The current code was marking queued events as flushed,
but left them in the queue. That doesn't make sense to
me - we should deliver all events we have before we
reach the paint phase of the frame cycle.
Unparenting the stack finalizes the entry and label,
but at least the label is available via the
gtk_editable_get_delegate API, and the a11y
implementation uses that at dispose time. So, clear
the pointers to prevent them from being dangling.
This was showing up as a segfault of the doc-shooter.
When the compositor unmaximized the window, we get a
state-changed signal, and we update the maximized field.
But then we go and recompute our layout based on the
maximize_initially field, and that is still TRUE, when
we were maximized initially. So we need to update both
fields.
This fixes a problem where using the window menu to
unmaximize an initially maximized window would not
work.
Fixes: #3226
These tests are a bit fragile because the initial focus
that is taken depends on what ends up in the center of
the window, horizontally or vertically, which depends
on things like fonts, or theme spacing.
This commit makes some tweaks to push things in the
widget-factory example around far enough to make the
tests work again.
We should figure out a way to make this more robust.
We are not using a box layout here since we want
to ignore the icons for measuring. But we still
want the layout to respect border spacing that
comes from the theme.
Since we mention abstract roles in the documentation
for GtkAccessibleRole, we should say what roles are
abstract. Doing this shows that we actually use two
abstract roles heavily, ourselves: WIDGET and WINDOW.
GtkModelButton is no longer derived from GtkButton,
but can still treat it like a button for the purposes
of having a click action. This lets ATs activate
menu items again.
When the button role changes, we want to update the
accessible role to match. Since accessible roles are
unchangeable post-creation of the AT context, we have
to cheat a bit and recreate the whole context.
Set the accessible role to GTK_ACCESSIBLE_ROLE_MENU_ITEM.
This is incomplete, we need to recreate the context when
the buttons role changes, and there are other things that
need to be set.
Some people read the "Getting Started" section as a series of
incremental lessons, and having the examples go from GtkApplication to
the old style "init / spin the main loop" confuses them.
We should be using GtkApplication everywhere in our examples.
According to section 7.1 of WAI-ARIA, the progressbar role
has the "Children presentational" characteristic, which
indicates that children should not be represented in
the a11y tree.
According to section 7.1 of WAI-ARIA, the meter role
has the "Children presentational" characteristic, which
indicates that children should not be represented in
the a11y tree.
According to section 7.1 of WAI-ARIA, the switch role
has the "Children presentational" characteristic, which
indicates that children should not be represented in
the a11y tree.
According to section 7.1 of WAI-ARIA, the slider role
has the "Children presentational" characteristic, which
indicates that children should not be represented in
the a11y tree, which makes sense, since these are all
just internal gizmos.
Recompute the layout when the css style change
affects text attributes. This matches what we do
in GtkLabel, and without this, changing the
font-features-setting css property in the Inspector
does not have immediate effect.
The last event, matching lifting the finger/releasing the mouse button,
is important when there's a large delay between it and the previous events,
as in when performing a movement, stopping, then releasing fingers as
opposed to doing a swipe.
If this event is skipped, doing this will result in kinetic deceleration
matching the previous finger movement, while the expected behavior would
be no deceleration.
See also 5dc6194b98 for a similar fix in
GtkEventControllerScroll.
The nameless, faceless gizmos inside a range do not
contribute to the accessible experience at all, lets
not add them to the tree. All the accessible functionality
is on the main widget (either a scale or a scrollbar).