This was testing something that shouldn't be possible
anyway: Adding more than one child to a bin. With the
bin removal, this now just overrides the child so
only one child is left in the end.
Just remove the test.
Use window title, or custom title widget if it's set. Remove 'title'
property.
Update demos and tests to set the title on the window instead of
headerbar.
Despite the name, the test was not in fact showing
contents on map anymore, since widgets are visible
by default. Setting visible to FALSE makes the test
work as expected again.
We are comparing a transparent label to a transparent
text view, so need to make sure the caret does not show
up in the text view to ruin the comparison.
GdkEvent has been a "I-can't-believe-this-is-not-OOP" type for ages,
using a union of sub-types. This has always been problematic when it
comes to implementing accessor functions: either you get generic API
that takes a GdkEvent and uses a massive switch() to determine which
event types have the data you're looking for; or you create namespaced
accessors, but break language bindings horribly, as boxed types cannot
have derived types.
The recent conversion of GskRenderNode (which had similar issues) to
GTypeInstance, and the fact that GdkEvent is now a completely opaque
type, provide us with the chance of moving GdkEvent to GTypeInstance,
and have sub-types for GdkEvent.
The change from boxed type to GTypeInstance is pretty small, all things
considered, but ends up cascading to a larger commit, as we still have
backends and code in GTK trying to access GdkEvent structures directly.
Additionally, the naming of the public getter functions requires
renaming all the data structures to conform to the namespace/type-name
pattern.
In the hope of making ci-only failures less of a black hole,
add a backtrace to the messsage for criticals.
This could eventually go into GLib (pass backtrace symbols along
as a log field for criticals), but for now this will do.
Make GtkScaleButton a widget that has a toggle button
as a child, just like all the other button widgets now.
The immediate benefit of this arrangement is to avoid
the "double focus" problem when we pop up the popup.
Update accessible, demos and tests to match.
The color editor shows a color picker button only if it
finds a suitable implementation, which it does not in ci.
So disable the focus-chain test for page 3.
This test was expecting to make existing widgets like
GtkBox focusable by setting :can-focus. That just doesn't
work anymore.
The focus chain testing that is done here is already
better covered by test-focus-chain, so lets just remove this.
The notebook grab_focus change in the previous commit made
backwards tabbing work as expected, and thereby changed the
output of one of the focus-chain tests.
Reviewing the existing settings, the only backend with
some differences in the modifier intent settings is OS X,
and we would rather have that implemented by interpreting
the existing modifiers in the appropriate way.
X11 Wayland Win32 OS X
primary ctrl ctrl ctrl mod2
mnemonic alt alt alt alt
context menu - - - ctrl
extend sel shift shift shift shift
modify sel ctrl ctrl ctrl mod2
no text alt|ctrl alt|ctrl alt|ctrl mod2|ctrl
shift group varies - - alt
GTK now uses the following modifiers:
primary ctrl
mnemonic alt
extend sel shift
modify sel ctrl
no text alt|ctrl
The context menu and shift group intents were not used
in GTK at all.
Update tests to no longer expect <Primary> to roundtrip
through the accelerator parsing and formatting code.
Add all of the keyboard translation results in the key event,
so we can translate the keyboard state at the time the event
is created, and avoid doing state translation at match time.
We actually need to carry two sets of translation results,
since we ignore CapsLock when matching accelerators, in
gdk_event_matches().
At the same time, drop the scancode field - it is only ever
set on win32, and is basically unused in GTK.
Update all callers.
The colorbutton contains a button which contains a colorswatch.
We want the focus to go straight to the button, nowhere else,
so mark the swatch as !can-focus.
Adapt tests to match.
It is hard to avoid widgets with the same name in a
large ui file - try harder to record a full focus chain
before decide that we've wrapped, by including the widget
address in the comparison. Note that we don't include
the addresses in the generated output, since that would
make expected output vary from run to run.
We are setting the month property to 10 different values,
checking that the change succeeds. But the calendar defaults
to the current date, so on every 30th of the month, we
try to set a date of Febuary 30, which fails.
