Remove all the old 2.x and 3.x version annotations.
GTK+ 4 is a new start, and from the perspective of a
GTK+ 4 developer all these APIs have been around since
the beginning.
The main GDK thread lock is not portable and deprecated.
The only reason why gdk_threads_add_timeout() and
gdk_threads_add_timeout_full() exist is to allow invoking a callback
with the GDK lock held, in case 3rd party libraries still use the
deprecated gdk_threads_enter()/gdk_threads_leave() API.
Since we're removing the GDK lock, and we're releasing a new major API,
such code cannot exist any more; this means we can use the GLib API for
installing timeout callbacks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793124
The main GDK thread lock is not portable and deprecated.
The only reason why gdk_threads_add_idle() and
gdk_threads_add_idle_full() exist is to allow invoking a callback with
the GDK lock held, in case 3rd party libraries still use the deprecated
gdk_threads_enter()/gdk_threads_leave() API.
Since we're removing the GDK lock, and we're releasing a new major API,
such code cannot exist any more; this means we can use the GLib API for
installing idle callbacks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793124
The event is not useful at all, so we are better off
with a signal that doesn't have it, and it is only
relevant on toplevel windows, so we don't need it on
GtkWidget.
With this commit, delete events no longer go through the
::event, ::delete-event, ::event-after widget signals,
but just cause the ::close-request signal on GtkWindow to be
emitted.
Using get_preferred_size here does not work since it computes the
minimum height for the minimum width, but we want to know the minimum
height for the current width.
The fix is twofold. First, when checking that a corner is resizable, we must
check the constraints on both edges. Second, when checking either edge we
must include both perpendicular sides in order to allow those to be
resizable when the constraint does not allow resizing the edge being
checked.
When looking for the cursor to apply, start from the innermost
widget and go up. This is the right behavior for cases like
entry icons. The top-down order we were using so far is the
right behavior for cases like global wait cursors. Since we
have entry icons in gtk, but not global wait cursors, lets
pick the other order for now.
application/x-rootwindow-drop is not useful anywhere else,
so put it under #ifdef GDK_WINDOWING_X11
On W32 this prevents toplevels from automatically becoming valid
drop targets with a useless drop type.
(This commit is cherry-picked from the gtk-3-22 branch)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786509
Instead of allowing people to pass a uint user-data, insist on them
comparing mime types.
The user data was a uint instead of a pointer anyway, so uniqueness
could not be guaranteed and it caused more issues than it was worth.
And that's ignoring the fact that it basically wasn't used.