Moving the inspector into libgtk lets use reuse internals without
having to add public API for everything or inventing awkward private
call conventions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730095
We are keeping references on the widget we are handling as we
are iterating up, but that doesn't protect us against the entire
tree being axed from inside gtk_widget_handle_event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727644
We are getting bug reports from people who are irritated that
dialogs now have 'double headers' under any wm but gnome-shell.
As an example, xfwm4 seems to do ok with csd windows, and
on balance it seems better to have some invisible border issues
than to have double headers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727414
Setting windows undecorated was broken by some of the recent
shadow width changes. We need to ensure that shadow width is
zero for undecorated windows, then things work again.
If the delete event ends up destroying the widget, unsetting
priv->delete_event_handler will happen on invalid memory, so
unset it before the widget is possibly destroyed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726825
We did not set an input shape on the window, so the region outside
the invisible border where we draw the outer edges of the shadow
were still part of the window, as far as clicks and cursors were
concerned. Fix this by setting an input shape that makes all clicks
outside of the resize borders go through to the underlying window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726125
As those are internal children, there's no signal that GtkWindowAccessible
could catch when those are added or removed, so make GtkWindow use the private
GtkContainerAccessible methods to add/remove the child accessible when that
happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725864
As discussed on desktop-devel-list [1], "There should be an intuitive,
consistent, immediate way to jump to the widgets that live in the
header bar." F10 has been suggested for this as it is already used to
active menubars.
F10 will focus the custom titlebar widget if the window has one and it
isn't already focused. If the titlebar widget doesn't exist or is
already focused then F10 focuses the menubar if there is one.
[1] https://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2014-February/msg00176.htmlhttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725141
It turns out popovers are already smart enough to cope with this
situation, so let popovers be internal children so things that rely
on gtk_container_forall(), like DnD, work without modifications.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725727
c287845240 was trying to fix
the memory leak caused by popovers begin destroyed in
gtk_window_destroy before chaining up to gtk_widget_destroy,
which unrealizes the window, and would clean up the popover
windows if the popovers were still around.
Fix this in a better way by moving the popover destruction
after the chaining up, so we unrealize first, and then
destroy the popovers.
Also, make _gtk_window_remove_popover unrealize the popover,
for symmetry with _gtk_window_add_popover.
This should fix
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724921
Dragging windows was not working on widgets in the titlebar
region unless they had the window-dragging style property
set. Fix this by looking at the region for motion notify
events as well as for buton press events.
Try to do a better job of keeping example content
from being too wide. It is often rendered as <pre>
text so the only time we can wrap it is in the source.
It is best to full break lines at all punctuation and
to try to keep the width under 70 chars or so.
Heavy duty can prevent this idle function from being called before
the window is destroyed, so make sure that the source is removed
when the window is finalized.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723771
Since realize does a lot of the heavy lifting of setting up
csd, we have to re-realize the window if we go from no-custom
titlebar to a custom titlebar or vice versa.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722919
When gtk_window_set_titlebar is called, we need to set up
client-side decorations properly, and the easiest way to do
so is to realize the window again. Really, you should call
set_titlebar before the window is realized.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722919
GtkWindow has 4 (!) APIs for setting window icons, and we
have to try them all in the right order to find the right
icon. This commit makes it so, and keeps the icon list
manipulation inside gtkwindow.c by adding a private API
for getting a single icon at the right size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722515
When all popovers are removed on destroy(), if a popover is nested into
(eg. with relative_to within) another popover, the removal of one can
lead to the other being removed while the hashtable is being iterated,
which would lead to undefined behavior in further iterations.
Then, use a GList to store popovers, iterating can be made more resilient
on these situations, and unless on pathological cases there's not going
to be as many of those popovers as to cause performance decreases at the
times those are iterated.
The popovers may return keyboard grabs to previous widgets, so if
called after unsetting the focus, the window may be left with a
dangling GtkWidget that would cause crash at later dispose() calls.
Popovers are strange in the sense that they aren't attached to a
parent directly, they rely on the relative_to widget so the toplevel
is shared, and when they have a parent, it is the toplevel itself,
not relative_to. This also means that there are conditions where the
popover loses it's parent, so they must survive unparenting.
