The last round of patches to get the desired direction of value move in
response to scrolls/keypresses on scales had the inadvertent side effect
of giving the opposite direction on scrollbars. Seeing as gtkrange.c is
already a collection of hacks, add another so that fix only holds if the
instance is a GtkScale, since that is what those patches were aimed at.
Close https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1065
We were mutating the list while iterating over it. This was not a
problem before since remove_controller just set the controller pointer
to NULL instead of actually removing it from the list of controllers.
We can avoid a signal connection per event controller (and the
EventControllerData struct) since every event controller knows the
widget it's attached to.
GtkTextView scrolls to the insertion point when the text
buffer signals a paste is done. This is wrong when there
are multiple views on the same buffer, and the paste
happened in another view.
To fix this, flip the handling of the scroll_after_paste
boolean to only be TRUE if we know that we want to scroll.
The gtk_app_chooser_dialog_set_heading() function do emit
notify::heading. Since the setter simply calls the function,
the setter itself shouldn't emit a notify signal by itself.
The bubble_timeout_id was reset only on some special case.
And so warnings were shown when the source is being tried
to be removed with the already removed id.
Fix this by unconditionally resetting the id on start of the function.
When an animated cursor was set and the previous cursor animation delay
happened to be the same, we wouldn't restart the animation timeout and
just return G_SOURCE_CONTINUE assuming the timer would continue. This
assumption is however only valid if the function was called from the
timeout, which is not the case.
Instead also arm the timer also if there is no previous timer active.
The last parameter of the signal callback from .ui
is the template's object from which the class is
derived.
And so, we already have access to the window object.
Let's just use it.
Our flatpak-builder manifests include building Graphene from Git; since
we're building the GTK demos, it's pointless to build the Graphene tests
as well. Disabling tests and benchmarks avoids pointless installations
inside the Flatpak build repo that will just be removed by the time we
bundle the demo.