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
We do this by making the ::populate-popup signals a little more
flexible. They used to just accept a GtkMenu as argument, now
they can take a menu or a toolbar. To not break the expectations
of existing callbacks, we only emit ::populate-popup with a toolbar
if the :populate-toolbar property is TRUE.
Don't set handles mode to none if the event has send_event set.
For consistency with GtkEntry, also make GtkTextView keep the
handle mode on buffer changes.
We always need to render the background, as the window
background is not always set (i.e. during gtk_widget_draw()) or
when its partially visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694925
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
This commit exposes the get_type() functions and standard
headers for accessible implementations. This makes it possible
to derive from the GTK accessible implementations without
GType magic tricks. This is necessary, because we require the
a11y type hierarchy to be parallel to the widget type hierarchy.
So, if you derive a widget and need to adjust its a11y implementation,
you have to be able to derive its accessible implementation.
This commit probably exposes more than is absolutely necessary,
it also exposes accessibles of widgets that are unlikely candidates
for deriving from.
GtkTextHandle is used to indicate both the cursor position
and the selection bound, dragging the handles will modify
the selection and scroll if necessary.
Backwards text selection is also blocked for touch devices,
so the handles don't get inverted positions and possibly
obscure portions of the selected text.
Instead, just draw the children. The cairo code will keep track of
things, so there's no need to track things.
Also, the old code was doing it wrong.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672544
This can cause lagging when scrolling as it causes us to repaint
on every scroll event. This wasn't historically a great problem,
but with smooth scrolling we get a lot more events, so this
now creates visible lagging on slower machines.
Without any extra supporting code, just adding GTK_SMOOTH_SCROLL_MASK to
the event mask for GtkTextView makes GEdit do the right thing and scroll
smoothly. Lovely.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=671488
The widget window is usually covered by the bin_window.
Its background color will become relevant when we introduce
kinetic scrolling with overshooting.
The new function provides an API that takes the PangoLayout and index
as input params, this way it handles strong and weak cursors internally
factoring out all code duplicated in the widgets that need to render
cursors.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=640317
When multiple pointers are in play, we need to be careful
not to loose track of the device between receiving a button
press and popping up a menu.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=663396
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.
which are SHIFT and MOD2 on the Mac, and SHIFT and CONTROL otherwise.
Use the new define all over the place and rename variables and
members to not say "shift" or "control".
This commit introduces a new setting, gtk-visible-focus, backed
by the Gtk/VisibleFocus X setting. Its three values control how
focus rectangles are displayed.
'always' is equivalent to the traditional GTK+ behaviour of always
rendering focus rectangles.
'never' does what it says, and is intended for keyboardless
situations, e.g. tablets.
'automatic' hides focus rectangles initially, until the user
interacts with the keyboard, at which point focus rectangles
become visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649567