The warning is not intended to disable the Create button and must only be shown
when the folder is not found, so this is implemented in the folder name exists
callback.
A "name" entry was added to FileExistsData to pass the filename to the callback
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751800
Allow the name and location columns to be resized, but arrange
for their sizing to be reset when the column layout changes (either
by the location column appearing/disappearing, or by the time
column changing between mtime and atime. This gives a decent
compromise between good automatic sizing and user control.
The code for getting the selected files was assuming that
we are always in browse mode, and was causing warnings when
hitting Ctrl-L twice, right after opening the file chooser.
The fix is to simple use the model that is passed into the
callback.
Avoid reloading models unnecessarily, e.g. when the user
switches to search and back without starting a search.
Keep the current list contents visible until a search is
actually started. Also, synchronize any changes in the
column layout with the corresponding model changes.
This search engine reuses the GFileInfo that is already loaded
for the file list, to ensure that hits from the current directory
always appear promptly.
Don't show Recent in the sidebar when we are in save mode.
We also ignore the startup-mode = recent in save mode now - we
don't want to populate the file list with recent files if Recent
is not on the sidebar. If you really want to go there, you can
still enter recent:// in the location entry.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751653
In save modes, the entry is really more for entering a name than
entering a full location, so don't go there eagerly when '.', '/'
or '~' are pressed. Make Ctrl-L work better in this mode too.
Use the same code that brings up the location entry on '/',
'~' or '.' also when the focus is not on the file list. This
prevents those key presses on the sidebar from ending up in
the search entry.
Some internal containers were erroneously taking focus, interrupting
the flow of tab keynav, and using arrow keynav to go from the file
list to the sidebar did not work anymore, after the recent sidebar
rewrite.
Make the file chooser entry optionally capture Escape
and emit a signal. Make the file chooser widget hide the
entry on that signal and go back to the path bar.
This gives us a two-level undo:
location entry -> path bar -> dialog close.
When the location entry is permanently displayed in the
header for save mode, we still let the first Escape close
the dialog.
Arrange things so that hitting Escape during a running
search stops the search, but leaves the search results
around, and hitting Escape again leaves the search mode.
The location column did not work for search results in recent://.
Fix that by looking at the target uri in this case. Show the location
column in recent mode. And make it more similar to nautilus by
showing the full path if it is not below $HOME.
When the search engine provides hits with GFileInfo, use that
to add the hits to the model directly, without going through
another round of async get_info calls.
To do this, we add a batched variant of the
_gtk_file_system_model_update_file call that takes lists of
GFiles and GFileInfos. Again, we can avoid repeated resorting
that happens when the files are updated individually.
Use a revealer to manage the visibility of the header area where
we show the pathbar, the location entry or search. This is a bit
smoother, and makes search more similar to a search bar.
Since nautilus merge, we were not showing 'Recent' in the sidebar
if GIO did not support the recent: scheme. But the file chooser
can show recent files independent of gvfs - it loads the recent
files manually. This is relevant on Windows and OS X, where gvfs
is typically not used.
This commit adds a show-recent property which can be used to override
the recent: scheme check. We use it in the file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750068
When recent files are not supported in gvfs, or turned off by
settings, we should not try to load them even if the startup
mode says so. This prevents inconsistency with the places
sidebar where 'Recent' will not appear in this case.
I managed to stall recent files today while trying to save a GTK
testcase in glade that contained enough spinning spinners that the CPU
was saturated just redrawing things.
I had to navigate the filesystem!
This signal can be emitted by GtkSearchEntry after search has been
cancelled, and other operation mode is set. It doesn't make sense to
populate the search model in that state anymore, so just avoid doing it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745479
The search engine might stay alive longer due to extra temporary refs, so
the signal handlers should be removed for the filechooser to ignore these
properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745479
Avoid scrolling animation when scrolling to where we want
to insert the new folder, since adding the entry doesn't
do the right thing if the treeview is still scrolling.
An alternative would be to wait for the animated scrolling
to reach its target before starting the editing, but this
is easier.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729366
We were trying to start search when the user types anything,
but this is annoying more often than helpful, and interferes
with the location entry. So, stick with explicitly enabled
search (via the search button or Alt-S) for now.
Add a button to allow restricting search to the current
folder (and subdirectories). This makes the search more
useful, and makes the file chooser more similar to
nautilus.
In search, we show files from differnt locations, and it makes
sense to show where they come from. This makes the file chooser
more similar to nautilus, too.
Folders that show up among search results were unexpectedly
returned even for GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_OPEN. Change things
around so that we switch to the folder instead, which is the
behavior we had in GTK+ 2.x.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744204
It is a bit misleading to have one of the places in the sidebar
selected while in search mode, since the search is not relative
to any location. So, unset the sidebar selection when we enter
search mode.
If the search entry doesn't consume the key event, don't
change to search mode. Otherwise, we interfere e.g. with
Ctrl and Shift keys for selection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743660