A vertical action area causes the info bar to be imposingly large.
This defeats the whole point of the info bar which is to be
unobtrusive. Not to mention it is impossible to make it look
and feel good.
When the icon-release signal is emitted on a GtkSearchEntry, the
contents is now cleared only if it's for the secondary icon. The primary
icon can be used for another purpose.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704164
This feature offers a number of benefits related to providing
feedback to the user when the password is masked. Some experts have
argued that password masking is harmful. I tend to agree with this
setting providing a better and more moderate solution. Some agree:
https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2009/07/the_pros_and_co.html
In order to further lessen the impact I've only enabled the feature
on the primary display since the likelyhood of a non-primary display
being visible by others is higher.
Fixed the documentation to clarify that gtk_recent_info_get_visited
and gtk_recent_info_get_modified are actually about the recent info
meta-data rather than the resource itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703827
In add_preedit_attrs, don't free foreground/background colors already
set in the underlying text attributes (style). They will be free'd by
release_style.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703533
Other code assumes that the widget has a window if it is realized.
Since we might trigger such code indirectly from gtk_window_realize,
don't mark the window as realized before we've registered its window.
Since we now do all drawing propagation on the cairo_t (rather than
exposing multiple independent times on the GdkWindows) we no longer
need the opacity 0.999 hack.
We render the source into a cairo_surface_t so that we can render it
with cairo directly, rather than having to convert it from a pixbuf
every time. We also specify the target window when creating the cairo
surface so that rendering can be faster.
Using cairo surfaces also allows us to seamlessly support window scales.
We also add a GTK_IMAGE_SURFACE source type.
Support scales when falling back to loading icons from the
icon theme.
In order to actually render scaled icons we add
gtk_icon_set_render_icon_surface which renders to a cairo_surface_t
which includes whatever scaling you need for scaled icons.
This draws an icon from a cairo_surface. We want to use this more rather
than render_icon as this means we can skip the pixbuf to surface
conversion (including allocation and alpha premultiplication) at
render time, plus we can use create_similar_image which may allow
faster rendering.