gtk2/gtk/gtkmenutrackeritem.c

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add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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/*
* Copyright © 2013 Canonical Limited
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the licence, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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*
* Author: Ryan Lortie <desrt@desrt.ca>
*/
#include "config.h"
#include "gtkmenutrackeritemprivate.h"
#include "gtkactionmuxerprivate.h"
#include "gtkdebug.h"
#include "gtkintl.h"
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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#include <string.h>
/*< private >
* GtkMenuTrackerItem:
*
* A GtkMenuTrackerItem is a small helper class used by GtkMenuTracker to
* represent menu items. It has one of three classes: normal item, separator,
* or submenu.
*
* If an item is one of the non-normal classes (submenu, separator), only the
* label of the item needs to be respected. Otherwise, all the properties
* of the item contribute to the items appearance and state.
*
* Implementing the appearance of the menu item is up to toolkits, and certain
* toolkits may choose to ignore certain properties, like icon or accel. The
* role of the item determines its accessibility role, along with its
* decoration if the GtkMenuTrackerItem::toggled property is true. As an
* example, if the item has the role %GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_CHECK and
* GtkMenuTrackerItem::toggled is %FALSE, its accessible role should be that of
* a check menu item, and no decoration should be drawn. But if
* GtkMenuTrackerItem::toggled is %TRUE, a checkmark should be drawn.
*
* All properties except for the two class-determining properties,
* GtkMenuTrackerItem::is-separator and GtkMenuTrackerItem::has-submenu are
* allowed to change, so listen to the notify signals to update your item's
* appearance. When using a GObject library, this can conveniently be done
* with g_object_bind_property() and GBinding, and this is how this is
* implemented in GTK; the appearance side is implemented in GtkModelMenuItem.
*
* When an item is clicked, simply call gtk_menu_tracker_item_activated() in
* response. The GtkMenuTrackerItem will take care of everything related to
* activating the item and will itself update the state of all items in
* response.
*
* Submenus are a special case of menu item. When an item is a submenu, you
* should create a submenu for it with gtk_menu_tracker_new_item_for_submenu(),
* and apply the same menu tracking logic you would for a toplevel menu.
* Applications using submenus may want to lazily build their submenus in
* response to the user clicking on it, as building a submenu may be expensive.
*
* Thus, the submenu has two special controls -- the submenus visibility
* should be controlled by the GtkMenuTrackerItem::submenu-shown property,
* and if a user clicks on the submenu, do not immediately show the menu,
* but call gtk_menu_tracker_item_request_submenu_shown() and wait for the
* GtkMenuTrackerItem::submenu-shown property to update. If the user navigates,
* the application may want to be notified so it can cancel the expensive
* operation that it was using to build the submenu. Thus,
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_request_submenu_shown() takes a boolean parameter.
* Use %TRUE when the user wants to open the submenu, and %FALSE when the
* user wants to close the submenu.
*/
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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typedef GObjectClass GtkMenuTrackerItemClass;
struct _GtkMenuTrackerItem
{
GObject parent_instance;
GtkActionObservable *observable;
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
char *action_namespace;
char *action_and_target;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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GMenuItem *item;
GtkMenuTrackerItemRole role : 4;
guint is_separator : 1;
guint can_activate : 1;
guint sensitive : 1;
guint toggled : 1;
guint submenu_shown : 1;
guint submenu_requested : 1;
guint hidden_when : 2;
guint is_visible : 1;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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};
#define HIDDEN_NEVER 0
#define HIDDEN_WHEN_MISSING 1
#define HIDDEN_WHEN_DISABLED 2
#define HIDDEN_WHEN_ALWAYS 3
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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enum {
PROP_0,
PROP_IS_SEPARATOR,
PROP_LABEL,
PROP_USE_MARKUP,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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PROP_ICON,
PROP_VERB_ICON,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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PROP_SENSITIVE,
PROP_ROLE,
PROP_TOGGLED,
PROP_ACCEL,
PROP_SUBMENU_SHOWN,
PROP_IS_VISIBLE,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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N_PROPS
};
static GParamSpec *gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[N_PROPS];
static void gtk_menu_tracker_item_init_observer_iface (GtkActionObserverInterface *iface);
G_DEFINE_TYPE_WITH_CODE (GtkMenuTrackerItem, gtk_menu_tracker_item, G_TYPE_OBJECT,
G_IMPLEMENT_INTERFACE (GTK_TYPE_ACTION_OBSERVER, gtk_menu_tracker_item_init_observer_iface))
GType
