The constant size request mode defines a request mode where
height-for-width geometry is unneeded, thus optimizing GTK+
by reducing the overall amount of requests that need to be
performed and cached while resizing an interface.
This function is a more convenient variant than
gtk_widget_set_device_events(), as it will
1) perform changes down a widget hierarchy, to
all windows.
1) use the same event mask than gdk_window_get_events()
The old functions to get core pointer and devices list are gone as
well. This slice is entirely replaced internally by multidevice
handling and may just go.
This allows us to add a check before executing
->get_preferred_height_for_width() to ensure we always
request for at least the minimum required size (and lets
us remove the warning in gtkcontainer.c telling implementors
to do this check manually from thier container implementations).
gtk_widget_override_*() deprecates gtk_widget_modify_*(). There are
only functions to modify fg/bg/font/symbolic color, If anything more
fancy/complex is needed. There is the possibility of adding a
GtkStyleProvider yourself.
gtk_widget_(set|unset|get)_state_flags() has been added, using GtkStateFlags
to represent the widget state. GtkStateType API has been implemented on top
of the new one.
There will be one GtkStyleContext per widget, at the moment its
lifetime is tied to the widget's, but it could be narrowed down
to GTK_WIDGET_REALIZED.
alignment/margin vfuncs adjust_size_request/allocation
Now get_height_for_width() will internally update the for_width
before passing it to the real height_for_width() vfunc, allowing
margins and extra space for alignments to be stripped, thus requesting
sufficient height for greater than natural widths (and also accounting
for margins properly). Test case adjusted in testadjustsize to ensure
proper behavior.
The GtkScrollable interface provides "hadjustment" and "vadjustment"
properties that are used by GtkScrolledWindow. It replaces
the ::set_scroll_adjustment signal. The scrollable interface
also has ::min-display-width/height properties that can be
used to control the minimally visible part inside a scrolled window.
- add slots for damage-event, move-focus and keynav-failed
- reorder signals a bit so related stuff is grouped together
- some indentation fixes in the GtkWidgetClass
- remove the move-focus compat hack from GtkTextView
- turn the move-focus compat hack in GtkWindow into properly
implementing GtkWidget::move-focus()
GtkWidget now has flags for horizontal and vertical expand, and
a compute_expand() method. compute_expand() is used by containers
to set a default expand flag. (If a widget has expand set explicitly,
it always overrides the results of compute_expand.)
GtkContainer has a default implementation of compute_expand which
simply walks over all child widgets and sets expand=TRUE
if any child is expanding.
The overall effect is that you only have to set expand on
leaf nodes in the widget tree, while previously you had to
set expand all the way up the tree as you packed every
container. Also, now containers need not have their own child
properties for expand.
For old containers which do have "expand" child properties,
they should override compute_expand and include the child
properties in whether the container is expand=TRUE.
Also, the old container should use
"child_prop_expand || gtk_widget_compute_expand()" everywhere
it previously used simply "child_prop_expand"
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=628902
It turns out that the previous handling of just providing a way to set
visuals just on toplevels was not sufficient. In particular it
complicated the various implementations of the tray icon specification.
This patch reintroduces gtk_widget_set_visual() which behaves very
similar to GTK2's gtk_widget_set_colormap().
A future commit will remove the gtk_window_set_visual() function.
The function reverses the transform that GTK does before emitting a draw
event. So we can use it in "old" widgets to revert the coordinate system
properly.
It doesn't make sense to keep them separate as GtkSizeRequest requires a
GtkWidget and GtkWidget implements GtkSizeRequest, so you can never have
one without the other.
It also makes the code a lot easier because no casts are required when
calling functions.
Also, the names would translate to gtk_widget_get_width() and people
agreed that this would be a too generic name, so a "preferred" was added
to the names.
So this patch moves the functions:
gtk_size_request_get_request_mode() => gtk_widget_get_request_mode()
gtk_size_request_get_width() => gtk_widget_get_preferred_width()
gtk_size_request_get_height() => gtk_widget_get_preferred_height()
gtk_size_request_get_size() => gtk_widget_get_preferred_size()
gtk_size_request_get_width_for_height() =>
gtk_widget_get_preferred_width_for_height()
gtk_size_request_get_height_for_width() =>
gtk_widget_get_preferred_height_for_width()
... and moves the corresponding vfuncs to the GtkWidgetClass.
The patch also renames the implementations of the vfuncs in widgets to
include the word "preferrred".
Previously, we tried to move the context's origin to the widget's top
left location, no matter what window the paint was happening on. Now we
only do that for child windows of the widget's window and leave the
context untouched for windows that the widget has created outside its
own hierarchy. In those casses, we also don't clip the context to
the widget's allocation.
Includes fixes to GtkHandlebox for this effect and fixes all known
issues with it.
These semantics assume that gtk_widget_draw() should only draw the parts
of a widget that are inside child windows and not draw stuff that is
located in completely different GdkWindows. In the handlebox case, it
means that it should only draw the handle when it is attached, but not
when it isn't. We'll likely need a special draw function for the
detached handlebox if we want to draw it.
I've seen (and written) quite some widgets (and theme engines) that use
cairo_paint() to draw the background. So avoiding overdraw makes sense.
Also move all that setup into a _gtk_widget_draw_internal() function
that will be used by all functions that can be used by other functions
that draw widgets.
For now, the draw signal is emitted by default from the expose event, so
widgets can chose to either implement the expose event or the draw
function.
This is for the transitional period from expose event to draw signal.
Note that for now subclasses can only implement the draw function when
none of their parents implemented the expose event.
The functions are gtk_widget_get_allocated_width() and
gtk_widget_get_allocated_height().
They are currently identical to using width/height of
gtk_widget_get_allocation(), but are introduced for ease of use (no need
to use a custom struct) and to free people from having to think about
allocation.x and allocation.y (which is where the origin of the cairo
context in GtkWidget::draw is located).
This removes:
gtk_widget_set_default_colormap()
gtk_widget_get_default_colormap()
gtk_widget_get_default_visual()
Colormaps are gone, and the default visual is the system visual of the
default screen.