With a headerbar, the widget in the center may be a label, constructed
internally, or a custom widget, constructed externally. The size
allocation code needs to handle either case the same way for the most
part. There's more than one place in the code that checks which of
the two widgets to use and does some operation on the selected one.
This commit simplifies the code by checking up front which one is the
center (title) widget and storing that in a temporary variable,
This allows reducing duplicated logic later on in the function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724332
There's some extraneous MIN() calls that have predetermined answers.
This commit drops them and then simplifies a few redudant checks into
one MIN call.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724332
The size allocation code maintains an array of two elements,
to track the allocation of children packed into the two sides
of a header bar. Sometimes this array is indexed with 0 and 1,
and sometimes its indexed with GTK_PACK_START and GTK_PACK_END.
The latter happen to have the values 0 and 1, respectively, but
that's not really obvious.
For clarity, this commit changes the code to index those arrays
consistently, sticking to 0 and 1 across the board.
It's only possible to have a label or a custom title, not both.
The size allocate code confusingly treats them as independent.
That is confusing, because, as the code is written, it makes it
look like the space for the custom title isn't getting accounted
for.
This commit else-ifies some parts of the size allocate code for
clarity.
Firefox does a bunch of interesting things with GTK.
If the top-level GtkWindow does not have a "csd" style class associated,
Firefox will happily draw the contents of the container used to render
HTML and XUL directly on the top level's GdkWindow; on the other hand,
if a "csd" style class is found, the MozContainer will create a new
child window, and draw on it.
Then, Firefox will proceed to disable double buffering on both the
top-level window and the MozContainer (unless they are backed by the
same GdkWindow, in which case only the top-level will be
single-buffered) *and* it will add a GDK_EXPOSURE_MASK flag to the
MozContainer events for good measure (even if this is only needed for
GTK+ 2.x).
After landing the GdkDrawingContext API in GdkWindow, GTK enabled
automatic double buffering on all top-level windows backed by a native
surface, ad most users of single buffering rely on child widgets instead
of top-levels, and we'd still like to have the same double buffering
behaviour for all top-levels on all backends. Obviously, with Firefox
disabling double buffering on the top-level window, the change broke
their drawing mechanism.
Ideally, Firefox could be fixed to not disable double buffering on the
top-level window when MozContainer has a separate GdkWindow — i.e. the
CSD case — but since we did introduce a slight change of behaviour in
fringe users of the GTK+ API, let's keep backwards compatibility with
the old code for a little while longer, and create an intermediate Cairo
context unbound from the GdkDrawingContext, like we used to do until
GTK+ 3.20.
And ensure it's still visible before returning the keyboard focus to it.
Because of the extra ref, add a dispose handler that will ensure the
ref is lost (by popping down), although this should be already ensured
through other paths (eg. when the popup widget loses visibility).
This fixes a possible crash in dispose paths, where we might be restoring
focus on an already destroyed widget, and at a time where, if the toplevel
is being itself disposed, no new focus should be set.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767849
If there are widget margins set, the whole popover will be displaced.
However the calculation of the tail position doesn't have this into
account, ending up with the tail being detached from the popover if
the margin grew too big.
We should not render the arrows invariably next to the GdkWindow edge,
but optionally displaced inside it depending on the widget margins.
Fixes the gtk3-demo "Popovers" demo case, whose GtkEntry popovers set
widget margins for some reason.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767851
do_sort will crash if sort_func is not defined. Instead of adding a check
there in the hot path, just check for sort_func before invalidating the
sort of the underlying GSequence.
I noticed that some of the gestures did not show up in the
search results in the builder example in gtk3-demo, because
they share the same title and don't have an accelerator to
disambiguate. Include the shortcut type to handle this case.
Set a max-content-width on some of the scrolled windows to
keep things looking mostly the same, now that GtkScrolledWindow
passes along the natural size of its child.
The cellrenderer signals might be taking the grab somewhere else, at which
point it's dubious we should attempt to take the keyboard focus into the
treeview.
This concretely breaks popovers triggered from cellrenderer signals on
button press, because the treeview will attempt to grab focus
inconditionally then.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767468
It's almost certainly a programmer error if an action isn't
activatable because its target and parameter type don't match.
This commit changes the existing g_message to a g_warning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767705
Previously a style cascade's parent could not have a parent itself. That
represented the two levels at which you could add a style provider: at
the screen level, with gtk_style_context_add_provider_for_screen(), and
at the style context level, with gtk_style_context_add_provider().
This commit changes no functionality, but this change will be necessary
for adding style providers in the future that apply to a subtree of the
widget tree. It relaxes the requirement that a style cascade's parent
must not have a parent, since in the future a style context may be
affected by any number of parent widgets' style contexts.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751409
Debian stable currently ships with a 3.16 kernel, so
it doesn't have memfd available.
This commit adds shm_open fall back code for that case
(for now).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
We currently use syscall() directly to invoke memfd_create,
since the function isn't available in libc headers yet.
The code, though, mishandles how errors are passed from syscall().
It assumes syscall returns the error code directly (but negative),
when in fact, syscall() uses errno.
Also, the code fails to retry on EINTR.
This commit moves the handling of memfd create to a helper function,
and changes the code to use errno and handle EINTR.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
When disposing a GdkDrawingContext we should unset the association
between the instance and the Cairo context; this avoids stale pointers
in case a reference that has acquired on the Cairo context survives the
lifetime of the GdkDrawingContext.
This is a bit of fallout from 34feba1, now that we resolve
the has_indicators value earlier than realize, it becomes
possible to call gdk_window_move_resize() before realization.
Just added the appropriate checks.
Instead of associating the GdkWindow that created the GdkDrawingContext
we can directly bind the Cairo context to the GDK drawing context.
Cairo contexts created via gdk_cairo_create() go back to not having a
GdkWindow associated to them, like they did before we introduced the
gdk_window_begin_draw_frame() API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766675