Instead of having just one function that has the gtype and mime type as
out arguments, have 3 functions: 1 that finds any match, 1 that finds a
GType match and one for a mime type match.
This makes the API way more convenient to use.
This requires implementing a "pipe" so we can have 2 streams running:
contentprovider => serializer => outputstream
inputstream => deserializer => reader
And the pipe shoves the data from the outputstream into the inputstream.
GdkContentProvider is the object that represents local data in the
clipboard.
This patch only introduces the object and adds the clipboard properties,
it does not yet provide a way for the actual implementations to access
it.
The only access that is implemented is the local shortcut GValue access.
This allows us not just to pass any mime type to the read function, but
it also makes it possible to pass multiple mime types and the clipboard
can then try them in order until it finds a supported one.
This is so far not implemented though.
It's unused. Plain text is not using that framework, neither is
in-process same-display transmission.
So it was only useful for sharing text with custom tags across
applications, and nobody is doing that.
This is not used by anything yet, but add it now, so people looking at
this new code can make sense of it.
Plus, the documentation mentions it, so better have the docs make sense.
It will be used once we add support for conversions to GDK and allow
doing cipboard/dnd by GValue.
Make sure the API reflects the idea that GdkContentFormats is a set
containing mime types. In particular, treat the object itself as a
plural - it's named content format`S' after all - and therefor use
the correct verb form.
Also make GdkContentFormats keep an array instead of a list, now that
it's immutable.
Instead of allowing people to pass a uint user-data, insist on them
comparing mime types.
The user data was a uint instead of a pointer anyway, so uniqueness
could not be guaranteed and it caused more issues than it was worth.
And that's ignoring the fact that it basically wasn't used.
Instead, add a function gtk_image_set_icon_size() for the cases where
overriding the icon size is necessary.
Treat icon sizes the same way as pixel sizes, too. So gtk_image_clear()
no longer unsets the icon size.
Instead of returning the icon size with them, make
gtk_image_get_icon_name() and gtk_image_get_gicon() only return the icon
itself.
As a benefit, we can turn them into regular getters that return values
instead of requiring out parameters.
Instead, provide gtk_image_get_icon_size() to query the icon size.
Change constructors to reflect that.
While doing so, also add a fallback argument to the cursor constructors,
so it is now possible to create cursors with fallback.
And have a priv->display instead of a priv->screen.
Includes turning gtk_menu_set_screen() into gtk_menu_set_display(),
because that function just forwards to its window.
This drops the pixbuf property and the pixbuf getters. We keep
gtk_image_new/set_from_pixbuf, but these are small helpers that
immediately convert to a surface, and there is no way to later get
back the pixbuf you passed in.
The from file/resource codepaths are also changed to load a surface
instead of a pixbuf.
Rename the surface getter to peek, following other render
node getters, and make the surface-based constructor private,
since it is not something we want to encourage.
Update all callers.
GtkMenu’s own keynav code, which actually bothers to account for the
layout of items, only happens if columns > 1. So, adding items to 1
column using a reverse loop meant they were placed in the Menu’s list of
children in that order, and because we only have 1 column, Menu passes
keynav up to MenuShell, which doesn’t adjust for the items’ positions.
‘Fix’ that here by adding items in the same order they’ll have when laid
out in the Menu, so keynav does what you’d expect, not the opposite. For
that, it’s simpler just to use gtk_container_add().
Let’s presume users are using add(), attach() with a non-inverted loop,
or attach() with arguments that create 2+ columns and so GtkMenu keynav.
Ditch two items that were white and so weren’t visible on our standard
theme anyway, and use the new space to test extra grid-mode properties.
Note that if we do this then, as before, we set the ListStore on the
ComboBox before appending to it, that produced runtime warnings like:
Gtk-CRITICAL **: gtk_menu_attach: assertion 'left_attach < right_attach' failed
I didn’t look into that yet, but it may indicate that attaching items
vs. recognising their spans don’t occur in the correct order. For the
purposes of testing this, I just create the CB after filling its model.
The ComboBoxes were initially empty, rather than reflecting the initial
values of the properties. The CheckButtons were only correct by chance.
Fix this by setting the initial values on the widgets and binding them
to the properties using SYNC_CREATE, so the two are always synced up.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786209
Just to test tooltips in all cases; what was already here
should have been sufficient, but this doesn't hurt.
