Making gtk.gresource.xml generated was causing a problem for
srcdir!=builddir builds from git. Builds from tarballs are
not affected, because the tarball contains the generated file.
The former can be called individually on each sequence, and the latter will
always call the former on all currently active sequences, so only implementing
resetting on cancel() works for both cases. Also, chain up on subclasses
implementing cancel.
This fixes clicking on nautilus' file list after popping up a menu, as broken
grabs are one of those situations where sequences get cancelled individually,
the "current button" wasn't properly reset, and further clicks with button != 3
were ignored.
This used to be done before the gestures port, and was removed
accidentally, so keep the motion_notify_event handler just for
this, and fallback to having those events handled by gestures
too.
This way plain clicks can be handled in gtkmain through the usual delivery mechanism,
and get possibly handled too by widgets holding a GTK+ grab. If window dragging is to
be started, the sequence will be claimed (and a grab will happen afterwards), notifying
properly the grabbing widget that event delivery was interrupted.
This makes it possible to dismiss popovers by clicking on window headerbars, while
still making it possible to drag the window with the popover opened.
The non-zero default default-border was causing buttons to shrink as
the focus moves around them. Themes which want a default-border should
define it explicitly.
The code is actually prepared for that, the gesture was initially limited
to only handling GDK_BUTTON_PRIMARY because it only used to handle row
activation.
This gesture acts only on events from the bin window, and checks that
either the pressed row is draggable, or the conditions for rubberband
selection apply.
A multipress gesture takes care of autosizing on double click, and
a drag gesture is used for both column dragging/resizing (only one
can happen at a time).
When placing tooltips, the csd shadow will get 'pushed up' and
may end up underneath the pointer. We don't want this to cause
the tooltip to be hidden, because that leads to flickering, so
ignore the shadow when finding the widget under the pointer.
For csd override-redirect windows, we don't set up resize handles,
but we were not ignoring the margin in all places, causing some
size calculations to go wrong.
... from per style data to only existing once per style context. This is
technically an API break because it no longer allows getting different
style properties between save()/restore() pairs, but I don't think this
was ever intended to work that way, as the style property API was to be
used and is used via gtk_widget_get_style().
And it simplifies code a lot.
We used to accept the same syntax for text-shadow and icon-shadow as
we accept for box-shadow. However, box-shadow does accept a spread and
the inset keyword while the others should not.