In the Quartz backend, there are two methods by which windows are
resized. The first method is fully handled by Quartz and does not appear
in the event stream the application resizes. The second method is when
we resize windows by ourselves. In OS X this happens when a GTK+ resize
grip is used. This resize grip is larger than the Quartz resize grip.
When the resize is started outside the "Quartz area", we have to handle
it by ourselves.
This patch fixes this manual window resizing by ignoring events while we
are in the process of resizing (such that the events actually arrive at
the sendEvent handler of GdkQuartzWindow where this resize is handled).
When the resize has finished we break all grabs such that GDK is not
stuck thinking the cursor is still in the resize window.
_gdk_x11_moveresize_configure_done() isn't called for wmspec
moves/resizes so we don't have a way to notice when a wmspec
move/resize ends and consequently untrigger the sending of
_NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL which results in this message always being
sent on the next button release event. In that case we are marking
that event as handled so it isn't processed further which breaks
button press/release event handling in several widgets.
To fix this we simply allow the normal event handling machinery to run
after sending the _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL message.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673328
Since the order in which _NET_WM_STATE and _NET_WM_DESKTOP are set, or
even *if* they are set, isn't defined, we could end up unsetting
GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED given that both handlers for these two X
properties end up doing window state changes for all states. As we
want GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED to be set by default we need to set its
master flag by default as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673125
We now have a proper MASTER/SLAVE input device split, where
the masters are virtual core input devices and we add fake hw
slave devices for the system pointer and real slave devices for
wintab devices.
We also set the proper source_device on the events so you can
tell which device sent it and properly decode the axis info.
The code for calculating the per-monitor workarea was ignoring
the fact that the EWMH workarea property can only handle rectangular
workareas, and thus can't really do justice to general monitor
arrangements. As a workaround, we ignore it for anything but
the primary monitor. And we ignore it for the primary monitor
as well if it does not even cover it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672163
We want to avoid handling focus events for the private focus window,
otherwise the keyboard grab taken by for example buttons will cause a
spurious FOCUS_OUT/FOCUS_IN on the toplevel.
The code that did this seems to have been lost in the XI2 transition for
GTK3.
This patch reapplies db4a6040af which was
backed out in 18406b7b04 to give
developers a chance to get their X servers fixed. As we want to get this
bugfix in for 3.4, we need to commit it now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657578
XI2 provides us with an increment for each scroll valuator,
and by dividing the delta by the increment, we obtain normalized
values in some abstract 'scroll unit'.
For mouse wheels, the evdev driver reports an increment of -1,
so doing this division fixes the inverted scrolling with wheels
that we've seen recently.
GtkRange was using GDK_POINTER_MOTION_MASK, and it was not
getting any emulated motion events, because we only translate
from GDK_BUTTON_MOTION_MASK to GDK_POINTER_MOTION_MASK, but not
the other way around, and emulated_mask only had
GDK_BUTTON_MOTION_MASK in it. Now we put GDK_POINTER_MOTION_MASK
in emulated_mask and successfully match for windows that
have GDK_POINTER_MOTION_MASK or any of the button motion masks
selected.
This fixes range sliders not following the finger and jumping
to the last position upon release.
If the Window Manager supports the _NET_WM_STATE_HIDDEN, we use it to use
the _NET_WM_STATE protocol when de-iconifying windows (iconification is
unchanged, via XIconifyWindow). Additionally, we no longer interpret all
UnmapNotify events for our window as the result of iconification.
(Based on patch by Tomas Frydrych <tf@linux.intel.com>)
NSEvent -scrollingDeltaX and -scrollingDeltaY aren't defined before
10.7, so objc assumes that they return a pointer. Trying to cast to a
float generates a compiler error.