The cairo_t that we create to render glyphs for
the glyph cache needs to match the font options
that are supposedly governing how glyphs are
drawn.
Since we allow font options to be different per
widget in gtk, we need to have them at least at
the level of individual render nodes. Adding them
to the lookup key for the glyph cache has the
side effect of solving another problem: We are
not flushing the cache when font options change.
Since font options affect how the glyphs get rendered,
we need to pass the font options down from the gtk level
to where the glyph cache is populated.
Add a new gsk_text_node_new_full api that takes a
cairo_font_options_t in addition to the other parameters.
If the alpha channel is zero, it doesn't matter what the values of the
red, green and blue channels are: the pixel is still fully transparent.
On most architectures, fully transparent pixels end up all-zeroes
(fully transparent black), matching what's in the reference PNG file;
but on mips*el the blend-difference and blend-normal tests get all-ones
(fully transparent white) and a test failure.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/4227
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
This lets people switch back to font rendering that is closer
to what GTK 3 does. It is not perfect - subpixel antialiasing
is not going to work. But it give us an Escape hatch while
we shake out the bugs in our linear layout.
Related: #3787
Make it clear that your class must have all the editable properties
already before you call the (confusingly named) function
gtk_editable_install_properties.
This adds support for sequences like <Compose>,G,u -> capital G with
breve. Previously, only a capital U was accepted for E, G, I and O
(but a lower-case u was accepted for A and U for some reason).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
The GtkComposeTable cache is always in big-endian format and is
byteswapped on load for the more common little-endian CPUs, but
init_builtin_table() in GtkIMContextSimple can't byteswap the built-in
data without copying it, which is undesirable. Pregenerate both big-
and little-endian compose data, and compile the correct flavour into
each build of GTK. This fixes failure of the composetable test when
building for a big-endian architecture such as s390x and (traditional,
big-endian) powerpc.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/4217
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Dragging will just drag the render node.
Dropping will replace the current contents of the textview with the
dropped node.
Neat side effect: You can drag the node onto itself to do a
deserialize/serialize of the current text.