and gtk_image_set_can_shrink().
Images are meant to always be icon-sized, they can never shrink below
that.
And images are icons, so they are meant to be square. If they are
not, we pretned that's by accident and keep aspect ratio.
That's kinda weird but allows us to delete the texture case from
GtkIconHelper and GTK_IMAGE_TEXTURE from the GtkImageType enum.
And it doesn't cause any other problems because the cell renderer
can't deal with paintables - otherwise it would mirror GtkImage and have
a "paintable" property instead.
If set, the image will draw its contents while keeping their aspect
ratio. That means empty areas show up on the top/bottom or left/right.
Also move the special-case snapshotting code for icons to
GtkIconHelper. That's where it belongs.
Remove all the old 2.x and 3.x version annotations.
GTK+ 4 is a new start, and from the perspective of a
GTK+ 4 developer all these APIs have been around since
the beginning.
Instead, add a function gtk_image_set_icon_size() for the cases where
overriding the icon size is necessary.
Treat icon sizes the same way as pixel sizes, too. So gtk_image_clear()
no longer unsets the icon size.
Instead of returning the icon size with them, make
gtk_image_get_icon_name() and gtk_image_get_gicon() only return the icon
itself.
As a benefit, we can turn them into regular getters that return values
instead of requiring out parameters.
Instead, provide gtk_image_get_icon_size() to query the icon size.
These are no longer used, instead we always covert to surface as
early as possible and drop the pixbuf.
This means we never store both the pixbuf and the surface at
for any longer time, which is wasteful. Also, its one step further
to drop GdkPixbufs from generic use in our APIs.
This drops the pixbuf property and the pixbuf getters. We keep
gtk_image_new/set_from_pixbuf, but these are small helpers that
immediately convert to a surface, and there is no way to later get
back the pixbuf you passed in.
The from file/resource codepaths are also changed to load a surface
instead of a pixbuf.
We render the source into a cairo_surface_t so that we can render it
with cairo directly, rather than having to convert it from a pixbuf
every time. We also specify the target window when creating the cairo
surface so that rendering can be faster.
Using cairo surfaces also allows us to seamlessly support window scales.
We also add a GTK_IMAGE_SURFACE source type.