2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
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/* GDK - The GIMP Drawing Kit
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* Copyright (C) 2000 Red Hat, Inc.
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*
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* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
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* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
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* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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* Lesser General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
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* License along with this library; if not, write to the
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* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
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* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
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*/
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/*
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* Modified by the GTK+ Team and others 1997-2000. See the AUTHORS
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* file for a list of people on the GTK+ Team. See the ChangeLog
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* files for a list of changes. These files are distributed with
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* GTK+ at ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/.
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*/
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#include <ctype.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include <limits.h>
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#include <errno.h>
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#include "gdk.h"
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#include "gdkprivate-win32.h"
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#include "gdkinternals.h"
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#include "gdkkeysyms.h"
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#include "config.h"
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guint _gdk_keymap_serial = 0;
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gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
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gboolean _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr = FALSE;
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2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
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2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
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static GdkKeymap *default_keymap = NULL;
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Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
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static guint *keysym_tab = NULL;
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2002-09-11 21:55:48 +00:00
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#ifdef G_ENABLE_DEBUG
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static void
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print_keysym_tab (void)
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{
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gint vk;
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gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
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g_print ("keymap:%s\n", _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr ? " (uses AltGr)" : "");
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2002-09-11 21:55:48 +00:00
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for (vk = 0; vk < 256; vk++)
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{
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gint state;
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g_print ("%#.02x: ", vk);
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for (state = 0; state < 4; state++)
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{
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gchar *name = gdk_keyval_name (keysym_tab[vk*4 + state]);
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if (name == NULL)
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name = "(none)";
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g_print ("%s ", name);
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}
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g_print ("\n");
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}
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}
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#endif
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Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
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static void
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update_keymap (void)
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{
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static guint current_serial = 0;
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gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
guchar key_state[256], temp_key_state[256];
|
|
|
|
wchar_t wcs[1];
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
guint scancode;
|
|
|
|
guint vk;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keysym_tab != NULL && current_serial == _gdk_keymap_serial)
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
current_serial = _gdk_keymap_serial;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keysym_tab == NULL)
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab = g_new (guint, 4*256);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
memset (key_state, 0, sizeof (key_state));
|
|
|
|
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
_gdk_keyboard_has_altgr = FALSE;
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
for (vk = 0; vk < 256; vk++)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if ((scancode = MapVirtualKey (vk, 0)) == 0)
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4+0] =
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4+1] =
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4+2] =
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4+3] = GDK_VoidSymbol;
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
{
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
gint shift;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
key_state[vk] = 0x80;
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
for (shift = 0; shift < 4; shift++)
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
guint *ksymp = keysym_tab + vk*4 + shift;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
guchar chars[2];
|
|
|
|
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
switch (shift)
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
case 0:
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_SHIFT] = 0;
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_CONTROL] = key_state[VK_MENU] = 0;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
case 1:
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_SHIFT] = 0x80;
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_CONTROL] = key_state[VK_MENU] = 0;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
case 2:
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_SHIFT] = 0;
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_CONTROL] = key_state[VK_MENU] = 0x80;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
case 3:
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_SHIFT] = 0x80;
|
|
|
|
key_state[VK_CONTROL] = key_state[VK_MENU] = 0x80;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = 0;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* First, handle those virtual keys that we always want
|
|
|
|
* as special GDK_* keysyms, even if ToAsciiEx might
|
|
|
|
* turn some them into a ASCII character (like TAB and
|
|
|
|
* ESC).
