Windows/surface's aren't supposed to be explicitly moved by any external
part, so don't provide API for doing so. Usage throughout Gdk is
replaced by the corresponding backend variants.
The generic layer still does the heavy lifting, leaving the backends
more or less just act as thin wrappers, dealing a bit with global
coordinate transformations. The end goal is to remove explicit surface
moving from the generic gdk layer.
To separate how toplevels and popups are configured, a first step is to
introduce a resize-only vfunc for backends to implement. It's meant to
only configure toplevel windows, i.e. popups. Currently it's used for
both types, but introducing the resize-only API is a first step.
GTK4 doesn't have WS_CHILD windows anymore, so hWndParent argument
to CreateWindowEx() is always interpreted as the owner window,
not the parent window.
A window with an owner:
* is above the owner in Z-order
* is destroyed when the owner is destroyed
* is hidden when the owner is minimized
This is enforced by the OS.
GTK can only allow this for popup windows.
Desktop window must never[0] be an owner.
[0]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20040224-00/?p=40493
1) Handle GDK_SURFACE_POPUP in RegisterGdkClass()
(for now pretend it's the same as GDK_SURFACE_TOPLEVEL)
2) Remove useless code from GDK_SURFACE_TOPLEVEL case in _gdk_win32_display_create_surface()
(now there's just GDK_SURFACE_TOPLEVEL there, no need for a type check)
3) Have a separate case for GDK_SURFACE_POPUP and ensure that
it doesn't get WS_CHILDWINDOW (and neither should GDK_SURFACE_TEMP).
Somewhat change the order of initialization (to be closer
to what Wayland backend does).
Also remove the wrapper field that is no longer needed -
it used to hold a pointer to the main GdkWindow instance,
which wrapped GdkWin32ImplWindow. Since impls are gone,
nothing is wrapping anything anymore.
Fix a substitution error, where wrong pointer was added
to the hash table. Added a comment to ensure that future readers
(including myself) won't be confused by the fact that we're
inserting a pointer instead of the handle itself.
All the information in it is already contained
in the surface object we pass along, and none
of the backend implementations were using the
attributes at all.
We are not creating such surfaces anymore, and
they were only ever meaningfully implemented
on X11. Drop the concept, and the api for determining
if a surface is input-only.
The skip-taskbar, skip-pager and urgency hints were
only ever implemented for X11, and are not very useful
with modern desktops. Relegate the functionality to
x11 backend api, and drop the GtkWindow api.
As in commit d45996c, the x and y coordinates passed into begin_drag and
begin_move are no longer root coordinates but are now surface
coordinates.
Use the x and y surface coordinates to acquire the root x and y
coordinates so that resizing and moving can work as expected.
In particular, this patch removes:
gdk_surface_get_events()
gdk_surface_set_events()
gdk_surface_get_device_events()
gdk_surface_set_device_events()
Event masks so far still exist for grabs.
* Remove clipdrop->dnd_target_state, it's not used anymore
* Remove non-functioning _gdk_dropfiles_store(), store dropfiles
list in GdkWin32Drop instead
* Fix multiple comment typos
* Fix _gdk_win32_get_clipboard_format_name_as_interned_mimetype() to
leave names that look like mime/types alone
* Refactor _gdk_win32_add_w32format_to_pairs() to populate
GdkContentFormatsBuilder directly, instead of making a GList
* Rename context -> drag (still using GdkDragContext type,
but [almost?] all variables and comments say "drag" now)
* Rename GdkDropContext -> GdkDrop
* Rename some parameter names for clarity
* Rewrite local protocol to look more like OLE2 protocol
instead of mirroring the structure of the X11 API.
* Add handle_events field to GdkWin32DragContext,
to shut off event handling (temporary fix until GTK is patched up)
* Remove _gdk_win32_drag_context_find() - the drag object is stored
in GdkDrop instead. Use _gdk_win32_find_drag_for_dest_surface()
to get it initially.
* Remove target_ctx_for_window, droptarget context is stored
in the surface instead.
* Call gdk_drag_context_set_cursor() just like wayland backend does
(slightly broken for now)
* Clean up the action choosing code (filter source actions by using
keyboard state, pass that to GTK, get all actions supported by GTK in
response, match them up with filtered source actions, return the
result, falling back to COPY in case of multiple actions)
* Check drag_win32->protocol instead of the use_ole2_dnd variable where
possible
* Remove protocol checks from functions that are only used by the local
protocol
* Use event state to manufacture the keyboard state for WM_MOUSEMOVE
* Change function names printed by GDK_NOTE to name the actual
functions, not their theoretical generic GDK stack ancestors
* Consistently use drag_win32 and drop_win32 variables instead of a mix
of that and win32_drag/win32_drop
* Return FALSE from button handler to ensure that GTK gets the button
event to break implicit grab
* Emit leave event on failed idroptarget_drop() calls
There is no reason why we shouldn't pass this flag every time
Z-order changes. We have separate routines that are used to
maintain relative Z-order, so it should be completely OK to
pass SWP_NOOWNERZORDER to let the OS know that it shouldn't try
to maintain relative Z-order of the windows when raising them.
Pass SWP_NOOWNERZORDER when rising TEMP surfaces to the top. This ensures that
they don't drag anything else to the top with them. The use-case for this is
a tooltip appearing for a non-foreground surface, causing said surface to rise
above other surfaces, some of which maybe foreground at the moment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784766
According to the old new thing[0], we should use the instance handle
of the GDK/GTK DLL when registering GDK-specific types in the system.
Using the instance handle for the whole application in these circumstances
is not an error, but can potentially clash with the types registered
by the application itself.
Also, extract window class icons from the GDK/GTK DLL, not from the
application executable.
[0]: https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20050418-59/?p=35873
* Remove DC refcounting (we trust GDK to always do
begin_frame/end_frame calls in pairs)
* Now that there's no GDK-provided double-buffer up the stack,
double-buffering is implemented here
(though it's disabled by default - in my tests it didn't provide
any visual improvements, but did decrease performance).
* For some reason delaying window resizes until the point where
we need to blit the double-buffer into the window leads
to visual glitches, so doulbe-buffered windows are resized
in begin_frame, same as non-double-buffered ones.
* New code to clear the paint region, for all drawing modes.
Hopefully, it isn't duplicated anywhere up the stack.
* GL has its own context now, so remove any GL-related comments.
* Layered windows are still used (because cairo actually works
better with them)
* A bit more code re-use for layered windows
* Some functions that were local to gdksurface-win32.c are made
usable for the whole backend
* Drag-indicator drawing is temporarily commented out to match
a similar change in X11 backend
* Previous commit had misleading info. The code was
added to begin_paint() instead of end_paint(). Though
that did not affect its performance in any visible way.
* Company advised to move the code to an "after_paint" signal
handler, so that it works on all renderers, not just Cairo.
This change caused high fluctuation in FPS values in fishbowl
when it is put in a situation where it cannot achieve 60fps
(such as using Cairo renderer at ultra-high resolution).
This seems to be deliberate and not a bug.
There is no easily apparent way of being notified when frame updates
happene exactly, so we just query frame info at the end of each paint.
If we query too often (faster than DWM refresh rate), we just get
the same values twice in a row, but that is, hopefully, highly unlikely.