Add an "Insert Emoji" item to the context menu in entries.
We also add a show-emoji-icon property, which when set to
TRUE, will add an icon that can be clicked to bring up
the Emoji chooser.
Our ::query-tooltip handler first checks whether the pointer is over any
of the icons, returning their tooltip if so, and if not chains up to
Widget::query-tooltip in order to show the text for the widget overall.
But ensure_has_tooltip(), which exists to update :has-tooltip based on
whether ::query-tooltip is needed, only set :has-tooltip to TRUE if any
icon had a tooltip, without caring whether the widget as a whole does.
That is asymmetrical and meant that if the Entry had a tooltip, but
subsequently all icons had their tooltips unset, :has-tooltip would be
set to FALSE, and hence the tooltip for the widget would become lost.
The fix is to set :has-tooltip to TRUE if the widget has a tooltip of
its own, and we only need to check the icons if that is not the case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785672
Since setting a clip is mandatory for almost all widgets, we can as well
change the size-allocate signature to include a out_clip parameter, just
like GtkCssGadget did. And since we now always propagate baselines, we
might as well pass that one on to size-allocate.
This way we can also make sure to transform the clip returned from
size-allocate to parent-coordinates, i.e. the same coordinate space
priv->allocation is in.
We now rely on toplevels receiving and forwarding all the events
the windowing should be able to handle. Event masks are no longer a
way to determine whether an event is deliverable ot a widget.
Events will always be delivered in the three captured/target/bubbled
phases, widgets can now just attach GtkEventControllers and let those
handle the events.
And refurbish cursor management to be set on the GtkWidget. The
input window is not needed anymore to receive events either.
This is no longer set through the GdkWindow, so use the private
GtkWidget API.
We can e.g. get the entry dispose()d and a focus_out event after that
(because the toplevel unsets the focus which previously was the entry).
We then later use priv->current_pos in a call to pango API which makes
sure the given index is valid for the given layout. Since we lazily
create a GtkEntryBuffer in get_buffer() and a PangoLayout lazily in
gtk_entry_create_layout, these 2 are always valid but don't match
priv->current_pos in this situation.
Fix this by resetting priv->current-pos in dispose().
Using Ctrl + left/right to skip between words, or left/right to cancel a
selection, were causing movement on the screen in the opposite direction
of the glyph on the key. This was surprising and awful UX for RTL users.
This is based on a patch covering the former case by:
Author: Ori Avtalion <ori@avtalion.name>
Date: Tue Apr 20 08:06:23 2010 +0000
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=136059
See the implementation of gtk_entry_create_layout():
pango_attr_list_splice() is used to add the PangoAttrList of the preedit
string. And that is done *after* applying the PangoAttrList of the
"attributes" property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776868
This reverts commit 8e29222d95.
This needs more work - spin buttons need to be converted at
the same time, and we should make sure that text still appears.
Add a new ::measure vfunc similar to GtkCssGadget's that widget
implementations have to override instead of the old get_preferred_width,
get_preferred_height, get_preferred_width_for_height,
get_preferred_height_for_width and
get_preferred_height_and_baseline_for_width.
The cursor was set using gdk_window_set_cursor() even in
gdk_window_new().
So instead of having yet another flag, just make the users of that flag
call gdk_window_set_cursor() directly after the window was created.
We currently beep when a character is appended at the end in
overwrite mode. That is obviously not right. Patch based on
a patch by Ian MacDonald.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772389
We were failing to do that, leading to progress not disappearing
anymore after it was initially shown, in the gtk3-widget-factory
entry progress example.
GdTaggedEntry needs that. Though there's probably a bunch of work left
inside GdTaggedEntry to make it look cute again (like storing the area
it reserves for itself to allocate tags in).
gtk_editable_get_selection_bounds() returns UTF-8 character offsets,
but gdk_pango_layout_get_clip_region() wants byte ranges, so convert
from one to the other.
With English, this is especially visible for passwords, which use ●
as the invisible character.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761128
(1) Keep priv->text_allocation for the area used by the text
(2) Compute all text coordinates with the help of priv->text_allocation
As a side effect the get_text_area_size and get_frame_size vfuncs are
now unused. If we wanted them back, they should get a single use durig
size_allocate() and then their results should be stored for further
processing.
This complicates refactorings, so remove that feature. It's not used
anywhere and doesn't play well with nodes the way it's implemented.
If we want it back, we can add it back later.
Clearing the icon doesn't appear to be necessary with
todays code, and it has the unfortunate side-effect of
temoorarily hiding the icon's window, which breaks grabs
and makes us miss the button release event when the icon
is changed from a button press handler.
The entry code passes GTK_DEST_DEFAULT_HIGHLIGHT when setting
up the drop target, but that is ineffective because of the
custom drag_motion implementation. Instead, call
gtk_drag_[un]hightlight ourselves.
If the window has not yet been created, then we can't set the invisible
cursor yet. This can happen in situations where the widget is in a
revealer with type-to-search functionality.
Use G_PARAM_DEPRECATED with deprecated style properties.
This will make it easier to identify and remove such stale
properties from css, since it will now trigger warnings.
Calling gtk_render_background for each rectangle in the region
leads to suboptimal and sometimes weird results. Getting this
right requires more work in Pango first. Go back to just rendering
a single background, and clip it to the selection region. This
matches what GtkLabel does.
This commit creates entry and button subnodes for the buttons
in GtkSpinButton. The nodes are ordered like this for horizontal
spinbutton
+ entry
+ image.left
+ image.right
+ progress
+ button.down
+ button.up
and like this for vertical ones:
spinbutton
+ button.down
+ entry
+ button.up
This arrangement requires cooperation from GtkEntry to place
the entry subnodes correctly, and some small changes in the theme.
This commit also fixes progress rendering in vertical spin buttons.
And remove the API to set that variable.
If you want the entry to not fill its whole allocated area,
gtk_widget_set_valign (entry, GTK_ALIGN_FILL);
will give you the old behavior.
Create css nodes for icons in entries, with name image, and use
gtk_style_context_save_to_node() for them. We still set the
style classes .left and .right on them.
Previously, we just hid the cursor if a key event was adding text,
but not when you used backspace, or Ctrl-V. Rearrange things so that
we obscure the cursor whenever the buffer contents change while we
are handling key events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754535