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
switch (vk)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
case VK_CANCEL:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Cancel; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_BACK:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_BackSpace; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_TAB:
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
if (shift & 0x1)
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_ISO_Left_Tab;
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Tab;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
case VK_CLEAR:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Clear; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RETURN:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Return; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_SHIFT:
|
|
|
|
case VK_LSHIFT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Shift_L; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_CONTROL:
|
|
|
|
case VK_LCONTROL:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Control_L; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_MENU:
|
|
|
|
case VK_LMENU:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Alt_L; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_PAUSE:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Pause; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_ESCAPE:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Escape; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_PRIOR:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Prior; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_NEXT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Next; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_END:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_End; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_HOME:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Home; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_LEFT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Left; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_UP:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Up; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RIGHT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Right; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_DOWN:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Down; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_SELECT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Select; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_PRINT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Print; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_EXECUTE:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Execute; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_INSERT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Insert; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_DELETE:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Delete; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_HELP:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Help; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_LWIN:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Meta_L; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RWIN:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Meta_R; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_MULTIPLY:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Multiply; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_ADD:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Add; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_SEPARATOR:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Separator; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_SUBTRACT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Subtract; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_DECIMAL:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Decimal; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_DIVIDE:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_KP_Divide; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F1:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F1; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F2:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F2; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F3:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F3; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F4:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F4; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F5:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F5; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F6:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F6; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F7:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F7; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F8:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F8; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F9:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F9; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F10:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F10; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F11:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F11; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F12:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F12; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F13:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F13; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F14:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F14; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F15:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F15; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F16:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F16; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F17:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F17; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F18:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F18; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F19:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F19; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F20:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F20; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F21:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F21; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F22:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F22; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F23:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F23; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_F24:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_F24; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_NUMLOCK:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Num_Lock; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_SCROLL:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Scroll_Lock; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RSHIFT:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Shift_R; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RCONTROL:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Control_R; break;
|
|
|
|
case VK_RMENU:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Alt_R; break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (*ksymp == 0)
|
|
|
|
{
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
gint k = ToAsciiEx (vk, scancode, key_state,
|
|
|
|
(LPWORD) chars, 0, _gdk_input_locale);
|
|
|
|
#if 0
|
|
|
|
g_print ("ToAsciiEx(%02x: %d: %d: %d, %02x%02x\n",
|
|
|
|
vk, scancode, shift, k, chars[0], chars[1]);
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
if (k == 1)
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
if (_gdk_input_codepage >= 1250 &&
|
|
|
|
_gdk_input_codepage <= 1258 &&
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
chars[0] >= GDK_space && chars[0] <= GDK_asciitilde)
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = chars[0];
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (MultiByteToWideChar (_gdk_input_codepage, 0,
|
|
|
|
chars, 1, wcs, 1) > 0)
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = gdk_unicode_to_keyval (wcs[0]);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
else if (k == -1)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
MultiByteToWideChar (_gdk_input_codepage, 0,
|
|
|
|
chars, 1, wcs, 1);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* It is a dead key, and it's has been stored in
|
|
|
|
* the keyboard layout's state by ToAsciiEx().
|
|
|
|
* Yes, this is an incredibly silly API! Make
|
|
|
|
* the keyboard layout forget it by calling
|
|
|
|
* ToAsciiEx() once more, with the virtual key
|
|
|
|
* code and scancode for the spacebar, without
|
|
|
|
* shift or AltGr. Otherwise the next call to
|
|
|
|
* ToAsciiEx() with a different key would try to
|
|
|
|
* combine with the dead key.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
memmove (temp_key_state, key_state, sizeof (key_state));
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_SHIFT] =
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_CONTROL] =
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_MENU] = 0;
|
|
|
|
ToAsciiEx (VK_SPACE, MapVirtualKey (VK_SPACE, 0),
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state, (LPWORD) chars, 0,
|
|
|
|
_gdk_input_locale);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Use dead keysyms instead of "undead" ones */
|
|
|
|
switch (gdk_unicode_to_keyval (wcs[0]))
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
case GDK_grave:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_grave; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_acute:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_acute; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_asciicircum:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_circumflex; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_asciitilde:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_tilde; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_breve:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_breve; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_abovedot:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_abovedot; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_diaeresis:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_diaeresis; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_doubleacute:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_doubleacute; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_caron:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_caron; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_cedilla:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_cedilla; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_ogonek:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_ogonek; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_degree:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_abovering; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_periodcentered:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_dead_abovedot; break;
|
|
|
|
case GDK_Greek_accentdieresis:
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_Greek_accentdieresis; break;
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
GDK_NOTE (EVENTS,
|
|
|
|
g_print ("Unhandled dead key cp:%d vk:%02x, sc:%x, ch:%02x%s%s\n",
|
|
|
|
_gdk_input_codepage, vk,
|
|
|
|
scancode, chars[0],
|
|
|
|
(shift&0x1 ? " shift" : ""),
|
|
|
|
(shift&0x2 ? " altgr" : "")));
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
else if (k == 0)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
/* Seems to be necessary to "reset" the keyboard layout
|
|
|
|
* in this case, too. Otherwise problems on NT4.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
memmove (temp_key_state, key_state, sizeof (key_state));
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_SHIFT] =
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_CONTROL] =
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state[VK_MENU] = 0;
|
|
|
|
ToAsciiEx (VK_SPACE, MapVirtualKey (VK_SPACE, 0),
|
|
|
|
temp_key_state, (LPWORD) chars, 0,
|
|
|
|
_gdk_input_locale);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GDK_NOTE (EVENTS, g_print ("ToAsciiEx returns %d "
|
|
|
|
"for vk:%02x, sc:%02x%s%s\n",
|
|
|
|
k, vk, scancode,
|
|
|
|
(shift&0x1 ? " shift" : ""),
|
|
|
|
(shift&0x2 ? " altgr" : "")));
|
|
|
|
}
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (*ksymp == 0)
|
|
|
|
*ksymp = GDK_VoidSymbol;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
key_state[vk] = 0;
|
|
|
|
}
|
gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime and
2003-07-25 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: New flags _gdk_input_locale_is_ime
and _gdk_keyboard_has_altgr.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Lots of changes. Most important
ones detailled here.
