Even if a window doesn't support client side shadow
(gtk_window_supports_client_shadow returns FALSE), don't assume the
shadow width is zero, as CSD may have been enabled anyway (meaning
priv->client_decorated is TRUE). In that case we still need to report
the correct width.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749451
If CSD is enabled with shadow even though it "shouldn't"*, the width
should still be calculated correctly. This fixes a regression caused by
b1e5ad469c.
* gtk_window_should_use_csd () returns false
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748615
The window state 'client_decorated' will only be set the window is being
realized. If anyone tries to get the shadow size before that it'd get
the with as if there always was no shadow.
This avoids negative sized opaque regions caused by the allocation being
smaller than shadow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748615
Requires Vista and newer.
* Create surfaces with cairo_win32_surface_create_with_format
* Provide an rgba visual that can be distinguished from the system visual
* Make rgba visual the best available visual
* Enable alpha-transparency for all windows that we control
* Check for appropriate cairo capabilities at configure time
(W32 - 1.14.3 newer than 2015-04-14; others - 1.14.0)
* Check for composition support before enabling CSDs
* Re-enable transparency on WM_DWMCOMPOSITIONCHANGED
Windows that were created while composition was enabled and that were CSDed
as a result and will look ugly (thick black borders or no borders at all) once
composition is disabled.
If composition is enabled afterwards, they will return back to normal.
This happens, for example, when RDP session is opened to a desktop where a GTK
application is running. For W7/Vista windows will only re-gain transparency after
the RDP session is closed. For W8 transparency will only be gone momentarily.
Windows that were created while composition was disabled will not be CSDed
automatically and will use SSD (WM decorations), while windows that are CSDed
manually will get a thin square border.
If composition is enabled afterwards, these windows will not change.
This is most noticeable for system menus (popup menus are often generated
on the fly, system menus are created once) and some dialogues (About dialogue,
for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727316
Instead of issuing g_warning, fill the provided GError.
This lets us test this error handling, and is the right
thing to do. Use the new GtkBuilder helpers and
g_markup_collect_attributes to do so.
To calculate the shadow width, we look at the value of priv->fullscreen
and priv->maximized.
Those fields will have the actual value only after GTK receives back a
window state event though, so they will be wrong in _realize(). Look at
priv->fullscreen_initially and priv->maximize_initially too, to avoid
the size changing right after realize, which would make the window
flicker if maximized at startup.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747808
It turned out that using mwm hints to instruct wms to
create border-only decorations is not really working
universally. So, instead of doing this, render a solid
frame without shadow on the client-side to handle this
case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746222
Signed-off-by: Olivier Fourdan <fourdan@xfce.org>
On popover_unmap(), perform the gtk_widget_unmap() call last, so the
GtkWindowPopover data is ensured to be alive throughout the function
if the popover widget is destroyed right on ::unmap.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745829
Now that this is split in two separate gestures, both must be reset
when the WM grabs the pointer. Also, do on resize drags like on move
drags, and claim the gesture before resetting, so the ownership is
properly transferred across any other widgets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745969
This reverts commit fb9a6bb6d8.
In a recent test, I've found that Xfce and Mate now support
this, so they will not be affected by this requirement. And
adding the check back will solve the 'client-side shadow'
problem in KDE.
Postpone until the last moment whether the target widget still
potentially uses updates from this sequence, or window dragging
actually applies because all gestures on the target went to denied
state.
This fixes window dragging on empty space in a headerbar that is
contained in a paned (as in e.g. gedit).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745562
The gesture is hooked to the capture phase, so it works for buttons in
header bars and whatnot. In order to be friendly to the widget it is
capturing events from, an ugly hack is in place to avoid capturing
events when the target widget has a gesture that would consume motion
events.
is_visible() wasn't the right check to perform here before unmapping,
and gtk_widget_unmap() already avoids being doubly called by checking
gtk_widget_get_mapped() anyway.
If the grab belongs elsewhere, the window won't claim the sequence right
away. The sequence may still be claimed afterwards when window dragging
starts, but simple clicks won't be consumed this way.
This makes it possible to close popovers when clicking on the title region,
while still permitting touch/button 1 interaction for every other purpose.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743257
On the wayland backend, set up GDK_WINDOW_SUBSURFACE windows
for popovers. In the popover code, the popover-relative-to-parent
calculation had to be tweaked, and it's been made to always prefer
the given popover position, since there's no sizing limitations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738891
Currently we only take into account the window GActionGroup for
activating the accels.
However, the application could have some custom GActionGroup in the
chain of focused widgets that could want to activate some action if
some accel is activated while that widget is focused.
To allow applications to set accels on widgets that use custom
GActionGroups, simply use the muxer of the focused widget, which
already contains the actions of the parents.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740682
This event might not have an action yet, but certainly accounts, and
should be triggering recognition.
This fixes a crash when attempting to drag CSD windows through touch. As
since cfaec2d2f5, gtk_gesture_single_get_current_sequence() would
rightfully return NULL if the gesture didn't enter recognition, making
event lookup fail.
Under wayland, the compositor doesn't have a 'overall window alpha'
knob, we just need to add the alpha to the buffers we send.
Client-side alpha, if you want to call it that.
Implement this by reusing the existing alpha support for non-toplevel
widgets. As a side-effect of the implementation, windows with RGBA
visual under X will now also use per-pixel alpha, instead of
overall alpha.
When the window is on a non-default screen, popover_realize
ended up passing a visual and a parent_window from different
screens into gdk_window_new, which doesn't work. Fix it by
using the visual of the parent window.
When a new screen is set on a window, we unrealize it, to
recreate all the resources. But we don't reset the client_decorated
flag, so realize() doesn't call create_decoration() - which makes
sense, since the decoration already exists. But the side-effect
of create_decoration() is to select the rgba visual, and visuals
are per-screen.
Fix this by looking for the rgba visual in set_screen(), and
replacing it with the rgba visual for the new screen, if necessary.
When gtk_window_set_titlebar (win, NULL) is called, we were taking
an early exit and forgot to re-map the window. This does not normally
happen in practice, but glade is about to get a 'csd' switch which
lets one toggle back and forth between titlebar and no titlebar.
If the menubar has an app-menu popover, and it is shown at the time of
disposing the window, it will attempt to transfer focus back to the
previous focus widget when undoing modality, even though the dispose()
code already did set_focus(NULL) previously.
At the time the popover is removed, there aren't many hints as to whether
the toplevel or the focus widget are being destroyed (ie. not still under
in_destruction), so just swap the order of these two calls.
For every other popover, this would all happen within dispose/destroy,
which is handled better.