While here, also add some instructive placeholder text.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780938
Replace uses of VLAs (variable-length arrays) using g_newa(), since
Visual Studio builds will unlikely ever support VLAs (which became optional
in C11).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Since setting a clip is mandatory for almost all widgets, we can as well
change the size-allocate signature to include a out_clip parameter, just
like GtkCssGadget did. And since we now always propagate baselines, we
might as well pass that one on to size-allocate.
This way we can also make sure to transform the clip returned from
size-allocate to parent-coordinates, i.e. the same coordinate space
priv->allocation is in.
We now rely on toplevels receiving and forwarding all the events
the windowing should be able to handle. Event masks are no longer a
way to determine whether an event is deliverable ot a widget.
Events will always be delivered in the three captured/target/bubbled
phases, widgets can now just attach GtkEventControllers and let those
handle the events.
We're mixing a lot of styles in the Meson build files. This is an
attempt at making everything slightly more consistent in terms of
whitespace and indentation.
gdk and gsk are no longer separate libs but part of gtk now, so any
Gtk+ user should just link to gtk, there's no need to additionally
link against all those static helper libs that go into the gtk lib.
This means we need to specifically add confinc to include_directories
in more places to make sure the right config.h (i.e. ours) gets
included and not a subproject's like graphene's config.h.
Not dragging in static libs also fixes the issue of all executables
having to be relinked for any and all changes. With this change
it's super-fast now and can be skipped for most changes that don't
touch the external ABI.
The center widget in GtkBox was only introduced to use it in
GtkActionBar. However, the implementation there is much more complex
than it needs to be, so move the center widget into GtkActionBar instead
and later remove it from GtkBox.
The :label-widget is drawn before the child, so put the controls that
set the alignment of the :label-widget before those that pad the child.
We set (horizontal|vertical) padding, not "[xy]thickness". Also change
to "label [xy]align" & use grid spacing, not spaces at end of Labels.
This was ruined, with only 1 of the 8 subwindows rendering any content.
This commit fixes the responsible errors in the embedded GtkBuilder UIs:
• Fix broken replace by commit fb3d9022ad
of HBox with a Box having a broken orientation <property>
• Replace VBox and [HV]Paned with GtkOrientable successors (properly!)
• Remove use of Button:use_action_appearance, as this no longer exists
This commit also adds error reporting, in case other errors creep into
the GtkBuilder UI definitions, plus cleanup for the Builders and Windows
Since GtkTreeMenu became a private class only used by GtkComboBox, all
this test actually did was to show a ComboBox constructed with a custom
CellArea. Now that the latter is no longer possible, the test just shows
a handful of settings that do nothing. Just test GtkComboBox directly.
Little tool that creates a bunch of test files to throw add the
rendernode binary.
They should really be part of a testsuite, but we have none, so OI just
put them here.
Only keep the version that calls gsk_render_node_draw() if people
specify the --fallback option.
The actual renderer selection works just as for regular GTK. The easiest
way to influence it is setting the GSK_RENDERER environment variable.
GtkCellView has a gadget, so peopl can do all their shenanigans with
CSS.
And the original use case (overriding the background so that the
cellview's GdkWindow shares the background color of the combobox) is
outdated since we have transparent backgrounds.
The tests read a nonexisting colorprofile, try to convert stuff read
from the window into it, do things that gdk-pixbuf should test and
then aren't even integrated into the testuite.
Sheesh.
Switch code to use gdk_display_is_composited() instead.
The new code also doesn't use a vfunc to query the property but rather
requires the backend to call set_composited()/set_rgba() to change the
value.
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
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 commit changes the way GskRenderer and GskRenderNode interact and
are meant to be used.
GskRenderNode should represent a transient tree of rendering nodes,
which are submitted to the GskRenderer at render time; this allows the
renderer to take ownership of the render tree. Once the toolkit and
application code have finished assembling it, the render tree ownership
is transferred to the renderer.
GSK is conceptually split into two scene graphs:
* a simple rendering tree of operations
* a complex set of logical layers
The latter is built on the former, and adds convenience and high level
API for application developers.
The lower layer, though, is what gets transformed into the rendering
pipeline, as it's simple and thus can be transformed into appropriate
rendering commands with minimal state changes.
The lower layer is also suitable for reuse from more complex higher
layers, like the CSS machinery in GTK, without necessarily port those
layers to the GSK high level API.
