If we are clicking through the shadow of a window, we need to take special
care to not raise the old window on mouseUp. This is normally done by the
display server for us, so we need to use the proper API that is public to
handle this (rather than CGSSetWindowTags()). Doing so requires us to
dispatch the event to the NSView and then cancel the activcation from
the mouseDown: event there.
If we closed a key window in response to events, we need to denote another
window as the new key window. This is easiest to do from an idle so that
we don't clobber notification pairs of "did resign"/"did become" key
window.
We have a sorted set of surfaces by display server stacking, so we can
take the first one we come across that is already mapped and re-show it
to become key/main.
If we have server-side decorations we might need to request a layout in
response to the resize notification. We don't need to do this in other
cases because we already handle that in the process of doing the resize
(and that code is that way because of delayed delivery of NSNotification).
If we are using NSWindow titled windows, we don't end up waking up the
frame clock when the window is resized on the display server. This ensures
that we do that after getting a notification of resize.
There are cases we might want to consume a NSEvent without creating a
GdkEvent or passing it along to the NSApplication for processing. This
creates a new value we can use and check against to propagate that without
having to do out parameters at the slightly odd invalid pointer value for
a GdkEvent (similar to how MMAP_FAILED is done).
This can get in the way of how we track changes while events are actively
processing. Instead, we may want to delay this until the next main loop
idle and then check to see if we have a main window as the NSNotification
may have come in right after this.
We were looking at GtkWidget:has-focus from
event controller signal handlers here, but
the widget property is only changed after
the event controllers.
Update the :has-focus property of the focus
widget when the active status of the window
changes.
We change the property after generating the
GDK_CROSSING_ACTIVE crossing events.
It appears that NVIDIA does not implement EGL_EXT_swap_buffers_with_damage
on their EGL implementation, but does implement the KHR variant of it.
This checks for a suitable implementation and stores a pointer to the
compatible implementation within the GdkGLContextPrivate struct.
We want to ensure that we recalculate the sort order of windows before
processing the motion. Generally this would be done in response from the
display server in GdkMacosWindow, but I've seen it possible to race there.
We need to handle the case where we might be racing against an incoming
configure event due to how notifications are queued from the display
server. Rather than calling configure (and possibly causing other things
to move around) this just queries the display server directly for the
coordinates that we care about.
Additionally, we can display:NO as we are in control of all the display
process now using CALayer.