Orca ignores events unless the object is inside an object
with role window and states ACTIVE and SHOWING. To arrange
for this, introduce a new ACTIVE platform state, and set it
for windows when they are active.
This gets orca to be a lot more talkative.
Linux 3.4 added support for the MADV_DONTDUMP option to madvise(), which
requests that the covered memory not be included in coredumps. It makes
sense to use this to prevent cases where application crashes could
result in secrets being persisted to disk or included in dumps that are
uploaded to remote servers for analysis. I've avoided making this fatal
since there's a chance this code could be built on systems that have
MADV_DONTDUMP but run on systems that don't.
In commit 4a76abffd4, we deferred unsetting focus
and default until after the next draw, overlooking the
case where the focus is set to another widget before we
ever get to the unsetting.
Fixes: #3413
Avoid passing through random key press or release
events while we are showing preedit. That prevents
'accidents' like typing Ctrl-. bringing up the
Emoji chooser during preedit, or hitting Ctrl-a
after the Compose key moving the 'dot' around in
vim in terminals.
Not for symbolic icons.
Don't apply `-gtk-icon-filter: opacity(0.5);` to the symbolic icons as
they already have the "gray" colors indicating the disabled state.
Symbolic icons can be styled using the `color` property.
Also remove the obsolete comment.
Some locations have to be mounted, but their mounts are not user-visible
(e.g. smb-browse). Though this is maybe a bit weird, it is how it works
for years. The problem is that the commit 267ea755, which tries to get the
default location for opening, caused regression as it doesn't expect such
possibility. Before this commit, such locations were opened without any
issue, but nothing happens currently after clicking to "Connect" except of
clearing the "Connect to Server" entry. Let's fallback to the original
location if the mount was not found to fix this regression.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/nautilus/-/issues/1811
Propagate the focus-on-click setting to the button
inside, so that setting menubuttons as !focus-on-click
works as expected. This helps for menubuttons in
header bars, where dragging on the button will otherwise
steal focus from the content.
Commit 3dbf5038fa tried to defer focus changes
until after rendering is done. But it failed to do so, since
the toplevel ::render handler is still before rendering of
popups that are attached to that toplevel. To do this
properly, we need to do it in the AFTER_PAINT frame clock
phase.
Fixes: #3725
We used to override cursor to use all-scroll while the
content is being scrolled. Unfortunately, there is several
problems with this:
- It is really only expected certain devices, and we don't
have the device information on Wayland
- With the way cursor setting works in GTK4, non-NULL cursors
of the content (eg the text views ibeam) win, making the
scroll cursor not show up
- Under X11, we seem to miss scroll end events and then
the scroll cursor gets stuck
Therefore, just remove this feature.
We need to invalidate the style when font-size changes,
because we propagate this value through the initial
value of the CSS font-size property, and it will not
be recomputed otherwise.
Forgetting to do so was causing the Wayland im context
to leave behind a dead event controller. This was showing
up as a crash when closing the inspector after changing
the im-module property of a GtkText widget. The crash
was delayed until closing the inspector because the
inspector keeps a ref on the event controllers of the
currently shown widget.
The use of the keyboard-activating CSS class for buttons was added
in [1], but the style did not apply to buttons with has-frame=FALSE.
[1] 00923615f4 ("button: Add back visual feedback for keynav", 2021-04-01)
The change in 740559a54f to populate the list incrementally
broke initial font selection. Fix that, by trying to select
until the incremental filling is done.
Fixes: #3687
We lost the visual feedback for activating a button
via Space or Enter when the :active pseudo-state became
managed. Bring it back with a style class.
Fixes: #3813
This was breaking muscle memory of people with
the us intl keyboard layout, for important keys
such as '. The unfortunate side-effect is that
our handling of <dead_acute> is a bit hampered
by sequences that don't fit the pattern. But
such is life.
Fixes: #3807
If we scroll down in a list that's still being filled, we hit the edge and
initiate overshoot, and then the adjustment's upper value increases. This
leads to an unwanted bounce back.
Additionally, if in a similar situation the upper value decreases, the
overscroll glow gets stuck.
Update kinetic scrolling upper and lower value on changes, and immediately
cancel it if dimensions on that side change.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/3752
Instead of getting current display before calling settings signal removal,
do it inside remove function and only if there is a signal connection to remove.
Arrange for the contents to be in a single transform
node that is updated as we scroll. This makes the job
of the render node differ a lot easier, since it does
not have to compare to big containers one-by-one.
Commit 8b82993dde added a noisy warning
to gtk_distribute_natural_allocation to quiet a
compiler warning. It turn out that the file chooser
managed to trigger this warning, so make it a quiet
return.
Reshuffle things to allow for a limited amount of
dead key 'chaining'. We keep up to 2 dead keys in
the preedit, so you can type
<dead_acute> <dead_cedilla> <c>
to produce ḉ, while still getting ```c with
<dead_grave> <dead_grave> <dead_grave> <c>.