It needs to open a display connection, which is obviously going to fail
miserably on any headless build machine.
Instead, we need to find where we started requiring to initialize GTK
when calling a get_type() function, and stop doing that.
This commit and commit 15cc85db29 fully
revert commit 6838861d26.
GCC will not do the right thing, and it will just break the build when
trying to include gtk.h first.
We'll have to live with the warning from the compiler about a missing
gtk_init() — though it would be better not to have to init GTK at all to
generate the introspection data.
This commit unbreaks the build in GNOME Continuous introduced by commit
6838861d26.
Calling our get_type functions without prior gtk_init() is not ok,
and causes warnings now. Avoid that by teaching g-ir-scanner to
put a gtk_init() call into its generated code.
Places sidebar shows XDG directories, mounted and unmounted devices,
connected networks, bookmarks and actions like 'Connect to server'
and 'Insert location', which causes the sidebar to grow very quickly
and look cluttered. Because of that, new mockups for the sidebar try
to simplify it.
To make the sidebar simpler, the new mockups propose that it should
only handle connected networks and removable devices such as flash
drives and USB devices, and delegates other devices for external
widgets through the 'Other Locations' item.
To handle fixed devices and manage network connections, add a new
widget named GtkPlacesView, based on Nautilus mockups to keep
consistency between GNOME file management tools - in this case,
between Nautilus and the bundled Gtk's file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752034
This search engine reuses the GFileInfo that is already loaded
for the file list, to ensure that hits from the current directory
always appear promptly.
We were using GTkTreeView in a simple list. Also, as we know,
GtkCellRenderers are not the best way to theme and manipulate
widgets.
So instead use a GtkListBox to modernize the GtkPlacesSidebar,
and in the way clean up some parts of the code (like headings)
which were not used anymore.
Also we don't use a model anymore, since the data is simple
enough to manage it in a subclass of the row itself.
- GtkCssWidgetNode
for style contexts owned by a widget
- GtkCssPathNode
for style contexts using a GtkWidgetPath
- GtkCssTransientNode
for nodes created with gtk_style_context_save()/restore()
The functionality of it is supposed to grow, so better put it in a
custom file early.
This is just a naive split so far, the next patches will split things
further.
This commit adds the GtkTextTag:underline-rgba and :strikethrough-rgba
properties and the necessary plumbing to apply these colors in GtkTextLayout.
With this change, you can alter the color of underlines including those
of type PANGO_UNDERLINE_ERROR.
You might want to alter the underline color to differentiate between
spelling and grammer mistakes. In code editors, it is convenient to
differentiate between errors and warnings.
Note that the GtkTextAppearance struct is public ABI and has no spare
room for new fields, so we are resorting to some tricky packing to store
the colors in the unused pixel field of the fg_color and bg_color structs.
This packing is accomplished by the macros in gtktextattributesprivate.h.
Signed-off-by: Christian Hergert <christian@hergert.me>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=402168
We need to filter out platform-specific sources from the files that we
use with the introspection scanner.
In this specific case I could have moved the gtkclipboard-quartz.c and
the gtkdnd-quartz.c files out of the $(gtk_base_c_sources) variable, but
doing a filter-out on the variable itself is more resilient in case we
eventually add files and we forget about the result.
The property is useless to set (it only allows 'initial', 'inherit' and
'unset' as values), but it is used to track changes to the icon theme.
And as such, it can ensure that widgets can track when they need to
reload icons.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743341
For now, this is only an implementation detail of the animated style.
The idea is to use GtkCssStaticStyle as the result of CSS queries and
then put a GtkCssAnimatedStyle on top that manages the animations. The
neat thing about this is that you can cache the static values.
GtkCssStyle is the base class to be used for all types of styles that do
exist.
GtkCssAnimatedStyle is the only implementation so far, that is exactly a
copy/paste of the old GtkCssStyle code.
The GTK_FILE_SYSTEM_ENABLE_UNSUPPORTED define is not used anymore,
and we don't install a gtk.css file for Raleigh, so no need to
uninstall one either.
gtk-update-icon-cache is no longer used at build time, so a lot
of the complicated machinery we have around that (conditional
build, cross build, etc) are no longer required.
This subdirectory gets in the way when integrating the inspector
build more fully with GTK+, and does not really add anything.
Just move everything one level up.