GtkPixelCache is a helper utility that lets you implement
faster scrolling of a viewport of a canvas by using an
offscreen pixmap cache.
You call _gtk_pixel_cache_draw with a callback function that
does the drawing, and additionally you specify the size and the
position of the viewport in the widget, and the position and size
of the canvas wrt the viewport. The callback will be called to
draw on an offscreen surface, and the surface will be drawn
on the window. The next time you do the same, any already drawn
pieces of the surface are re-used from the offscreen and need
not be rendered again.
If things inside the canvas change you need to call
_gtk_pixel_cache_invalidate to tell the cache about this.
Some other details:
* The offscreen surface is generally a bit larger than
the viewport, so scrolling a small amount can often
be done without redrawing children.
* If the canvas is not larger than the viewport no
offscreen surface is used.
GtkPixelCache: Make sure we always copy using SOURCE
We were using OVER for the first copy (from source to group surface.
GtkPixelCache: Fix x/y typos
GtkPixelCache: Allow NULL for invalidate region
gtkpixelcache: Use CONTENT_COLOR for solid bg windows
The gtk-launch tool can be build without gio-unix (although it
will not really do much without an alternative implementation for
g_desktop_app_info).
So there is no need to not build gtk-launch anymore.
This reverts commit 9a1235bf0d.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682824
Add separate GtkStack and GtkStackSwitcher widgets that are an
alternative to GtkNotebook. Additionally, GtkStack supports
animated transitions when changing pages.
These widgets were initially developed in libgd.
This is Tristan's *excellent* work, minus the old code for the shortcuts bar - that is all done
in GtkPlacesSidebar now.
The UI gets loaded from a Glade resource; most of the old code to create the UI by hand is gone.
There is still code for save_widgets_create(); this needs to be moved into the UI file, but it
is not a big deal.
gtk_file_chooser_default_init() calls a new post_process_ui() that takes care of all the things
that cannot be done directly in Glade.
Having the changes for composite widget templates makes it impossible
to merge the places-sidebar branch. So, we will merge that branch,
and *then* apply the changes for composite templates.
This reverts commit bf909f5615.
As the first composite widget in GTK+, this patch also
adds some Makefile mechanics to list the ui files as
dependencies of the global GTK+ resources, and adds the
initial test case where composite classes should be tested.
This catalog can be used to work with GTK+'s private widget types,
this patch exposes a private function gtk_glade_catalog_init() which
Glade will use for the sole purpose of initializing some private widget
types in GTK+ that are referenced from various GTK+ composite widget
xml files.
GtkMenuTracker folds a nested structure of sections in a GMenuModel into
a single linear menu, which it expresses to its user by means of 'insert
item at position' and 'remove item at position' callbacks.
The logic for where to insert separators and how to handle action
namespaces is contained within the tracker, removing the need to have
this logic duplicated in the 3 or 4 places that consume GMenuModel.
In comparison with the previous code, the tracker no longer completely
destroys and rebuilds menus every time a single change occurs. As a
result, the new gtkmenu testcase now runs in approximately 3 seconds
instead of ~60 before.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696468
Add window-minimize, window-maximize, window-restore and window-delete
icons to the builtin icon theme. These will be used for icons in
the window buttons, and the expectation is that the icon theme
will provide icons matching the desired decoration style.
window-delete is used instead of window-close, since window-close
is also used for GTK_STOCK_CLOSE, and the two may require different
styles when used inside the application vs in the window frame.
Add a very simple GtkWidget function for an "tick" callback, which
is connected to the ::update signal of GdkFrameClock.
Remove:
- GtkTimeline. The consensus is that it is too complex.
- GdkPaintClockTarget. In the rare cases where tick callbacks
aren't sufficient, it's possible to track the
paint clock with ::realize/::unrealize/::hierarchy-changed.
GtkTimeline is kept using ::update directly to allow using a GtkTimeline
with a paint clock but no widget.
Add back the GtkTimeline code that previously made private and
then removed. It will be hooked up to GdkFrameClock. This commit
purely adds the old code back.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
This is essentially a GtkCssImage for a cairo_surface_t and is a pretty
much straight up copy of GtkCssImageUrl. But we want to implement lazy
loading and animations, so GtkCssImageUrl is going to gain new
features...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692934
This is analogous to NautilusTrashMonitor in that it just monitors trash:///
and is able to return the appropriate icon for the trash's current state.
Later we may want to move this utility object into GIO or something.