Code that has been ifdeffed out for a long time removed. Remove
some really old doc comments that were left behind for some public
functions, the official ones are in the X11 backend anyway. Change
GDK_WINDOW_OBJECT() calls to GdkWindowObject casts. Reformat
multi-line boolean expressions to have the operators at ends of
lines.
As mouse capture with SetCapture() indeed seems to work OK, no
need to have the correspoinding macro USE_SETCAPTURE and ifdefs.
Ifdef out the gdk-ping-msg stuff. I don't remember why it was
needed at some time, and things seem to work fine now without
(knock on wood).
Ifdef out the search for some Latin locale keyboard layout being
loaded. Not used currently, but might be needed after all, if we
decide that we want to be able to generate ASCII control character
events with a non-Latin keyboard.
(assign_object): New helper function, handles the g_object_ref()
and unref() calls when assigning GObject pointers.
(generate_crossing_events): Also generate the GDK_NOTIFY_INTERIOR
enter event when the pointer has moved to an ancestor window. Was
left out by mistake.
(gdk_window_is_ancestor): Renamed from gdk_window_is_child().
(gdk_pointer_grab, gdk_pointer_ungrab): Implement the confine_to
functionality, using ClipCursor().
(find_window_for_mouse_event): Splice part of code into new
function find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event().
(fixup_event, append_event, apply_filters): New functions, code
refactored out from elsewhere.
(synthesize_enter_or_leave_event, synthesize_leave_event,
synthesize_enter_event,
synthesize_leave_events,synthesize_enter_events): Also take a
GdkCrossingMode parameter, in preparation to generating
GDK_CROSSING_GRAB and GDK_CROSSING_UNGRAB events.
(fixup_event, append_event, fill_key_event_string): New functions,
code refactoring.
(vk_from_char, build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event):
Removed as part of dropping WM_CHAR handling.
(build_key_event_state,gdk_event_translate): Call
GetKeyboardState(), once, for each keyboard message, instead of
several calls to GetKeyState() here and there.
(gdk_event_translate): Fix bugs #104516, #104662, #115902. While
at it, do some major refactoring, and some fixes for potential
problems noticed while going through the code.
Don't handle WM_CHAR at all. Only handle WM_KEYDOWN and
WM_KEYUP. Don't need the state variables related to whether to
wait for WM_CHAR or not, and whether the current key is
AltGr. Remove lots of complexity. Thus don't need the
use_ime_composition flag.
Not handling WM_CHAR means dead key handling will have to be taken
care of by GTK, but that seems to work fine, so no worry.
Another side-effect is that Alt+keypad digits don't work any
longer, but it's better to learn to use GTK's ISO14755 support is
anyway.
Be more careful in checking whether AltGr is involved. Only
attempt to handle it if the keyboard actually has it. And
explicitly check for *left* Control plus *right* Alt being
pressed. Still, allow (left) Alt and/or (right) Control with AltGr
chars.
Handle keys using similar code as in the X11 backend. As we have
built a keymap in gdkkeys-win32.c anyway, use it by calling
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state() to look up the keysym from
the virtual key code and keyboard state. Build the key event
string in exactly the same way as the X11 backend.
If an IME is being used, don't generate GDK events for keys
between receiving WM_IME_STARTCOMPOSITION and
WM_IME_ENDCOMPOSITION, as those keys are for the IME.
For WM_IME_COMPOSITION, handle all the Unicode chars returned from
the IME, not just the first one.
gdk_event_translate() is still quite complex, could split the
message handler cases out into separate functions.
On mouse events, when the mouse is grabbed, use
find_real_window_for_grabbed_mouse_event() in order to be able to
generate correct crossing events.
No longer take a pre-allocated GdkEvent as parameter. Instead,
allocate events as needed and append them to the queue. (This is
different from how gdk_event_translate() in the X11 backend
works.) This change made the code much clearer, especially in the
cases where we have to generate several GDK events for one Windows
message. Return FALSE if DefWindowProc() should be called, TRUE
if not. If DefWindowProc() should not be called, also return the
value to be returned from the window procedure.