Lets fix this before the 31st, by setting the calendar
to a good date.
The lightweight inheritance mechanism used for GtkShortcutTrigger is not
going to be usable by bindings, because boxed types cannot have derived
types.
We could use GTypeInstance and derive everything from that, like
GParamSpec, but in the end shortcuts are not really a performance
critical paths, unlike CSS values or render nodes.
Copy the logic from GtkKeyHash for matching key events
to shortcuts.
Adapt shortcuts test to work with the better matching,
by creating more complete key events.
Allow GtkShortcutTrigger to return partial matches.
Currently, no triggers produce such results, and
GtkShortcutController treats partial matches like
exact ones.
Similar to GtkShortcutTrigger, GtkShortCutAction provides all the
different ways to activate a shortcut.
So far, these different ways are supported:
- do nothing
- Call a user-provided callback
- Call gtk_widget_activate()
- Call gtk_widget_mnemonic_activate()
- Emit an action signal
- Activate an action from the widget's action muxer
Before this commit, adding GtkWidgetAction to class private data would
require copying the actions to each subclass as they were built or
modified. This was convenient in that it is a sort of "copy on write"
semantic.
However, due to the way that GTypeInstance works with base _init()
functions, the "g_class" pointer in GTypeInstance is updated as each
_init() function is called. That means you cannot access the subclasses
class private data, but only the parent class private data.
If instead we use a singly linked list of GtkWidgetAction, each subclass
has their own "head" yet all subclasses share the tail of the
GtkWidgetAction chain.
This creates one bit of complexity though. You need a stable way to know
which "bit" is the "enabled" bit of the action so we can track enabled
GAction state. That is easily solved by calculating the distance to the
end of the chain for a given action so that base classes sort ahead of
subclasses. Since the parent class always knows its parent's actions, the
position is stable.
A new dynamic bitarray helper also helps us avoid allocations in all the
current cases (up to 64 actions per widget) and dynamically switches to
malloc if that is to ever be exceeded.
For some reason, these tests are flaky in ci,
they always work locally for me. So, until
we use the data these tests produce for something,
lets just turn them off.
This makes meson actually parse the individual test
results. Most of the time, it does not make a difference,
but one case where it does is when all the individual
tests of a binary are skipped, meson will mark the
test as skipped.
The background-image-multiple.ref.ui file uses
non-existing properties, which gives us a g_warning,
and the glib test framework insists on treating
warnings as fatal, so we end up doing exit(133),
which in turn makes the meson TAP parser ignore
its xfails.
Comment out the nonexisting properties, so we can
fail properly, and then in turn xfail properly.
Reduce the amount of special casing by using a list model
for global and managed shortcuts, too.
This way, the ListModel API will work for the ShortcutController in the
GtkShortcutManager and GtkRoot.
The only special case remaining is shortcut activation, which needs to
pass the right widget to the controller in the global/managed case.
Similar to GtkShortcutTrigger, GtkShortCutAction provides all the
different ways to activate a shortcut.
So far, these different ways are supported:
- do nothing
- Call a user-provided callback
- Call gtk_widget_activate()
- Call gtk_widget_mnemonic_activate()
- Emit an action signal
- Activate an action from the widget's action muxer
- Activate a GAction
This is a huge reorganization of GtkDropTarget. I did not know how to
split this up, so it's unfortunately all one commit.
Highlights:
- Split GtkDropTarget into GtkDropTarget and GtkDropTargetAsync
GtkDropTarget is the simple one that only works with GTypes and offers
a synchronous interface.
GtkDropTargetAsync retains the full old functionality and allows
handling mime types.
- Drop events are handled differently
Instead of picking a single drop target and sending all DND events to
it, every event is sent to every drop target. The first one to handle
the event gets to call gdk_drop_status(), further handlers do not
interact with the GdkDrop.
Of course, for the ultimate GDK_DROP_STARTING event, only the first
one to accept the drop gets to handle it.
This allows stacking DND event controllers that aren't necessarily
interested in handling the event or that might decide later to drop
it.