Signed-off-by: Federico Mena Quintero <federico@gnome.org>
When cross-compiling, instead of depending on a natively built GTK+ (which means
building Glib, ATK, Pango, gdk-pixbuf, libX11...) for gtk-update-icon-cache,
find the host compiler and gdk-pixbuf, and build another gtk-update-icon-cache
with that.
This uses AX_PROG_CC_FOR_BUILD from autostars to find the host compiler, and
assumes that you'd set PKG_CONFIG_FOR_BUILD to a host pkg-config binary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691301
We add a separate gtk-a11y.h single-include header for
them. This header will work much the same as gtkx.h. It
will be installed in /usr/include/gtk-3.0/gtk, but you
have to include it separately.
This adds the GtkCssAnimation class and the code needed to hook it into
GtkStyleContext. It takes the values out of the CSS "animation"
properties and does animations. See
http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-animations/
for details.
Note that the code for starting and stopping animations with widget
visibility doesn't work yet.
We had the bookmarks machinery in GtkFileSystem for historical reasons.
Now, we'll keep this separately. This will allow us to make the
bookmarks machinery public if needed in the future.
Signed-off-by: Federico Mena Quintero <federico@gnome.org>
Conflicts:
gtk/Makefile.am
This is a helper object to allow text widgets to implement
text selection on touch devices. It allows for both cursor
placement and text selection, displaying draggable handles
on/around the cursor and selection bound positions.
Currently, this is private to GTK+, and only available to
GtkEntry and GtkTextView.
When compiling gtk on Win32 then the file gtkdbusgenerated.c also needs to be
compiled and linked into the gtk library as it's needed for GtkMountOperation
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682825
The current process of implementing GActionObserver is annoying and the
GSimpleActionObserver interface leaves a lot to be desired. Introduce a
new class, GtkActionHelper that gives you pretty much everything you'd
want to do as an implementor of GtkActionable.
The GtkActionHelper also features an "application" mode that is not
associated with a particular GtkWidget but rather with whatever widget
happens to be the active window of the given GtkApplication at a
particular point in time. This will be useful for the Mac OS menubar.
This program launches an application specified by its desktop name
optinally taking list of URIs which are passed as arguments.
Uses GdkAppLaunchContext to get proper startup notification and
display handling for graphical apps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679342
Make GMountOperation look for an owner of org.Gtk.MountOperationHandler
if possible, and use it instead of the GTK-based dialogs.
This allows applications to use the implementation offered by the
desktop shell, if available, through a DBus private interface:
org.Gtk.MountOperationHandler.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674963
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
Makes name consistent with other quartz-only modules and makes it clear that this works with the GMenuModel system rather than the older GtkMenu system.
This is a GtkCssComputedValues subclass. So it's essentially a store for
computed CSS values. But it can be animated by advancing it to a certain
timestamp.
A StyleAnimation is an immutable object used to track the state of CSS
values. I'd have liked to make it fully immutable - ie not have the
timestamp in there - but couldn't find a place to sanely store the
timestamp.
This is an abstract base class. Implementations for this will be added
later (for both CSS3 transitions and animations, potentially for
animated images).
Actually aplying the information in this object will be done by a
different object commtted later.
... and Make this new value be a real GValue, as we don't need to save
performance for these anymore (it's just used for custom properties).
And I'd rather have code work for all values then be optimized for no
reason.
Deprecate public API where appropriate and make it no-ops.
Remove all calls to it.
Get rid of the 'transition' css property.
For now, this means spinners don't animate anymore.
Note: custom CSS properties still use the default GtkCssValue and always
will.
So there is a difference in css values used between those, even though
they both carry a GdkRGBA payload.
This way, we don't have to do magic inside GtkStyleContext, but have a
real API.
As a cute bonus, this object implements GtkStyleProvider itself. So we
can just pretend there's only one provider.
This is not ideal, we should have a real classic windows theme,
but at least its better than everything being pink, which is what
happens otherwise when theming is not enables.
This does nothing but turn all GtkBitmask functions into static inline
functions that call the gtk_allocated_bitmask_*() equivalent.
The implementation of the static functions has also been put into a
private header, to not scare people who want to see how things are
implemented.
It was problematic to maintain Raleigh going forward, as any
changes in it affected all themes. Also, its more robust if
each theme is a full standalone css rather than relying on
an inherited css base.
So, this changes Raleigh to a standalone theme that we can tweak
without accidentally breaking other themes, and makes the
default theme empty. In fact, we don't even add the default
provider anymore as its always empty.
Replace the (invalid) DTD in the GtkBuilder docs by a
RELAX NG schema. Also install the schema in /usr/share/gtk-3.0,
so it can be used to validate GtkBuilder ui files.
