gtk2/gtk/gtkcsspalettevalue.c

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css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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/* GTK - The GIMP Toolkit
* Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* 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 License, 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/>.
*/
#include "config.h"
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#include "gtkcsspalettevalueprivate.h"
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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#include "gtkcssiconthemevalueprivate.h"
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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#include "gtkcsscolorvalueprivate.h"
#include "gtkcssrgbavalueprivate.h"
#include "gtkprivate.h"
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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struct _GtkCssValue {
GTK_CSS_VALUE_BASE
guint n_colors;
char **color_names;
GtkCssValue **color_values;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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};
static GtkCssValue *default_palette;
static GtkCssValue *gtk_css_palette_value_new_empty (void);
static GtkCssValue *gtk_css_palette_value_new_sized (guint size);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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static void
gtk_css_palette_value_set_color (GtkCssValue *value,
guint i,
char *name,
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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GtkCssValue *color)
{
value->color_names[i] = name; /* No strdup */
value->color_values[i] = color;
}
static void
gtk_css_palette_value_sort_colors (GtkCssValue *value)
{
guint i, j;
/* Bubble sort. We're mostly talking about 3 elements here. */
for (i = 0; i < value->n_colors; i ++)
for (j = 0; j < value->n_colors; j ++)
{
if (strcmp (value->color_names[i], value->color_names[j]) < 0)
{
char *tmp_name;
GtkCssValue *tmp_value;
tmp_name = value->color_names[i];
tmp_value = value->color_values[i];
value->color_names[i] = value->color_names[j];
value->color_values[i] = value->color_values[j];
value->color_names[j] = tmp_name;
value->color_values[j] = tmp_value;
}
}
}
static GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_palette_value_find_color (GtkCssValue *value,
const char *color_name)
{
guint i;
for (i = 0; i < value->n_colors; i ++)
{
if (strcmp (value->color_names[i], color_name) == 0)
return value->color_values[i];
}
return NULL;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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}
static void
gtk_css_value_palette_free (GtkCssValue *value)
{
guint i;
for (i = 0; i < value->n_colors; i ++)
{
g_free (value->color_names[i]);
_gtk_css_value_unref (value->color_values[i]);
}
g_free (value->color_names);
g_free (value->color_values);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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g_slice_free (GtkCssValue, value);
}
static GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_value_palette_compute (GtkCssValue *specified,
guint property_id,
GtkStyleProvider *provider,
GtkCssStyle *style,
GtkCssStyle *parent_style)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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{
GtkCssValue *computed_color;
GtkCssValue *result;
gboolean changes = FALSE;
guint i;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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result = gtk_css_palette_value_new_sized (specified->n_colors);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < specified->n_colors; i ++)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
{
GtkCssValue *value = specified->color_values[i];
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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computed_color = _gtk_css_value_compute (value, property_id, provider, style, parent_style);
result->color_names[i] = g_strdup (specified->color_names[i]);
result->color_values[i] = computed_color;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
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changes |= computed_color != value;
}
if (!changes)
{
_gtk_css_value_unref (result);
result = _gtk_css_value_ref (specified);
}
return result;
}
static gboolean
gtk_css_value_palette_equal (const GtkCssValue *value1,
const GtkCssValue *value2)
{
guint i;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
if (value1->n_colors != value2->n_colors)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return FALSE;
for (i = 0; i < value1->n_colors; i ++)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
{
if (strcmp (value1->color_names[i], value2->color_names[i]) != 0)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return FALSE;
if (!_gtk_css_value_equal (value1->color_values[i], value2->color_values[i]))
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
static GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_value_palette_transition (GtkCssValue *start,
GtkCssValue *end,
guint property_id,
double progress)
{
GtkCssValue *result, *transition;
GtkCssValue *start_color, *end_color;
const char *name;
guint i;
GPtrArray *new_names;
GPtrArray *new_values;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
/* XXX: For colors that are only in start or end but not both,
* we don't transition but just keep the value.
* That causes an abrupt transition to currentColor at the end.