- Port all widgets to either of those
Both have a somewhat changed API due to the new event handling.
For the ones who should use the sync version, lots of cleanup was
involved to operate on a sync API.
It is enough to just set the parent (and make the parent
call gtk_native_check_resize in size_allocate).
This commit removes the relative_to argument to the
constructors of GtkPopover and GtkPopoverMenu, and
updates all callers.
This is in particular relevant for the ::is-focus property, because
updating that one doesn't cause enter/leave events.
But it also checks that notify and enter/leave happen in the right
order.
Split the focus tracking into a separate
GtkEventControllerFocus, and change the API one more time.
We are back to having ::focus-in and ::focus-out signals.
Update all users.
Add properties, and use string arrays instead of lists.
Among other things, this renames gtk_icon_theme_list_icons
to gtk_icon_theme_get_icon_names.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/2410
This tests was testing gestures by faking an event in the
middle of a window that has a hbox with an expanding image in it.
For me (and I guess this depends on all sorts of issues like whether
CSD is enabled, font sizes, etc) the hbox ended up centered horizontally
but not vertically (probably because of csd at the top), so no events
ever hit the inner widgets.
This is fixed by emitting the events at allocation.x/y of the
hbox, which should contain both the hbox and the image (as it expands).
We test this by looking at the produced render nodes now that
we don't actualluy scale the icon. Also, it turns out that this
code was broken due to some typos, so we also fix those.
These are always set to the same value as the corresponding border
radius properties. They are also non-standard, so remove them and
replace them with the border radius properties everywhere.
Fixes#2414
These now render the paintable to a cairo surface and convert that
to a texture. This is sort of a hack, but its only used in two
special cases internally and in two hacky test apps.
This changes gtk_text_buffer_insert_texture() to
gtk_text_buffer_insert_paintable() which is strictly more useful
(as textures are paintables). It also fixes the code to actually
support drawing the paintables (as well as tracking changes
to the paintables.
If icon lookup fails or if loading it fails later, just always
fall back to the built in image-missing icon. Nobody is handling
missing icons in a sane way anyway.
If you *truly* need to handle missing icons, you need to manually
use gtk_icon_theme_has_icon().
While changing the loading code I also fixed an issue where it
was always passing "png" to pixbuf, now it also handles "xpm" if
that is the filename suffix.
We had a pretty complex setup where we tried to avoid scaling up themes from dirs
that specified a size. However, not only was it very complex, but it didn't quite
work with window scales, because when using e.g. a size 32 directory for 16@2x
the dir size is wrong anyway. Additionally it turns out most code either picks
an existing icon size, or uses the FORCE_SIZE flags, so it doesn't seem
like a useful behaviour.
This change drops the FORCE_SIZE flags, and always scales
icons. Additionally it moves the scaling of the icon to rendering,
which seems more modern, and allows us to (later) share icons loaded
for different sizes that happened to use the same source file (at
different scales).
Note that this changes the behaviour of
gtk_icon_paintable_download_texture() is it now returns the unscaled
source icon. However, ignore thats, as I plan to remove this function
and replace it with a way to render a paintable to a cairo-surface
instead.
It it hard to control which of the csd style classes we get,
since it depends on details of the X server or compositor.
Explicitly ignore this difference by replacing .solid-csd
with .csd in the output.
Stylecontexts are on their way out and I'm removing API that the
testsuite was relying on, so remove the tests.
Put the useful parts of the tests elsewhere.
Instead, rely on people passing fallbacks explicitly.
Alternatively, GThemedIcon provides the functionality to create
fallbacks, which is what GtkImage and the testsuite now use.
That method is slightly better, too, so the expected test results
have been updated accordingly.
There is no way to query contexts or do anything useful with them.
So don't keep track of them and don't make them an argument in public
APIs with the docs saying "I don't know what to use here, maybe read
some spec somewhere".
We expose no API to get at any colors for drawing symbolics, so we
shouldn't have APIs to draw with them.
Apart from that, those APIs look like a box of crayons, not like an
icontheme.
Most users were just forgetting to set the proper flags.
