Kinetic scrolling is only done on touch devices, since it is
sort of meaningless on pointer devices, besides it implies
a different input event handling on child widgets that is
unnecessary there.
If the scrolling doesn't start after a long press, the scrolling is
cancelled and events are handled by child widgets normally.
When clicked again close to the previous button press location
(assuming it had ~0 movement), the scrolled window will allow
the child to handle the events immediately.
This is so the user doesn't have to wait to the press-and-hold
timeout in order to operate on the scrolledwindow child.
The innermost scrolled window always gets to capture the events, all
scrolled windows above it just let the event go through. Ideally
reaching a limit on the innermost scrolled window would propagate
the dragging up the hierarchy in order to keep following the touch
coords, although that'd involve rather evil hacks just to cater
for broken UIs.
This seems a bit "too powerful" and unlikely to be used by most
applications. Remove it from now, until someone comes up with a strong
desire for it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670485
This commit adds API that allows to add new named sections
to the Credits part of GtkAboutDialog, in addition to the
hardcoded sections for authors, documenters, artists and
translators.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=484693
gtk_window_get/set_attached_to() is a new API that allows for windows to
be attached to a GtkWidget.
The attachment is a logical binding between the toplevel window and the
widget that generated it; this kind of information is currently used to
propagate style information from the widget to the window, but is also
useful e.g. for accessibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666103
We don't expose ::quit-requested as API anymore. Instead, we expect
users to register inhibitors when needed. Without quit-requested,
there is no need for ::quit-cancelled and gtk_application_quit_response
anymore.
We still emit ::quit when the application is about to quit.
This lets applications block logout and similar actions ahead
of time. Currently only implemented for D-Bus, but Windows has
very similar API since Vista.
This is fairly basic, allowing applications to learn when
the session manager is about to end the session, and possibly
block this. The only implementation at this point is using the
org.gnome.SessionManager D-Bus interface of gnome-session. It should
be straightforward to port the EggSMClient implementations for
Windows and OS X.
If the scale has an origin (it will have one by default), GtkRange will
render the two sides before/after the current value with different style
classes, making it possible for themes to use different colors and
properties for the two areas.
This was possible in GTK 2 with style details, but got lost during the
road to 3.0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=665140
The new function provides an API that takes the PangoLayout and index
as input params, this way it handles strong and weak cursors internally
factoring out all code duplicated in the widgets that need to render
cursors.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=640317
Which handle accelerators with keycodes as well as keyvals,
so we can use it in applications that use GtkCellRendererAccel's
"Other" mode of operations (namely gnome-control-center and
gnome-settings-daemon).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=662755
GtkFontButton already has a property named "font-name" which may
conflict / be an ABI break when moving GtkFontButton to implement
GtkFontChooser. Also, this is more in line with how other parts in
gtk (e.g. GtkCellRendererText) call a font string property.
Make the GtkFontChooser API similar to the Gtk{File,Recent,App}Chooser
APIs by introducing GtkFontChooser as an interface, that has a default
implementation in GtkFontChooserWidget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657627
This struct keeps track of an area of text in a CSS file and uses it
when specifying information. Also, the cssprovider keeps track of
sections when parsing a file.
This commit introduces a new setting, gtk-visible-focus, backed
by the Gtk/VisibleFocus X setting. Its three values control how
focus rectangles are displayed.
'always' is equivalent to the traditional GTK+ behaviour of always
rendering focus rectangles.
'never' does what it says, and is intended for keyboardless
situations, e.g. tablets.
'automatic' hides focus rectangles initially, until the user
interacts with the keyboard, at which point focus rectangles
become visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649567