- add gtkmodulesprivate.h and move stuff there from gtkprivate.h
- add gtkprivate.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- add gtkwin32.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- don't redefine GTK_DATADIR and friends in gtkprivate.h
- have _gtk_get_datadir() and friends on all platforms
- remove the horrid hacks where gtkprivate.h can't be included,
or must be included later due to redefinition of the compile-time
directories
gobject_introspection's G-ir-scanner doesn't like the -xobjective-c
option needed to compile ObjectiveC features in quartz implementations
of certain gtk functions. This rearranges the compiler flag environment
variables in Makefile so that G-ir-scanner doesn't see them.
Make the GtkFontChooser API similar to the Gtk{File,Recent,App}Chooser
APIs by introducing GtkFontChooser as an interface, that has a default
implementation in GtkFontChooserWidget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657627
This struct keeps track of an area of text in a CSS file and uses it
when specifying information. Also, the cssprovider keeps track of
sections when parsing a file.
It is now no longer possible to disable it.
This doesn't matter though because GTK will not instantiate a11y
objects until you actually use it. So nothing changes in practice.
This will be used as a base both for parsing text-shadow and box-shadow
properties. The type is private, as there's no real use in exporting
this in a public API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649314
Instead of relying on GScanner and its idea of syntax, code up a parser
that obeys the CSS spec.
This also has the great side effect of reporting correct line numbers
and positions.
Also included is a reorganization of the returned error values. Instead
of error values describing what type of syntax error was returned, the
code just returns SYNTAX_ERROR. Other messages exist for when actual
values don't work or when errors shouldn't be fatal due to backwards
compatibility.
Value parsing only sometimes emitted errors. Sometimes it didn't emit
errors but ignored the value, sometimes it took a default, sometimes it
converted it to something it deemed suitable.
While refactoring, I moved the whole GValue <=> char * conversion
routines to a separate file, to make navigating the core css provider
easier.
This is a special-purpose button that can be used together with
GPermission objects to control the sensitivity of system settings.
Suitable permission objects can e.g. be obtained from PolicyKit.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626457
Fixes a regression introduced in 07d49ee5.
Libtool by default refuses to link static libraries into shared
libraries. In Windows, libuuid is however a static library and needed
for shared libgtk; as a work around, use "-Wl,-luuid" to pass the option
directly to the linker.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=642214
-Update to distribute the VS2010 files.
-Added rules in Makefile.am's of GDK and GTK to fill in the
project/filter files templates with up-to-date source file
listings to simplify maintenace.
Any comments on the usage of the VS2010 files are welcome!
At the same time, change the library sonames for -3.0 to just -3.
This is necessary since the 2.99 releases installed libraries like
libgtk-3.0.so.0.9903.0, and we want to prevent the library version
number from jumping back. So 3.0 will have libgtk-3.so.0.0.0.
Gdk-3.0 is already included above via --include-uninstalled, so
don't also specify it in INCLUDES. Doing so breaks if it isn't
installed already, since we try to find the gdk-3.0.pc.
People agreed that it doesn't make sense to make an xembed
implementation like plug/socket does not make sense on anything but X11.
And as GdkNativeWindow is going away for multibackend portability
reasons, we'd either need API fixes in the plug-socket codee or
constrain the widgets to a single backend. We chose the latter.
This is a subclass of GEmblemedIcon that can show a number or
short string as an emblem, overlayed on top of another emblem.
Written by Cosimo Cecchi
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=637169
- Removed GtkTreeMenu from gtk-docs.sgml
- Removed GtkTreeMenu from gtk3-sections.txt
- Removed GtkTreeMenu from gtk.symbols
- Make GtkTreeMenu apis prefixed with '_' (including _get_type()).
- Updated GtkComboBox sources to use the private apis
- Updated GtkCellView to not mention #GtkTreeMenu in gtk-doc statements
- Updated tests/testtreemenu to not use a GtkTreeMenu but still
show a very fancy GtkComboBox
- Moved gtktreemenu.h to private headers section in the makefile.
- Removed include of gtktreemenu.h from gtk.h
Added GtkTreeMenu class to automatically render
a GtkTreeModel into a GtkMenu hierarchy (will be
used by GtkComboBox for its dropdown menus). Included
an accompanying testcase tests/testtreemenu
In bug 635207, it was pointed out that it is a bad idea to
rename these tools purely in the name of parallel-installability,
since it forces dependencies to make a choice between running
gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-update-icon-cache-3.0 (or both ?!).
So, we rename these utilities back to their un-suffixed names
and rely on distributors to resolve the conflict between GTK+ 2.x
and GTK+ 3.0 packages, which can be done e.g. by dropping the
utilities from the gtk3 packages and add a gtk3 -> gtk2 dependency.
This commit does a number of things:
- remove some dead wchar configury from configure.ac and gdkconfig.h
- repurpose gdkconfig.h as header that contains GDK_WINDOWING_foo
macros for each included backend, include it in gdk.h and install
it in $includedir instead of below $libdir
- drop the backend from the library names
- build libgdk-3.0.la as a convenience lib and include it in libgtk-3.0.la
It does not yet enable building multiple backends at the same time.
In the process of removing all sealed members from headers.
At the same time, add a gtkwindowprivate.h header and move
all internal functions from gtkwindow.h there.
This object backs up gtk_widget_override_* operations. This object
is not meant to be public because any intention to modify widgets'
style in a themeable way should involve using regions/classes, so
they're modifiable through CSS. As such, the API is really
short-scoped.