gtk_menu_tracker_item_role_get_type (void)
{
static gsize gtk_menu_tracker_item_role_type;
if (g_once_init_enter (&gtk_menu_tracker_item_role_type))
{
static const GEnumValue values[] = {
{ GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL, "GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL", "normal" },
{ GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_CHECK, "GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_CHECK", "check" },
{ GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_RADIO, "GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_RADIO", "radio" },
{ 0, NULL, NULL }
};
GType type;
type = g_enum_register_static (I_("GtkMenuTrackerItemRole"), values);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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g_once_init_leave (&gtk_menu_tracker_item_role_type, type);
}
return gtk_menu_tracker_item_role_type;
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_property (GObject *object,
guint prop_id,
GValue *value,
GParamSpec *pspec)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (object);
switch (prop_id)
{
case PROP_IS_SEPARATOR:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_separator (self));
break;
case PROP_LABEL:
g_value_set_string (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_label (self));
break;
case PROP_USE_MARKUP:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_use_markup (self));
break;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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case PROP_ICON:
g_value_take_object (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_icon (self));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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break;
case PROP_VERB_ICON:
g_value_take_object (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_verb_icon (self));
break;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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case PROP_SENSITIVE:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_sensitive (self));
break;
case PROP_ROLE:
g_value_set_enum (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_role (self));
break;
case PROP_TOGGLED:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_toggled (self));
break;
case PROP_ACCEL:
g_value_set_string (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_accel (self));
break;
case PROP_SUBMENU_SHOWN:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_submenu_shown (self));
break;
case PROP_IS_VISIBLE:
g_value_set_boolean (value, gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_visible (self));
break;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
default:
G_OBJECT_WARN_INVALID_PROPERTY_ID (object, prop_id, pspec);
break;
}
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_finalize (GObject *object)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (object);
g_free (self->action_namespace);
g_free (self->action_and_target);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (self->observable)
g_object_unref (self->observable);
g_object_unref (self->item);
G_OBJECT_CLASS (gtk_menu_tracker_item_parent_class)->finalize (object);
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_init (GtkMenuTrackerItem * self)
{
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_class_init (GtkMenuTrackerItemClass *class)
{
class->get_property = gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_property;
class->finalize = gtk_menu_tracker_item_finalize;
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_IS_SEPARATOR] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("is-separator", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_LABEL] =
g_param_spec_string ("label", "", "", NULL, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_USE_MARKUP] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("use-markup", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ICON] =
g_param_spec_object ("icon", "", "", G_TYPE_ICON, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_VERB_ICON] =
g_param_spec_object ("verb-icon", "", "", G_TYPE_ICON, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SENSITIVE] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("sensitive", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ROLE] =
g_param_spec_enum ("role", "", "",
GTK_TYPE_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE, GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL,
G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_TOGGLED] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("toggled", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ACCEL] =
g_param_spec_string ("accel", "", "", NULL, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SUBMENU_SHOWN] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("submenu-shown", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_IS_VISIBLE] =
g_param_spec_boolean ("is-visible", "", "", FALSE, G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS | G_PARAM_READABLE);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
g_object_class_install_properties (class, N_PROPS, gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs);
}
/* This syncs up the visibility for the hidden-when='' case. We call it
* from the action observer functions on changes to the action group and
* on initialisation (via the action observer functions that are invoked
* at that time).
