shade/alpha/mix() take colour(s) and a number that is the ratio by which
to transform them. It was written here that these shall be passed in the
order (number, colour). That was wrong: they must be passed in the order
(colour[s], number) to work, and for the Inspector not to flag an error.
This reverts commit 76af907676.
The behavioral change described in the migration guide
has now been made optional with new scrolled window API,
so no need to mention this in the migration guide.
Making propagation of child natural sizes mandatory (or default, even) was
evidently a mistake as this causes dynamic content in a scrolled window
to resize it's parent when the scrolled window is competing for space
with an adjacent widget.
This patch instead adds API to control whether natural width and
height of the child should be propagated through the scrolled windows
size requests.
This GdkEventController is a helper object to handle pad events,
it allows setting a mapping to action names, to be triggered in
the given action group.
In order to help on places where advanced mapping/configurability
of pad features is not desirable, this controller also allows
passing a NULL pad device, meaning it will listen on all pads,
and/or passing -1 on mode/index, so an action applies to all
modes/features (eg. strips/rings).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770026
This is an interface meant to be implemented by the "pad" devices.
This device-specific interface exposes the mapping of all pad features,
it allows retrieving:
- The number of buttons/rings/strips
- The number of groups
- The number of modes a group has
- Whether a given button/ring/strip belongs to a given group
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770026
GDK_PAD_BUTTON*,RING and STRIP will be emitted respectively when
pad buttons, rings or strips are interacted with. Each of those
pad components belong to a group (a pad can contain several of
those), which may be in a given mode. All this information is
contained in the event.
GDK_PAD_GROUP_MODE is emitted when a group in the pad switches
mode, which will generally result in a different set of actions
being triggered from the same buttons/rings/strips in the group.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770026
The effect of transitions-enabled=true can now be
achieved using gtk_popover_popup/popdown and the effect
of transitions-enabled=false can be achieved using
gtk_widget_show/hide.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769706
Since not chaining up in gtk_widget_show/gtk_widget_hide is not allowed,
we can't just implicitly delay the hiding in GtkPopover's hide
implementation. Fix this by introducing gtk_popover_popup() and
gtk_popover_popdown() to show or hide a popover with transition and
revert GtkPopover's show/hide implementation to apply their effect
without the transition.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769706
The error was:
gtk3-scan.c:193: undefined reference to `gtk_shortcuts_label_get_type'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
It's since commit 7543cd8ce4, which made
the GtkShortcutLabel class public.
GtkShortcutLabel is a widget that displays a single
shortcut accelerator or gesture in the user interface,
and is currently used by the shortcuts window.
This widget, however, has public value as other applications
also may want to expose their own shortcuts. For instance,
it'll be useful for the Keyboard panel on Control Center and
the new shortcut editor in Pitivi, among others.
This patch exposes GtkShortcutLabel as a public widget,
and adds the necessary documentation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769205
The gtk_show_uri API doesn't let us specify a parent window. With
portals, there may be an intermediate dialog, for which it is nice
to have parent window information, to place it properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768499
The header bar currently ignores the expand property on its
children. This commit changes the code to honor that property.
It divvies up any free space and distributes it equally to packed
children (with any left over space given out a pixel at a time
on a first come, first serve basis).
This commit also adds support for the title widget to be made
expandable.
It accomplishes this by using up the padding the title widget
is centered with.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724332
Instead of associating the GdkWindow that created the GdkDrawingContext
we can directly bind the Cairo context to the GDK drawing context.
Cairo contexts created via gdk_cairo_create() go back to not having a
GdkWindow associated to them, like they did before we introduced the
gdk_window_begin_draw_frame() API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675
Existing code drawing on a GDK window has to handle the direct drawing
and the buffered drawing by itself, by checking the window type and
whether or not the window is backed by a native windowing surface. After
that, the calling code has to create a Cairo context from the window and
keep an association between the context and the window itself.
This is completely unnecessary: GDK can determine whether or not it
should use a backing store to draw on a GdkWindow as well as create a
Cairo context, and keep track of it.
This allows to simplify the calling code, and enforce some of the
drawing behavior we want to guarantee to users.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675
In Wayland, surfaces get an enter/leave notification each time they
enter or leave an output.
Add an API to GdkWaylandWindow to retrieve the output the window has
last entered.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766566
This has several benefits:
- Less code in GtkApplication. The accels handling is something
self-contained, and GtkApplication now delegates the work.
- For the accels functions, there is now a distinction between static
functions and functions in the gtkapplicationaccelsprivate.h header,
which makes the code easier to understand, because we have a good
overview just by reading the header.
- The struct _GtkApplicationPrivate is now easier to find instead of
being in the middle of the file.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764879
Because there are multiple different types of styluses that can be used with
tablets, we have to have some sort of identifier for them attached to the
GdkDeviceTool, especially since knowing the actual tool type for a GdkDeviceTool
is necessary for matching up a GdkDeviceTool with it's appropriate
GdkInputSource in Wayland (eg. matching up a GdkDeviceTool eraser with the
GDK_SOURCE_ERASER GdkInputSource of a wayland tablet).
Signed-off-by: Stephen Chandler Paul <thatslyude@gmail.com>
GdkDeviceTool is an opaque object that can be used to identify a given
tool (eg. pens on tablets) during the app/device lifetime. Tools are only
set on non-master devices, and are owned by these.
The accounting functions are made private, the only public call on
GdkDeviceTool so far is gdk_device_tool_get_serial(), useful to identify
the tool across runs.
We should conform to a minimal set of reasons for the gtk side to emit
a better GtkDragResult than GTK_DRAG_RESULT_ERROR. This fixes the notebook
tab DnD feature, where we rely on GTK_DRAG_RESULT_NO_TARGET.
In the wayland side, unfortunately we can't honor either NO_TARGET nor
USER_CANCELLED, we don't know of the latter, so we could return false
positives on the former.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761954
Make the preview command parse options properly, turn the ID into
an --id=ID option, and add a --css=FILE option that allows to
specify a css file to use for previewing.
This is useful for e.g. previewing the reftest .ui files with
their corresponding .css.
This lets us do fallback in case an image format is not
supported, and also lets us provide solid-color images.
We don't support image fragment notations.
See ttps://www.w3.org/TR/css3-images/#image-notation
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761318
The new function, gtk_render_background_get_clip answers the
question: what pixels are affected if I call gtk_render_background ?
The long-term goal is to have APIs that answer this question for
all rendering primitives.
Derived classes like GtkSourceView with their own ::key-event
handler need access to this, in order to make their keynav
as nice as the builtin one, wrt to caret visibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760748
And use it to handle kinetic scrolling in the GtkScrolledWindow.
However, dropping the delta check causes the X11-based kinetic
scroll to break since we don't have the stop event here. Correct handling of
xf86-input-libinput-based scroll events is still being discussed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756729