This is a free-form tab that can contain information about the
system environment. To see it, set GtkAboutDialog::system-information
to a non-NULL value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776604
...by putting it in a stack. The busy_spinner and eject_button are
mutually exclusive, but only the latter was coded to ensure that its
visibility did not cause the rest of the row to reflow. By putting both
widgets in a stack and setting child_visible on that, the row allocates
enough space to show one - or none - at once, avoiding any misalignment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772345https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772348
This reverts commit 6af5033386.
Scrolled window behavior of propagating child natural sizes
has now been made optional, so there is no need to work around
this by setting a hard coded maximum content height anymore.
GtkPlacesView currently provides no example of
server addresses, which may confuse users.
To fix that, add a helper popover with some
guidance on server addresses.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756570
We used to always make the labels in message dialogs selectable,
which is a bit problematic wrt. to keynav - the label can
unexpectedly 'turn blue', which irritates some people.
With the new gtk-keynav-use-caret setting, we can now only
make the labels selectable when it is required for accessibilty
reasons.
We weren't using the open flags on the other locations signal, which
makes impossible for applications like nautilus to act in the same
way that for any other location where the user can choose between
opening in the current view, in a new window or in a new tab.
Add a new signal with an open flags parameter and deprecate
the other-location signal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754743
The previous way of manually juggling the visibility of the
labels doesn't work anymore, now that gadgets of invisible
widgets don't allocate space anymore.
It's not a hugely complicated file, but it's easier to deal with some of
the details of tooltip windows styling if we have a UI file to edit,
instead of source code.
Use combobox as the element name for the main CSS nodes of
GtkComboBox and GtkComboBoxText. Add the .combo style class
to the button and entry. in a GtkComboBox or GtkComboBoxText.
Unfortunately, GtkFileChooserButton is different from the other
pickers in that it is not a button, but rather has a button.
We ignore the difference for styling purposes, and just add
a .file style class to the button.
The current situation is somewhat sad, with the path
label totally misaligned throughout the rows.
This is fixed by using a size group for the path labels,
so they all have the same allocated size (with the max
of 15 chars). Also, instead of hiding the eject button,
set it child-invisible, so it is hidden and yet it's size
is allocated by GtkBox.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757303
Disclosure triangles are usually used pointing down, however
in this case the popover spawns in the upper direction, which
makes it odd looking.
Instead of pointing always down or up, point down when not toggled and
animate a rotation when toggled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756568
That way, the GTK engine doesn't think that the general .button CSS
might potentially apply to it.
And because combobox button is overly complex and stupid, it cannot be
cached.
So buttons thought they cannot ever cache anything because they might
suddenly end up inside a combobox without noticing and then they'd need
to round their corners differently. Of course they're just regular
"Remove" buttons like all the other 100s of "Remove" buttons in
gnome-software. But hey, better not cache anything for them and
recompute their CSS every time the :hover state changes on one of the
rows.
Since we're dealing with networks, terms like "Eject" or
the eject button are misleading, since we're not actually
ejecting but disconnecting.
Fix that by showing the appropriate icon and tooltip.
Instead of putting it inside the button manually, put it there properly
by adding a box containing the cell view and the arrow.
Do the same thing in list mode, instead of creating an event box that
tries to behave as a button.
Since we started adding a persistent Computer item,
all the code related to the view modes became obsolete,
since the view is never empty anymore. So, drop this
dead code and use the plain stack to manage the empty
search results view.
Also, this patch fixed a very annoying keyboard navigation
issue where we couldn't go from the On This Computer to Networks
lists, because they were two separate widgets. Merge the two
lists into a single one, and update headers accordingly.
The places sidebar rows' labels were missing a proper
xalign, which caused the labels to keep shaking while
the sidebar was resized.
Fix that by setting the label's xalign to 0.
GtkPlacesView widget manages persistent locations,
factoring out GtkPlacesSidebar functionality.
It, however, does not completely shows all sidebar
locations, since Computer is still missing.
Add a Computer item, adjusting some internal behavior
to make that possible.
Previously, we would pango_font_describe() every time the code ran and
we wouldn't ever hit the optimized quick exit.