*/
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
gboolean visible;
switch (self->hidden_when)
{
case HIDDEN_NEVER:
visible = TRUE;
break;
case HIDDEN_WHEN_MISSING:
visible = self->can_activate;
break;
case HIDDEN_WHEN_DISABLED:
visible = self->sensitive;
break;
case HIDDEN_WHEN_ALWAYS:
visible = FALSE;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached ();
}
if (visible != self->is_visible)
{
self->is_visible = visible;
g_object_notify (G_OBJECT (self), "is-visible");
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_added (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
const char *action_name,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
const GVariantType *parameter_type,
gboolean enabled,
GVariant *state)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (observer);
GVariant *action_target;
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s added", action_name));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
action_target = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, G_MENU_ATTRIBUTE_TARGET, NULL);
self->can_activate = (action_target == NULL && parameter_type == NULL) ||
(action_target != NULL && parameter_type != NULL &&
g_variant_is_of_type (action_target, parameter_type));
if (!self->can_activate)
{
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s can't be activated due to parameter type mismatch "
"(parameter type %s, target type %s)",
action_name,
parameter_type ? g_variant_type_peek_string (parameter_type) : "NULL",
action_target ? g_variant_get_type_string (action_target) : "NULL"));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (action_target)
g_variant_unref (action_target);
return;
}
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s can be activated", action_name));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
self->sensitive = enabled;
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s is %s", action_name, enabled ? "enabled" : "disabled"));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (action_target != NULL && state != NULL)
{
self->toggled = g_variant_equal (state, action_target);
self->role = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_RADIO;
}
else if (state != NULL && g_variant_is_of_type (state, G_VARIANT_TYPE_BOOLEAN))
{
self->toggled = g_variant_get_boolean (state);
self->role = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_CHECK;
}
g_object_freeze_notify (G_OBJECT (self));
if (self->sensitive)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SENSITIVE]);
if (self->toggled)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_TOGGLED]);
if (self->role != GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ROLE]);
g_object_thaw_notify (G_OBJECT (self));
if (action_target)
g_variant_unref (action_target);
/* In case of hidden-when='', we want to Wait until after refreshing
* all of the properties to emit the signal that will cause the
* tracker to expose us (to prevent too much thrashing).
*/
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (self);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_enabled_changed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
const char *action_name,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gboolean enabled)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (observer);
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s: enabled changed to %d", action_name, enabled));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (!self->can_activate)
return;
if (self->sensitive == enabled)
return;
self->sensitive = enabled;
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SENSITIVE]);
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (self);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_state_changed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
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const char *action_name,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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GVariant *state)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (observer);
GVariant *action_target;
gboolean was_toggled;
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s: state changed", action_name));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (!self->can_activate)
return;
action_target = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, G_MENU_ATTRIBUTE_TARGET, NULL);
was_toggled = self->toggled;
if (action_target)
{
self->toggled = g_variant_equal (state, action_target);
g_variant_unref (action_target);
}
else if (g_variant_is_of_type (state, G_VARIANT_TYPE_BOOLEAN))
self->toggled = g_variant_get_boolean (state);
else
self->toggled = FALSE;
if (self->toggled != was_toggled)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_TOGGLED]);
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_removed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
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const char *action_name)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (observer);
gboolean was_sensitive, was_toggled;
GtkMenuTrackerItemRole old_role;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s was removed", action_name));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (!self->can_activate)
return;
was_sensitive = self->sensitive;
was_toggled = self->toggled;
old_role = self->role;
self->can_activate = FALSE;
self->sensitive = FALSE;
self->toggled = FALSE;
self->role = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL;
/* Backwards from adding: we want to remove ourselves from the menu
* -before- thrashing the properties.
*/
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (self);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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g_object_freeze_notify (G_OBJECT (self));
if (was_sensitive)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SENSITIVE]);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (was_toggled)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_TOGGLED]);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (old_role != GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM_ROLE_NORMAL)
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ROLE]);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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g_object_thaw_notify (G_OBJECT (self));
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_primary_accel_changed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
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const char *action_name,
const char *action_and_target)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self = GTK_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (observer);
const char *action;
action = strrchr (self->action_and_target, '|') + 1;
if ((action_and_target && g_str_equal (action_and_target, self->action_and_target)) ||
(action_name && g_str_equal (action_name, action)))
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_ACCEL]);
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_init_observer_iface (GtkActionObserverInterface *iface)
{
iface->action_added = gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_added;
iface->action_enabled_changed = gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_enabled_changed;
iface->action_state_changed = gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_state_changed;
iface->action_removed = gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_removed;
iface->primary_accel_changed = gtk_menu_tracker_item_primary_accel_changed;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
GtkMenuTrackerItem *
_gtk_menu_tracker_item_new (GtkActionObservable *observable,
GMenuModel *model,
2020-07-24 13:54:49 +00:00
int item_index,
gboolean mac_os_mode,
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
const char *action_namespace,
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gboolean is_separator)
{
GtkMenuTrackerItem *self;
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
const char *action_name;
const char *hidden_when;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
g_return_val_if_fail (GTK_IS_ACTION_OBSERVABLE (observable), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_MENU_MODEL (model), NULL);
self = g_object_new (GTK_TYPE_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM, NULL);
self->item = g_menu_item_new_from_model (model, item_index);
self->action_namespace = g_strdup (action_namespace);
self->observable = g_object_ref (observable);
self->is_separator = is_separator;
if (!is_separator && g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "hidden-when", "&s", &hidden_when))
{
if (g_str_equal (hidden_when, "action-disabled"))
self->hidden_when = HIDDEN_WHEN_DISABLED;
else if (g_str_equal (hidden_when, "action-missing"))
self->hidden_when = HIDDEN_WHEN_MISSING;
else if (mac_os_mode && g_str_equal (hidden_when, "macos-menubar"))
self->hidden_when = HIDDEN_WHEN_ALWAYS;
/* Ignore other values -- this code may be running in context of a
* desktop shell or the like and should not spew criticals due to
* application bugs...
