This is a 'developer mode' feature, and it can and does interfere
with preexisting key bindings in some applications, so keep it
off by default in stable releases, at least.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754115
Until now the code was not very clear about why the loading property is
needed, since we didn't forced all the async operations to mark the
view as loading. This cause that clients are not aware when the view
is busy on those situations.
For instance Nautilus uses the property for a few things, one of it
is to show a busy spinner on the tab title.
To improve the situation, mark as loading when a volume operation,
a mount operation or a connect to server operation is being performed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754150
We are showing a GtkSpinner on the networks header to provide feedback
to the user if we are fetching networks, therefore we have to modify
the spinner state when doing it.
However GtkListBox doesn't give guarantees about the widgets
set by gtk_list_box_set_header, and we could access an invalid
widget.
To avoid to access invalid widgets, bind the fetching networks
view property to the networks header spinner active property instead
of modifying directly the spinner in the private structure.
Not having the spinner in the private structure also makes the code
cleaner.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754150
We were filtering out placeholders if the list box filters
while not searching, which is not what we want, since placeholders
should only be hidden if the view is searching.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754150
Make this function harmless to call without an open display connection.
This happens during gobject introspection, which instantiates GTK+
types without calling gtk_init.
It needs to open a display connection, which is obviously going to fail
miserably on any headless build machine.
Instead, we need to find where we started requiring to initialize GTK
when calling a get_type() function, and stop doing that.
This commit and commit 15cc85db29 fully
revert commit 6838861d26.
GCC will not do the right thing, and it will just break the build when
trying to include gtk.h first.
We'll have to live with the warning from the compiler about a missing
gtk_init() — though it would be better not to have to init GTK at all to
generate the introspection data.
This commit unbreaks the build in GNOME Continuous introduced by commit
6838861d26.
Having these extra spaces in the accel string is a bit awkward,
since they will be included in text decorations such as underlines.
Removing them has no visible effect.
Calling our get_type functions without prior gtk_init() is not ok,
and causes warnings now. Avoid that by teaching g-ir-scanner to
put a gtk_init() call into its generated code.
Otherwise, we end up using different metaphors in the place view
and in the sidebar, and nobody is going to know what the disconnect
icon means in this context.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754022
Since being 'activatable' istead of 'button' now that reset
is not needed anymore, the patch is pretty noisy since sass
interpreter changes, those look innocuous though.
A * selector applies to all widgets, so even GtkBox or GtkGrid - and
most importantly GtkListBoxRow - need to recompute their style because
of the * selector.
By using a more specific one, these common cases aren't affected
anymore.
Fixes slowdowns in gtk3-demo's listbox demo and in gnome-software.
That way, the GTK engine doesn't think that the general .button CSS
might potentially apply to it.
And because combobox button is overly complex and stupid, it cannot be
cached.
So buttons thought they cannot ever cache anything because they might
suddenly end up inside a combobox without noticing and then they'd need
to round their corners differently. Of course they're just regular
"Remove" buttons like all the other 100s of "Remove" buttons in
gnome-software. But hey, better not cache anything for them and
recompute their CSS every time the :hover state changes on one of the
rows.
We can actually share :first-child/:last-child related things now,
because we special case them. So the only positions we cannot cache are
nth-child/nth-last-child.
This should take care of a lot of Adwaita's styling.
This way, we can live without row references.
A side effect is that opening the inspector on the gtk-demo list box
example now only takes 0.5s instead of the previous 3 minutes.
Instead of queueing a new idle handler every time we call
gtk_window_update_debugging(), only queue one if none is queued that.
Saves a lot of work, in particular when templates create context menus
for every row in a large listbox as in the gtk-demo listbox example.
Do not use .button anymore.
This is for 2 reasons:
1. The styling is seperate in our themes, so it doesn't make sense to
share the style class.
2. Due to the shared styling of .buton, listbox rows inherit all the
special case styles that exist for buttons - such as linked buttons,
header buttons, entry buttons, spinbutton buttons, etc. This means
that the code has to check all these special cases all the time and
for listbox rows, this is very slow.
