gtk2/gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c

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/* GDK - The GIMP Drawing Kit
* Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Peter Mattis, Spencer Kimball and Josh MacDonald
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
* Copyright (C) 1998-2002 Tor Lillqvist
*
* 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, write to the
* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*/
/*
* Modified by the GTK+ Team and others 1997-2000. See the AUTHORS
* file for a list of people on the GTK+ Team. See the ChangeLog
* files for a list of changes. These files are distributed with
* GTK+ at ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/.
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "gdkpixmap.h"
#include "gdkdisplay.h"
#include "gdkscreen.h"
Large changes to the Win32 backend, partially made necessary by the 2000-05-02 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> Large changes to the Win32 backend, partially made necessary by the changes to the backend-independent internal structures. Attempts to implement similar backing store stuff as on X11. The current (CVS) version of the Win32 backend is *not* as stable as it was before the no-flicker branch was merged. A zipfile with that version is available from http://www.gimp.org/win32/. That should be use by "production" code until this CVS version is usable. (But note, the Win32 backend has never been claimed to be "production quality".) * README.win32: Add the above comment about versions. * gdk/gdkwindow.c: Don't use backing store for now on Win32. * gdk/gdk.def: Update. * gdk/gdkfont.h: Declare temporary Win32-only functions. Will presumably be replaced by some more better mechanism as 1.4 gets closer to release shape. * gdk/makefile.{cygwin,msc}: Update. * gdk/win32/*.c: Correct inclusions of the backend-specific and internal headers. Change code according to changes in these. Use gdk_drawable_*, not gdk_window_* where necessary. * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c: Use MISC selector for GDK_NOTE, not our old DND. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c (gdk_win32_draw_text): Don't try to interpret single characters as UTF-8. Thanks to Hans Breuer. Use correct function name in warning messages. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Use correct parameter lists for the GSourceFuncs gdk_event_prepare and gdk_event_check. (gdk_event_get_graphics_expose): Do implement, use PeekMessage. Thanks to Hans Breuer. (event_mask_string): Debugging function to print an GdkEventMask. (gdk_pointer_grab): Use it. * gdk/win32/gdkfont-win32.c: The Unicode subrange that the (old) book I used claimed was Hangul actually is CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A. Also, Hangul Syllables were missing. Improve logging. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Largish changes. * gdk/win32/gdkim-win32.c (gdk_set_locale): Use g_win32_getlocale() from GLib, and not setlocale() to get current locale name. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkwin32.h: Move stuff from gdkprivate-win32.h to gdkwin32.h, similarily as in the X11 backend. * gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c (gdk_propagate_shapes): Bugfix, assignment was used instead of equals in if test. Thanks to Hans Breuer. * gdk/win32/makefile.{cygwin,msc} * gtk/makefile.{cygwin,msc}: Updates. Better kludge to get the path to the Win32 headers that works also with the mingw compiler. * gtk/gtkstyle.c: Include <string.h>.
2000-05-01 22:06:49 +00:00
#include "gdkprivate-win32.h"
static void gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_get_size (GdkDrawable *drawable,
gint *width,
gint *height);
static void gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_init (GdkPixmapImplWin32 *pixmap);
static void gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_class_init (GdkPixmapImplWin32Class *klass);
static void gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_finalize (GObject *object);
static gpointer parent_class = NULL;
