This function will be useful in other places, such as determining the
widgets that must receive crossing events after pointer picking points
to another widget.
We now try to emulate cairo_t:
We keep a stack of nodes via push/pop and a transform matrix.
So whenever a new node is added to the snapshot, we transform it
by the current transform matrix and append it to the current node.
Add a new ::measure vfunc similar to GtkCssGadget's that widget
implementations have to override instead of the old get_preferred_width,
get_preferred_height, get_preferred_width_for_height,
get_preferred_height_for_width and
get_preferred_height_and_baseline_for_width.
GtkWidget.create_render_node() sets up a GskRenderNode appropriate for
rendering the contents of a widget, including its bounds,
transformation, and anchor point.
We need a virtual function to retrieve the GskRenderNode for each
widget, which is supposed to attach its own children's GskRenderNodes.
Additionally, we want to maintain the existing GtkWidget::draw mechanism
for widgets that do not implement get_render_node() — as well as widgets
that have handlers connected to the ::draw signal.
GTK used to not emit GtkWidget::style-updated on widgets that weren't
realized. This sped up construction of complex widgetry in the early
days of GTK3 where we instantly invalidated on every change.
We don't do that anymore, so in theory (and in my limited testing with
widget-factory) this shouldn't be a prolem anymore.
What is a problem though is that postponing style-updated leads to 2
problems:
(1) Unrealized widgets will not emit style-updated which may cause them
to not properly update their state and return wrong values from
get_preferred_width/height() etc
(2) Emitting style-updated during realize can happen too late.
When a widget is not made child-visible by its parent (common
examples: notebook, paned) it will also not be realized when the
parent is initially shown. However, when they get realized later
(after a resize of the parent), they will emit style-updated (and
potentially queue a resize) during size-allocate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765700
Previously, we had a special cae to draw subwindows of widgets.
This is not necessary as conformant widgets should be able to properly
render themselves when all windows need to be painted.
From now on assume that is the case.
We therefore paint nonnative GDK windows "inline" by just returning TRUE
for gtk_cairo_should_draw_window() for those windows.
This speeds up hilighting different rows in the listbox gtk-demo example
tremendously (by a factor of 10 or more) as the previous code was
O(<number of non-window subwidgets> *
<number of subwindows>) which in the listbox example were ~15,000 and
~2,000 respectively.
There are currently three widget that implement such a property, and
there are other widgets for which the behavior can make sense. It
seems like a good time to add the property to GtkWidget itself so
subclasses can choose to respect it without adding their own property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757269
This commit toggles the big switch. We now don't run size_allocate()
from the toplevel up anymore in cases where we don't need to.
Things might be broken in subtle ways as a result of this commit. We'll
have to find them and fix them.
... and API to set and unset it.
It is set when gtk_widget_queue_resize() is called.
It is unset when gtk_widget_get_preferred_width/height() is called.
So far it is not used.
Merge it into GtkWidgetPrivate. In my measurements, about half
of all widgets have a non-default auxinfo struct, and we use this
information in size allocation, so it is nice to avoid the gdata
overhead.
We only use widget paths for a few widgets nowadays (notebook,
treeview, pathbar, combobox), so we can save some space by
not having this field in GtkWidgetPrivate.
The hash table is only accessed at creation and destruction time,
and many widgets don't use templates at all, so no need to have
this permanently occupying space.
When recomputing CSS, we need a correct widget path in the fallback mode
where we're still using widget paths.
So we need to invalidate it everytime it actually changes, and not just
when emitting the style-updated signal.
Fixes css-match-regions reftest.
Postpone until the last moment whether the target widget still
potentially uses updates from this sequence, or window dragging
actually applies because all gestures on the target went to denied
state.
This fixes window dragging on empty space in a headerbar that is
contained in a paned (as in e.g. gedit).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745562
The gesture is hooked to the capture phase, so it works for buttons in
header bars and whatnot. In order to be friendly to the widget it is
capturing events from, an ugly hack is in place to avoid capturing
events when the target widget has a gesture that would consume motion
events.
These functions, while added for use by the GTK inspector, are generally
useful to applications that need to resolve what action groups are
available to a particular GtkWidget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741386
Currently we only take into account the window GActionGroup for
activating the accels.
However, the application could have some custom GActionGroup in the
chain of focused widgets that could want to activate some action if
some accel is activated while that widget is focused.
To allow applications to set accels on widgets that use custom
GActionGroups, simply use the muxer of the focused widget, which
already contains the actions of the parents.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740682
Event controllers now auto-attach, and the GtkCapturePhase only determines
when are events dispatched, but all controllers are managed by the widget wrt
grabs.
All callers have been updated.
And handle the fact that drawing bounds are now handled by this API and
the corresponding gtk_widget_get_clip().
Also add _gtk_widget_supports_clip() function to check if a widget has
been ported to the new world.
The propagation phase property/methods in GtkEventController are gone,
This is now set directly on the GtkWidget add/remove controller API,
which has been made private.
The only public bit now are the new functions gtk_gesture_attach() and
gtk_gesture_detach() that will use the private API underneath.
All callers have been updated.
Rename our internal GActionMuxer, GActionObserver and GActionObservable
classes and interfaces to have names in our own namespace.
These classes were originally intended for GIO but turned out to be too
special-purpose to be useful there, so we never made them public API but
have just been copying them around (without bothering to properly rename
them). Now that other people will be copying them out of Gtk, it's even
more important to prevent this namespace abuse from spreading further.
gtk_widget_preferred_size() is only useful if you want to quickly port a
widget from GTK2 sizing code to GTK3 but does not properly work with
height-for-width as used in GTK. So we don't want to encourage people to
use it. In particular we want people to convert to height-for-width
before adding baseline support to their widgets.