The previous code would be floating the last reference as soon as the
parent is gone, but it was non-obvious who'd own that reference. So
fix this situation by granting the ownership of popovers to their
relative_to widget, an extra reference may be held by the toplevel
when the popover has a parent, but the popover object will be
guaranteed to be alive as long as the parent lives.
This way, memory management of popovers is as hidden from the user
as regular widgets within containers are, users are free to call
gtk_widget_destroy() on a popover, but it'd eventually become
destructed when relative_to is.
This makes it possible to move/resize client-side decorated windows that are
otherwise obscured by a GTK+ grab somewhere else, either a popover within the
window itself or a modal dialog above the window.
Popovers are transient floating widgets that are confined to the
window space. These have their own GdkWindow that is set on top
of the regular window contents, so they can be used for popup menu
alike UIs with custom popup/popdown/grabs behavior.
With proper notifications, plus an accessor method for that state. This
allows client to just listen to notify::is-maximized instead of tracking
window-state-event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698786
This leads to disastruous results, since each menu is itself
in a GtkWindow, so holding down the menu key leads to a neverending
cascade of menus on top of menus.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722106
The window-dragging code had a number of issues: The code was
starting a drag on every button press, never bothering to cancel
them. This leads to the odd hand cursor occurring between the two
clicks to maximize. We relied on GDK's multi-click detection, which
gives us triple-clicks when we really want sequences of double-clicks.
Lastly, we didn't propery restrict double-click handling to the primary
button, so e.g. if you had a window on an empty workspace, double-right
click on the titlebar would maximize it, which is not intended.
This commit solves all three problem by a doing our own double-click
detection, and only starting a drag when the pointer goes out of
'double-click range'. We change the way dragging is implemented for
menubars and toolbars to just letting events bubble up, so they
get the same behaviour as the titlebar. To make this work, we
have to select for pointer motion events in a few more places.
gtkapplication.c has turned into a bit of an #ifdef mess over time, and
many of the current checks are incorrect. As an example, if you build
Gtk for wayland, and exclude the X11 backend, much of the functionality
required by wayland (such as exporting menu models) will be disabled.
Solve that by introducing a backend mechanism to GtkApplication (named
GtkApplicationImpl) similar to the one in GApplication. Add backends
for Wayland, X11 and Quartz, with X11 and Wayland sharing a common
'DBus' superclass.
GtkApplicationImpl
|
/--------------+-------------------\
| |
GtkApplicationImplDBus GtkApplicationImplQuartz
|
/-----------+-----------------\
| |
GtkApplicationImplX11 GtkApplicationImplWayland
GtkApplicationImpl itself is essentially a bunch of vfuncs that serve as
hooks for various things that the platform-specific backends may be
interested in doing (startup, shutdown, managing windows, inhibit, etc.)
With this change, all platform specific code has been removed from
gtkapplication.c and gtkapplicationwindow.c (both of which are now free
of #ifdefs, except for a UNIX-specific use of GDesktopAppInfo in
gtkapplicationwindow.c).
Additionally, because of the movement of the property-setting code out
of GtkApplicationWindow, the _GTK_APPLICATION_ID properties (and
friends) will be set on non-GtkApplicationWindows, such as dialogs.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720550
We don't want the maximum size to be smaller than the minimum size. Not
just because it's wrong but also because when this happens the rest of
GTK gets mighty confused and infloops resizing to min-size and
max-size in turns causing a flickering window. Well, at least if you
run X without a window manager. Or your window manager hasn't finished
starting up.
Private RHEL bug finding this issue:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035409
Both GtkApplicationWindow and GtkHeaderBar listen for changes
of the gtk-shell-shows-app-menu setting, so they need to somehow
coordinate who is going to take action and show a fallback.
We prefer the menu button in the title over the menubar, so
let GtkApplicationWindow opt out if it finds that the header bar
has been configured to show window controls.
And deprecate the X11-specific version of it.
We call this new API _set_shadow_width() and not _set_frame_extents()
because we already have a gdk_window_get_frame_extents() with a
different meaning and different type of value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720374
When setting a custom titlebar that happens to be a GtkHeaderBar,
we connect to notify::title to pick up title changes on the headerbar,
but we forgot to sync the title initially. Fix that.
Win32 does not have alpha channel currently ; fix the check
for this, so trying to enable CSDs on this platform will
not "succeed" and crash the app anymore.
Partially fixes gtk3-widget-factory.