This adds a GtkTextLineDisplayCache which can be used to cache a number
of GtkTextLineDisplay (and thus, PangoLayout) while displaying a view.
It uses a GSequence to track the position of the GtkTextLineDisplay
relative to each other, a MRU to cull the least recently used display,
and and a direct hashtable to lookup display by GtkTextLine.
We only cache lines that are to be displayed (!size_only). We may want to
either create a second collection of "size_only" lines to speed that up,
or determine that it is unnecessary (which is likely the case).
This removes the use of GtkTextDisplay (a PangoRenderer) to use
the GskPangoRender which generates render nodes. Part of this means
improving the GskPangoRenderer to support the necessary features for
displaying a GtkTextView.
Primarily, this is a merging of GtkTextDisplay features into
GskPangoRender. Additionally, GtkTextDisplay was removed to allow for
gtk_text_layout_snapshot() to be implemented elsewhere.
This commit moves GtkConstraintGuide into its own
source files to avoid gtkconstraintlayout.c turning
too messy, adds max size properties and implements
getters and setters.
GtkConstraintSolver is an implementation of the Cassowary constraint
solving algorithm:
http://constraints.cs.washington.edu/cassowary/
The Cassowary method allows to incrementally solve a tableau of linear
equations, in the form of:
x = y × coefficient + constant
with different weights, or strengths, applied to each one.
These equations can be used to describe constraints applied to a layout
of UI elements, which allows layout managers using the Cassowary method
to quickly, and efficiently, lay out widgets in complex relations
between themselves and their parent container.
The only cases of stateful actions we've seen
so far have been boolean properties, and we
don't really want to add much state handling
API, so lets just go with property actions
for now.
Adapt the only user in GtkText.
This library is meant to be the new CSS library that gets used from GDK,
GSK and GTK for string printing and parsing.
As a first step, move GtkCssProviderError into it.
While doing so, split it into GtkCssParserError (for critical problems)
and GtkCssParserWarning (for non-critical problems).
The need of a specialised fixed layout container that can be placed into
a GtkScrolledWindow ceased to exist once GtkScrolledWindow gained the
ability to automatically interpose a GtkViewport when adding a child
that does not implement GtkScrollable.
All the other justifications that led to the existence of GtkLayout as a
separate widget from GtkFixed have been largely made irrelevant in the
20 years since its inception.
- Rename GtkLegacyLayout to GtkCustomLayout
- Use for() to iterate over children in GtkBinLayout
- Whitespace fixes for code imported from GtkBox
- Store the GtkLayoutChild instances inside LayoutManager
- Simplify the GtkLayoutManager API by dropping unnecessary arguments
- Fix the ownership model of GtkLayoutManager
GtkLegacyLayout is a layout manager for the transitional period between
the introduction of layout managers and the removal of GtkWidget virtual
functions for the size negotiation.
Layout managers needs a way to store properties that control the layout
policy of a widget; typically, we used to store these in GtkContainer's
child properties, but since GtkLayoutManager is decoupled from the
actual container widget, we need a separate storage. Additionally, child
properties have their own downsides, like requiring a separate, global
GParamSpecPool storage, and additional lookup API.
GtkLayoutChild is a simple GObject class, which means you can introspect
and document it as you would any other type.
A base abstract class for layout manager delegate objects.
Layout managers are associated to a single widget, like event
controllers, and are responsible for measuring and allocating the
children of the widget they are bound to.
This is a new object (well, boxed type, but I'm calling it object) for
dealing with transform in a more constructive way than graphene_matrix_t
by keeping track of how the transform was created.
This way, reasoning about the transform becomes easier, and we can create
better ways to print it or transition from one transform to another one.
An example of this is that while a 0 degree and a 360degree rotation are
both the identity matrix, doing a transition between the two would cause
a rotation.