1) Don't directly draw in motion-notify, instead call
gtk_widget_queue_draw()
2) Don't draw ticks in expose events anymore, only when they were
changed
For now, the draw signal is emitted by default from the expose event, so
widgets can chose to either implement the expose event or the draw
function.
This is for the transitional period from expose event to draw signal.
Note that for now subclasses can only implement the draw function when
none of their parents implemented the expose event.
The functions are gtk_widget_get_allocated_width() and
gtk_widget_get_allocated_height().
They are currently identical to using width/height of
gtk_widget_get_allocation(), but are introduced for ease of use (no need
to use a custom struct) and to free people from having to think about
allocation.x and allocation.y (which is where the origin of the cairo
context in GtkWidget::draw is located).
validate_visible_area() can change the vertical adjustment and thus
trigger window moves/scrolls. This seems to change the surface for
which gtk_tree_view_bin_expose() just created a cairo context. Creating
the cairo context after the call to validate_visible_area() fixes
such crashes.
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()
This way, we can specify a colormap when constructing windows. And ew
must do that to avoid BadMatch from XCreateWindow when we use a
different visual.
Also add a priv pointer to GdkVisual and use it for the GdkVisualPrivate
structure. Then Make GdkVisualPrivate actually private to
gdkvisual-x11.c and make other callers use proper function calls to
access it.
Direct and TrueColor visuals don't alloc colors, so they don't need to
fiddle with colormaps. Just copy the code that computes the pixel value
from gdkcolor-x11.c and use it. For other visual types, don't set the
background color and fallback to background = None.
This removes:
gtk_widget_set_default_colormap()
gtk_widget_get_default_colormap()
gtk_widget_get_default_visual()
Colormaps are gone, and the default visual is the system visual of the
default screen.