We now consider non-native windows non-opaque, which means any invalid
area in a subwindow will also be invalid all the way up to the nearest
native windows. We take advantage of this by ignoring all expose events
on non-native windows (which typically means just the toplevel) and instead
propagating down the draw() calls to children directly via
gtk_container_propagate_draw.
This is nice as it means we always draw widgets the same way, and it
will let us do some interesting ways in the future.
We also clean up the GtkWidget opacity handling as we can now always
rely on the draing happening via cairo.
We can't really just draw by walking down the widget hierarchy, as
this doesn't get the clipping right (so e.g. widgets doing cairo_paint
may draw outside the expected gdkwindow subarea) nor does it let
us paint window backgrounds.
So, we now do multiple draws for each widget, once for each GdkWindow,
although we still do it on the same base cairo_t that we get for the
toplevel native window. The difference is only the clipping, the rendering
order, and which other widgets we propagate into.
We also collect all the windows of a widget so we can expose them inside
the same opacity group if needed.
NOTE: This change neuters gtk_widget_set_double_buffered for
widgets without native windows. Its impossible to disable
the double buffering in this model.
If a subclass (say a child of GtkButton) overrides the non-baseline
size request methods we need to call these, rather than the new
get_height_and_baseline_for_width method.
In order to handle this we make the default for this method to be
NULL, and instead check at runtime which method to call. If any
non-baseline vfunc has changed in a class but the baseline one
hasn't, then we can't use the baseline one.
This modifies the size machinery in order to allow baseline support.
We add a new widget vfunc get_preferred_height_and_baseline_for_width
which queries the normal height_for_width (or non-for-width if width
is -1) and additionally returns optional (-1 means "no baseline")
baselines for the minimal and natural heights.
We also add a new gtk_widget_size_allocate_with_baseline() which
baseline-aware containers can use to allocate children with a specific
baseline, either one inherited from the parent, or one introduced due
to requested baseline alignment in the container
itself. size_allocate_with_baseline() works just like a normal size
allocation, except the baseline gets recorded so that the child can
access it via gtk_widget_get_allocated_baseline() when it aligns
itself.
There are also adjust_baseline_request/allocation similar to the
allocation adjustment, and we extend the size request cache to also
store the baselines.
... instead of GtkSizeGroupMode. Orientation is what we're interested in
after all. When we need a GtkSizeGroupMode, we can do the translation
where we need it.
This way we don't need a marker on GtkWidgetParivate that needs to be
unset later, so we have all our data in the same place and can avoid
problems with reentrancy and shenanigans like that.
But the main reason I wrote that is cleaner code.
With this function now available, we can do size computation in 2
ways:
(1) Compute size with size groups
(2) Compute size without size groups
And have (1) use (2) instead of setting flags on widgets. This patch
does exactly that.
This allows adding a GActionGroup with a given name at an arbitrary
point in the widget tree.
This patch also adds an internal _get_action_muxer() API. Calling this
will create a GActionMuxer associated with the widget. The parent of
the muxer will be the muxer of the widget's conceptual parent. For
non-menus, that is the normal parent. For menus, it is the attach
widget.
In this way, we end up with a hierarchy of GActionMuxer that largely
reflects the hierarchy of GtkWidget, but only in places that the action
context has been requested. These muxers are the ones on which the
inserted actions groups are installed.
A following patch will add a user of this API.
Add an internal API that allows GtkStyleContext to create a widget path
for the widget and with that bypassing gtk_widget_get_path() and that
function caching the path.
This patch adds a capture phase to GTK+'s event propagation
model. Events are first propagated from the toplevel (or the
grab widget, if a grab is in place) down to the target widget
and then back up. The second phase is using the existing
::event signal, the new capture phase is using a private
API instead of a public signal for now.
This mechanism can be used in many places where we currently
have to prevent child widgets from getting events by putting
an input-only window over them. It will also be used to implement
kinetic scrolling in subsequent patches.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641836
We automatically request more motion events in behalf of
the original widget if it listens to motion hints. So
the capturing widget doesn't need to handle such
implementation details.
We are not making event capture part of the public API for 3.4,
which is why there is no ::captured-event signal.
gtk_window_get/set_attached_to() is a new API that allows for windows to
be attached to a GtkWidget.
The attachment is a logical binding between the toplevel window and the
widget that generated it; this kind of information is currently used to
propagate style information from the widget to the window, but is also
useful e.g. for accessibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666103
This function returns the accessible if it already exists. This way we
can call functions on the accessible from the widget itself instead of
having to rely on signals.
This patch optimizes window resizes by assuming that if a widget
has the same height at a width of 50 as with a width of 150, the
height for width 100 will also be the same.
The patch also further optimizes the cache allocator, now there
are 2 pointer arrays of up to a maximum of 5 requests, the arrays
will only be allocated if a request is ever made in that orientation
and the array will be sparse until each request is made (i.e. if a
label can only wrap to 3 lines, there will only be 3 out of a
possible 5 SizeRequest structures allocated to cache it).
This patch makes contextual height-for-width request caching
optional (the contextual cache is not allocated for widgets that
report GTK_SIZE_REQUEST_CONSTANT_SIZE).
Optimized GtkSizeGroup code that is invoked for every queued resize
and every request that is not previously cached by trading qdata on
widgets for 3 extra bitfields on the GtkWidgetPrivate structure.
Move the private get_cursor_color method belongs to StyleContext. Change
the api so that retrieving both primary and secondary color is possible.
I left the method private for now, though it should probably be public
as all the other getters.
The gtkprivate.h header contains GtkWidget-specific private symbols that
are not useful except in a handful of cases. Basically everything
includes gtkprivate.h for the GTK_PARAM_* macros.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=632539