And flags aren't the right way to set this anyway, it was just
acceptable as a workaround during GTK3 to not break API.
The API encouraged wrong usage - most of the users were indeed wrong.
Use the correct version instead:
gtk_icon_theme_get_for_display (gtk_widget_get_display ())
All the a11y tests were failing for me with a window state diff
like this:
- state: active enabled resizable sensitive showing visible
+ state: enabled resizable sensitive showing visible
I guess the windows in the CI always gets the focus, but not when
I run it here. Generally focus seems asynchronous and hard to rely
on so I just made the test ignore the active state on toplevels.
These days initilizing gtk may create a connection to the sesson bus,
so we have to initialize GTestDBus before initalizing gtk, or we'll
use the address of the "real" session bus (and remember that in the
global).
To further muck things up, g_test_dbus_up() resets important env
vars like DISPLAY and XDG_RUNTIME_DIR, which we have to re-set.
This adds a GDK_DEBUG=default-settings flag which disables reads
from xsettings and Xft resources, and enables this for the testsuite.
This is one less way to get different testresults depending on the
environment. In particular, it was failing the css tests for me
due to getting the wrong font size because i have a different dpi.
Instead of just doing radical change matching on the node itself, also
consider the parent nodes via the bloom filter.
This means a radical change is now also one where the parent
name/id/classes change, but since that's considered a radical change on
the parent already, those things are slow anyway.
Improves the benchmark times for CSS validation during backdrop
transitions in widget-factory from 45ms to 35ms on my machine.
:not() selectors cannot be radical because the bloomfilter only knows if
a value is set in any of the nodes, but cannot determine the opposite
(if a value is not set in at least one node), but that would be required
for:not() selectors.
However, this is very unlikely to happen in the real world, so it's not
worth optimizing.
Unfortunately, change tracking could know this, so by excluding the
:not() selectors from radical changes, the change tracking will now pick
them up. If that turns out to be a performance problem, we need to add a
special category for radical not filters, so change tracking and bloom
filters can deal with them.
The testcase demonstrating the problem in widget-factory has been
extrated and added.
Properly handle diff(1) failing.
In this particular case, the test passed a NULL input file to the diff
(that was fixed, too) and then diff only found one input file and
aborted.
But without this fix, we'd also not catch other abortion reasons for
diff() - as long as it exited in any way, we were happy.
Some of these test cases involve :not, and thus are affected
by our now correct handling of it for change computation.
All of them are affected by the window now being visible.
Add various tests for the change flag computation that
we do in the css selector tree.
test1: Just test the basic machinery of this test
test2: Trigger every change flag at least once
test3: Test that multiple states combine as expected
test4: Test negations (known to produce wrong results)
test5: Test a complex selector (not producing the expected
output atm)
widget-factory.ui:
The real thing: widget-factory+Adwaita. Note that
this expedts to be run with GSETTINGS_BACKEND=memory
Note that test4 checks the wrong results that we currently
produce for selectors involving :not. It will have to be
updated when we fix the handling of :not. The widget-factory.ui
testcase will certainly also be affected.
When looking for the get_type function for GThemedIcon,
try both g_themed_icon_get_type and gthemed_icon_get_type
The former is what gio has, the latter is still supported
to avoid breaking gweather_location_get_type.
Update tests to cover this new case.
GtkBuilderScope is an interface that provides the scope that a builder
instance operates in.
It creates closures and resolves types. Language bindings are meant to
use this interface to customize the behavior of builder files, in
particular when instantiating templates.
A default implementation for C is provided via GtkBuilderCScope (to keep
with the awkward naming that glib uses for closures). It is derivable on
purpose so that languages or extensions that extend C can use it.
The reftest code in fact does derive GtkBuilderCScope for its own scope
implementation that implements looking up symbols in modules.
gtk-widget-factory was updated to use the new GtkBuilderCScope to add
its custom callback symbols.
So it does it different from gtk-demo, which uses the normal way of
exporting symbols for dlsym() and thereby makes the 2 demos test the 2
ways GtkBuilder uses for looking up symbols.
