMenu.
It still checks for NULL everywhere, which shouldn’t be needed, but (A)
this commit is already too big, & (B) simply removing such checks where
they _seem_ unnecessary causes bad times. I’ll puzzle through that later
Commit fdc0c6426b for removing (partly!)
appears-as-list also deleted the code that propagated wrap-width to the
TreeMenu and thus put us into “grid mode”. This restores that code.
And as Benjamin noted, calling check_appearance() here is wrong, so bye.
We want to simplify our initialization code and remove all commandline
argument handling from it. The first stop for this is to reduce the
number of gtk_init variants we have.
This is how windows are meant to be hidden as per the wayland
protocol, there's no need to destroy the xdg_surface and other
interfaces.
Also, rename gdk_wayland_window_hide_surface() to clear_surface(),
as that's what it does.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773686
i.e. when wrap-width > 0. This was only being done for non-grid cases.
So, ComboBoxes in grid mode did not indicate their selection when popped
up and required users to keynav from ‘nothing’ (at the top-left) to the
item they wanted to select. By selecting the active item in advance, now
it’s highlighted & acts as the starting point for keynav around the grid
This previously only mentioned its effect on the displayed value, and
even after the previous commit, its rounding of the actual value upon
change still reads like too much of an afterthought. Worse, it wasn’t
mentioned at all in the doc for the @digits parameter. Change this to
emphasise rounding always occurs and the displayed value is secondary.
Whether it should is an open question, but for now, the documentation
should clearly indicate that currently rounding is only applied upon
changes to the value, not to the existing value when ::digits changes.
This is already clear in the doc for the underlying Range::round-digits.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=358970
The documents state that gtk_scale_set_digits() “causes the value of the
adjustment to be rounded off to this number of digits, so the retrieved
value matches the value the user saw.” Note the lack of any condition.
But in fact, if draw-value was false, rounding was disabled on the base
Range, so values that weren’t displayed weren’t rounded. This made the
docs wrong and made an apparently cosmetic detail alter functionality.
Fix by ensuring the number of digits set on Scale is always propagated
along to gtk_range_set_round_digits(), thus rounding to it in all cases
when the value changes, regardless of whether the value is displayed.
This doesn’t address the other idea from Bugzilla: that changing the
number of digits should clamp the _existing_ value if it’s more precise.
This contradicts digits docs in the base Range, but the above from Scale
can be read as implying it’ll happen. For now, that’s an open question.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=358970
GtkFileChooserButton installs a handler for the popped-up signal, which
refilters the menu, in order to hide the “(None)” item from the popup
if it was previously selected in the ComboBox. This oddity means that:
• Until recently, this item would be selected in the menu shell, which
would then be popped up and change the selection away from that item.
This was therefore redundant (more on which below!) but benign.
• After the patch for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771242
however, this causes a critical assertion fail, as now we stash the
originally selected item in a pointer so that it can be selected only
after realisation/popup – but by that stage, the model has just been
refiltered and the previous pointer no longer refers to a valid item.
This commit works around this problem by, after popping up the menu,
getting the active item again, in case a popped-up handler has gone and
invalidated the pointer to the active item that we saved before popup.
If a handler does this, everything done to find/use the original item is
pointless. But this avoids the ugly critical in FileChooserButton, while
not harming every other ComboBox that doesn’t mess with its model while
popping up (hopefully the vast majority), and it’s very difficult to
imagine a way to check if the active item is /going to/ be hidden later)
Previously, for compatibility with GTK 3.0, we allowed specifying
numbers without units and interpreted them as pixels, even when the CSS
specification didn't.
Remove that now that we can break API.
This reverts commit 4875c689a0.
This was a thinko. Writable is not actually settable from the
application side, but only for the user, from the backend side.
Elsewhere we already go through the keymap to get modifiers so we
should do the same here. In fact, this was relying on xkb modifier
mask values being bitwise compatible with GdkModifierType which isn't
necessarily true.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770112
Gtk+ treats MOD1 as a synonym for Alt, and does not expect it to be
mapped around, so we should avoid adding GDK_META_MASK if MOD1 is
already included to avoid confusing gtk+ and applications that rely on
that behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770112
When a subsurface is used as a parent of a popup, GDK needs to traverse
up to the transient-for as the next parent, to properly find the parent
used by the popup positioner. This is because the parent of a popup
must always either be an xdg_popup or an xdg_surface, but traversing
the "parent" (in GDK terms) upwards from a subsurface will end up on
the fake root window before we hit the actual parent (in Wayland terms).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776225
Instead of having 3 different shaders for the different clipping
versions, just have one shader and use a preprocessor define to use
different clip functions.
That preprocessor define is set in the Makefile.
Also use foo.frag and foo.vert as the file extensions instead of using
foo.frag.glsl and foo.vert.glsl, as that's what glslc suggests as
extension.
That way we don't need to move the clip rounded rect manually through
the vertex shader into the fragment shader but can just look at the push
constants.
Simplifies shaders a lot.
Passing a rectangle with zero width or height to xdg_shell-v6
set_anchor_rect() will cause a protocol error and terminate the client,
as with gedit when pressing the Win key.
Reason for this is because the rectangle used to set the anchor comes
from gtk_text_layout_get_iter_location() which uses the pango layout
width/height, which can be empty if there is not character at the given
location.
Make sure we don't use 0 as width or height as an anchor rectangle to
avoid the protocol error, and compensate the logical position of the
given rectangle if the size is changed, so that the actual position
remains as expected by the client.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777176
Images with just an aspect ratio, but without a size, should be scaled
to be fully visible in the given area.
But we scaled them to completely cover the given area, which made them
partially invisible.
Reftest included.
gtk_snapshot_pop() => removed
gtk_snapshot_pop_and_append() => gtk_snapshot_pop()
So now there is no way to get a rendernode out of the snapshotting API
until you gtk_snapshot_finish().
... and use it.
The function is a bit awkward because it requires 2 calls to
gtk_snapshot_pop(), but once you accept that, it's very convenient to
use, as can be seen by the 2 implementations.
This is a free-form tab that can contain information about the
system environment. To see it, set GtkAboutDialog::system-information
to a non-NULL value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776604
The Mesa Vulkan drivers need XInitThreads() being called, because their
implementation has to use threads.
And I don't want to make the call depend on if Vulkan is compiled in
because that makes GTK's X11 behavior depend on compile-time flags, so
it's always called.
This way, we ensure that files that are built during make always get
properly listed. And we ensure that creating the resources actually
depends on them.
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