Defer a11y initialization until we have a display. A11y initialization
causes widget classes to be initalized, which in turn needs some
backend-specific information about modifier masks that can't be
obtained before we have a display.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736125
If we manually enter an unaccessible path in the entry, e.g
"/root/foo.txt", we should receive an error saying that the
folder is not accessible instead of showing the replace
confirmation dialog.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753969
Previously we were assuming that only list box rows could occur
as focus children of a list box, and would crash if that wasn't
the case. This commit handles this case, and integrates focusable
headers into directional keynav and the focus chain.
The typical case of using separators as headers is not affected
by this change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753694
State that the overlays are placed wrt to the GtkOverlay, not
with respect to the main widget. This makes a difference for
small main widgets which are not configured to fill the entire
GtkOverlay.
When an operation is cancelled it's never safe to access
the object itself or the private struct, since it could be
called (and probably is) during finalize.
In case the operation is cancelled, just bail out to fix
the crashes.
Add a spinner when networks are being fetched and make
the network section permanent and show a placeholder with
a message that no networks were found in case there are no
networks. In this way users from previous versions won't be
confused with the fact that no networks are shown.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753786
Previously we had a network item in the sidebar, which now
is replaced by the network section on other-locations view.
However we were not exposing the networks in network:///.
Fetch them and add them in the network section of other-locations
view.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753786
Code exists in the wild that calls this function after the widget has
been destroyed (and the pixel cache released). Simply check that the
pixel cache exists to preserve the existing state.
When you move line by line, only padding is
automaticly shown and you need to use Page key to show margin.
This commit also fix cursor going out of the screen bug.
In order to play along with child widgets that use scroll events for anything
else than scrolling, it will be better to do this in the bubble phase, so
the child widget has an opportunity to GDK_EVENT_STOP the event before we
trigger kinetic scrolling.
This of course won't work for widgets that choose to reimplement scroll event
handling themselves, they should be smart at resorting to GtkScrolledWindow's
scroll event handling.
This fixes kinetic scrolling kicking in too pervasively on widgets that eg.
implement zoom on scroll events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753495
By assigning an URI to Other Locations item, we
can programaticaly select it. Fixes a bug in Nautilus,
where the Other Locations item is unselected imediately
after being clicked.
GtkPrintOperation was emitting paginate only if a signal was
connected, this meant that subclassing and overriding the
paginate vfunc lead to the unexpected result that paginate did
not run.
Instead we always emit the signal and use a custom accumulator:
if there is a signal we just run that and avoid the default
handler, otherwise we run the default handler which can be the
one by the subclass or the default handler that just skips
pagination.
Patch by Yevgen Muntyan, fixes#345345
We were not allowing to cancel the operation at all, and at
most the operation was cancelled only when clicked connect again.
Also due to gvfs bug 753735 we actually weren't cancelling
at all, and therefore creating multiple dialogs.
We don't want to leak references if the widget created to represent the
item in the model does not have a floating reference — which is usually
what happens in bindings, as they automatically sink references when
creating new instances.
See commit 6e03e7e8 for the similar change in GtkListBox.
These will be mutually exclusive with touch events, so it won't
be possible to trigger gestures through mixed input and whatnot.
The accounting of touchpad events is slightly different, there
will be a single internal PointData struct, stored in the hashtable
with the NULL event sequence/key (same than pointer events in
this regard), just that the events stored will be GdkEventTouchpad*,
so will hold information about all fingers at once.
But this difference is just internal, the GtkGesture API doesn't
make explicit assumptions about the number of points (the closest
to a per-point query API is gtk_gesture_get_sequences()). All
signals emitted just contain the last changed GdkEventSequence,
and API takes GdkEventSequences, so everything is consistent with
sequence=NULL for touchpad events.
Along the code, we're basically asking for 1) the total count of
touchpoints, and 2) the number of active touchpoints (not denied
nor ended).
Wrap both usecases into a _gtk_gesture_get_n_physical_touchpoints(),
and replace all occurrences.
The gestures that don't want touchpad gesture events are majority,
even those that want such events will only listen to subsets (eg.
pinch, swipe,...).
So it makes sense to ignore touchpad events by default, and let
subclasses opt those in.
