These turned out to break existing ui files, concretely
GWeatherLocationEntry was no longer guessed correctly.
Update the testcases to reflect this, and add a testcase
for GWeather.
"Hey I know, let's do an easter egg!"
"What kind of easter egg?"
"We can nest lots of textviews!"
"Sounds cool!"
...
"But how does one see a textview inside a textview?"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, it just looks like black text on a white background."
"You mean it's the same as if we just duplicated the text?"
"Yeah!"
"Hrm, maybe we can put a frame around it."
"Sounds good. I'll stuff the textviews in a GtkFrame."
"What? Why? Let's use a GtkEventBox and override its background"
"Why is that a good idea when we have GtkFrame?"
"Because I said so!"
"Okay."
Overriding the background color for a color swatch is wrong. The color
is not the background, it's the foreground, so it should be painted in
a draw signal handler.
- gtk_style_context_get_background_color()
- gtk_style_context_get_border_color()
Those functions shouldn't be used anymore, because they don't represent
anything from the CSS styling we support. The background color often
isn't used due to background images and there are actually 4 different
border colors (1 for each side) - if there isn't also a border image in
use.
Instead of drawing a gradient in the background color, draw a CSS box.
And change the theme so instead of setting just a background color it
draws a gradient.
The resulting visuals are the same.
Instead of drawing text for selections and links manually, use the
gtk_render_background() and gtk_render_layout() functions.
As a side effect, this allows shadows on selected text and links
and real backgrounds (like gradients or images), too.
I tried asking but nobody knew why it is necessary to set the background
color of the first cell. It seems with CSS styling this is completely
unnecessary.
This fixes shadows that are animated not updating the clip of the widget
they are drawn on. An example of this are the buttons in the CSS shadows
example in gtk-demo.
Reftest included
With buttons at the bottom, things were not looking good here:
no spacing, and a gray background. Add spacing, and put the buttons
on the white background.
It turns out that GtkBuilder will sometimes set a property
twice. Normally, this is harmless, but for GtkRadioButton:group,
it triggered a critical. Remove that.