Includes the ability to turn on updates in the inspector. Animations are
now run via a tick function which allows us to neatly overlay a
semi-transparent red rectangle and fade it out over time.
It also probably enables way more, but somebody with more UI neatness
than me needs to figure out what it eanbles first...
The update tracking code was ugly and using deprecated drawing APIs. It
was also in the wrong place.
So instead of trying to keep it working, I'll remove it. We need to find
a better way to put it and make it work there.
_gtk_accessibility_init() only gets called if the default
display changes, but in case gdk_init() is called before gtk_init()
the default display is already set and no property notification occurs.
This can happen quite easily in pygobject where
"from gi.repository import Gdk, Gtk"
will call gdk_init() followed by gtk_init() in the Python overrides.
This fixes it by checking for a default display in all cases.
Defer a11y initialization until we have a display. A11y initialization
causes widget classes to be initalized, which in turn needs some
backend-specific information about modifier masks that can't be
obtained before we have a display.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736125
This is implicitly done for us in the case of grabs on windows from other
groups, but we must perform this check explicitly for grabs with
owner_events=True on windows from the same group, in that case the window
would handle the events as if there was no grab.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752327
Popovers may be spawn when there's GTK+ grabs somewhere else (eg.
text selection popover/handles in an entry in a modal popover). When
this happens, events go to the grab widget (in this case the modal
popover) and are effectively ignored by the event widget, even though
it's can be conceptually a child of the grab widget.
To get away with this, tweak a bit gtk_main_do_event(), so events going
to popovers that are related to grab_widget or a child of it are received,
as it would happen with regular children of grab_widget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750993
The changes in commit 13e22e2030 made
_gtk_window_check_handle_wm_event() indirectly depend on
gtk_get_current_event_time() which relies on the current event being
available on the current_events stack.
Since the current event is only pushed on the stack afterwards we get
an invalid timestamp which breaks ewmh window moving.
This fixes the issue by pushing the current event before we start
relying on it being there in gtk_main_do_event() and, as a byproduct,
also fixes a potential memory leak when we have a rewritten event and
return early due to _gtk_window_check_handle_wm_event() being TRUE.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750384
The gesture is hooked to the capture phase, so it works for buttons in
header bars and whatnot. In order to be friendly to the widget it is
capturing events from, an ugly hack is in place to avoid capturing
events when the target widget has a gesture that would consume motion
events.
The current way of exposing GDK API that should be considered internal
to GTK+ is to append a 'libgtk_only' suffix to the function name; this
is not really safe.
GLib has been using a slightly different approach: a private table of
function pointers, and a macro that allows accessing the desired symbol
inside that vtable.
We can copy the approach, and deprecate the 'libgtk_only' symbols in
lieu of outright removal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739781
Introduce a new debug category "actions" and write some messages from
GtkActionHelper about if we can find the actions or not.
We will probably soon want to add some similar messages to
GtkMenuTrackerItem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733965
Prevent a segfault in unknown circumstances, and break the ignore
deprecations wrapper out from the if statement so that we don't
cover too much ground by accident.
This reverts commit b875572f2a.
Apps like Abiword, gnumeric and gnome-chess, and toolkits like
ClutterGTK were all using this for various purposes, and this made them
break. Bring back this feature for now.
It still won't work under Wayland.
gtk_widget_set_double_buffered is now deprecated, and we don't support
non-double-buffered widgets. This means that under normal circumstances,
paints are never outside of a begin_paint / end_paint sequence, which
natively-double-buffered backends like Wayland can't possibly support.