This will be used right before handle_event() in order to filter
out events, useful to make the previous "no touchpad events" behavior
the default, and have gesture subclasses include manually the touchpad
events they handle.
For all other events, we run the bubble phase deep in the specific
::motion/button-press/release/touch handlers.
For touchpad events, it doesn't make sense to use GtkWidgetClass
slots if the intended way to deal with these are gestures, so we
run the bubble phase directly from gtk_widget_event_internal().
Do not call _gtk_icon_helper_clear explicitely when the properties
are set, since the corresponding _gtk_icon_helper_set_* method
already calls clear internally.
While at it rename the reset function to make it clear that it
is calling notify for the previous image type and avoid the
notification if the image type is not changing.
We have a testcolorchooser test, with a --edit option. It was
supposed to make the color chooser come up in edit mode, but
it didn't work ever since we dropped the ::response handler.
Fix it by resetting show-editor on unmap, instead of on map.
This way, users can set show-editor before showing the dialog,
and it will take effect.
Since we're dealing with networks, terms like "Eject" or
the eject button are misleading, since we're not actually
ejecting but disconnecting.
Fix that by showing the appropriate icon and tooltip.
We are not showing the URL of network locations
anymore, since they are distracting and not
necessary.
The code, however, forgot to cleanup the URL,
so we are still showing the URL for network
locations.
Fix that by properly cleanup the URL for network
locations.
The .button:link .label selector matches any label "inside" a
link button. And a label inside the context menu counts as inside
for this purpose. This causes the text-decoration property to
leak into the context menu, even though the property is not
inherited. Avoid this by tightening the selector to
.button:link > .label.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753451
When we connect to a server, the default and expected
behavior is going to the default location, which usually
is the home directory or a writable directory.
GtkPlacesSidebar behaves properly, while GtkPlacesView
doesn't.
Fix that by jumping to the default locations instead of
the root location.
Don't use gtk_widget_show_all() on row widgets because that would
unconditionally show all of its children. This might be unwanted in case
the row implementation wants to keep some of its children hidden.
This commit changes it to use show() instead of show_all() and relies on
the row widget to control the visibility of its children itself as
appropriate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753392
GtkFileSystem has a complicated way to handle cancellables.
You keep the cancellable pointer that is returned by
_gtk_file_system_get_info and similar methods so that you can
cancel the operation, but you do not own a reference to it.
The only place where it is ok to unref a cancellable is in
your callback, which gets handed a cancellable that you need
to unref at the end. You are expected to compare it to the
pointer you stashed away to find out if the operation has
already been superseded by a newer call, in which case you
disregard the results.
GtkFileChooserButton was following these rules for most of
the cancellables it keeps around, but it was sometimes unreffing
the cancellables that are stored in the model, which could lead
to refcount confusion and crashes. This commit makes it follow
the rules for that case too, which fixes the crash in the bug
below, and does not show up any leaks in valgrind under light
testing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737804
The recent change to the enum declaration for GtkCssChange actually
relied on compiler-dependent behavior, which also breaks the build on
some non-GCC compilers, such as Visual Studio. As noted in the
G_STATIC_ASSERT line just beneath this declaration, we need to change
this enum declaration to #define's, in order to fix the build in such
situations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752814
It works just as well here as it does in the file chooser, and
this lets us unify the right-click and long-press behavior a bit.
We used to switch directly to the editor on long-press, now we
can show the popover, just as we do on right-click.
This is implicitly done for us in the case of grabs on windows from other
groups, but we must perform this check explicitly for grabs with
owner_events=True on windows from the same group, in that case the window
would handle the events as if there was no grab.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752327
We only load thumbnails when we find that the row is in the visible
range of the treeview. It seems that animated scrolling makes it so
that the bottommost row stays out of the visible range until it is
too late. To work around this, extend the range by one row in each
direction.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753142
Properties like transition-property might change when hovering over
something, even if the property itself does not change. These properties
don't affect drawing, so don't queue redraws for them.
Since a lot of Adwaita sets transition: all, it's easy to end up in a
state where we're making dummy transitions for all of the icons, most of
which we'll never be showing.