*
* Note: if we just set a hidden-when state, but don't get the
* action_name below then our visibility will be FALSE forever.
* That's to be expected since the action is missing...
*/
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (!is_separator && g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "action", "&s", &action_name))
{
GtkActionMuxer *muxer = GTK_ACTION_MUXER (observable);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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const GVariantType *parameter_type;
GVariant *target;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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gboolean enabled;
GVariant *state;
gboolean found;
target = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, "target", NULL);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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self->action_and_target = gtk_print_action_and_target (action_namespace, action_name, target);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (target)
g_variant_unref (target);
action_name = strrchr (self->action_and_target, '|') + 1;
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS,
if (!strchr (action_name, '.'))
g_message ("menutracker: action name %s doesn't look like 'app.' or 'win.'; "
"it is unlikely to work", action_name));
state = NULL;
gtk_action_observable_register_observer (self->observable, action_name, GTK_ACTION_OBSERVER (self));
found = gtk_action_muxer_query_action (muxer, action_name, &enabled, &parameter_type, NULL, NULL, &state);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (found)
{
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s existed from the start", action_name));
gtk_menu_tracker_item_action_added (GTK_ACTION_OBSERVER (self), observable, action_name, parameter_type, enabled, state);
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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else
{
GTK_NOTE(ACTIONS, g_message ("menutracker: action %s missing from the start", action_name));
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (self);
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (state)
g_variant_unref (state);
}
else
{
gtk_menu_tracker_item_update_visibility (self);
self->sensitive = TRUE;
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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return self;
}
GtkActionObservable *
_gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_observable (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->observable;
}
/*< private >
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_separator:
* @self: A GtkMenuTrackerItem instance
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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*
2014-01-21 00:15:34 +00:00
* Returns: whether the menu item is a separator. If so, only
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
* certain properties may need to be obeyed. See the documentation
* for GtkMenuTrackerItem.
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
*/
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_separator (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->is_separator;
}
/*< private >
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_has_submenu:
* @self: A GtkMenuTrackerItem instance
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
*
2014-01-21 00:15:34 +00:00
* Returns: whether the menu item has a submenu. If so, only
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
* certain properties may need to be obeyed. See the documentation
* for GtkMenuTrackerItem.
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
*/
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_has_link (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self,
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
const char *link_name)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
GMenuModel *link;
link = g_menu_item_get_link (self->item, link_name);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (link)
{
g_object_unref (link);
return TRUE;
}
else
return FALSE;
}
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const char *
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_label (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *label = NULL;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, G_MENU_ATTRIBUTE_LABEL, "&s", &label);
return label;
}
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_use_markup (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "use-markup", "&s", NULL);
}
/*< private >
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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* gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_icon:
*
* Returns: (transfer full):
*/
GIcon *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_icon (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
GVariant *icon_data;
GIcon *icon;
icon_data = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, "icon", NULL);
if (icon_data == NULL)
return NULL;
icon = g_icon_deserialize (icon_data);
g_variant_unref (icon_data);
return icon;
}
/*< private >
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_verb_icon:
*
* Returns: (transfer full):
*/
GIcon *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_verb_icon (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
GVariant *icon_data;
GIcon *icon;
icon_data = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, "verb-icon", NULL);
if (icon_data == NULL)
return NULL;
icon = g_icon_deserialize (icon_data);
g_variant_unref (icon_data);
return icon;
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_sensitive (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->sensitive;
}
GtkMenuTrackerItemRole
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_role (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->role;
}
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_toggled (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->toggled;
}
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const char *
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_accel (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *accel;
if (!self->action_and_target)
return NULL;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "accel", "&s", &accel))
return accel;
