This gesture handles any number of clicks, ensuring multiple presses
stay within thresholds and timeouts. When anything of that happens,
the gesture is reset and press count starts from 1 again.
Optionally, the gesture can be given a rectangle, used in in presses > 1
to ensure the consecutive presses happen on user imposed areas.
This gesture implementation recognices swipes on any direction.
The "swipe" signal has the X/Y velocity vector components, so
those can be used for direction guessing and velocity thresholds.
A widget intended to offer contextual actions for a given view.
It allows packing children into the start or end as well as offering
a single centered child box.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721665
GtkFlowBox is a container that its children in a reflowing
grid, which can be oriented horizontally or vertically.
It is similar to GtkListBox in that the children can
be sorted and filtered, and by requiring a dedicated child
widget type, GtkFlowBoxChild. It is similar to GtkTreeView
in that is supports a full set of selection modes, including
rubberband selection.
This is the culmination of work that has happened in the
egg-list-box module, and earlier in libegg. The origins of
this code are the EggSpreadTable in libegg, which was written
by Tristan van Berkom. It was moved to egg-list-box and
renamed EggFlowBox by Jon McCann, and I gave it some finishing
touched in the flowbox-improvements branch of that module.
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
Add separate GtkStack and GtkStackSwitcher widgets that are an
alternative to GtkNotebook. Additionally, GtkStack supports
animated transitions when changing pages.
These widgets were initially developed in libgd.
Add a very simple GtkWidget function for an "tick" callback, which
is connected to the ::update signal of GdkFrameClock.
Remove:
- GtkTimeline. The consensus is that it is too complex.
- GdkPaintClockTarget. In the rare cases where tick callbacks
aren't sufficient, it's possible to track the
paint clock with ::realize/::unrealize/::hierarchy-changed.
GtkTimeline is kept using ::update directly to allow using a GtkTimeline
with a paint clock but no widget.
Use GdkFrameClock for the timing of GtkTimeline. This require the
user to provide either a GtkWidget or a GdkFrameClock when creating
the timeline. The default constructor now takes a GtkWidget. If you
want to create a GdkFrameClock without a widget, you need to use
g_object_new() and pass in a GdkFrameClock and GdkScreen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
This is the interface for GtkWidgets that can be associated with an
action on a GtkAppicationWindow or associated GtkApplication.
It essentially features 'action-name' and 'action-target' properties
with some associated convenience API.
This interface is implemented by GtkButton and GtkToolButton.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667394
This feels premature; we do have the fallback situation covered
adaequately with the menubar, and people can do their own creative
solutions with gtk_application_window_get_menu(), so we don't have
to offer a widget for this right now.
This is a GtkWindow subclass that "application windows" will use. Each
is associated with a GtkApplication, has the ability to show menus and
will have its own associated set of actions.