This lower layer is based on GskRenderNode instances, which represent
the tree of rendering operations; and a GskRenderer instance, which
takes the render nodes and submits them (after potentially reordering
and transforming them to a more appropriate representation) to the
underlying graphic system.
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.
I added a new test function, but didn't actually use it.
No wonder I couldn't reproduce the lifecycle issues with
drag widgets that firefox is experiencing.
Eventually, we should probably remove the examples that rely
on geometry support, since they probably don't work correctly
anymore. For now, just disable the warnings.
Quite a few applications use GTK_WINDOW_POPUP to create various
temporary windows and place then on screen. That works fine on X11 but
on Wayland there is no global coordinate system for regular surfaces.
If the application is using a gdk temp window and set a parent with
gtk_window_transient_for(), the gdk wayland backend has all it needs to
create a subsurface that can be placed at will by the application.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759738
Instead of the weird PathElt struct, generate a quick-n-dirty parser
that parses CSS selectors into GtkWidgetPath elements.
Based on a patch by Benjamin Otte.
On Wayland, for tooltips to work as expected, the type hint must be set
to tooltips, otherwise the popup window won't be translated as a
subsurface.
Fix the test do work as expected under Wayland.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759018
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.
A GtkWindow's allocation includes the titlebar, borders, and shadows; we
only want to draw our custom alpha content over the child allocation of
the GtkWindow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756886
This example populates a flow box with buttons, and makes the
flow box children unfocusable, with the intention that the focus
moves directly between the buttons. Currently, keynav does not
work at all in this case.
We need to check on realize if we have access to a GL context, before
calling GL functions. We use gtk_gl_area_get_error() for that.
We also need to tear down the resources during unrealization, instead
of leaking them.
Places sidebar shows XDG directories, mounted and unmounted devices,
connected networks, bookmarks and actions like 'Connect to server'
and 'Insert location', which causes the sidebar to grow very quickly
and look cluttered. Because of that, new mockups for the sidebar try
to simplify it.
To make the sidebar simpler, the new mockups propose that it should
only handle connected networks and removable devices such as flash
drives and USB devices, and delegates other devices for external
widgets through the 'Other Locations' item.
To handle fixed devices and manage network connections, add a new
widget named GtkPlacesView, based on Nautilus mockups to keep
consistency between GNOME file management tools - in this case,
between Nautilus and the bundled Gtk's file chooser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752034
The menu tracker does a better job of this than we can, so move over to
using it instead.
This fixes issues with './testgmenu --import' not properly displaying
the language submenu.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752016
In this case we have a bunch of interactive main children
of the overlay, and then a centered overlay that contains both
non-interactive (labels) and interactive (entry) widgets.
This shows off a problem where the non-interactive parts (the labels)
steals input from the overlay main children (breaks button click and
hover effects).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750568https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90917
Use cursor names instead of font cursors, so we can also show
cursors that are not represented in the X cursor font and thus
don't have a value in the GdkCursorType enumeration.
There is no need to e.g. blur in the x-direction for the top part
of a box shadow. Also, there is no need to extend the mask in the
non-blurred direction.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746468
This is somewhat tricky to work out, so put some example
code here for future reference. The tricky part is that
GtkAccelLabel tries to be smart about hiding the accel
if there's not enough space, so we have to make sure to
pack the label with expand=TRUE and set align=GTK_ALIGN_FILL,
or things won't work.
Make sure that variables are declared at the top of the block.
Break up one of the sincos() calls into individual calls to sin() and cos()
so that we do not have to complicate the initialization of the following
GLfloat array.
Instead of using glxgears, which still uses OpenGL 2.1 and the fixed
pipeline, we use a slightly modified es2gears, OpenGL 3.2, and the
programmable pipeline.
Since we dropped the legacy OpenGL compatibility profile, we need to use
recent OpenGL APi and concepts. This also means that the example code
gets a tad more complicated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
This will be used to just detect when an edge of the scrollable area is
reached - as opposed to the edge-overshot signal that is emitted when
the user scrolls past the edge.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742848
The code here was always a bit buggy: We removed the tab from
the notebook in a ::drag-data-received handler. But with
GTK_DEST_DEFAULT_DROP, that signal is emitted before we inform
the source side that the drag is finished. With its improved drag
handling, GtkNotebook now interprets this as a 'spontaneous'
removal of the tab being dragged, and cancels the drag, leading
to an unwanted cancel animation.
The easiest fix is to just defer the tab removal to an idle.