This function may be used to know the hardware device that triggered
an event, it could resort to the master device in the few cases there's
not a direct hardware device to relate to the event (i.e.: crossing events
due to grabs)
One less magic function. Also refactored it to make it easier to
implement. It now returns TRUE if it beeped and FALSE if it failed to do
so. A default implementation exists that just returns FALSE for all the
backends that can't beep windows (read: everything but X11 with XKB -
and why on earth do keyboard libs implement beeping?)
Trying to get rid of all the _gdk_windowing_something() functions that
we expect backends to magically know about and instead put them in a
proper interface (mostly GdkWindowImplClass).
... instead of _gdk_drawable_ref_cairo_surface() where appropriate.
Also, don't implement the drawable->create_cairo_surface vfunc anymore.
This is in preparation for the split of GdkWindow from GdkDrawable.
You are not allowed to track surfaces from GDK or draw outside of expose
events. So we can remove ugly hacks needed previously. See
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=606009 for the introduction
of this workaround.
This is not strictly an API change as GdkDrawable is typedeffed to
GdkWindow, but it changes the header, so I'm marking it as such.
gdk_cairo_create() can only be used with windows these days, so it makes
sense to pass a window. With that, we can alseo remove the
set_cairo_clip() vfunc from GdkDrawable and implement it inside
gdkwindow.c.
An event filter may add or remove filters itself. This patch does
two things to address this case. The first is to take a temporary
reference to the filter while it is being used. The second is
to wait until after the filter function is run before determining
the next node in the list to process. This guards against
changes to the next node. It also does not run functions
that have been marked as removed. Though I'm not sure if this
case can arise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=635380
This new function takes a GdkRGBA in order to set the background to
an alpha color. Keep in mind that RGBA visuals and a composited environment
are still necessary to have an alpha background displayed.
Add signal GdkWindow::create-surface which allows to use any
surface type as storage for offscreen windows.
Test the new signal in tests/gdkoffscreenbox.c
This previously caused the x11 code to do a XSetWindowBackgroundPixmap
call on a window that was about to be destroyed. And that's not really
useful.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=630864
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.