(Previously, the interaction with gdk_event_translate()'s caller
was much more complex, when we had to indicate whether the
already-queued event should be left in the queue or removed, and
in addition also had to indicate whether to call DefWindowProc()
or not, and what value to return from the window procedure if
not.)
Don't use a separate "private" variable required to be pointing to
the GdkWindowObject of the "window" variable at all times. Just
use casts, even if looks a bit uglier.
Notice destroyed windows as early as possible, and break out of
the messsage switch.
Use _gdk_pointer_root as current_window when the pointer is
outside GDK's top-level windows.
On WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE, set _gdk_input_locale_is_ime as
appropriate, based on ImmIsIME().
(gdk_event_translate, gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Implement client messages.
Use a registered Windows message to pass GDK client messages. Note
that the amount of user data is restricted to four bytes, as it is
carried in the LPARAM. (The WPARAM is used for the message type
"atom".)
(real_window_procedure): Adapt for new gdk_event_translate()
interface.
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c (_gdk_windowing_init): Set
_gdk_input_locale_is_ime initially.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Use g_object_ref()/unref() instead
of g_colormap_ref()/unref().
(gdk_window_new): Made code a bit more like the X11 one, pretend
to handle screens (although we just have one for now).
* gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
(gdk_event_send_client_message_for_display,
gdk_screen_broadcast_client_message): Document the user data
limitation on Win32.
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c (print_event): More complete enter
and leave notify detail output.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c (update_keymap): Make dead keys
visible to GDK and GTK. Store the corresponding GDK_dead_* keysym
for those, so that the GtkIMContextCimple compose tables will
work. Deduce if the keyboard layout has the AltGr key, and set the
above flag accordingly.
2003-07-26 01:54:59 +00:00
|
|
|
if ((keysym_tab[vk*4 + 2] != GDK_VoidSymbol &&
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4] != keysym_tab[vk*4 + 2]) ||
|
|
|
|
(keysym_tab[vk*4 + 3] != GDK_VoidSymbol &&
|
|
|
|
keysym_tab[vk*4 + 1] != keysym_tab[vk*4 + 3]))
|
|
|
|
_gdk_keyboard_has_altgr = TRUE;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2002-09-11 21:55:48 +00:00
|
|
|
GDK_NOTE (EVENTS, print_keysym_tab ());
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
|
|
|
GdkKeymap*
|
Changes multihead reorganizing code for win32 support, mostly from a patch
Wed Jun 5 18:34:47 2002 Owen Taylor <otaylor@redhat.com>
Changes multihead reorganizing code for win32 support,
mostly from a patch by Hans Breuer.
* gdk/gdkcolor.c gdk/x11/gdkcolor-x11.c gdk/gdkcursor.c
gdk/x11/gdkcursor-x11.c gdk/gdkevents.c gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
gdk/gdkfont.c gdk/x11/gdkfont-x11.c gdk/gdkkeys.c
gdk/x11/gdkkeys-x11.c gdk/gdkimage.c gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c
gdk/gdkscreen.c gdk/x11/gdkmain-x11.c
gdk/gdkdisplay.c gdk/gdkevents-x11.c gdk/gdkpango.c
gdk/x11/gdkpango-x11.c gdk/gdkselection.c
gdk/x11/gdkselection-x11.c gdk/gdkwindow.c
gdk/x11/gdkwindow-x11.c gdk/gdkvisual.c gdk/x11/gdkvisual-x11.c:
Move port-independent singlehead wrapper functions into
port-independent part of GDK. (#80009)
* gdk/win32/gdkcolor-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkcursor-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkfont-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkimage-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkproperty-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkselection-win32.c gdk/win32/gkwindow-win32.c:
Turn singlehead functions into "multihead" functions that ignore
their GdkDisplay or GdkScreen arguments.
* gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkinput-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h:
Misc multihead-compatibility changes.
* gtk/gtk.def gdk/gdk.def: Update for multihead functions.
* gdk/gdkcolormap.h gdk/gdkvisual.h gdk/x11/gdkcolormap-x11.c
gdk/x11/gdkvisual-x11.c: Remove the screen fields
from the public parts of the colormap/visual structures, add accessors
instead.
* gdk/gdkpixbuf-render.c gdk/gdkpixmap.c gdk/gdkrgb.c
gdk/x11/gdkcolormap-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c
gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkprivate-x11.h gtk/gtkgc.c
gtk/gtkstyle.c gtk/gtkwidget.c: Use accessors to get the screen
for colormaps, visuals; move the fields into the private
structures for the x11 backend.
