If we use GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE we are asking for a core profile
according to the GLX_ARB_create_context_profile extension. For that,
we pass the GLX_CONTEXT_CORE_PROFILE_BIT_ARB value for the
GLX_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK_ARB attribute.
The specification for the extension says that:
If the requested OpenGL version is less than 3.2,
GLX_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK_ARB is ignored and the functionality
of the context is determined solely by the requested version.
Since we're asking for a core profile, we assume a GL version greater
than or equal to 3.2; thus, we don't need to specify the
GLX_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION_ARB or the GLX_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION_ARB
attributes, and instead just rely on whatever version GLX gives us.
This seems to work around a strange issue in Mesa; if we ask for a core
profile and any version > 3.0, we get broken rendering on any shared
context we create.
Since gsize doesn't work as a typename in a ui file,
we have to be careful not to pass pointers to wrongly
sized variables when getting the guint64 values out
of the model.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742664
We still use symbolic icons for Copy, Cut, and Delete operations inside
toolbars and some menus, so it's worth pointing to the symbolic icon
names in the deprecation notices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741969
We need to clear the cache manually on full revalidates because
_gtk_css_change_for_child() will clear the full revalidation flags.
And then gtk_style_context_update_cache() will not do the right thing
(which is to clear itself).
Because we can switch from animating to non-animating pretty much
anywhere, do the check for animations unconditionally instead of trying
to cram it into the correct if path (and failing).
We now cache the results of lookups on the parent GtkCssStyle. This
allows sharing styles between widgets (recursively). However, this
only works if the styles can't potentially depend on siblings -
neither directly via sibling selectors or via position pseudo-classes
like :first-child.
Unfortunately, Adwaita currently uses first-child a lot, and in
particular for labels, which are the most common widgets.
The big benefits of this change are both less CPU - due to not needing
to compute styles again - and less memory usage - due to sharing of
the styles between widgets. Here's some nonscientific numbers I
collected while pondering the usefulness of this patch:
glade glade widget
demo demo factory
runtime styles styles
Adwaita before 19.1s 5800 1150
Adwaita now 18.9s 3800 970
Adwaita hacked now 14.5s 3100 910
simple before 11.3s 5800 1150
simple now 10.8s 1300 590
Adwaita: Adwaita as provided by GTK
Adwaita hacked: Adwaita with the first/last-child for GtkLabel removed
simple: A 250 lines simple GTK theme I use for testing
before: This patch not applied
now: this patch applied
glade demo runtime: Starting glade opening a large file and closing it
glade demo styles: GtkCssStaticStyle objects after opening glade with
the large file as per inspector
widget factory styles: GtkCssStaticStyle objects after startup as per
inspector
Previously we looked at the save/restore state when determining the
parent. This is wrong in the case where we're updating the cache though.
So we now save the parent in the style info.
After the parent changes in commit
3a337156d1 we need to refresh the cached
styles after the current style. After all, they now depend on the base
style.
After 3a337156d1 style lookups still used
the parent context's style as the parent style, even though after a
gtk_style_context_save() the root style of the style context is the
proper parent.
Testcase attached.
Instead of keeping an animated style everywhere, we replace it with the
static style when nothing gets animated.
Apart from making the code cleaner, this gets rid of a bunch of animated
style values that do nothing but wrap a static style.
The only style that is animated is the style of the unsaved primary
node. So there's no need to create animated style objects for the other
ones.
There is a bunch of ugliness in the code currently. Further commits are
expected to fix them.
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.