Make sure we always deal with the same screen when
connecting / disconnecting the theme-variant changed handler.
Pointed out by Morten Welinder in
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705640
When an icon is requested as symbolic, our generic fallback algorithm
uses fullcolor icons when the specified icon name is not found, treating
the "-symbolic" suffix as another component of the icon name.
Change the algorithm to check beforehand if the icon is symbolic, remove
the suffix if so, and re-add it at the end for all the generated icon
names.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680926
With multiple GDK backends in the process, we run into problems where
we try to use the Wayland im module on X, which crashes. This commit
adds a quick backend filter that removes the wayland, xim and ime
input methods from consideration unless the corresponding GDK backend
is in use.
This code is called early on, without a window, and then later on
with a window. Currently, it returns different results for these
cases when the setting contains a value. That leads to pointless
construction and destruction of im contexts. Instead, just look
at the settings of the default screen. In practice, there is only
one screen, ever.
... to make it possible to insert rows in the middle of the list without having
to fiddle with the sort functions. One of the first users is going to be Glade.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705558
We want a surface so we can properly represent the scale factor for it.
All backends are converted to use surfaces and we reimplement the
backwards compat code in the generic code.
To handle hidpi support we need to make sure we don't
downscale scaled css images.
Note: If cairo_surface_create_similar starts doing this
by itself we need to back this out.
A problem with the zoom scroll mode is that you have to restart
if you hit the bottom of the screen before you hit the bottom
of your document.
This commit adds an autoscroll feature to the zoom scroll: if
you move outside the window while in zoom scroll mode, we keep
scrolling in the direction you were going until you let go
of the mouse button.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704703
Triggering zoom scroll mode by Shift click was too much
of an easter egg. It also requires using keyboard and
mouse together, which is hard to do for many users.
Instead, we now trigger zoom scroll mode by click-and-hold
(or touch-and-hold).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704703
The internal class GtkPressAndHold was so far only
reacting to touch events. But in most cases where
a touch-and-hold or 'long press' pattern is useful,
click-and-hold can also be used.
This patch makes GtkPressAndHold react to mouse
clicks as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704703