* gdk/gdkdisplay.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.[ch]
gdk/gdkscreen.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.c:
Remove virtualization of screen and display functions.
(#79990, patch from Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/win32/gdkdisplay-x11.c gdk/win32/gdkscreen-win32.c
gdk/win32/{Makefile.am, makefile.msc, makefile.mingw}:
New files containing stub implementations of Display,
Screen functions.
* gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.[ch]
gdk/x11/gdkx.h: Clean up function exports and what
headers they are in. (#79954)
* gdk/x11/gdkx.h: Fix macro that was referring to a non-existant
screen->screen_num. (In the patch for #79972, Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/gdkscreen.c gdk/gdkwindow.c gdk/x11/gdkinternals.h
gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.c: Fix gdk_screen_get_window_at_pointer()
to use window hooks. (#79972, patch partly from Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c: Fix
some warnings.
2002-06-06 00:26:42 +00:00
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_get_for_display (GdkDisplay *display)
|
2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
2002-06-20 23:59:27 +00:00
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (display == gdk_display_get_default (), NULL);
|
Changes multihead reorganizing code for win32 support, mostly from a patch
Wed Jun 5 18:34:47 2002 Owen Taylor <otaylor@redhat.com>
Changes multihead reorganizing code for win32 support,
mostly from a patch by Hans Breuer.
* gdk/gdkcolor.c gdk/x11/gdkcolor-x11.c gdk/gdkcursor.c
gdk/x11/gdkcursor-x11.c gdk/gdkevents.c gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c
gdk/gdkfont.c gdk/x11/gdkfont-x11.c gdk/gdkkeys.c
gdk/x11/gdkkeys-x11.c gdk/gdkimage.c gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c
gdk/gdkscreen.c gdk/x11/gdkmain-x11.c
gdk/gdkdisplay.c gdk/gdkevents-x11.c gdk/gdkpango.c
gdk/x11/gdkpango-x11.c gdk/gdkselection.c
gdk/x11/gdkselection-x11.c gdk/gdkwindow.c
gdk/x11/gdkwindow-x11.c gdk/gdkvisual.c gdk/x11/gdkvisual-x11.c:
Move port-independent singlehead wrapper functions into
port-independent part of GDK. (#80009)
* gdk/win32/gdkcolor-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkcursor-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkfont-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkimage-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkproperty-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkselection-win32.c gdk/win32/gkwindow-win32.c:
Turn singlehead functions into "multihead" functions that ignore
their GdkDisplay or GdkScreen arguments.
* gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c
gdk/win32/gdkinput-win32.c gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h:
Misc multihead-compatibility changes.
* gtk/gtk.def gdk/gdk.def: Update for multihead functions.
* gdk/gdkcolormap.h gdk/gdkvisual.h gdk/x11/gdkcolormap-x11.c
gdk/x11/gdkvisual-x11.c: Remove the screen fields
from the public parts of the colormap/visual structures, add accessors
instead.
* gdk/gdkpixbuf-render.c gdk/gdkpixmap.c gdk/gdkrgb.c
gdk/x11/gdkcolormap-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c
gdk/x11/gdkimage-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkprivate-x11.h gtk/gtkgc.c
gtk/gtkstyle.c gtk/gtkwidget.c: Use accessors to get the screen
for colormaps, visuals; move the fields into the private
structures for the x11 backend.
* gdk/gdkdisplay.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.[ch]
gdk/gdkscreen.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.c:
Remove virtualization of screen and display functions.
(#79990, patch from Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/win32/gdkdisplay-x11.c gdk/win32/gdkscreen-win32.c
gdk/win32/{Makefile.am, makefile.msc, makefile.mingw}:
New files containing stub implementations of Display,
Screen functions.
* gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.[ch] gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.[ch]
gdk/x11/gdkx.h: Clean up function exports and what
headers they are in. (#79954)
* gdk/x11/gdkx.h: Fix macro that was referring to a non-existant
screen->screen_num. (In the patch for #79972, Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/gdkscreen.c gdk/gdkwindow.c gdk/x11/gdkinternals.h
gdk/x11/gdkscreen-x11.c: Fix gdk_screen_get_window_at_pointer()
to use window hooks. (#79972, patch partly from Erwann Chenede)
* gdk/x11/gdkdisplay-x11.c gdk/x11/gdkevents-x11.c: Fix
some warnings.
