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.
This allows themes do whatever they want as separators, with
paddings, borders and backgrounds.
If "wide-separators" property is true, then, instead of just draw
a frame, also render its background, and take into account the
padding property for its limits.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719713
The call to gtk_button_set_relief() in gtk_toolbar_init() indirectly
used the style context of the half-created widget, before we had a
chance to add the "toolbar" style class to it.
Reorder gtk_toolbar_init() to ensure that the proper style class is
set first.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719595
currently it's using the same sizes for natural and minimum, but it
happens that, when it's allowed to use the arrow, the minimum size
can be smaller than natural.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693227
Attached widgets inherit from the style of the widget they are
attached to. This can sometimes have unintended consequences,
like a context menu in the main view of gedit inheriting the font
that is configured for documents, or the context menu of the preview
in the font chooser coming up with humongous font size.
To fix this problem, we introduce a context menu style class
and use it for all menus that are used like that. The theme
can then set a font for this style class.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697127
We've recently a number of classes wholly. For these cases,
move the headers and sources to gtk/deprecated/ and adjust
Makefiles and includes accordingly.
Affected classes:
GtkAction
GtkActionGroup
GtkActivatable
GtkIconFactory
GtkImageMenuItem
GtkRadioAction
GtkRecentAction
GtkStock
GtkToggleAction
GtkUIManager
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
If you want to get rounded corners on an hbox, instead of
:first-child {
border-top-left-radius: 5px;
border-bottom-left-radius: 5px;
}
:last-child {
border-top-right-radius: 5px;
border-bottom-right-radius: 5px;
}
you now need to write:
:first-child, :last-child:dir(rtl) {
border-top-left-radius: 5px;
border-bottom-left-radius: 5px;
}
:last-child, :first-child:dir(rtl)
{
border-top-right-radius: 5px;
border-bottom-right-radius: 5px;
}
Instead of using gtk_style_context_get_font() in
pango_context_get_metrics(), use pango_context_get_font_description().
The context contains the font description we are about to use after all.
While shadow-type *properties* can make sense, to opt-out of the
padding/border machinery programmatically, having it as a style
property doesn't make any sense, since we have a better way to change
the bevel style from the theme already.
This commit deprecates the shadow-type style property in GtkToolbar.
This is a regression from commit
d0d21a4f00.
We are requesting the CSS padding twice: once unconditionally and
another time if SHADOW_TYPE != NONE, which is usually the case.
The widget is already calling gtk_render_frame, but is not measuring css
border and padding when negotiating its size. This patch replaces the
already existing get_internal_padding static helper with a function that
sums the old internal-padding value with the values specified via css.
GtkToolbar doesn't have its own GdkWindow to draw on (it calls
gtk_widget_set_has_window(FALSE) in _init), but only an event window
(input-only).
Since gtk_widget_get_window() in that case will return the GdkWindow of
the parent container, by calling gtk_style_context_set_background() here
we're overriding the base background of the container instead of our.
While in most cases this doesn't have any noticeable effect, since
the toplevel GtkWindow will paint its background on top of it at the
beginning of the draw cycle, when the classic window hierarchy is
broken, such as when widgets are rendered through a clutter-gtk
offscreen embedding, the background will become visible, which is
undesirable.
Fix this by having GtkToolbar not call gtk_style_context_set_background
in its style_updated handler.
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.
Add _gtk_button_event_triggers_context_menu() and use it instead
of checking for event->button == 3, so context menus are invoked
correctly on the Mac.
When using an editable toolbar in evince, we can end up
in gtk_toolbar_get_visible() position with item being the
highlight_tool_item, but not one of the regular children.
So, handle that.
It turns out there's more places where the toolbar item size is used as
the margin box instead of the content box. Because of that, store the
margin box when allocating and use it whenever calls
toolbar_content_get_allocation() instead of calling
gtk_widget_get_allocation().