The spinner is a regular builtin image now. There is no need to go
through the shadows code manually anymore as regular items do get
shadows automatically.
This also allows simplifying the actual spinner drawing code so that it
actually works.
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.
We need to be able to compute different GtkCssImage values
depending on the scale, and we need this at compute time so that
we don't need to read any images other than the scale in used (to
e.g. calculate the image size). GtkStyleProviderPrivate is shared
for all style contexts, so its not right.
Adds conditional code paths to GdkCssShadowValue for painting outset
shadows, and allows shadows to be applied in two passes (first outset
then inset). This can be used to draw csd shadows in outer window
borders.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695998
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
The implementation of transition for GtkCssShadowValue can return NULL
at least when the two values have a different inset; all other parts of
the GTK/CSS machinery (e.g. GtkCssArrayValue) handle this by returning
NULL too. Instead, GtkCssShadowsValue was returning an invalid value,
where "len" was set, but some values in the array were NULL, which would
lead to a segfault when this value is later evaluated by the compute
function.
Fix this by making GtkCssShadowsValue return NULL if a shadow transition
fails, like GtkCssArrayValue does.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686013
Here's the shortest description of the bug I can come up with:
When computing values, we have 3 kinds of dependencies:
(1) other properties ("currentColor" or em values)
(2) inherited properties ("inherit")
(3) generic things from the theme (@keyframes or @define-color)
Previously, we passed the GtkStyleContext as an argument, because it
provided these 3 things using:
(1) _gtk_style_context_peek_property()
(2) _gtk_style_context_peek_property(gtk_style_context_get_parent())
(3) context->priv->cascade
However, this makes it impossible to lookup values other than the ones
accessible via _gtk_style_context_peek_property(). And this is exactly
what we are doing in gtk_style_context_update_cache(). So when the cache
updates encountered case (1), they were looking up the values from the
wrong style data.
So this large patch essentially does nothing but replace the
context argument in all compute functions with new arguments for the 3
cases above:
(1) values
(2) parent_values
(3) provider
We apparently have a lot of computing code.
This is to allow animating arrays properly. I'm not really thrilled
about this solution (we leak propertys into the values again...), but
it's the best I can come up with - I prefer it to having N different
array types...
When values are computed, they might depend on various other values and
we need to track this so we can update the values when those other
values change. This is the first step in making that happen.
This patch does not do any dependency tracking at all, instead it uses
GTK_CSS_DEPENDS_ON_EVERYTHING as a sort of FIXME.
This is a reorganization of how value computing should be done.
Previously the GtkCssStyleProperty.compute vfunc was supposed to take
care of special cases when it needed those for computation. However,
this proved to be very complicated in cases where values were nested and
only the last value (of a common type) needed to be special cased.
A common example for this was the fallback handling for unresolvable
colors.
Now, we pass the property's ID along with all compute functions so we
can do the special casing where it's necessary.
Note that no actual changes happen in this commit. This will happen in
follow-ups.
This commit is essentially a large reorganization. Instead of all value
subtypes having their own compute function, there is the general
_gtk_css_value_compute() function that then calls a vfunc on the
subtype.