The version of device scale that landed in upstream cairo
master already inherits the device scale in cairo_create_similar,
so no need to do that in gtk anymore.
The reftest is a bit flaky because it compares cell renderers with
GtkImage and therefor an icon view with a GtkBox, but it's the best I
can come up with.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702423
Even when not following states, blacklist the states we don't follow
instead of whitelisting the ones we do. This way, we don't accidentally
eat new ones like the text direction flags.
Fixes a bug where text direction wasn't available when rendering stock
items.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702423
Due to the split up of the property sheets, the install projects did not
have info on the Intermediate and Output Paths, which caused confusing
messages from Visual Studio to show up upon completing build+"install" and
closing Visual Studio on whether to reload the install project, at least on
Visual Studio 2008.
Also clean up the Visual Studio 2008 install project a bit.
Include the property sheet which defines these properties to fix this.
In the gnome-ostree model builddir contains all generated files not in
git (unless the build system explicitly overrides that). Here the
wayland-client-protocol.h was in $(builddir)/wayland, so we need to
find it using our already extant -I$(top_builddir)/gdk, rather than
relying on same-directory lookup.
Add the concept of shell capabilities, which allow the compositor
to advertise support for the app menu and the global menubar,
which are then propagated as GdkSettings.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707129
If the compositor supports the gtk-shell interface, use it to
export the application ID, dbus name and paths that can be used
for the application menu.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707129
Call gtk_widget_get_mapped() in a couple of places before looking at the
widget's parent, since it might be set to a widget that has been
finalized, causing an invalid read.
GTK+ tries to automatically assign the best input module based on the
'system locale'. In the specific case of the IME input method, it will
be the default for the whole GTK+ application if the system locale is
either Japanese (ja), Korean (ko) or Chinese (zh). Other defaults are
equally applicable, e.g. if system locale is Catalan (ca), the special
'Cedilla' input module is chosen.
System locale can be changed (e.g. Win7) through the following sequence
(reboot required):
Control Panel
Region and Language
Administrative
Language for non-Unicode Programs
Change system locale...
The problem with this behaviour is that changing the 'default input
language' (e.g. from English to Japanese+IME) doesn't affect the GTK+
application. Therefore, I can have an English system locale (where GTK+
will choose Simple IM by default) but then have Japanese+IME as input
language.
Default input language can be changed (e.g. Win7) through the following
sequence (no reboot required):
System locale can be changed (e.g. Win7) through:
Control Panel
Region and Language
Keyboards and Languages
Keyboards and other input languages
Change keyboards...
Default input language can also be changed using the language bar directly.
So, instead of using the system-wide default locale to decide which input
method to use as default, better use the input language specified by the
user, which may be the same as the system-wide default locale, or different.
Following the previous example, with an English system locale and a
Japanese+IME input language, the default input method will now be IME
instead of Simple, which is closer to what's expected by the user.
This change only affects the application during startup; i.e. if the user
changes the input language while the application is running, we wouldn't be
changing the default input method to use. We could do this processing the
WM_INPUTLANGCHANGE messages, though.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700428