Hide the handles when the popover appears, and brind them back
when it disappears. This will need revisiting if we start using
the popover for mouse interaction as well, where we may not
want handles to show up.
We don't want the popup to appear spontaneously, so eventually
the timeout may go away altogether. For now, shorten it to 50ms,
to avoid rewriting all the places where the timeout is set or
unset.
Use the drag-started signal to differentiate between drags that
move a handle and taps on a handle. Show the touch selection popup
for the latter, but not the former.
Hide the handles when the popover appears, and brind them back
when it disappears. This will need revisiting if we start using
the popover for mouse interaction as well, where we may not
want handles to show up.
We don't want the popover to appear spontaneously, so eventually
the timeout may go away altogether. For now, shorten it to 50ms,
to avoid rewriting all the places where the timeout is set or
unset.
Add bold/italics/underline styling to the context menu of
the 'Lorem ipsum...' text view in page 1. The point is not
to show good UI for this kind of styling, but to demonstrate
custom actions in the context menu / touch selection.
Update style for touch selection in GtkEntry and GtkTextView
according to https://wiki.gnome.org/Design/OS/Selections
Add 'Select All' to the default actions, change actions
to use icons and move the popover to the bottom. If there is
no selection, just offer to paste.
Since nautilus merge, we were not showing 'Recent' in the sidebar
if GIO did not support the recent: scheme. But the file chooser
can show recent files independent of gvfs - it loads the recent
files manually. This is relevant on Windows and OS X, where gvfs
is typically not used.
This commit adds a show-recent property which can be used to override
the recent: scheme check. We use it in the file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750068
- use consistent widget style. unfortunately using assets
- light/dark variant
- new assets for text selestions, using existing slider asset for
insertion point
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750396
We don't want scale marks to affect scale sizing and positioning,
so draw them inside the range recangle. This avoids size changes
for marks that don't have labels, at least.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749650
The change in 03213b9509 changed the rules
as to when CSD can be enabled, but it also unconditionally enables CSD
with the implicit assumption that client-side shadows were the real
issue, and that we could work around that by drawing our own borders.
This also means that setting a titlebar for a GtkWindow will enable CSD
unconditionally.
In reality, some window managers (like Matchbox) *only* support
server-side decorations, and will ignore all hints to the contrary, to
the point of drawing decorations at random locations on top of the
window.
Since CSD are enabled unconditionally, the GTK_CSD environment variable
is also not a suitable escape hatch.
In the grand tradition of asking ourselves if we should do something
just because we can, we should split the environment checks from the
checks on what the user requested; by doing that, we can also check
when enabling client-side decorations, and ideally bail out if needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750343
On wl_keyboard.key/modifiers, we're just forgetting about currently
pressed mouse buttons. Fix this by storing button and key modifiers
separately, and put these together when creating the GdkEvents.
Text insertion/pasting might trigger scroll, so we'd have to wait
until the text was revalidated and the scrolling truly happened
before we can check the new handle(s) position.
Nowadays (and for quite some years now) we rely on GdkEventGrabBroken
events to be received. This fake button event seems a remnant of
the early Gtk 2.x days, and is currently even inconsistent with our
event delivery model, so just remove it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749737