Don't pass 0x0 as size when calling gdk_surface_new().
The Wayland backend takes us literally, and we end
up with a surface that (temporarily) has these
dimensions, confusing other APIs that we pass the
size to, such as Vulkan.
We want to ensure that the pointer position is reflected
when widget geometry changes, so add a function that tells
GDK "please create a motion event at the current position
on this surface, if one doesn't happen already".
A year ago, we make this function not return the child
surface anymore. But the information whether the device
is actually over the surface is still useful, and we
should not loose it.
GTK will not up front know how to correctly calculate a size, since it
will not be able to reliably predict the constraints that may exist
where it will be mapped.
Thus, to handle this, calculate the size of the toplevel by having GDK
emitting a signal called 'compute-size' that will contain information
needed for computing a toplevel window size.
This signal may be emitted at any time, e.g. during
gdk_toplevel_present(), or spontaneously if constraints change.
This also drops the max size from the toplevel layout, while moving the
min size from the toplevel layout struct to the struct passed via the
signal,
This needs changes to a test case where we make sure we process
GDK_CONFIGURE etc, which means we also needs to show the window and
process all pending events in the test-focus-chain test case.
It's not a portable API, so remove it. The corresponding backend
specific functions are still available, if they were implemented, e.g.
gdk_macos_monitor_get_workarea() and gdk_x11_monitor_get_workarea().
Make GdkEvents hold a single GdkDevice. This device is closer to
the logical device conceptually, although it must be sufficient for
device checks (i.e. GdkInputSource), which makes it similar to the
physical devices.
Make the logical devices have a more accurate GdkInputSource where
needed, and conflate the event devices altogether.
Crossing events are now detached from widget state, all tricky consequences
from getting multiple crossing events are now somewhat moot. Resort to sending
all generated crossing events, and drop this barely (ever?) used API.
Only return one accumulated scroll event per frame.
Compress them by adding up the deltas.
Still missing: a way to capture history, like
we do for motion events.
Fixes: #2800
We require a C compiler supporting C99 now. The main purpose of
these fallbacks was for MSVC. From what I can see this is now all supported
by MSVC 2015+ anyway.
The only other change this includes is to replace isnanf() with the
(type infering) C99 isnan() macro, because MSVC doesn't provide isnanf().
Don't call into the backends when the input region
or shadow width don't actually change. This avoid
distracting calls in debug logs, and just generally
is the right thing to do.
We pass the GdkEvent as a pointer, because the autogenerated marshallers
don't know how to handle GTypeInstance-derived classes.
Since the GValue box that we use in the marshaller passes the GdkEvent
instance as is, we also need to acquire a reference before invoking the
closure, and release it afterwards, to ensure that the GdkEvent instance
survices the invocation.
If you run weston with the headless backend, you get a Wayland
display with no seat, which is just fine by the protocol.
gdk_display_get_default_seat() returns NULL in this case. Various
widgets assume that we always have a seat with a keyboard and a
pointer, since that is what X guarantees. Make things survive
without that, so we can run the testsuite under a headless
Wayland compositor.
Tracking of those broke sometime along the gdk cleanups, so we
started missing some GDK_GRAB_BROKEN events from being emitted
(eg. after a button press/implicit grab triggers an active grab).
Implicit grabs are only added if there's no prior grab (either
implicit through other button presses, or explicit), in order to
keep accounting correct, make those prevail.
When we autohide a popup surface with a grab, hide all other auto hiding
popups up the popup chain. The end result is that when you click outside
a menu with submenus open, the whole menu chain is dismissed.
GdkEvent has been a "I-can't-believe-this-is-not-OOP" type for ages,
using a union of sub-types. This has always been problematic when it
comes to implementing accessor functions: either you get generic API
that takes a GdkEvent and uses a massive switch() to determine which
event types have the data you're looking for; or you create namespaced
accessors, but break language bindings horribly, as boxed types cannot
have derived types.
The recent conversion of GskRenderNode (which had similar issues) to
GTypeInstance, and the fact that GdkEvent is now a completely opaque
type, provide us with the chance of moving GdkEvent to GTypeInstance,
and have sub-types for GdkEvent.
The change from boxed type to GTypeInstance is pretty small, all things
considered, but ends up cascading to a larger commit, as we still have
backends and code in GTK trying to access GdkEvent structures directly.
Additionally, the naming of the public getter functions requires
renaming all the data structures to conform to the namespace/type-name
pattern.