The code now is a lot more complex because the
compute-actual-value-when-required-the-first-time approach is not
supported out of the box in GtkTreeModel (or GValue).
I forgot to clean up the long press gesture, and in additon, creating
the rename popover from the ui template was causing the tree view
to not be disposed when the file chooser goes away. Work around this
by manually unsetting the relative-to widget of the popover in dispose.
Previous patch modified places sidebar widget to stop handling
fixed devices by adding an "Other Locations..." item. Up to now,
however, these changes are isolated from each other since the
bundled file manager widgets ignore the sidebar requests for
external management of fixed devices and networks.
To fix that, make the file chooser widget be aware of the
GtkPlacesSidebar::show-other-locations signal and, when requested,
show places view to manage the fixed devices and networks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752034
Places sidebar shows XDG directories, mounted and unmounted devices,
connected networks, bookmarks and actions like 'Connect to server'
and 'Insert location', which causes the sidebar to grow very quickly
and look cluttered. Because of that, new mockups for the sidebar try
to simplify it.
To make the sidebar simpler, the new mockups propose that it should
only handle connected networks and removable devices such as flash
drives and USB devices, and delegates other devices for external
widgets through the 'Other Locations' item.
To handle fixed devices and manage network connections, add a new
widget named GtkPlacesView, based on Nautilus mockups to keep
consistency between GNOME file management tools - in this case,
between Nautilus and the bundled Gtk's file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752034
Allow the name and location columns to be resized, but arrange
for their sizing to be reset when the column layout changes (either
by the location column appearing/disappearing, or by the time
column changing between mtime and atime. This gives a decent
compromise between good automatic sizing and user control.
Some internal containers were erroneously taking focus, interrupting
the flow of tab keynav, and using arrow keynav to go from the file
list to the sidebar did not work anymore, after the recent sidebar
rewrite.
The filter combo box in the file chooser was stretching to match
the height of the extra widgets next to it. Since, stretched combo
boxes are not a pretty sight, make it stick to the top instead.
Patch by Caolán McNamara,
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751227
Use a revealer to manage the visibility of the header area where
we show the pathbar, the location entry or search. This is a bit
smoother, and makes search more similar to a search bar.
We were using GTkTreeView in a simple list. Also, as we know,
GtkCellRenderers are not the best way to theme and manipulate
widgets.
So instead use a GtkListBox to modernize the GtkPlacesSidebar,
and in the way clean up some parts of the code (like headings)
which were not used anymore.
Also we don't use a model anymore, since the data is simple
enough to manage it in a subclass of the row itself.
Since nautilus merge, we were not showing 'Recent' in the sidebar
if GIO did not support the recent: scheme. But the file chooser
can show recent files independent of gvfs - it loads the recent
files manually. This is relevant on Windows and OS X, where gvfs
is typically not used.
This commit adds a show-recent property which can be used to override
the recent: scheme check. We use it in the file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750068
Making a container focusable is rarely the right thing to do.
It typically breaks the focus chain, and makes the container
contents unfocusable, as was the case here.
The previous commit removed default-valued properties,
but apparently that has a negative effect for grid
packing properties, so put the explicit value back.
The height of the text buttons depends on the font height,
whereas the search button has a fixed-size icon in it...
Prevent unevent heights by putting them all in a size group.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745263
The height of the text buttons depends on the font height,
whereas the search button has a fixed-size icon in it...
Prevent unevent heights by putting them all in a size group.
Add a button to allow restricting search to the current
folder (and subdirectories). This makes the search more
useful, and makes the file chooser more similar to
nautilus.
In search, we show files from differnt locations, and it makes
sense to show where they come from. This makes the file chooser
more similar to nautilus, too.
The last round of filechooser redesign work had left
search somewhat dysfunctional. This commit fixes things
up enough that search is once again a working feature
of the file chooser.
Most of the core GNOME applications (eg., gnome-control-center,
gnome-documents, and nautilus) start searching as soon as the text
changes, and don't wait for the user to hit ENTER. It would be nice to
follow the same pattern.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739977
This subdirectory gets in the way when integrating the inspector
build more fully with GTK+, and does not really add anything.
Just move everything one level up.