if (!GTK_IS_ACTION_MUXER (self->observable))
return NULL;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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return gtk_action_muxer_get_primary_accel (GTK_ACTION_MUXER (self->observable), self->action_and_target);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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}
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const char *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_special (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *special = NULL;
g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "x-gtk-private-special", "&s", &special);
return special;
}
const char *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_custom (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
const char *custom = NULL;
g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "custom", "&s", &custom);
return custom;
}
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const char *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_display_hint (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *display_hint = NULL;
g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "display-hint", "&s", &display_hint);
return display_hint;
}
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const char *
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_text_direction (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *text_direction = NULL;
g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "text-direction", "&s", &text_direction);
return text_direction;
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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GMenuModel *
_gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_link (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self,
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const char *link_name)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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{
return g_menu_item_get_link (self->item, link_name);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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}
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char *
_gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_link_namespace (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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{
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const char *namespace;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "action-namespace", "&s", &namespace))
{
if (self->action_namespace)
return g_strjoin (".", self->action_namespace, namespace, NULL);
else
return g_strdup (namespace);
}
else
return g_strdup (self->action_namespace);
}
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_should_request_show (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "submenu-action", "&s", NULL);
}
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_submenu_shown (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->submenu_shown;
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_set_submenu_shown (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self,
gboolean submenu_shown)
{
if (submenu_shown == self->submenu_shown)
return;
self->submenu_shown = submenu_shown;
g_object_notify_by_pspec (G_OBJECT (self), gtk_menu_tracker_item_pspecs[PROP_SUBMENU_SHOWN]);
}
void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_activated (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
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const char *action_name;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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GVariant *action_target;
g_return_if_fail (GTK_IS_MENU_TRACKER_ITEM (self));
if (!self->can_activate)
return;
action_name = strrchr (self->action_and_target, '|') + 1;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
action_target = g_menu_item_get_attribute_value (self->item, G_MENU_ATTRIBUTE_TARGET, NULL);
gtk_action_muxer_activate_action (GTK_ACTION_MUXER (self->observable), action_name, action_target);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
if (action_target)
g_variant_unref (action_target);
}
typedef struct {
GObject parent;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
GtkMenuTrackerItem *item;
2020-07-24 18:40:36 +00:00
char *submenu_action;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gboolean first_time;
} GtkMenuTrackerOpener;
typedef struct {
GObjectClass parent_class;
} GtkMenuTrackerOpenerClass;
static void gtk_menu_tracker_opener_observer_iface_init (GtkActionObserverInterface *iface);
GType gtk_menu_tracker_opener_get_type (void) G_GNUC_CONST;
G_DEFINE_TYPE_WITH_CODE (GtkMenuTrackerOpener, gtk_menu_tracker_opener, G_TYPE_OBJECT,
G_IMPLEMENT_INTERFACE (GTK_TYPE_ACTION_OBSERVER, gtk_menu_tracker_opener_observer_iface_init))
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_init (GtkMenuTrackerOpener *self)
{
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_finalize (GObject *object)
{
GtkMenuTrackerOpener *opener = (GtkMenuTrackerOpener *)object;
gtk_action_observable_unregister_observer (opener->item->observable,
opener->submenu_action,
(GtkActionObserver *)opener);
if (GTK_IS_ACTION_MUXER (opener->item->observable))
gtk_action_muxer_change_action_state (GTK_ACTION_MUXER (opener->item->observable),
opener->submenu_action,
g_variant_new_boolean (FALSE));
gtk_menu_tracker_item_set_submenu_shown (opener->item, FALSE);
g_free (opener->submenu_action);
G_OBJECT_CLASS (gtk_menu_tracker_opener_parent_class)->finalize (object);
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_class_init (GtkMenuTrackerOpenerClass *class)
{
G_OBJECT_CLASS (class)->finalize = gtk_menu_tracker_opener_finalize;
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update (GtkMenuTrackerOpener *opener)
{
GtkActionMuxer *muxer = GTK_ACTION_MUXER (opener->item->observable);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
gboolean is_open = TRUE;
GVariant *state;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
/* We consider the menu as being "open" if the action does not exist
* or if there is another problem (no state, wrong state type, etc.).
* If the action exists, with the correct state then we consider it
* open if we have ever seen this state equal to TRUE.
