Add separate GtkStack and GtkStackSwitcher widgets that are an
alternative to GtkNotebook. Additionally, GtkStack supports
animated transitions when changing pages.
These widgets were initially developed in libgd.
Add a test case that simulates the timing operaton that goes on
when showing a constant frame rate stream like a video - each
frame is shown at the VBlank interval that is closest to when it
would ideally be timed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Show the average and standard deviation of the latency in addition to
the frame rate. Add options to print the output in machine-readable form,
and to control the frequency and total number of statistics that will be
output.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
When we have pending motion events, instead of delivering them
directly, request the new FLUSH_EVENTS phase of the frame clock.
This allows us to compress repeated motion events sent to the
same window.
In the FLUSH_EVENTS phase, which occur at priority GDK_PRIORITY_EVENTS + 1,
we deliver any pending motion events then turn off event delivery
until the end of the next frame. Turning off event delivery means
that we'll reliably paint the compressed motion events even if more
have arrived.
Add a motion-compression test case which demonstrates behavior when
an application takes too long handle motion events. It is unusable
without this patch but behaves fine with the patch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Add a test of a window with an animated size and contents. The
test accepts load factor command line argument to see how things
work as the drawing of the content requires more GPU resources.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
This is useful to sketch out in GtkBuilder widgets in different states
all at once, so that we can check theming is right for them.
Add some initial UI files for primary-toolbar and inline-toolbar widgets.
Instead of undefining the DISABLE_DEPRECATED guards,
define the GDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNING macro where needed.
Also replace INCLUDES by AM_CPPFLAGS to shut up automake.
The tool works like this:
./accessibility-dump [FILE ...]
If no files are given, all files with the extension ".ui" in the current
directory are taken. For every file "test.ui", the following steps are
performed:
1) test.ui is loaded using GtkBuilder
2) The accessible for the window is loaded
3) The information of accessible is converted into a string using a
syntax defined in this test file
4) The generated string is diffed with the file "test.txt"
5) If the diff is empty, the test is a success, if not, the test fails.
6) The diff is output when the test runner is run with --verbose
So to add a test named "test", create a file called "test.ui", put it
into this directory. Then create the expected output file "test.txt",
put it into this directory too. You can create the initial version of
this file by invoking "./accessibility-dump --verbose test.ui". The
output will contain the expected text and can be copy/pasted into the
text file.
Tests in the parser need 1 or 2 files:
1) test.css
2) test.ref.css (optional, defaults to test.css)
The test instantiates a CSS provider, loads test.css, then dumps the
loaded file to test.out.css and then checks that that file matches
test.ref.css. If not, it dumps a diff between those two to the log and
fails.
You want to run the test with --verbose to get the output dumped to
stdout.
This is a special-purpose button that can be used together with
GPermission objects to control the sensitivity of system settings.
Suitable permission objects can e.g. be obtained from PolicyKit.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626457
This now allows text view to render text with alpha values in
the text foreground and backgrounds, the work is almost complete,
currently the error-underline-color is still a GdkColor style property
and since we use only GdkRGBA for rendering it needs to be converted
and applied, probably a new rgba version of the style property should
also be introduced.
This commit adds tests/testtextview that must be run from the tests/
directory to show translucent text in action.
Add a new test runner supposed to do a lot of generic tests. Run it like
this:
./gtk-reftest [OPTIONS] TESTFILE [TESTFILES...]
where FILE is a GtkBuilder ui file to run.
For a general test named "test", you want to have the following files:
1) test.ui
2) test.ref.ui
3) test.css (optional)
The test will then check that test.ui and test.ref.ui are rendered
identically with the provided css.
In detail, for every provided TESTFILE the test runner will:
1) Add the css to the default screen
2) Load the test.ui file and the test.ref.ui file
3) Grab the first GtkWindow subclass widget
4) gtk_widget_show() it and take a snapshot image of its contents into
a cairo surface.
5) Compare the two images to be bitwise identical. If they are not, a
diff image will be created hilighting the differences.
6) Save the images as png files to the output directory named:
- test.out.png (rendering of test.ui)
- test.ref.png (rendering of test.ref.ui)
- test.diff.png (optional, differences from step 5)
7) Fail the test if the two images are not bitwise identical
Credit for the idea of reftests goes to Mozilla and in particular David
Baron. For a larger introduction of why reftests are useful, see
http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/roc/archives/2008/12/reftests.html