The zoom/rotate change for quartz does not build on 10.7. This change
adds zoom/rotate support in quartz only for 10.8 and following. The
problems is described here:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760276 and here
https://trac.macports.org/ticket/51052
NSEventPhaseMayBegin was only introduced in 10.8 although documentation
says it is introduced in 10.7. Tests on 10.7 indicate that the phase
property for the Magnify event is not supported at all on 10.7
Because of our port of css animation and css transition to
progress tracker, we should not think of animated styles as
immutable objects that can map any timestamp to css values.
Rather, timestamps can correspond to different values depending
on the value of GTK_SLOWDOWN over the course of the animation.
To keep animated styles and style animations totally immutable,
we will not share styleanimations between animatedstyles, and
make a new copy of a styleanimation for each timestamp.
Not the ideal solution for this problem, but in practice leads to
much better performance on lower end hardware.
Stack does a double draw on the first frame of its animation, of
both the old contents (into a cairo surface) and the new contents.
Homogeneous stacks only need to reallocate contents on the first
frame.
On lower powered hardware where our frames will be a good deal
slower than the refresh rate anyway, we can assure a smother
experience by waiting a frame to start tweening where frame duration
will be more consistent.
glade-previewer places a gtkwindow inside another toplevel gtkwindow,
updating the shadow width for the client induces a busy loop where the
parent will grow continuously until it crashes gnome-shell/mutter.
To avoid the loop, do not update the shadow width if not dealing with a
toplevel window.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761651
On wayland, such axes are per-tool, we must update device capabilities
on the fly as new tools enter proximity, first the slave device so
it matches the current tool, and then the master device so it looks
the same than the current slave device.
Only the management of tablets and tools is added so far. No tablet events
are yet interpreted.
As it's been the tradition in GTK+, erasers are split into their own device,
whereas the rest of the tools are meant to be routed through the
GDK_SOURCE_PEN device. Both pen/eraser devices are slaves to a master
pointer device, separate to wl_pointer's. This is so each tablet can
maintain its own cursor/positioning accounting.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Chandler Paul <thatslyude@gmail.com>