GType
_gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_get_type (void)
{
static GType object_type = 0;
if (!object_type)
{
const GTypeInfo object_info =
{
sizeof (GdkPixmapImplWin32Class),
(GBaseInitFunc) NULL,
(GBaseFinalizeFunc) NULL,
(GClassInitFunc) gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_class_init,
NULL, /* class_finalize */
NULL, /* class_data */
sizeof (GdkPixmapImplWin32),
0, /* n_preallocs */
(GInstanceInitFunc) gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_init,
};
object_type = g_type_register_static (GDK_TYPE_DRAWABLE_IMPL_WIN32,
"GdkPixmapImplWin32",
&object_info, 0);
}
return object_type;
}
GType
_gdk_pixmap_impl_get_type (void)
{
return _gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_get_type ();
}
static void
gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_init (GdkPixmapImplWin32 *impl)
{
impl->width = 1;
impl->height = 1;
}
static void
gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_class_init (GdkPixmapImplWin32Class *klass)
{
GObjectClass *object_class = G_OBJECT_CLASS (klass);
GdkDrawableClass *drawable_class = GDK_DRAWABLE_CLASS (klass);
parent_class = g_type_class_peek_parent (klass);
object_class->finalize = gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_finalize;
drawable_class->get_size = gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_get_size;
}
static void
gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_finalize (GObject *object)
{
GdkPixmapImplWin32 *impl = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (object);
GdkPixmap *wrapper = GDK_PIXMAP (GDK_DRAWABLE_IMPL_WIN32 (impl)->wrapper);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP, g_print ("gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_finalize: %p\n",
GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (wrapper)));
_gdk_win32_drawable_finish (GDK_DRAWABLE (object));
GDI_CALL (DeleteObject, (GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (wrapper)));
gdk_win32_handle_table_remove (GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (wrapper));
G_OBJECT_CLASS (parent_class)->finalize (object);
}
static void
gdk_pixmap_impl_win32_get_size (GdkDrawable *drawable,
gint *width,
gint *height)
{
if (width)
*width = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (drawable)->width;
if (height)
*height = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (drawable)->height;
}
GdkPixmap*
_gdk_pixmap_new (GdkDrawable *drawable,
gint width,
gint height,
gint depth)
{
struct {
BITMAPINFOHEADER bmiHeader;
union {
WORD bmiIndices[256];
DWORD bmiMasks[3];
RGBQUAD bmiColors[256];
} u;
} bmi;
UINT iUsage;
HDC hdc;
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
HWND hwnd;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
HPALETTE holdpal = NULL;
HBITMAP hbitmap;
GdkPixmap *pixmap;
GdkDrawableImplWin32 *drawable_impl;
GdkPixmapImplWin32 *pixmap_impl;
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
GdkColormap *cmap;
guchar *bits;
gint i;
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
gint window_depth;
g_return_val_if_fail (drawable == NULL || GDK_IS_DRAWABLE (drawable), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail ((drawable != NULL) || (depth != -1), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail ((width != 0) && (height != 0), NULL);
if (!drawable)
drawable = _gdk_root;
if (GDK_IS_WINDOW (drawable) && GDK_WINDOW_DESTROYED (drawable))
return NULL;
window_depth = gdk_drawable_get_depth (GDK_DRAWABLE (drawable));
if (depth == -1)
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
depth = window_depth;
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP, g_print ("gdk_pixmap_new: %dx%dx%d drawable=%p\n",
width, height, depth, drawable));
pixmap = g_object_new (gdk_pixmap_get_type (), NULL);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
drawable_impl = GDK_DRAWABLE_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->impl);
pixmap_impl = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->impl);
drawable_impl->wrapper = GDK_DRAWABLE (pixmap);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
