There's no usecase for them, so remove them before we have to commit to
keeping an API.
Make the hooks private for now, actually removing them will come in
followup patches.
Its usecase was GERD - http://testbit.eu/~timj/historic/gerd/ - and that
project is long since dead.
I couldn't find any app using it after asking around and googling either.
Its usecase was GERD - http://testbit.eu/~timj/historic/gerd/ - and that
project is long since dead.
It has been superseded in GTK 2.2 by GdkDisplayPointerHooks anyway.
There are sure regressions but basic stuff seems to be working
again after all the API breakage done with comments like
"Win32 and Quartz need to be ported still."
Move everything dealing with compound text to be X11 specific
Only gdk_text_property_to_utf8_list and gdk_utf8_to_string_target
are kept across backends, so add vfuncs for these.
Also, remove the non-multihead-safe variants of all these.
These functions were trivial g_spawn wrappers in all backends
except for X11, and they can be easily replaced by
g_app_info_create_for_commandline + GdkAppLaunchContext.
Add a GdkDisplay::get_app_launch_context vfunc, and a
gdk_display_get_app_launch_context that for X11 returns a subclass.
For win32 and quartz, the implementations were trivial, so we
just return a new GdkAppLaunchContext without subclassing. Since
the type of the context now depends on the display,
gdk_app_launch_context_set_display is deprecated.
The old functions to get core pointer and devices list are gone as
well. This slice is entirely replaced internally by multidevice
handling and may just go.
This function will enable events for all devices of a given
GdkInputSource, either these available at the time of the call,
or these that are connected in the future.
gdk_enable_multidevice() has been replaced with gdk_disable_multidevice(),
so applications may call that function if they want to go back at the
previous behavior.
There would be usually little reasons to call that function, unless the
application is doing X calls itself that count on old fashioned core
devices.
The feature can and should be implemented manually using
gdk_window_get_background() and Cairo drawing. A non-cairo drawing API
does not make sense in GDK anymore.
In particular, the following functions are gone:
- gdk_screen_get_default_colormap()
- gdk_screen_set_default_colormap()
- gdk_screen_get_system_colormap()
- gdk_screen_get_rgba_colormap()