*/
result = gtk_css_palette_value_new_empty ();
new_names = g_ptr_array_new ();
new_values = g_ptr_array_new ();
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < start->n_colors; i ++)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
{
name = start->color_names[i];
start_color = start->color_values[i];
end_color = gtk_css_palette_value_find_color (end, name);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
if (end_color == NULL)
transition = _gtk_css_value_ref (start_color);
else
transition = _gtk_css_value_transition (start_color, end_color, property_id, progress);
g_ptr_array_add (new_names, g_strdup (name));
g_ptr_array_add (new_values, transition);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
}
for (i = 0; i < end->n_colors; i ++)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
{
name = end->color_names[i];
end_color = end->color_values[i];
start_color = gtk_css_palette_value_find_color (start, name);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
if (start_color != NULL)
continue;
g_ptr_array_add (new_names, g_strdup (name));
g_ptr_array_add (new_values, _gtk_css_value_ref (end_color));
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
}
result->n_colors = new_names->len;
result->color_names = (char **)g_ptr_array_free (new_names, FALSE);
result->color_values = (GtkCssValue **)g_ptr_array_free (new_values, FALSE);
gtk_css_palette_value_sort_colors (result);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return result;
}
static void
gtk_css_value_palette_print (const GtkCssValue *value,
GString *string)
{
gboolean first = TRUE;
guint i;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
if (value == default_palette)
{
g_string_append (string, "default");
return;
}
for (i = 0; i < value->n_colors; i ++)
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
{
if (first)
first = FALSE;
else
g_string_append (string, ", ");
g_string_append (string, value->color_names[i]);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
g_string_append_c (string, ' ');
_gtk_css_value_print (value->color_values[i], string);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
}
}
static const GtkCssValueClass GTK_CSS_VALUE_PALETTE = {
gtk_css_value_palette_free,
gtk_css_value_palette_compute,
gtk_css_value_palette_equal,
gtk_css_value_palette_transition,
NULL,
NULL,
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
gtk_css_value_palette_print
};
static GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_palette_value_new_empty (void)
{
GtkCssValue *result;
result = _gtk_css_value_new (GtkCssValue, &GTK_CSS_VALUE_PALETTE);
return result;
}
static GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_palette_value_new_sized (guint size)
{
GtkCssValue *result;
result = _gtk_css_value_new (GtkCssValue, &GTK_CSS_VALUE_PALETTE);
result->n_colors = size;
result->color_names = g_malloc (sizeof (char *) * size);
result->color_values = g_malloc (sizeof (GtkCssValue *) * size);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return result;
}
GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_palette_value_new_default (void)
{
if (default_palette == NULL)
{
default_palette = gtk_css_palette_value_new_sized (3);
gtk_css_palette_value_set_color (default_palette, 0, g_strdup ("error"),
_gtk_css_color_value_new_name ("error_color"));
gtk_css_palette_value_set_color (default_palette, 1, g_strdup ("success"),
_gtk_css_color_value_new_name ("success_color"));
gtk_css_palette_value_set_color (default_palette, 2, g_strdup ("warning"),
_gtk_css_color_value_new_name ("warning_color"));
/* Above is already sorted */
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
}
return _gtk_css_value_ref (default_palette);
}
GtkCssValue *
gtk_css_palette_value_parse (GtkCssParser *parser)
{
GtkCssValue *result, *color;
GPtrArray *names;
GPtrArray *colors;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
char *ident;
if (gtk_css_parser_try_ident (parser, "default"))
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return gtk_css_palette_value_new_default ();
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
result = gtk_css_palette_value_new_empty ();
names = g_ptr_array_new ();
colors = g_ptr_array_new ();
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
do {
ident = gtk_css_parser_consume_ident (parser);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
if (ident == NULL)
{
_gtk_css_value_unref (result);
return NULL;
}
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
color = _gtk_css_color_value_parse (parser);
if (color == NULL)
{
g_free (ident);
_gtk_css_value_unref (result);
return NULL;
}
g_ptr_array_add (names, ident);
g_ptr_array_add (colors, color);
} while (gtk_css_parser_try_token (parser, GTK_CSS_TOKEN_COMMA));
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
result->n_colors = names->len;
result->color_names = (char **)g_ptr_array_free (names, FALSE);
result->color_values = (GtkCssValue **) g_ptr_array_free (colors, FALSE);
gtk_css_palette_value_sort_colors (result);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return result;
}
const GdkRGBA *
gtk_css_palette_value_get_color (GtkCssValue *value,
const char *name)
{
guint i;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
gtk_internal_return_val_if_fail (value->class == &GTK_CSS_VALUE_PALETTE, NULL);
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < value->n_colors; i ++)
{
if (strcmp (value->color_names[i], name) == 0)
return _gtk_css_rgba_value_get_rgba (value->color_values[i]);
}
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
return NULL;
css: Introduct -gtk-icon-palette This borrows heavily from the CSS4 fonts draft's font-palette, currently found at https://drafts.csswg.org/css-fonts-4/#font-palette-control The palette is mainly meant to trigger invalidations when colors used for symbolic icons change, to potentially allow extending supported colors in symbolic icons and to recolor all colors of a symbolic icon, not just the main one. The syntax for the property goes like this: Name: -gtk-icon-palette Value: default | name <color> [ , name <color> ]* Initial: default Applies to: all elements with icons Inherited: yes Animatable: yes, each color animated separately The property defines a list of named colors to be used when looking up icons. If a name is not defined, the value of the current "color" property is used. Which names are relevant depends on the icons in use. Currently symbolic icons make use of the names "success", "warning" and "error". "default" is the current behavior of the GTK when coloring symbolic icons and is equal to the string success @success_color, warning @warning_color, error @error_color Animation is crudely implemented by animating colors that are in both palettes that are animated and otherwise keeping the color from the palette that defined it. Note that this can cause a sharp cut at the beginning or end of the animation when the color goes away and will therefore be replaced with the color property. You can see an example of animations at http://gfycat.com/CautiousPeacefulIaerismetalmark
2015-12-02 23:33:51 +00:00
}