We are not emitting these events anymore, so lets remove them
from the api. The GdkSettingAction enum is moved to xsettings-client.c
where its only use remains.
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.
Those should be interpreted by widget-local gestures, not guessed at a
high level with no notions of the specific context. Users will want
GtkGestureMultiPress to replace these events.
As event->any.window is the toplevel, this is not useful anymore to
determine the window/widget that is the target for this event. Add
helper functions to attach user data to GdkEvents so the target
widget can be stored on the gtk/ side.
These calls should be made private with the rest of GdkEvent related
API.
GDK_PAD_BUTTON*,RING and STRIP will be emitted respectively when
pad buttons, rings or strips are interacted with. Each of those
pad components belong to a group (a pad can contain several of
those), which may be in a given mode. All this information is
contained in the event.
GDK_PAD_GROUP_MODE is emitted when a group in the pad switches
mode, which will generally result in a different set of actions
being triggered from the same buttons/rings/strips in the group.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770026
Windows save in hardware_keycode an information which is not so low
level and some application require the hardware scancode.
As Windows provides this information save it in GdkEventPrivate
and provide a function to get this information.
For no Windows system the function return the hardware_keycode instead.
Signed-off-by: Frediano Ziglio <fziglio@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765259
The way gdk_drag_status() may be called multiple times during the
processing of drag and drop events throughout the widget hierarchy
brings some superfluous messaging going in, esp. when it's the last
request the one we want to honor, yet we emit messaging requests on
all.
This is barely appreciable in the X11 backend, but due to the design
of the wayland protocol, quick series of changes like this it have
some self-amplificating consequences which may end up flooding the
connection.
We can delegate this to a late "commit" call, performed within GDK
event management. This way gdk_drag_status() calls may be cached
and only result in windowing messaging once per ::drag-motion or
::drag-data-received event. Emitting the final status will also
avoid spurious action changes on the compositor and the other peer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763298
When compressing window state events, we didn't free the discarded
event after removing it from the queue, causing us to leak it. This
commit makes sure to free the discarded event after unqueuing it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762468
If there are already a window state event for a given window queued
when the window state is changed, drop that event and queue a new event
with a changed_mask based on the state before last event that was queue
without compression.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762468
Remember the last source device we're generating multiple clicks for,
just so we can bail out if the device changed. That will just reset
the counting.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723659
And use it to handle kinetic scrolling in the GtkScrolledWindow.
However, dropping the delta check causes the X11-based kinetic
scroll to break since we don't have the stop event here. Correct handling of
xf86-input-libinput-based scroll events is still being discussed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756729
There's places where we don't set a seat yet, plus the places
outside GTK+ where events are created, we should warn and fall
back to the master device seat with these.
The extra reference will be held from GdkEventPrivate data, so there's
a common place to all events. Without this, events queued after devices/
capabilities disappear (eg. on TTY switch) might hold invalid pointers.
Windowing level operations on those devices (queries, grabs...) are
expected to fail at that time, but we should hold meaningful data for
the regular event handling paths.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753185