A recent commit for emoji also updated seemingly unrelated parts of the
generated CSS files, presumably due to other things that changed in
master. The CSS files should be kept in sync with their SASS sources.
Another selector forces round corners for headerbars in a stack, and it
has higher priority than the selector covering the non-stack case from
commit 712a8adbd9. Totem’s MainToolbar
happens to be in a stack, and we should maintain symmetry here anyway.
So, as window classes .maximized and .tiled are excluded from this other
selector, the newly handled .fullscreen case must be excluded here also.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770513
Totem uses a fullscreen window with a headerbar at the top, and without
this change, that headerbar has rounded corners, which look different
from a maximised window and let video content show through beneath.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770513
The :last-child selector supposed to reset the border was
overridden by the :hover selector. This is fixed by moving the
:last-child selector after the overriding one.
Thanks to Sebastian Keller for spotting.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779078.
Fix the sizing and spacing, blue tags for the bright variant,
similar to what gnome-documents was shipping, and inverted gray
tags for the dark variant, not vanishing on hover.
Changing code to agree with docs, which said frame.flat, was backwards.
Mea culpa. Theme authors ran with the actual behaviour, not the docs. As
stability is more important, let’s go back to frame > border.flat, and
fix the docs to reflect what the code does and how to set .flat in code.
N.B. This retains the change in HighContrast of "frame border" to "frame
> border". Not using the direct child selector contradicted Adwaita &
could conceivably have unwanted results on nested nodes named border.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778905
The docs say that this class should be put on the frame node, and that’s
all we can do from C code, but the CSS was selecting on the border node.
The result was that adding .flat did not disable the border as expected.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778905
the darker bottom border used on buttons looks bad on circular ones
so now a gradient clipped on the border-box and a transparent
border is used in that partcular case.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771205 for details.
$button_fill contains the background-image property value of
buttons, having it readable outside the drawing mixin allows, for
example, stacking background images in an easier way.