It won't stand true anymore that the GdkEventType argument is the
first field of the GdkEvent* structs. All callers have been updated
to use event->any.type instead.
Instead of just passing the GdkContentFormats, we are now passing the
GdkContentProvider to gdk_drag_begin().
This means that GDK itself can now query the data from the provider
directly instead of having to send selection events.
Use this to provide the private API gdk_drag_context_write() that allows
backends to pass an output stream that this data will be written to.
Implement this as the mechanism for providing drag data on Wayland.
And to make this all work, implement a content provider named
GtkDragContent that is implemented by reverting to the old DND
drag-data-get machinery inside GTK, so for widgets everything works just
like before.
Instead, pass the actions as part of gdk_drag_begin() and insist DND is
always managed.
A new side effect is that gdk_drag_begin() can now return %NULL.
This is a trivial commit that does a big change: We now ignore event masks.
Further commits will clean up code, but if bisection ends up here, you
know it's because code is getting delivered events that it weren't getting
before.
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.
Some clients (e.g. gnome-online-accounts) quickly unmap and map
a window. With some backends the backend surface will be replaced
causing the application to crash because the GL context is still
using the old surface. Clearing the GL context when a window is
withdrawn fixes this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789141
This patch makes that work using 1 of 2 options:
1. Add all missing enums to the switch statement
or
2. Cast the switch argument to a uint to avoid having to do that (mostly
for GdkEventType).
I even found a bug while doing that: clearing a GtkImage with a surface
did not notify thae surface property.
The reason for enabling this flag even though it is tedious at times is
that it is very useful when adding values to an enum, because it makes
GTK immediately warn about all the switch statements where this enum is
relevant.
And I expect changes to enums to be frequent during the GTK4 development
cycle.
One used to point to the toplevel and the other to the client-side window
that the pointer pointed to. The latter was made to be like the former in
most places, so put those together, and fix the remaining cases where the
variable might not end up with a toplevel/native window.
This is not necessary now that there's no client-side windows to track.
The only removed piece that could make sense is emission of grab broken
events, but it's already an stretch since the semantics of those with
multi-touchpoint is unclear.
Anyhow, This should be fixed at the GTK level, while we let GDK deal with
seat/device level grabs.