This adds the GtkCssAnimation class and the code needed to hook it into
GtkStyleContext. It takes the values out of the CSS "animation"
properties and does animations. See
http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-animations/
for details.
Note that the code for starting and stopping animations with widget
visibility doesn't work yet.
This is a helper object to allow text widgets to implement
text selection on touch devices. It allows for both cursor
placement and text selection, displaying draggable handles
on/around the cursor and selection bound positions.
Currently, this is private to GTK+, and only available to
GtkEntry and GtkTextView.
When compiling gtk on Win32 then the file gtkdbusgenerated.c also needs to be
compiled and linked into the gtk library as it's needed for GtkMountOperation
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682825
The current process of implementing GActionObserver is annoying and the
GSimpleActionObserver interface leaves a lot to be desired. Introduce a
new class, GtkActionHelper that gives you pretty much everything you'd
want to do as an implementor of GtkActionable.
The GtkActionHelper also features an "application" mode that is not
associated with a particular GtkWidget but rather with whatever widget
happens to be the active window of the given GtkApplication at a
particular point in time. This will be useful for the Mac OS menubar.
This program launches an application specified by its desktop name
optinally taking list of URIs which are passed as arguments.
Uses GdkAppLaunchContext to get proper startup notification and
display handling for graphical apps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679342
Make GMountOperation look for an owner of org.Gtk.MountOperationHandler
if possible, and use it instead of the GTK-based dialogs.
This allows applications to use the implementation offered by the
desktop shell, if available, through a DBus private interface:
org.Gtk.MountOperationHandler.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674963
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
As used in Totem and gnome-contacts. The widget
takes either a GtkMenu or a GMenuModel to construct
its menu, and can be given a parent widget to use to
position the drop-down (as used in GtkMenuToolButton).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668013
Makes name consistent with other quartz-only modules and makes it clear that this works with the GMenuModel system rather than the older GtkMenu system.
This is a GtkCssComputedValues subclass. So it's essentially a store for
computed CSS values. But it can be animated by advancing it to a certain
timestamp.
A StyleAnimation is an immutable object used to track the state of CSS
values. I'd have liked to make it fully immutable - ie not have the
timestamp in there - but couldn't find a place to sanely store the
timestamp.
This is an abstract base class. Implementations for this will be added
later (for both CSS3 transitions and animations, potentially for
animated images).
Actually aplying the information in this object will be done by a
different object commtted later.
... and Make this new value be a real GValue, as we don't need to save
performance for these anymore (it's just used for custom properties).
And I'd rather have code work for all values then be optimized for no
reason.
Deprecate public API where appropriate and make it no-ops.
Remove all calls to it.
Get rid of the 'transition' css property.
For now, this means spinners don't animate anymore.
Note: custom CSS properties still use the default GtkCssValue and always
will.
So there is a difference in css values used between those, even though
they both carry a GdkRGBA payload.
This way, we don't have to do magic inside GtkStyleContext, but have a
real API.
As a cute bonus, this object implements GtkStyleProvider itself. So we
can just pretend there's only one provider.