Handle dead keys in special_ucs_table and have them converted by
UCKeyTranslate(), so all dead key combinations can be entered.
Later, this should be handled in the input method, just as it's
done for X11/Win32.
Fixes bug #658379 - Disabled devices still added to list on startup,
spotted by Bastien Nocera. Do not create GdkDevices for disabled
devices on device manager construction, leading to a confusing initial
state.
This commit introduces a new setting, gtk-visible-focus, backed
by the Gtk/VisibleFocus X setting. Its three values control how
focus rectangles are displayed.
'always' is equivalent to the traditional GTK+ behaviour of always
rendering focus rectangles.
'never' does what it says, and is intended for keyboardless
situations, e.g. tablets.
'automatic' hides focus rectangles initially, until the user
interacts with the keyboard, at which point focus rectangles
become visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649567
Functions dealing with native Xlib types were (skip)ed because
gobject-introspection did not have correct Xlib types declarations.
They are corrected now, so these GdkX11 functions can be enabled back
again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=655495
I tried to suppress compiler warnings on pre-10.6 machines this way,
but it defeats its purpose when you compile for pre-10.6 machines on
a 10.6 machine. For now, we have to live with the warnings when
compiling on/for pre-10.6 machines, there does not seem an easy and proper
way to suppress the warnings.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=653947
It could happen that a cookie event has been already allocated/freed
in an event filter, as it can't be allocated a second time, all GDK
can do is skipping the event. Spotted by Guillaume Desmottes.
This function can be used to find the GdkDevice wrapping
an XInput2 device ID. For core devices, the Virtual Core
Pointer/Keyboard IDs (2/3) may be used.
This function can be used to find out the XInput2 device ID
behind a GdkDevice, mostly useful when you need to interact
with say Clutter, or raw libXi calls.
Fixes Bug 645993 - XIM has wierd behaviors. Some XIM modules
filter every key event, possibly replacing it with their own
one. These events usually have serial=0, so make
GdkDeviceManagerXI2 also listen on these.
For client-side windows, we need to queue a repaint when the background
changes. For native windows, the windowing system does take care of it,
but client-side windows are our own, so we gotta do it manually.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=652102
This is already done in gdk_event_source_get_filter_window(), and
could lead to wrong event assignment if an event translator happens
to return a window for an event it doesn't handle.
This method can be implemented by event translators so they
return the right window from XGenericEventCookie events, as
ev->xany.window isn't meaningful for these.
GdkEventSource now also uses this to find out the right window
filters to apply.
XKB and GDK both add "internal" bits to GdkModifierType. In C,
this typically doesn't cause problems as bitfields are just integers,
and there's no validation. However for bindings, it's normal to
convert enumerations to "native" enumeration types, which don't
support unknown bits. See bug 597292.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634994
It could be the case that gdk_window_set_cursor() is called on
pointers not yet known to the device tracking code in GdkDisplay,
so update the cursor on all master pointers.
The code actually updating the cursor for the given window has
been refactored out to gdk_window_set_cursor_internal(), used
in gdk_window_set_device_cursor() as well, which makes it handle
root/foreign windows too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649313
-Update to distribute the VS2010 files.
-Added rules in Makefile.am's of GDK and GTK to fill in the
project/filter files templates with up-to-date source file
listings to simplify maintenace.
Any comments on the usage of the VS2010 files are welcome!
The zlib compressed xmlhttprequest thing was a nice hack, but it doesn't
really work in production. Its not portable, doesn't have enought API
(missing notification for closed sockets) and having to synchronize
between two different connections in a reliable way is a pain.
So, we're going everything over the websocket. This is a pure switch,
but after this we want to modify the protocol to work better over
the uncompressed utf8 transport of websockets.
Some special key keycode values as seen in keydown actually match
normal keys (like "." has a keyCode 46 on keyPress, which is the same
as Delete, but 190 for KeyDown). So we must match the special keys on
keypress. However, some things must be checked on keydown as they are not
generating keypress events.
We can't really know the client side keymaps, so we use the keysym
as the hardware keycode (essentially claiming to have a keyboard with
one key for all possible keysyms). This is not ideal, but its hard to
do better with no knowledge of the client side keyboard mappings.
(And html keyboard events suck badly...)
We're using the noVNC keyboard even handling model (and some of the
code with permissions). This means we combine data from keydown and
keypress to figure out the translated keysyms according to the keyboard
layout at the users machine.
This symbol needs to be exported for GDK (Win32) so that the
runtime checks for Win32 backend usage can be done on
MSVC-compiled versions of GTK+ too.
I did not add the corresponding symbols for the other backend
though-they are probably exported automatically by GCC AFAIK.
This is done to make commit
9db4accf9c
work on MSVC
The XI2 device manager was mistakenly setting the window user_time on
both ButtonPress and ButtonRelease, which meant that processes that
tried to launch another process based on the time of a ButtonPress
event would end up always focus-stealing-preventing the new app.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647275
As soon as something changes, even if it was a request from the user
we send a configure event. If not we might race with a app-side
generated configure event.
For instance, a create + resize might create only a configure event for
the create in the browser, but that may get to the app after the app-side
configure event for the resize, overriding the new size.
* Always calculate the context, don't store in surface.
* Store the toplevel element (frame or canvas) for easy access.
* Always use visibility hidden rathern than display none to hide windows,
as this means we can always rely on dom positioning info.