I noticed that some of the gestures did not show up in the
search results in the builder example in gtk3-demo, because
they share the same title and don't have an accelerator to
disambiguate. Include the shortcut type to handle this case.
Set a max-content-width on some of the scrolled windows to
keep things looking mostly the same, now that GtkScrolledWindow
passes along the natural size of its child.
The cellrenderer signals might be taking the grab somewhere else, at which
point it's dubious we should attempt to take the keyboard focus into the
treeview.
This concretely breaks popovers triggered from cellrenderer signals on
button press, because the treeview will attempt to grab focus
inconditionally then.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767468
It's almost certainly a programmer error if an action isn't
activatable because its target and parameter type don't match.
This commit changes the existing g_message to a g_warning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767705
Previously a style cascade's parent could not have a parent itself. That
represented the two levels at which you could add a style provider: at
the screen level, with gtk_style_context_add_provider_for_screen(), and
at the style context level, with gtk_style_context_add_provider().
This commit changes no functionality, but this change will be necessary
for adding style providers in the future that apply to a subtree of the
widget tree. It relaxes the requirement that a style cascade's parent
must not have a parent, since in the future a style context may be
affected by any number of parent widgets' style contexts.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751409
Debian stable currently ships with a 3.16 kernel, so
it doesn't have memfd available.
This commit adds shm_open fall back code for that case
(for now).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
We currently use syscall() directly to invoke memfd_create,
since the function isn't available in libc headers yet.
The code, though, mishandles how errors are passed from syscall().
It assumes syscall returns the error code directly (but negative),
when in fact, syscall() uses errno.
Also, the code fails to retry on EINTR.
This commit moves the handling of memfd create to a helper function,
and changes the code to use errno and handle EINTR.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
When disposing a GdkDrawingContext we should unset the association
between the instance and the Cairo context; this avoids stale pointers
in case a reference that has acquired on the Cairo context survives the
lifetime of the GdkDrawingContext.
This is a bit of fallout from 34feba1, now that we resolve
the has_indicators value earlier than realize, it becomes
possible to call gdk_window_move_resize() before realization.
Just added the appropriate checks.
Instead of associating the GdkWindow that created the GdkDrawingContext
we can directly bind the Cairo context to the GDK drawing context.
Cairo contexts created via gdk_cairo_create() go back to not having a
GdkWindow associated to them, like they did before we introduced the
gdk_window_begin_draw_frame() API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675
Instead of giving out Cairo contexts, GdkWindow should provide a
"drawing context", which can then create Cairo contexts on demand; this
allows us to future proof the API for when we're going to use a
different rendering pipeline, like OpenGL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675
Existing code drawing on a GDK window has to handle the direct drawing
and the buffered drawing by itself, by checking the window type and
whether or not the window is backed by a native windowing surface. After
that, the calling code has to create a Cairo context from the window and
keep an association between the context and the window itself.
This is completely unnecessary: GDK can determine whether or not it
should use a backing store to draw on a GdkWindow as well as create a
Cairo context, and keep track of it.
This allows to simplify the calling code, and enforce some of the
drawing behavior we want to guarantee to users.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675
The maximum content size does not increase the minimum request
but only ensures that both minimum and natural requests do not
exceed the maximum setting.
Widgets should support size requests before being realized in general,
otherwise this can cause flicker/resize at initial display time as
the toplevel window can make a request before realize/allocate.
This also makes the added testsuite/gtk/scrolledwindow.c test work again,
this was broken because we only ever calculate whether we are going
to use overlay scrollbars once the scrolled window is realized (and
the test case does not realize any window).
This patch does a couple of things:
o Removes the obscure 'extra_width' and 'extra_height' variables
making the request code exceedingly difficult to read
o Fixes the max-content-size properties introduced in bug 742281
so that they do not grow the minimum request.
o Cleanup of request code in general:
- min/max content sizes are clamped around the child request as needed
- scrollbar requests are only added in one place, after child request
sizes are calculated and without the extra_width/height thing.
Commit 023f406c96 has a typo that results
in this error:
../../../testsuite/gtk/notify.c: In function 'test_type':
../../../testsuite/gtk/notify.c:679:54: error: expected expression
before ')' token
(g_str_equal (pspec->name, "max-content-width") ||)
^
A wl_buffer has a max size of 4096 bytes, of which 8 are needed for the
header and another 4 for the string argument length (in this case), so
make sure the we only save the first 4083 bytes that are still valid
UTF8.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767241
The allowed values for the max-content- properties depend
on the value of the min-content- properties, in a way that
our simple test is not prepared to deal with. Just skip
them for now.
xdg-shell allows desktop environments to extend the list of states
within a given range.
Use this possibility to add a new state for tiled so that gtk+ can
benefit from this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766860