pixmap_impl->is_foreign = FALSE;
pixmap_impl->width = width;
pixmap_impl->height = height;
GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->depth = depth;
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
if (depth == window_depth)
{
cmap = gdk_drawable_get_colormap (drawable);
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
if (cmap)
gdk_drawable_set_colormap (pixmap, cmap);
}
if (GDK_IS_WINDOW (drawable))
hwnd = GDK_WINDOW_HWND (drawable);
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
else
hwnd = GetDesktopWindow ();
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
if ((hdc = GetDC (hwnd)) == NULL)
{
WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("GetDC");
g_object_unref ((GObject *) pixmap);
return NULL;
}
bmi.bmiHeader.biSize = sizeof (BITMAPINFOHEADER);
bmi.bmiHeader.biWidth = width;
bmi.bmiHeader.biHeight = -height;
bmi.bmiHeader.biPlanes = 1;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
switch (depth)
{
case 1:
case 24:
case 32:
bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount = _gdk_windowing_get_bits_for_depth (gdk_display_get_default (), depth);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
break;
case 4:
bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount = 4;
break;
case 5:
case 6:
case 7:
case 8:
bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount = 8;
break;
case 15:
case 16:
bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount = 16;
break;
default:
g_warning ("gdk_win32_pixmap_new: depth = %d", depth);
g_assert_not_reached ();
}
if (bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount == 16)
bmi.bmiHeader.biCompression = BI_BITFIELDS;
else
bmi.bmiHeader.biCompression = BI_RGB;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
bmi.bmiHeader.biSizeImage = 0;
bmi.bmiHeader.biXPelsPerMeter =
bmi.bmiHeader.biYPelsPerMeter = 0;
bmi.bmiHeader.biClrUsed = 0;
bmi.bmiHeader.biClrImportant = 0;
iUsage = DIB_RGB_COLORS;
if (depth == 1)
{
bmi.u.bmiColors[0].rgbBlue =
bmi.u.bmiColors[0].rgbGreen =
bmi.u.bmiColors[0].rgbRed = 0x00;
bmi.u.bmiColors[0].rgbReserved = 0x00;
bmi.u.bmiColors[1].rgbBlue =
bmi.u.bmiColors[1].rgbGreen =
bmi.u.bmiColors[1].rgbRed = 0xFF;
bmi.u.bmiColors[1].rgbReserved = 0x00;
}
else
{
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
if (depth <= 8 && drawable_impl->colormap != NULL)
{
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GdkColormapPrivateWin32 *cmapp =
GDK_WIN32_COLORMAP_DATA (drawable_impl->colormap);
gint k;
if ((holdpal = SelectPalette (hdc, cmapp->hpal, FALSE)) == NULL)
WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("SelectPalette");
else if ((k = RealizePalette (hdc)) == GDI_ERROR)
WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("RealizePalette");
else if (k > 0)
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP_OR_COLORMAP, g_print ("_gdk_win32_pixmap_new: realized %p: %d colors\n",
cmapp->hpal, k));
iUsage = DIB_PAL_COLORS;
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
bmi.u.bmiIndices[i] = i;
}
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
else if (bmi.bmiHeader.biBitCount == 16)
{
Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. 2002-11-15 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/gdk.def: Reflect recent renamings and removals of functions. Merge from stable: Start implementing all fill styles (i.e. tiled, stippled, and opaque stippled in addition to the plain solid style) in the Win32 backend in an elegant and generic way. For now only did the draw_rectangle() and draw_glyphs() methods. The rest will follow. Previously some of the drawing methods implemented opaque stippling, but not tiles or non-opaque stippling. Seems to work fine, now the check marks show up in check buttons, the stippled background and stippled text in gtk-demo's Text Widget look as they should, and GtkText's line wrap arrow shows correctly instead of an ugly rectangle. [This refers to the stable branch, haven't actually checked HEAD.] The implementation does do a lot of pixmap handling and blitting back and forth, especially on Win9x. But performance is hopefully not an issue. I don't think many applications do a lot of tiled or stippled drawing. