The window-dragging code had a number of issues: The code was
starting a drag on every button press, never bothering to cancel
them. This leads to the odd hand cursor occurring between the two
clicks to maximize. We relied on GDK's multi-click detection, which
gives us triple-clicks when we really want sequences of double-clicks.
Lastly, we didn't propery restrict double-click handling to the primary
button, so e.g. if you had a window on an empty workspace, double-right
click on the titlebar would maximize it, which is not intended.
This commit solves all three problem by a doing our own double-click
detection, and only starting a drag when the pointer goes out of
'double-click range'. We change the way dragging is implemented for
menubars and toolbars to just letting events bubble up, so they
get the same behaviour as the titlebar. To make this work, we
have to select for pointer motion events in a few more places.
If a menu is opened and it doesn't fit entirely below or above
the menu bar, gtk+ will place it on top. The button release will
then activate the popup item that happens to appear under the
cursor. Avoid this by ignoring release events if they originated
in the parent menu bar and the duration of the press was too short.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703069
When creating separators we were binding the "label" property on the
tracker to the "label" property on the GtkSeparatorMenuItem.
This was problematic for two reasons.
First, it was pointless. The section header label will never change.
Second, it was causing problems: doing the binding caused the value to
be initially synced up, even if it was NULL. Doing this caused
GtkMenuItem to create a GtkAccelLabel and add it as a child, which
prevented the separator from being shown normally.
Change the code a bit so that we just call gtk_menu_item_set_label()
when creating the item, if we find the label to be non-NULL.
Also, show() the separator item at first. GtkMenu manages visibility of
separators internally, but it seems "more correct" to show it ourselves
at first.
In the non-submenu case we bind the 'visibility' attribute to the
tracker, which takes care of showing the item. In the submenu case, we
don't bind all of the properties, so we miss this one.
Deal with it by just show()ing the submenu item.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702332
Add a new class, GtkMenuTrackerItem that represents a menu item, to be
used with GtkMenuTracker.
GtkMenuTracker's insert callback now works in terms of this new type
(instead of passing reference to the model and an index to the item).
GtkMenuShell now handles all of the binding tasks internally, mostly
through the use of property bindings. Having bindings for the label and
visibility attributes, in partiular, will help with supporting upcoming
extensions to GMenuModel.
GtkModelMenu has been reduced to a helper class that has nothing to do
with GMenuModel. It represents something closer to an "ideal" API for
GtkMenuItem if we didn't have compatibility concerns (eg: not emitting
"activate" when setting toggle state, no separate subclasses per menu
item type, supporting icons, etc.) Improvements to GtkMenuItem could
eventually shrink the size of this class or remove the need for it
entirely.
Some GtkActionHelper functionality has been duplicated in
GtkMenuTracker, which is suboptimal. The duplication exists so that
other codebases (such as Unity and gnome-shell) can reuse the
GtkMenuTracker code, whereas GtkActionHelper is very much tied to
GtkWidget. Supporting binding arbitrary GtkWidgets to actions vs.
supporting the full range of GMenuModel features for menu items turns
out to be two overlapping but not entirely similar problems. Some of
the duplication (such as roles) can be removed from GtkActionHelper once
Gtk's internal Mac OS menubar support is ported to GtkMenuTracker.
The intent to reuse the code outside of Gtk is also the reason for the
unusual treatment of the enum type introduced in this comment.
This adds no new "public" API to the Gtk library, other than types that
we cannot make private due to GType limitations.
It's pretty useless to make a menu without actions behind it and people
who are using gtk_menu_shell_bind_model() directly are probably not
interested in doing it the GtkApplicationWindow way (so they won't get
the "app" and "win" groups for free). People are going to need to call
gtk_widget_insert_action_group(), so mention this in the docs to help
them along.
GtkMenuTracker folds a nested structure of sections in a GMenuModel into
a single linear menu, which it expresses to its user by means of 'insert
item at position' and 'remove item at position' callbacks.
The logic for where to insert separators and how to handle action
namespaces is contained within the tracker, removing the need to have
this logic duplicated in the 3 or 4 places that consume GMenuModel.
In comparison with the previous code, the tracker no longer completely
destroys and rebuilds menus every time a single change occurs. As a
result, the new gtkmenu testcase now runs in approximately 3 seconds
instead of ~60 before.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696468
This replaces the previously hardcoded calls to gdk_window_set_user_data,
and also lets us track which windows are a part of a widget. Old code
should continue working as is, but new features that require the
windows may not work perfectly.
We need this for the transparent widget support to work, as we need
to specially mark the windows of child widgets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687842
This was broken since commit b2aaa94 in 2008. Its commit message
clearly states that the intention was to check for GTK_GRAB,
GTK_UNGRAB and STATE_CHANGED. Lets do that, then.
This was found by Coverity.
If the display server or GDK hides the window - fire the "deactivate" signal
to ensure that the internal state is consistent.
This patch also ensures that the "deactivate" signal will not be fired for a
menu that is not active.
Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670881
gtk_menu_shell_insert() is a virtual function that was being directly
invoked from the class vtable.
Turn it into a proper signal and emit it in the usual way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656565