*
* In the event that we see the state equal to FALSE, we force it back
* to TRUE. We do not signal that the menu was closed because this is
* likely to create UI thrashing.
*
* The only way the menu can have a true-to-false submenu-shown
* transition is if the user calls _request_submenu_shown (FALSE).
* That is handled in _free() below.
*/
if (gtk_action_muxer_query_action (muxer, opener->submenu_action, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, &state))
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
if (state)
{
if (g_variant_is_of_type (state, G_VARIANT_TYPE_BOOLEAN))
is_open = g_variant_get_boolean (state);
g_variant_unref (state);
}
}
/* If it is already open, signal that.
*
* If it is not open, ask it to open.
*/
if (is_open)
gtk_menu_tracker_item_set_submenu_shown (opener->item, TRUE);
if (!is_open || opener->first_time)
{
gtk_action_muxer_change_action_state (muxer, opener->submenu_action, g_variant_new_boolean (TRUE));
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
opener->first_time = FALSE;
}
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_added (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
const char *action_name,
const GVariantType *parameter_type,
gboolean enabled,
GVariant *state)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update ((GtkMenuTrackerOpener *)observer);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_removed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
const char *action_name)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update ((GtkMenuTrackerOpener *)observer);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_enabled_changed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
const char *action_name,
gboolean enabled)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update ((GtkMenuTrackerOpener *)observer);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
}
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_state_changed (GtkActionObserver *observer,
GtkActionObservable *observable,
const char *action_name,
GVariant *state)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
{
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update ((GtkMenuTrackerOpener *)observer);
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
2013-05-08 12:20:23 +00:00
static void
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_observer_iface_init (GtkActionObserverInterface *iface)
{
iface->action_added = gtk_menu_tracker_opener_added;
iface->action_removed = gtk_menu_tracker_opener_removed;
iface->action_enabled_changed = gtk_menu_tracker_opener_enabled_changed;
iface->action_state_changed = gtk_menu_tracker_opener_state_changed;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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}
static GtkMenuTrackerOpener *
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_new (GtkMenuTrackerItem *item,
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const char *submenu_action)
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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{
GtkMenuTrackerOpener *opener;
opener = g_object_new (gtk_menu_tracker_opener_get_type (), NULL);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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opener->first_time = TRUE;
opener->item = item;
if (item->action_namespace)
opener->submenu_action = g_strjoin (".", item->action_namespace, submenu_action, NULL);
else
opener->submenu_action = g_strdup (submenu_action);
gtk_action_observable_register_observer (item->observable,
opener->submenu_action,
(GtkActionObserver *)opener);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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gtk_menu_tracker_opener_update (opener);
return opener;
}
void
gtk_menu_tracker_item_request_submenu_shown (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self,
gboolean shown)
{
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const char *submenu_action;
gboolean has_submenu_action;
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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if (shown == self->submenu_requested)
return;
has_submenu_action = g_menu_item_get_attribute (self->item, "submenu-action", "&s", &submenu_action);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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self->submenu_requested = shown;
/* If we have a submenu action, start a submenu opener and wait
* for the reply from the client. Otherwise, simply open the
* submenu immediately.
*/
if (has_submenu_action)
{
if (shown)
g_object_set_data_full (G_OBJECT (self), "submenu-opener",
gtk_menu_tracker_opener_new (self, submenu_action),
g_object_unref);
else
g_object_set_data (G_OBJECT (self), "submenu-opener", NULL);
}
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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else
gtk_menu_tracker_item_set_submenu_shown (self, shown);
add GtkMenuTrackerItem Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be used with GtkMenuTracker. GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type (instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item). GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming extensions to GMenuModel. GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting "activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it entirely. Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs. supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker. The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment. This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
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}
/*
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_visible:
* @self: A GtkMenuTrackerItem instance
*
* Don't use this unless you're tracking items for yourself -- normally
* the tracker will emit add/remove automatically when this changes.
*
* Returns: if the item should currently be shown
*/
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_get_is_visible (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->is_visible;
}
/*
* gtk_menu_tracker_item_may_disappear:
* @self: A GtkMenuTrackerItem instance
*
* Returns: if the item may disappear (ie: is-visible property may change)
*/
gboolean
gtk_menu_tracker_item_may_disappear (GtkMenuTrackerItem *self)
{
return self->hidden_when != HIDDEN_NEVER;
}