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h: Define a new macro, GDI_CALL, that calls a GDI function and prints a warning if it failed. Also API_CALL for non-GDI calls. Cleans all the the if (!BlaBla()) WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("BlaBla") snippets, these can now be written GDI_CALL (BlaBla, ()). Declare new functions. * gdk/win32/gdkdrawable-win32.c: Use GDI_CALL macro in lots of places. (generic_draw): New function that handles all the blitting necessary to implement tiles and stipples. A function that actually draws stuff is passed as a parameter to generic_draw(). If the fill style is solid, it is called directly, to draw on the destination drawable. Otherwise it is called to draw on a temporary mask bitmap, which then is used in blitting operations. The tiles and/or stipples are rendered into another temporary pixmap. If MaskBlt() is available (on NT/2k/XP), it is used, otherwise a sequence of BitBlt() is used to do the final composition onto the destination drawable. (draw_tiles_lowlevel, draw_tiles): Some renaming and code reorg. Use BitBlt() to blit each tile, not gdk_draw_drawable(). (rop2_to_rop3): New function, does binary->ternary rop mapping. (blit_from_pixmap, blit_inside_window, blit_from_window): Use rop2_to_rop3(). Previously used SRCCOPY always... (draw_rectangle, gdk_win32_draw_rectangle, draw_glyphs, gdk_win32_draw_glyphs): Split functionality into two functions, with generic_draw() doing its magic inbetween. * gdk/win32/gdkevents-win32.c: Remove the TrackMouseEvent code, it was ifdeffed out and wouldn't have done anything even if enabled. Remove the GDK_EVENT_FUNC_FROM_WINDOW_PROC code, didn't have any effect any more anyway after all the changes GTK+ has gone through in the last years. Remove some #if 0 code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c (gdk_gc_copy): Set the copy's hdc field to NULL in case a GC is copied while it has a Windows DC active. * gdk/win32/gdkprivate-win32.h * gdk/win32/gdkglobals-win32.c: Remove gdk_event_func_from_window_proc. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: Remove -event-func-from-window-proc option. If there is a PRETEND_WIN9X envvar, set windows_version as if on Win9x. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (_gdk_win32_pixmap_new, gdk_pixmap_new): Combine these two, _gdk_win32_pixmap_new() wasn't used or exported. Make a bit more like the X11 version. Hopefully I didn't break the fragile palettized display ("pseudocolor") code. * gdk/win32/gdkgc-win32.c: Various debugging output improvements. (predraw_set_foreground): Check whether tile/stipple origins are valid when calling SetBrushOrgEx(). (gdk_win32_hdc_get): Ifdef out code that tries to handle the stipple by converting it into a region, and combining the clip region with that. A stipple shouldn't work like that, it should replicate in x and y directions. Stipples are now handled by generic_draw() in gdkdrawable-win32.c. * gdk/win32/gdkmain-win32.c: (gdk_win32_gcvalues_mask_to_string, gdk_win32_rop2_to_string): New debugging functions. (gdk_win32_print_dc): Print also DC's rop2 and text color.
2002-11-16 01:12:10 +00:00
GdkVisual *visual = gdk_visual_get_system ();
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
bmi.u.bmiMasks[0] = visual->red_mask;
bmi.u.bmiMasks[1] = visual->green_mask;
bmi.u.bmiMasks[2] = visual->blue_mask;
}
}
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
hbitmap = CreateDIBSection (hdc, (BITMAPINFO *) &bmi,
iUsage, (PVOID *) &bits, NULL, 0);
if (holdpal != NULL)
SelectPalette (hdc, holdpal, FALSE);
GDI_CALL (ReleaseDC, (hwnd, hdc));
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP, g_print ("... =%p bits=%p pixmap=%p\n", hbitmap, bits, pixmap));
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
if (hbitmap == NULL)
{
WIN32_GDI_FAILED ("CreateDIBSection");
g_object_unref ((GObject *) pixmap);
return NULL;
}
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
drawable_impl->handle = hbitmap;
pixmap_impl->bits = bits;
