This was only every implemented under X11, and with CSD,
this is clearly in the application realm. We should not
pretend that we can support it on the toolkit level.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775061
It was suggested that the project files to be moved to win32/, so that we can
have one less layer of directories we need to go down into to reach the project files.
This merged gtk, gdk and gsk into one library, making it possible to
have internal private APIs between gtk them, as well as producing more
efficient code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773100
We now need C99 features from the compiler which are only supported by
Visual Studio 2013 and later, so drop the MSVC 2008~2012 projects, and make
the baseline supported Visual Studio version be 2013. Update the build files
as a result.
These complicate a lot of GdkWindow internals to implement features
that not a lot of apps use, and will be better achieved using gsk.
So, we just drop it all.
Add a new ::measure vfunc similar to GtkCssGadget's that widget
implementations have to override instead of the old get_preferred_width,
get_preferred_height, get_preferred_width_for_height,
get_preferred_height_for_width and
get_preferred_height_and_baseline_for_width.
This updates all the projects files to be be named appropriately as we move from GTK-3.x to 4.x,
and updates the autotools files so that things are distributed and generated properly.
Also remove deprecated/gtkstatusicon-quartz.c from gtk/Makefile.am, as that was causing 'make dist'
to fail as that file has been removed.
This fixes 'make dist' with the updated existing project files in proper order.
Note that this does not include the new GSK, which will be added later, so the project files do
not yet build the whole stack on Visual Studio at this point.
And with it, gtk_widget_get_visual() and gtk_widget_set_visual() are
gone.
We now always use the RGBA visual (if available) and otherwise fall back
to the system visual.
And rename it to "Touch and Drawing Tablets", since it's no longer about
"axes" really.
As for pad support in the demo, just keep it "simple", make the
controller handle all pad devices, and make all the actions have the
same callback.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770026
gtk+/demos/gtk-demo/css_blendmodes.c: In function ‘update_css_for_blend_mode’:
gtk+/demos/gtk-demo/css_blendmodes.c:49:26: error: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Werror=format-nonliteral]
blend_mode);
^~~~~~~~~~
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769236
After introducing the CSS blend mode enum values and including
the background-blend-mode CSS property, it is very important to
actually provide an example of the new feature.
This patch adds a new demo to gtk3-demo which shows how the
background-blend-mode CSS property works.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768305
This only used by luck before. We are changing a property from the
::notify handler for that property. Now that GtkRevealer is notifying
the property when it stops animations on unmap, we end up in a life
lock situation where we never make it out of the notify queue.
Fix this by not restarting the animation if the widget is unmapped.
On wayland we get separate master/slaves for each tablet, we will
need to receive crossing events for each master pointer if there's
more than one around.
Axis labels are very X specific, and are not really possible to port to other
backends such as Wayland. As such, it makes more sense to use GdkAxisUse and
GdkAxisUseFlag in order to determine the axis capabilities of a device and draw
their axes.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Chandler Paul <thatslyude@gmail.com>
The font features demo started calling the Harfbuzz API directly
starting from commit 9de3b24c20. Harfbuzz
is an implicit dependency of Pango on some platforms, but it's not part
of the public dependencies; this means that we cannot expect to link to
Pango and automatically get Harfbuzz symbols to link against —
especially when things like --as-needed are in play.
This change triggered build failures on non-Unix platforms, fixed by
commit 2a9967731a, as well as build
failures in Continuous, with this error message:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-gnomeostree-linux/4.9.3/../../../../x86_64-gnomeostree-linux/bin/ld:
font_features.o: undefined reference to symbol 'hb_tag_to_string'
//lib/libharfbuzz.so.0: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command
line
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
In order to get the font features demo to build everywhere we should
take an explicit, though optional, check on Harfbuzz, and conditionally
build the font features demo with the right compiler and linker flags.
The fonts features demo now uses fontconfig APIs via PangoFT2, which makes
the code not build on non-Linux, so only include this demo in the build
on UNIX.
Add more features to the list, allow selecting script/language
from the set that is supported by the font, indicate which
features are present in the font for the selected script/language,
and expand the default specimen to cover latin, cyrillic and
greek.
Its very easy to get extra references to the NativeDialog so that
when you release your last reference any visible dialog is not
hidden. We handle this by adding a destroy method similar to how
you destroy regular toplevels.
Use the common automake module from the previous commit in the
Makefile.am's, which means that the Makefile.am's in gdk/ and gtk/ can be
cleaned up as a result. As a side effect, the property sheet that is used
to "install" the build results and headers can now be generated in terms of
the listing of headers to copy during 'make dist', where we can acquire
most of the list of headers to "install", so that we can largely avoid the
situation where the property sheet files are not updated in time for this,
causing missing headers when this build of GTK+ is being used.
Also use the Visual Studio Project file generation for the following
projects:
gtk3-demo
gtk3-demo-application
gtk3-icon-browser
gdk-win32
gdk-broadway
gail-util
So that the maintenace of these project files can be simplified as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681965
Add a --run option which takes the name of an example and
launches it. Also add a --autoquit option which can be used
to quit after a given number of seconds.
The application demo had a "Blue" and a "Bold" menuitem both with
the Ctrl-B accel. This is confusing, since only one of them works.
Change the accelerator for bold to Ctrl-Shift-B, so they both work.
Add all 388 tweets of the @GTKtoolkit account. This shows the
performance behavior of the listbox (not good with that many rows) and
allows us to quickly notice when things get worse (or better).
And just so I have a place where I can dump how I generated this file:
First, I got Timm Bäder to download me the json for the twitter feed
into a file gtk.json, then I ran the jq tool on it like this:
jq ".[] | if .retweeted_status then .retweeted_status.user.name + \"|\"
+ .retweeted_status.user.screen_name else .user.name + \"|\" +
.user.screen_name end + \"|\" + .text" gtk.json | cat -n | sed
"s/\\s*\([0-9]*\)\t\"\(.*\)\"/\\1|\\2/" > messages.start
jq ".[] | .created_at" gtk.json | sed "s/\"\(.*\)\"/\1/" | while read
in; do date +%s -d "$in"; done > dates
jq ".[] | \"0|\" + if .retweeted_status then .user.screen_name else \"\"
end + \"|\" + (.favorite_count | tostring) + \"|\" + (.retweet_count |
tostring)" gtk.json | sed "s/\"\(.*\)\"/\\1/" > messages.end
paste -d\| messages.start dates messages.end > messages.txt
This whole machinery of going through 3 intermediate files was only
necessary to onvert the dates from ISO format to unix timestamps,
otherwise this could have been a single line.