2002-06-06 00:26:42 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
|
|
|
if (default_keymap == NULL)
|
|
|
|
default_keymap = g_object_new (gdk_keymap_get_type (), NULL);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return default_keymap;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PangoDirection
|
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_get_direction (GdkKeymap *keymap)
|
|
|
|
{
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
update_keymap ();
|
2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
switch (PRIMARYLANGID (LOWORD ((DWORD) _gdk_input_locale)))
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
case LANG_HEBREW:
|
|
|
|
case LANG_ARABIC:
|
2002-02-27 16:37:04 +00:00
|
|
|
#ifdef LANG_URDU
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
case LANG_URDU:
|
2002-02-27 16:37:04 +00:00
|
|
|
#endif
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
case LANG_FARSI:
|
|
|
|
/* Others? */
|
|
|
|
return PANGO_DIRECTION_RTL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
return PANGO_DIRECTION_LTR;
|
|
|
|
}
|
2001-06-22 14:08:51 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
gboolean
|
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keyval (GdkKeymap *keymap,
|
|
|
|
guint keyval,
|
|
|
|
GdkKeymapKey **keys,
|
|
|
|
gint *n_keys)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GArray *retval;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keymap == NULL || GDK_IS_KEYMAP (keymap), FALSE);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keys != NULL, FALSE);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (n_keys != NULL, FALSE);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keyval != 0, FALSE);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
retval = g_array_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (GdkKeymapKey));
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Accept only the default keymap */
|
|
|
|
if (keymap == NULL || keymap == gdk_keymap_get_default ())
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
gint vk;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
update_keymap ();
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for (vk = 0; vk < 256; vk++)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
gint i;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (keysym_tab[vk*4+i] == keyval)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GdkKeymapKey key;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
key.keycode = vk;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* 2 levels (normal, shift), two groups (normal, AltGr) */
|
|
|
|
key.group = i / 2;
|
|
|
|
key.level = i % 2;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_array_append_val (retval, key);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Remove the event_mask, it is now in GdkWindowObject.
2002-03-01 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h (struct _GdkWindowImplWin32): Remove
the event_mask, it is now in GdkWindowObject.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Change accordingly. Set the
GDK_STRUCTURE_MASK in gdk_window_set_events(), as it is always set
in gdk_window_new(), too. (Bug#72921)
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Change accordingly here, too.
(vk_from_char): New function, calculates the virtual keycode
corresponding to the char in a WM_CHAR message.
(build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event): Use it.
(build_keypress_event): Call ImmReleaseContext() after using the
input context. This might plug a memory or resource leak.
(build_key_event_state): Remove #if 0 code.
(gdk_event_translate): Actually, it would be preferrable to always
handle just the WM_KEYDOWN and WM_KEYUP messages, not WM_CHAR at
all, and thus drop the contorted logic with ignore_wm_char etc.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: (gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keyval):
Debugging output.
(gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state): Return correct value. (But
_gtk_key_hash_lookup() doesn't check the return value...)
2002-02-28 23:38:55 +00:00
|
|
|
#ifdef G_ENABLE_DEBUG
|
|
|
|
if (_gdk_debug_flags & GDK_DEBUG_EVENTS)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
gint i;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_print ("gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keyval: %#.04x (%s):",
|
|
|
|
keyval, gdk_keyval_name (keyval));
|
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < retval->len; i++)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GdkKeymapKey *entry = (GdkKeymapKey *) retval->data + i;
|
|
|
|
g_print (" %#.02x %d %d", entry->keycode, entry->group, entry->level);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
g_print ("\n");
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
if (retval->len > 0)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
*keys = (GdkKeymapKey*) retval->data;
|
|
|
|
*n_keys = retval->len;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
*keys = NULL;
|
|
|
|
*n_keys = 0;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_array_free (retval, retval->len > 0 ? FALSE : TRUE);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return *n_keys > 0;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
gboolean
|
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keycode (GdkKeymap *keymap,
|
|
|
|
guint hardware_keycode,
|
|
|
|
GdkKeymapKey **keys,
|
|
|
|
guint **keyvals,
|
|
|
|
gint *n_entries)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GArray *key_array;
|
|
|
|
GArray *keyval_array;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keymap == NULL || GDK_IS_KEYMAP (keymap), FALSE);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (n_entries != NULL, FALSE);
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
if (hardware_keycode <= 0 ||