Change the format of GtkBuilder <menu> to be more in-line with the style
of the rest of GtkBuilder so that we can do translation in a consistent
way.
The format is now substantially more difficult to hand-write, but tools
should be along soon.
There is an xslt program attached to the bug to help you convert your
existing .ui files from the old format to the new one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668696
This follows the approach used by the Quartz port - that of a separate
implementation matching GtkClipboard.
The simple clipboard tests in gtk3-demo function correctly but there are
almost certainly leaks and bugs.
We now use the GtkStleProviderPrivate interface, which hopefully is
faster and more conformant to CSS. Long term, it definitely should be
both.
I would have liked to split this up into multiple commits, but couldn't
find a way.
This is the interface for GtkWidgets that can be associated with an
action on a GtkAppicationWindow or associated GtkApplication.
It essentially features 'action-name' and 'action-target' properties
with some associated convenience API.
This interface is implemented by GtkButton and GtkToolButton.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667394
Move internal accel map API there and update all users.
Also, add an internal function to create an accel path for
an action and parameter, and use it in gtkapplication.c and
gtkmodelmenuitem.c instead of duplicating that code.
Put this in a separate file and substantially refactor it.
Move handling of submenu creation into gtkmodelmenuitem where it
belongs.
Improve our handling of when to show separators or not.
This GtkMenuItem subclass (and GActionObserver implementation) contains
all the knowledge necessary for converting a GMenuModel item description
into a GtkMenuItem.
Remove much of the code that used to do this from
gtkapplicationwindow.c.
This feels premature; we do have the fallback situation covered
adaequately with the menubar, and people can do their own creative
solutions with gtk_application_window_get_menu(), so we don't have
to offer a widget for this right now.
This is a GtkWindow subclass that "application windows" will use. Each
is associated with a GtkApplication, has the ability to show menus and
will have its own associated set of actions.
These were destined for GLib, but they don't really make sense as a
public API. Instead, we'll copy/paste them around between the various
codebases that need to render menus.
GtkIconHelper is a helper object to easily obtain a pixbuf from
different icon sources (e.g. a GIcon, an icon name, a stock id, ...).
Code is ported from GtkImage, which will be adapted in the next commit.
We now support -gtk-win32-theme-part(class,part,state) in background
and border-image CSS properties. This renders the corresponding
theme part using DrawThemeBackground() and acts as a base for a
CSS based windows theme.
Note that we build the parsing code even on non-win32 so that
all themese will parse the same on all arches. We draw pink instead
of the actual theme parts on non-win32 though.
Add missing GDK linking to GIR build and examples:
GISCAN Gtk-3.0.gir
CCLD gtk-query-immodules-3.0
./.libs/libgtk-3.so: undefined reference to `gdk_keymap_get_modifier_mask'
./.libs/libgtk-3.so: undefined reference to `gdk_modifier_intent_get_type'
./.libs/libgtk-3.so: undefined reference to `gdk_window_begin_resize_drag_for_device'
./.libs/libgtk-3.so: undefined reference to `gdk_event_triggers_context_menu'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
CCLD grid-packing
../gtk/.libs/libgtk-3.so: undefined reference to `gdk_keymap_get_modifier_mask'
[...]
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=664027
Move the remaining struct definition into gtkimcontextinfo.h and include
that header in gtk.h. gtkimmodule.h is now an empty header. We should
probably deprecate it somehow.
This is also necessary so headers used in gtk .c files don't include
gtk.h which in turn includes all the deprecated headers which we want to
avoid so we can include them with deprecation warnings turned off.
- add gtkmodulesprivate.h and move stuff there from gtkprivate.h
- add gtkprivate.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- add gtkwin32.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- don't redefine GTK_DATADIR and friends in gtkprivate.h
- have _gtk_get_datadir() and friends on all platforms
- remove the horrid hacks where gtkprivate.h can't be included,
or must be included later due to redefinition of the compile-time
directories
gobject_introspection's G-ir-scanner doesn't like the -xobjective-c
option needed to compile ObjectiveC features in quartz implementations
of certain gtk functions. This rearranges the compiler flag environment
variables in Makefile so that G-ir-scanner doesn't see them.
Make the GtkFontChooser API similar to the Gtk{File,Recent,App}Chooser
APIs by introducing GtkFontChooser as an interface, that has a default
implementation in GtkFontChooserWidget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657627
This struct keeps track of an area of text in a CSS file and uses it
when specifying information. Also, the cssprovider keeps track of
sections when parsing a file.