All the list model tests were leaking items,
because g_list_model_get_item is transfer full.
Fixing these unveils a crash in the treelistmodel
and maplistmodel tests.
We use a compilation symbol in our build to allow the inclusion of
specific headers while building GTK, to avoid the need to include only
the global header.
Each namespace has its own compilation symbol because we used to have
different libraries, and strict symbol visibility between libraries;
now that we have a single library, and we can use private symbols across
namespaces while building GTK, we should have a single compilation
symbol, and simplify the build rules.
The bug was introduced in commit:
9b7640b8 by Benjamin Otte, 2012-03-26 17:24:02
styleproperty: Make _gtk_style_property_parse_value() return a CssValue
In that commit, `values` changed from `GValue*` to `GtkCssValue**`,
but one `!G_IS_VALUE (&values[8])` was left untouched. As a result,
if `border` shorthand contains anything after color, it might crash,
depending on memory layout.
New test included.
Fixes: #751
gtk_builder_connect_signals() is no longer necessary, because all the
setup that made it necessary to have this extra step is now done
automatically via the closure functions.
This is pretty unused and gets in the way of the next steps.
A potential side effect is that for templates the widget was passed as
the user data argument. If that turns out to be important, we have to
special case that situation.
This adds support using the GtkTextHistory helper for undo/redo to the
GtkText widget. It is similar in use to GtkTextView, but with a simplified
interface.
You can disable undo support using the GtkText:enable-undo property. By
default, it is enabled.
The expander icon is renamed from "arrow" to "expander".
The expander widget itself is renamed from "expander" to
"expander-widget" (Better ideas welcome).
This makes it possible to have an "expander" icon in more places then
the GtkExpander widget (in particular in tree lists) and not
confuse it with arrows.
This creates a new GtkTextViewChild that can manage overlay children at
given x,y offsets in buffer coordinates. This simplifies GtkTextView by
extracting this from GtkTextWindow as well as providing a real widget for
the borders.
With this change, we also rename gtk_text_view_add_child_in_window() to
gtk_text_view_add_overlay(). For those that were using
GTK_TEXT_WINDOW_WIDGET, they can use a GtkOverlay. It does not appear
that anyone was using GTK_TEXT_WINDOW_(LEFT|RIGHT|TOP|BOTTOM) for widgets
in this fashion, but that can be done by setting a gutter widget with
gtk_text_view_set_gutter(). We can make GtkTextViewChild public if
necessary to simplify this should it become necessary.
GtkTextViewChild will setup a CSS node of either "text" or "border"
depending on the GtkTextWindowType.
The old GtkTextViewChild has been renamed to AnchoredChild as it is only
used for widgets with anchors in the GtkTextBuffer. This also removes the
use of allocated GSList and instead embeds a GQueue and GList to save a
few extraneous allocations.
These are too sensitive to rendering differences
between renderers to run reliably in ci, but we
still want to keep them around. In particular,
the big glyph tests are useful to exercise the
GL glyph cache.
The code previously forgot to include the left child of the model's
node. Which of course only happened if that child wasn't NULL, which is
a common case.
Found and test provided by Matthias Clasen.
Instead of playing games with mapping negative symbolic values to
positive ones, let's use the appropriate constants everywhere. This
allows us to use:
GTK_CONSTRAINT_STRENGTH_WEAK * 2
Or
GTK_CONSTRAINT_STRENGTH_STRONG + 1
In code using the public API.
We also store the strength values as integers, so we can compare them
properly, and only turn them into doubles when they are inserted into
the solver, just like every other variable.
Make the 'repeat edit' test make more than to
suggestions in a single edit phase. It turns out
that this does not work, whereas just doing
two in a row does.
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.
Differentiate between wrapping around and
stopping at the end of the focus chain.
Update the existing tests, and add two
new ones where the difference matters.
Add a test that enumerates the focus chain by
emitting move-focus repeatedly, and compares
the result to expected output.
The test expects a ui file and a reference
file as input. The reference file can be created
using the --generate option.