|
|
|
|
hardware_keycode >= 256)
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (keys)
|
|
|
|
*keys = NULL;
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals)
|
|
|
|
*keyvals = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*n_entries = 0;
|
|
|
|
return FALSE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keys)
|
|
|
|
key_array = g_array_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (GdkKeymapKey));
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
key_array = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals)
|
|
|
|
keyval_array = g_array_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (guint));
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
keyval_array = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Accept only the default keymap */
|
|
|
|
if (keymap == NULL || keymap == gdk_keymap_get_default ())
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
gint i;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
update_keymap ();
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (key_array)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
GdkKeymapKey key;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
key.keycode = hardware_keycode;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
key.group = i / 2;
|
|
|
|
key.level = i % 2;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
g_array_append_val (key_array, key);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyval_array)
|
|
|
|
g_array_append_val (keyval_array, keysym_tab[hardware_keycode*4+i]);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ((key_array && key_array->len > 0) ||
|
|
|
|
(keyval_array && keyval_array->len > 0))
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (keys)
|
|
|
|
*keys = (GdkKeymapKey*) key_array->data;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals)
|
|
|
|
*keyvals = (guint*) keyval_array->data;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (key_array)
|
|
|
|
*n_entries = key_array->len;
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
*n_entries = keyval_array->len;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (keys)
|
|
|
|
*keys = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals)
|
|
|
|
*keyvals = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*n_entries = 0;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (key_array)
|
|
|
|
g_array_free (key_array, key_array->len > 0 ? FALSE : TRUE);
|
|
|
|
if (keyval_array)
|
|
|
|
g_array_free (keyval_array, keyval_array->len > 0 ? FALSE : TRUE);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return *n_entries > 0;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
guint
|
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_lookup_key (GdkKeymap *keymap,
|
|
|
|
const GdkKeymapKey *key)
|
|
|
|
{
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
guint sym;
|
|
|
|
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keymap == NULL || GDK_IS_KEYMAP (keymap), 0);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (key != NULL, 0);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (key->group < 4, 0);
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Accept only the default keymap */
|
|
|
|
if (keymap != NULL && keymap != gdk_keymap_get_default ())
|
|
|
|
return 0;
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
update_keymap ();
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (key->keycode >= 256 ||
|
|
|
|
key->group < 0 || key->group >= 2 ||
|
|
|
|
key->level < 0 || key->level >= 2)
|
|
|
|
return 0;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sym = keysym_tab[key->keycode*4 + key->group*2 + key->level];
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (sym == GDK_VoidSymbol)
|
|
|
|
return 0;
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
return sym;
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
gboolean
|
|
|
|
gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state (GdkKeymap *keymap,
|
|
|
|
guint hardware_keycode,
|
|
|
|
GdkModifierType state,
|
|
|
|
gint group,
|
|
|
|
guint *keyval,
|
|
|
|
gint *effective_group,
|
|
|
|
gint *level,
|
2002-02-21 17:14:10 +00:00
|
|
|
GdkModifierType *consumed_modifiers)
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
guint tmp_keyval;
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
guint tmp_modifiers;
|
|
|
|
guint *keyvals;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
gint shift_level;
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
gboolean ignore_shift = FALSE;
|
|
|
|
gboolean ignore_group = FALSE;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (keymap == NULL || GDK_IS_KEYMAP (keymap), FALSE);
|
|
|
|
g_return_val_if_fail (group < 4, FALSE);
|
|
|
|
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
GDK_NOTE (EVENTS, g_print ("gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state: keycode=%#x state=%#x group=%d\n",
|
|
|
|
hardware_keycode, state, group));
|
|
|
|
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
if (keyval)
|
|
|
|
*keyval = 0;
|
|
|
|
if (effective_group)
|
|
|
|
*effective_group = 0;
|
|
|
|
if (level)
|
|
|
|
*level = 0;
|
|
|
|
if (consumed_modifiers)
|
|
|
|
*consumed_modifiers = 0;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Accept only the default keymap */
|
|
|
|
if (keymap != NULL && keymap != gdk_keymap_get_default ())
|
|
|
|
return FALSE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (hardware_keycode >= 256)
|
|
|
|
return FALSE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (group < 0 || group >= 2)
|
|
|
|
return FALSE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ((state & GDK_SHIFT_MASK) && (state & GDK_LOCK_MASK))
|
|
|
|
shift_level = 0; /* shift disables shift lock */
|
|
|
|
else if ((state & GDK_SHIFT_MASK) || (state & GDK_LOCK_MASK))
|
|
|
|
shift_level = 1;
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
