As far as I'm aware, these only exist with `gdk_wayland_surface_` names
for historical reasons, before these types were split.
This way, those functions will be able to access members of the
`GdkWaylandToplevel` struct. And it just saves a few lines of code.
There is nothing particularly specific to drawables
in there (and we don't have that concept anymore),
so just name the source file to match the header.
Easier for everybody.
Move the autocleanup declarations into their
respective headers.
While we are at it, correct the autocleanup
declaration for GdkEvent to use gdk_event_unref,
not g_object_unref. Oops
Introduce GDK_DISPLAY_DEBUG() and GDK_DEBUG() and
the helper function gdk_debug_message(). This is
meant to clean up the mess of our current debug
statements which wildly mix g_message, g_print
and g_printerr.
The X11 backend can mark modifiers like Shift as consumed even if they
aren't actually active, which seems to be something to do with making
shortcuts like `<Control><Shift>plus` and `<Control>plus` work as
intended regardless of whether the plus symbol is obtained by pressing
Shift and a key (like `+/=` on American, British or French keyboards)
or not (like `*/+` on German keyboards).
However, this can go badly wrong when the modifier is *not* pressed.
For example, terminals normally have separate bindings for `<Control>c`
(send SIGINT) and `<Control><Shift>c` (copy). If we disregard the
consumed modifiers completely, when the X11 backend marks Shift as
consumed, pressing Ctrl+c would send SIGINT *and* copy to the clipboard,
which is not what was intended.
By masking out the members of `consumed` that are not in `state`, we
get the same interpretation for X11 and Wayland, and ensure that
keyboard shortcuts that explicitly mention Shift can only be triggered
while holding Shift. It continues to be possible to trigger keyboard
shortcuts that do not explicitly mention Shift (such as `<Control>plus`)
while holding Shift, if the backend reports Shift as having been
consumed in order to generate the plus keysym.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5095
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/1016927
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
The filetransfer protocol says to use
application/vnd.portal.filetransfer, but I used
application/vnd.portal.files when I implemented the
protocol. Oops.
This commit dds the correct mimetype, but we still
support the old one to preserve interoperatibility
with existing flatpaks using GTK 4.6.
Fixes: #5182
We need to register the portal mime types before
the others to prefer them, doing this call async
messes up that ordering.
This is effectively reverting 69fb3648b2
`apply_monitor_change()` already calls `update_scale()`.
Note that this only affects old compositor versions (see
`should_update_monitor()`) so it's just a minor cleanup.
This function is probably not generally useful for a Gtk+/win32 user,
and it's only used internally by gdk-win32. It's time to deprecate it, I
believe.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Right now we only support system DPI awareness in GTK4. In that case
it makes sense to scale text with the DPI of the primary monitor, like
done in GTK3.
We plan to land support for proper fractional scaling in Gdk/Win32, so
in the future the "gtk-xft-dpi" setting will be gathered as intended,
i.e. for text magnification, as an a11y feature.