Under Wayland, fullscreen/maximized windows may not cover the entire
area when a size increment is specified.
Ignore size increments for fullscreen/maximized windows just like most
window managers do under X11 so that windows with size increments can
still be fullscreen or fully maximized under Wayland as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751368
Since 740bcf5, we use these properties to properly compute shadow widths
for unmapped windows. If a client calls gtk_window_maximize and a window
manager unmaximizes a window, we should draw borders, so we need to
reset these when we get the property notification.
This queues an unnecessary resize on the toplevel, and is not needed
anymore, now that GtkWidget does not call
gtk_style_context_set_background() on the window's GdkWindow anymore.
And wrap it with G_GNUC_IGNORE_DEPRECATIONS.
Unfortunately we can't stop rendering the background altogether here.
Also, refactor some common code in a single function.
And wrap it with G_GNUC_IGNORE_DEPRECATIONS.
Unfortunately we can't stop rendering the background altogether here.
Also, gtk_style_context_set_background() should really be called every
time the style is updated. Fix that.
We used to "invalidate" scroll valuators, so the next scroll event could
be used as the base for the next scroll deltas. This has the inconvenience
that it invariably consumes the first event received after enter and,
due to interactions with WM overeager passive button grabs, there's a
possibility we don't scroll at all if we receive interleaved "smooth
scroll" XI_Motion events and XI_Enter events (Normally triggered by regular
scroll wheels in mice).
In order to fix this, and at the expense of some sync-call overhead on
XI_Enter events (one XIQueryDevice call per slave device), query the
current scroll valuator state for all the slaves of the entered pointer,
so we do know beforehand the right base values. If new devices are plugged
while the pointer is on top of the client, the initialized scroll values
will match the valuators'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750994https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750870
It has the unintended effect of picking the suggested action from the
context, which conflicts with the (possibly 0) status we set on our
::drag-motion handler.
Given this widget is not interested in listening to DnD from every
possible target, it is safe to just disable it.
gdk_x11_device_xi2_window_at_position() may attempt to push/pop
a few error trap pairs while traversing the window tree. Move it
outside the server grab, and around the multiple XIQueryPointer
calls we may do here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751739
This allows a widget to override global font_options, such as hinting and
subpixel order. The widget's PangoContext is updated when this is set.
Some update code from gtk_widget_update_pango_context was moved to
update_pango_context so that gtk_widget_update_pango_context runs it.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751677
The WM isn't aware of O-R (popup) or offscreen windows. If somebody
maps an offscreen or a popup GTK+ window before the main window, we'll
complete the sequence before a "real" window is mapped. Make sure to
ignore these for startup notifies.
In case the X11 backend is not enabled, we still need to include the
pangofc-fontmap.h header file, as we use the Pango/FontConfig API in
both the X11 and Wayland case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751625
We mistakenly forced the "STRING" type, which was able to confuse higher
layer helpers like gtk_selection_data_get_uris(). This fixes a crash
happening anytime a drop is attempted on a GtkPlacesSidebar.