shift_level = 0;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
update_keymap ();
|
|
|
|
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
keyvals = keysym_tab + hardware_keycode*4;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Drop group and shift if there are no keysymbols on
|
|
|
|
* the key for those.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (shift_level == 1 &&
|
|
|
|
keyvals[group*2 + 1] == GDK_VoidSymbol &&
|
|
|
|
keyvals[group*2] != GDK_VoidSymbol)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
shift_level = 0;
|
|
|
|
ignore_shift = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (group == 1 &&
|
|
|
|
keyvals[2 + shift_level] == GDK_VoidSymbol &&
|
|
|
|
keyvals[0 + shift_level] != GDK_VoidSymbol)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
group = 0;
|
|
|
|
ignore_group = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals[group *2 + shift_level] == GDK_VoidSymbol &&
|
|
|
|
keyvals[0 + 0] != GDK_VoidSymbol)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
shift_level = 0;
|
|
|
|
group = 0;
|
|
|
|
ignore_group = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
ignore_shift = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* See whether the group and shift level actually mattered
|
|
|
|
* to know what to put in consumed_modifiers
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals[group*2 + 1] == GDK_VoidSymbol ||
|
|
|
|
keyvals[group*2 + 0] == keyvals[group*2 + 1])
|
|
|
|
ignore_shift = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyvals[2 + shift_level] == GDK_VoidSymbol ||
|
|
|
|
keyvals[0 + shift_level] == keyvals[2 + shift_level])
|
|
|
|
ignore_group = TRUE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
tmp_keyval = keyvals[group*2 + shift_level];
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
tmp_modifiers = ignore_group ? 0 : GDK_MOD2_MASK;
|
|
|
|
tmp_modifiers |= ignore_shift ? 0 : (GDK_SHIFT_MASK | GDK_LOCK_MASK);
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (effective_group)
|
|
|
|
*effective_group = group;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (level)
|
|
|
|
*level = shift_level;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (consumed_modifiers)
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
*consumed_modifiers = tmp_modifiers;
|
Implement the functions that until now just were non-functional stubs. For
2002-02-26 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: Implement the functions that until
now just were non-functional stubs. For "hardware keycodes", we
use Windows virtual keycodes. Not scancodes, although that at
first might seem more low-level and a better match to X11
keycodes.
The Windows API is really mixed up and confused with respect to
scancodes and virtual keycodes. (Surprised?) Some scancodes are
generated by two keys on the keyboard (!), and although the
keyboard messages do have a flag to indicate which key the user
pressed, other API that take a scan code as input don't let you
specify which actual key you mean.
(update_keymap): Function to build a X11-like representation of
the keyboard. Each key has four keysyms: two levels (nonshifted
and shifted) and two groups (normal and with AltGr).
(gdk_keymap_get_direction): Use the codepage corresponding to the
thread's input locale, not the system codepage.
* gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c
* gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Remove the input_locale and
charset_info fields from GdkWindowImplWin32. Input locale is
per-thread in Windows, and as GDK on Windows really only works
when the GDI interaction all happens in just one thread anyway,
this state can be global. Use globals _gdk_input_locale and
_gdk_input_codepage instead. Set these based on the thread's input
locale (keyboard layout, or which IME is active).
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Set the group and hardware_keycode
fields in GDK key events. On input locale change messages, set
the global state variables, and inform update_keymap() that it
has to rebuild the keymap.
2002-02-26 01:18:27 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (keyval)
|
|
|
|
*keyval = tmp_keyval;
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2002-03-06 00:36:08 +00:00
|
|
|
GDK_NOTE (EVENTS, g_print ("...group=%d level=%d cmods=%#x keyval=%s\n",
|
|
|
|
group, shift_level, tmp_modifiers, gdk_keyval_name (tmp_keyval)));
|
|
|
|
|
Remove the event_mask, it is now in GdkWindowObject.
2002-03-01 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.h (struct _GdkWindowImplWin32): Remove
the event_mask, it is now in GdkWindowObject.
* gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c: Change accordingly. Set the
GDK_STRUCTURE_MASK in gdk_window_set_events(), as it is always set
in gdk_window_new(), too. (Bug#72921)
* gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Change accordingly here, too.
(vk_from_char): New function, calculates the virtual keycode
corresponding to the char in a WM_CHAR message.
(build_keypress_event, build_keyrelease_event): Use it.
(build_keypress_event): Call ImmReleaseContext() after using the
input context. This might plug a memory or resource leak.
(build_key_event_state): Remove #if 0 code.
(gdk_event_translate): Actually, it would be preferrable to always
handle just the WM_KEYDOWN and WM_KEYUP messages, not WM_CHAR at
all, and thus drop the contorted logic with ignore_wm_char etc.
* gdk/win32/gdkkeys-win32.c: (gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keyval):
Debugging output.
(gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state): Return correct value. (But
_gtk_key_hash_lookup() doesn't check the return value...)
2002-02-28 23:38:55 +00:00
|
|
|
return tmp_keyval != GDK_VoidSymbol;
|
2000-12-14 23:14:18 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|