The lightweight inheritance mechanism used for GtkShortcutTrigger is not
going to be usable by bindings, because boxed types cannot have derived
types.
We could use GTypeInstance and derive everything from that, like
GParamSpec, but in the end shortcuts are not really a performance
critical paths, unlike CSS values or render nodes.
GTK defines various types that are meant to be derivable only within GTK
itself, and "final" from the perspective of consumers of the GTK API.
The existing macros defined by GObject, such as G_DECLARE_FINAL_TYPE and
G_DECLARE_DERIVABLE_TYPE, lack this functionality.
While we wait for GObject to get this kind of macro, we should define
our own.
Make GtkShortcutController collect matching shortcuts
in the same way GtkKeyHash did (accept fuzzy matches
if we don't have any exact matches), and cycle among
the matches if we have multiple.
Copy the logic from GtkKeyHash for matching key events
to shortcuts.
Adapt shortcuts test to work with the better matching,
by creating more complete key events.
Allow GtkShortcutTrigger to return partial matches.
Currently, no triggers produce such results, and
GtkShortcutController treats partial matches like
exact ones.
People should use shortcut controllers instead (global, capture).
A side effect of this is that GtkAccelLabel now lost its method to
magically look up accelerators to display. Somebody needs to add that
back later.
API remains the same, but activation is now done via a
shortcutcontroller.
The code uses a controller with global scope so that the
shortcuts are managed with all the other global shortcuts.
This is mainly for internal use, but I can't see a reason to not have it
public for people who want to maintain their own lists.
I'm sure gnome-builder will never ever find a way to misuse it.
When creating shortcuts, there almost always are a trigger and an action
available for use. So make gtk_shortcut_new() take those as arguments.
Also add gtk_shortcut_new_with_arguments() so people can easily pass
those in, too.
Similar to GtkShortcutTrigger, GtkShortCutAction provides all the
different ways to activate a shortcut.
So far, these different ways are supported:
- do nothing
- Call a user-provided callback
- Call gtk_widget_activate()
- Call gtk_widget_mnemonic_activate()
- Emit an action signal
- Activate an action from the widget's action muxer