gdk_win32_handle_table_insert (&GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (pixmap), pixmap);
return pixmap;
}
static const unsigned char mirror[256] = {
0x00, 0x80, 0x40, 0xc0, 0x20, 0xa0, 0x60, 0xe0,
0x10, 0x90, 0x50, 0xd0, 0x30, 0xb0, 0x70, 0xf0,
0x08, 0x88, 0x48, 0xc8, 0x28, 0xa8, 0x68, 0xe8,
0x18, 0x98, 0x58, 0xd8, 0x38, 0xb8, 0x78, 0xf8,
0x04, 0x84, 0x44, 0xc4, 0x24, 0xa4, 0x64, 0xe4,
0x14, 0x94, 0x54, 0xd4, 0x34, 0xb4, 0x74, 0xf4,
0x0c, 0x8c, 0x4c, 0xcc, 0x2c, 0xac, 0x6c, 0xec,
0x1c, 0x9c, 0x5c, 0xdc, 0x3c, 0xbc, 0x7c, 0xfc,
0x02, 0x82, 0x42, 0xc2, 0x22, 0xa2, 0x62, 0xe2,
0x12, 0x92, 0x52, 0xd2, 0x32, 0xb2, 0x72, 0xf2,
0x0a, 0x8a, 0x4a, 0xca, 0x2a, 0xaa, 0x6a, 0xea,
0x1a, 0x9a, 0x5a, 0xda, 0x3a, 0xba, 0x7a, 0xfa,
0x06, 0x86, 0x46, 0xc6, 0x26, 0xa6, 0x66, 0xe6,
0x16, 0x96, 0x56, 0xd6, 0x36, 0xb6, 0x76, 0xf6,
0x0e, 0x8e, 0x4e, 0xce, 0x2e, 0xae, 0x6e, 0xee,
0x1e, 0x9e, 0x5e, 0xde, 0x3e, 0xbe, 0x7e, 0xfe,
0x01, 0x81, 0x41, 0xc1, 0x21, 0xa1, 0x61, 0xe1,
0x11, 0x91, 0x51, 0xd1, 0x31, 0xb1, 0x71, 0xf1,
0x09, 0x89, 0x49, 0xc9, 0x29, 0xa9, 0x69, 0xe9,
0x19, 0x99, 0x59, 0xd9, 0x39, 0xb9, 0x79, 0xf9,
0x05, 0x85, 0x45, 0xc5, 0x25, 0xa5, 0x65, 0xe5,
0x15, 0x95, 0x55, 0xd5, 0x35, 0xb5, 0x75, 0xf5,
0x0d, 0x8d, 0x4d, 0xcd, 0x2d, 0xad, 0x6d, 0xed,
0x1d, 0x9d, 0x5d, 0xdd, 0x3d, 0xbd, 0x7d, 0xfd,
0x03, 0x83, 0x43, 0xc3, 0x23, 0xa3, 0x63, 0xe3,
0x13, 0x93, 0x53, 0xd3, 0x33, 0xb3, 0x73, 0xf3,
0x0b, 0x8b, 0x4b, 0xcb, 0x2b, 0xab, 0x6b, 0xeb,
0x1b, 0x9b, 0x5b, 0xdb, 0x3b, 0xbb, 0x7b, 0xfb,
0x07, 0x87, 0x47, 0xc7, 0x27, 0xa7, 0x67, 0xe7,
0x17, 0x97, 0x57, 0xd7, 0x37, 0xb7, 0x77, 0xf7,
0x0f, 0x8f, 0x4f, 0xcf, 0x2f, 0xaf, 0x6f, 0xef,
0x1f, 0x9f, 0x5f, 0xdf, 0x3f, 0xbf, 0x7f, 0xff
};
GdkPixmap *
_gdk_bitmap_create_from_data (GdkDrawable *drawable,
const gchar *data,
gint width,
gint height)
{
GdkPixmap *pixmap;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GdkPixmapImplWin32 *pixmap_impl;
gint i, j, data_bpl, pixmap_bpl;
guchar *bits;
g_return_val_if_fail (data != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail ((width != 0) && (height != 0), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (drawable == NULL || GDK_IS_DRAWABLE (drawable), NULL);
if (!drawable)
drawable = _gdk_root;
else if (GDK_IS_WINDOW (drawable) && GDK_WINDOW_DESTROYED (drawable))
return NULL;
pixmap = gdk_pixmap_new (drawable, width, height, 1);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
if (pixmap == NULL)
return NULL;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
pixmap_impl = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->impl);
bits = pixmap_impl->bits;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
data_bpl = ((width - 1) / 8 + 1);
pixmap_bpl = ((width - 1)/32 + 1)*4;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < height; i++)
for (j = 0; j < data_bpl; j++)
bits[i*pixmap_bpl + j] = mirror[(guchar) data[i*data_bpl + j]];
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP, g_print ("gdk_bitmap_create_from_data: %dx%d=%p\n",
width, height, GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (pixmap)));
return pixmap;
}
GdkPixmap*
_gdk_pixmap_create_from_data (GdkDrawable *drawable,
Fix #105497; constify uses of GdkColor. 2004-01-26 Federico Mena Quintero <federico@ximian.com> Fix #105497; constify uses of GdkColor. * gdk/gdkgc.c (gdk_gc_set_rgb_fg_color): Constify. (gdk_gc_set_rgb_bg_color): Constify. (gdk_gc_set_foreground): Constify. * gdk/x11/gdkcursor-x11.c (gdk_cursor_new_from_pixmap): Constify. * gdk/win32/gdkcursor-win32.c (gdk_cursor_new_from_pixmap): Constify. * gdk/linux-fb/gdkcursor-fb.c (gdk_cursor_new_from_pixmap): Constify. * gdk/x11/gdkpixmap-x11.c (gdk_pixmap_create_from_data): Constify. * gdk/win32/gdkpixmap-win32.c (gdk_pixmap_create_from_data): Constify. * gdk/linux-fb/gdkpixmap-fb.c (gdk_pixmap_create_from_data): Constify. * gdk/x11/gdkwindow-x11.c (gdk_window_set_background): Constify. * gdk/win32/gdkwindow-win32.c (gdk_window_set_background): Constify. * gdk/linux-fb/gdkwindow-fb.c (gdk_window_set_background): Constify. * gdk/gdkpango.c (gdk_draw_layout_line_with_colors): Constify. (gdk_draw_layout_with_colors): Constify. * gdk/gdkpixmap.c (gdk_pixmap_colormap_new_from_pixbuf): Constify. (gdk_pixmap_colormap_create_from_xpm): Constify. (gdk_pixmap_create_from_xpm): Constify. (gdk_pixmap_colormap_create_from_xpm_d): Constify. (gdk_pixmap_create_from_xpm_d): Constify. * gtk/gtkcellview.c (gtk_cell_view_set_background_color): Constify. * gtk/gtkclist.c (gtk_clist_set_foreground): Constify. (gtk_clist_set_background): Constify. * gtk/gtkcolorbutton.c (gtk_color_button_new_with_color): Constify. (gtk_color_button_set_color): Constify. * gtk/gtkcolorsel.c (gtk_color_selection_set_current_color): Constify and add a check for color != NULL. (gtk_color_selection_get_current_color): Add a check for color != NULL. (gtk_color_selection_set_previous_color): Constify and add a check for color != NULL. (gtk_color_selection_get_previous_color): Add a check for color != NULL. * gtk/gtkctree.c (gtk_ctree_node_set_foreground): Constify. (gtk_ctree_node_set_background): Constify. * gtk/gtktext.c (gtk_text_insert): Constify. (insert_text_property): Constify. (text_properties_equal): Constify. (new_text_property): Constify. * gtk/gtkwidget.c (gtk_widget_modify_color_component): Constify. (gtk_widget_modify_fg): Constify. (gtk_widget_modify_bg): Constify. (gtk_widget_modify_text): Constify. (gtk_widget_modify_base): Constify.
2004-01-26 20:21:09 +00:00
const gchar *data,
gint width,
gint height,
gint depth,
const GdkColor *fg,
const GdkColor *bg)
{
/* Oh wow. I struggled with dozens of lines of code trying to get
* this right using a monochrome Win32 bitmap created from data, and
* a colour DIB section as the result, trying setting pens,
* background colors, whatnot and BitBlt:ing. Nope. Then finally I
* realized it's much easier to do it using gdk...:
*/
GdkPixmap *result;
GdkPixmap *source;
GdkGC *gc;
g_return_val_if_fail (drawable == NULL || GDK_IS_DRAWABLE (drawable), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (data != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (fg != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (bg != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail ((drawable != NULL) || (depth != -1), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail ((width != 0) && (height != 0), NULL);
if (GDK_IS_WINDOW (drawable) && GDK_WINDOW_DESTROYED (drawable))
return NULL;
result = gdk_pixmap_new (drawable, width, height, depth);
source = gdk_bitmap_create_from_data (drawable, data, width, height);
gc = gdk_gc_new (result);
gdk_gc_set_foreground (gc, fg);
gdk_gc_set_background (gc, bg);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
_gdk_win32_blit
(TRUE,
GDK_DRAWABLE_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (result)->impl),
gc, source, 0, 0, 0, 0, width, height);
g_object_unref (source);
g_object_unref (gc);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
GDK_NOTE (PIXMAP, g_print ("gdk_pixmap_create_from_data: %dx%dx%d=%p\n",
width, height, depth,
GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (result)));
return result;
}
GdkPixmap *
gdk_pixmap_foreign_new_for_display (GdkDisplay *display,
GdkNativeWindow anid)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (GDK_IS_DISPLAY (display), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (display == _gdk_display, NULL);
return gdk_pixmap_foreign_new (anid);
}
GdkPixmap *
gdk_pixmap_foreign_new_for_screen (GdkScreen *screen,
GdkNativeWindow anid,
gint width,
gint height,
gint depth)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (GDK_IS_SCREEN (screen), NULL);
return gdk_pixmap_foreign_new (anid);
}
GdkPixmap*
gdk_pixmap_foreign_new (GdkNativeWindow anid)
{
GdkPixmap *pixmap;
GdkDrawableImplWin32 *draw_impl;
GdkPixmapImplWin32 *pix_impl;
HBITMAP hbitmap;
SIZE size;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
/* Check to make sure we were passed a HBITMAP */
g_return_val_if_fail (GetObjectType ((HGDIOBJ) anid) == OBJ_BITMAP, NULL);
hbitmap = (HBITMAP) anid;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
/* Get information about the bitmap to fill in the structure for the
* GDK window.
