combo_box_popdown() currently skips popping down our menu if it is NULL.
But the required call to this at end-of-life was in destroy(), by which
point dispose() already NULLed the menu, so Menu::popdown() would never
run, even if it should. Fix this by trying popdown() earlier in unmap().
Also, add a converse assurance that we don’t popup() while not mapped.
Even once we remove all the now-pointless NULL checks, destroy() was the
wrong place to call combo_box_popdown(), and unmap() is the right place.
gtk_init() removed its support for supporting arguments, so we ought to do
likewise for Windows, which actually defines items that call gtk_init()
the old way (and also get rid of argument support in those functions,
since the direction is to not support them).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Commit fdc0c6426b removed the appears-as-
list style property, & hence the ability to put the ComboBox into list
mode – but it left behind a pile of hijinks that were only used in said
mode & so were now doing absolutely nothing. This commit deletes those.
While doing that, I got carried away…so this also stops pointlessly type
checking popup_widget, as that can never be anything but a GtkTreeMenu.
It still checks for NULL everywhere, which shouldn’t be needed, but (A)
this commit is already too big, & (B) simply removing such checks where
they _seem_ unnecessary causes bad times. I’ll puzzle through that later
Commit fdc0c6426b for removing (partly!)
appears-as-list also deleted the code that propagated wrap-width to the
TreeMenu and thus put us into “grid mode”. This restores that code.
And as Benjamin noted, calling check_appearance() here is wrong, so bye.
We want to simplify our initialization code and remove all commandline
argument handling from it. The first stop for this is to reduce the
number of gtk_init variants we have.
This is how windows are meant to be hidden as per the wayland
protocol, there's no need to destroy the xdg_surface and other
interfaces.
Also, rename gdk_wayland_window_hide_surface() to clear_surface(),
as that's what it does.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773686
i.e. when wrap-width > 0. This was only being done for non-grid cases.
So, ComboBoxes in grid mode did not indicate their selection when popped
up and required users to keynav from ‘nothing’ (at the top-left) to the
item they wanted to select. By selecting the active item in advance, now
it’s highlighted & acts as the starting point for keynav around the grid
This previously only mentioned its effect on the displayed value, and
even after the previous commit, its rounding of the actual value upon
change still reads like too much of an afterthought. Worse, it wasn’t
mentioned at all in the doc for the @digits parameter. Change this to
emphasise rounding always occurs and the displayed value is secondary.
Whether it should is an open question, but for now, the documentation
should clearly indicate that currently rounding is only applied upon
changes to the value, not to the existing value when ::digits changes.
This is already clear in the doc for the underlying Range::round-digits.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=358970
The documents state that gtk_scale_set_digits() “causes the value of the
adjustment to be rounded off to this number of digits, so the retrieved
value matches the value the user saw.” Note the lack of any condition.
But in fact, if draw-value was false, rounding was disabled on the base
Range, so values that weren’t displayed weren’t rounded. This made the
docs wrong and made an apparently cosmetic detail alter functionality.
Fix by ensuring the number of digits set on Scale is always propagated
along to gtk_range_set_round_digits(), thus rounding to it in all cases
when the value changes, regardless of whether the value is displayed.
This doesn’t address the other idea from Bugzilla: that changing the
number of digits should clamp the _existing_ value if it’s more precise.
This contradicts digits docs in the base Range, but the above from Scale
can be read as implying it’ll happen. For now, that’s an open question.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=358970
GtkFileChooserButton installs a handler for the popped-up signal, which
refilters the menu, in order to hide the “(None)” item from the popup
if it was previously selected in the ComboBox. This oddity means that:
• Until recently, this item would be selected in the menu shell, which
would then be popped up and change the selection away from that item.
This was therefore redundant (more on which below!) but benign.
• After the patch for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771242
however, this causes a critical assertion fail, as now we stash the
originally selected item in a pointer so that it can be selected only
after realisation/popup – but by that stage, the model has just been
refiltered and the previous pointer no longer refers to a valid item.
This commit works around this problem by, after popping up the menu,
getting the active item again, in case a popped-up handler has gone and
invalidated the pointer to the active item that we saved before popup.
If a handler does this, everything done to find/use the original item is
pointless. But this avoids the ugly critical in FileChooserButton, while
not harming every other ComboBox that doesn’t mess with its model while
popping up (hopefully the vast majority), and it’s very difficult to
imagine a way to check if the active item is /going to/ be hidden later)
Previously, for compatibility with GTK 3.0, we allowed specifying
numbers without units and interpreted them as pixels, even when the CSS
specification didn't.
Remove that now that we can break API.
This reverts commit 4875c689a0.
This was a thinko. Writable is not actually settable from the
application side, but only for the user, from the backend side.
Elsewhere we already go through the keymap to get modifiers so we
should do the same here. In fact, this was relying on xkb modifier
mask values being bitwise compatible with GdkModifierType which isn't
necessarily true.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770112
Gtk+ treats MOD1 as a synonym for Alt, and does not expect it to be
mapped around, so we should avoid adding GDK_META_MASK if MOD1 is
already included to avoid confusing gtk+ and applications that rely on
that behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770112