The gesture functionality was taken over by GtkShortcutsShortcut,
so this widget is no longer needed, and it never was in a stable
release, so lets get rid of it.
Under X11, popovers are always constrained to the toplevel
window. Under Wayland, they aren't. This commit adds a
property that allows to explicitly constrain popovers to
the toplevel, giving them the same behavior under Wayland
as under X11.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757474
Its very easy to get extra references to the NativeDialog so that
when you release your last reference any visible dialog is not
hidden. We handle this by adding a destroy method similar to how
you destroy regular toplevels.
This is a base class that essentially mirrors GtkDialog, but
it is not a GtkWindow, as the actual implemetation will be using
native code.
The base class has show and hide vfuncs, as well as a helper function
to run the dialog in a modal fashion.
This will be later used by the native file chooser dialog.
... and gtk_widget_path_iter_get_object_name(). This allows applications
that still use widget paths to use the new object names to get the
correct styling.
Mutter and webkit-gtk are examples here.
When the $(resource_prefix)/gtk/help-overlay.ui resource exists,
load a GtkShortcutsWindow from it for each GtkApplicationWindow,
and set up a win.show-help-overlay action with accels <Primary>F1
and <Primary>? to show it.
Each gesture type has its separate GdkEvent struct, and begin/update/
end/cancel event types.
There is support for multi-finger swipe (3-4 fingers), and 2-finger
rotate/pinch gestures.
This allows a widget to override global font_options, such as hinting and
subpixel order. The widget's PangoContext is updated when this is set.
Some update code from gtk_widget_update_pango_context was moved to
update_pango_context so that gtk_widget_update_pango_context runs it.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751677
It is convenient to allow applications to show all the drop
targets at once. This improves the user experience with drag
an drop.
The new API allows the application to set the gtkplacessidebar
in a mode where invalid drop targets are insensitive and it
adds a "new bookmark" row. This mode is intended to be set
when the application is aware of a dnd operation and needs to
be stopped kwhen the application is aware that dnd operation
was cancelled or ended in a different part than gtkplacesisdebar.
The context parameter is unused in this patch, but will be
used in next patches when the sidebar will use a GtkListBox.
The reason of being unused now is just convenience.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747793
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
Load themed cursors from the same places they are loaded on freedesktop systems,
but use W32 API functions to do so (works for .cur/.ani cursors instead of X
cursors).
Refactor the code for cursor handling. Prefer loading cursors by name.
Do not load actual cursors when loading the theme. Find the files and remember
the arguments/calls for loading them instead. Keeping HCURSOR instance in the
hashmap would result in multiple GdkCursors using the same HCURSOR. Given that
we use DestroyCursor() to off them, this would cause problems (at the very
least - DestroyCursor() would fail).
Store GdkCursor instances in a cache. Update cached cursors when theme changes.
Recognize "system" theme as a special (and default) case. When it is set,
prefer system cursors and fall back to Adwaita cursors and (as a last resort)
built-in X cursors. Otherwise prefer theme cursors and fall back to system and
X cursors.
Force GTK to use "left_ptr" cursor when no cursor is set. Using NULL makes
it use the system default "arrow", which is not the intended behaviour when
a non-system theme is selected.
Ignore cursor size setting and query the OS for the required cursor size, as
Windows (almost) does not allow setting cursors of arbitrary size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749287
Add a new API, gtk_popover_set_default_widget, that can be
used to make a widget act as default while the popover is
shown. This is useful in dialog-like popovers.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747664