*/
GetBitmapDimensionEx (hbitmap, &size);
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
/* Allocate a new GDK pixmap */
pixmap = g_object_new (gdk_pixmap_get_type (), NULL);
draw_impl = GDK_DRAWABLE_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->impl);
pix_impl = GDK_PIXMAP_IMPL_WIN32 (GDK_PIXMAP_OBJECT (pixmap)->impl);
draw_impl->wrapper = GDK_DRAWABLE (pixmap);
draw_impl->handle = hbitmap;
draw_impl->colormap = NULL;
Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 2002-02-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/*.c: Massive changes. Too many to list here, but I'll try a summary: 1) Unify GdkPixmap and GdkImage implementation: For each GdkPixmap, allocate a GdkImage, and vice versa. GdkPixmapImplWin32Data has a pointer to the GdkImage. GdkImage::windowing_data is a pointer to the GdkPixmap. This simplifies many pixmap and image related functions a lot, and reduces duplicated code snippets. For instance, there is only one place in gdk/win32 where CreateDIBSection() is called, in the function _gdk_win32_new_pixmap(). Converting a bitmap (GdkPixmap) to a Windows region is almost trivial, with the bitmap bits being readily accessible in the associated GdkImage. All blitting between GdkPixmaps, GdkWindows and GdkImages goes through handled the _gdk_win32_blit() function, which calls different functions to handle the cases of blitting from pixmaps, inside windows (scrolling), or from windows, which all require somewhat different handling. 2) Support 256-color mode. This has long been very broken, now it works more or less OK. Keep the logical palette for each colormap as small as possible while allocating and freeing colors. Select and realize the logical palette associated with a GdkColormap into a DC before drawing or blitting. When the display is in 256-color mode, make it possible for the user to override the size of the palette(s) used with either the GDK_WIN32_MAX_COLORS environment variable, or a -max-colors command line option. It is possible to reduce the palette size all the way down to using just the 16 static colors (which causes the system visual to be of type GDK_VISUAL_STATIC_COLOR. This could possibly be useful if one desperately wants to avoid color flashing. (Note that in order for this to work properly, an as of yet not commited fix to gdkrgb.c is needed.) Handle the palette messages. On WM_PALETTECHANGED, call UpdateColors() for the given window hierarchy. Do this only if a window in some other top-level window hierarchy caused the palette change (realized a palette). Do this max five times in a row (an arbitrarily chosen limit), though, otherwise redraw by generating expose events. On WM_QUERYNEWPALETTE, cause a redraw of the whole window hierarchy by generating GDK_EXPOSE events. 3) Code cleanup in general. For instance, remove the "emulated" X11 structs ColormapStruct, Visual and XStandardColormap. Use the new GDK_DEBUG_* flags for debugging output in the relevant source files. Remove the unused colormap hash table in gdkcolor-win32.c 4) Plug some resource leaks. 2002-02-14 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * gdk/win32/gdkdnd-win32.c (gdk_dropfiles_filter): Use g_filename_to_uri() to actually create legal URIs in the text/uri-list data.
2002-02-17 00:25:05 +00:00
pix_impl->width = size.cx;
pix_impl->height = size.cy;
pix_impl->bits = NULL;
gdk_win32_handle_table_insert (&GDK_PIXMAP_HBITMAP (pixmap), pixmap);
return pixmap;
}
GdkPixmap*
gdk_pixmap_lookup (GdkNativeWindow anid)
{
return (GdkPixmap*) gdk_win32_handle_table_lookup (anid);
}
GdkPixmap*
gdk_pixmap_lookup_for_display (GdkDisplay *display, GdkNativeWindow anid)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (GDK_IS_DISPLAY (display), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (display == _gdk_display, NULL);
return gdk_pixmap_lookup (anid);
}