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.
This change is made for consistency, it doesn't make sense to expose
one-way propagation, as it can only break expectations from GTK+. This
function might be made entirely private in the future, but it still
makes sense to do this in one go for our internal usecases.
As we now refrain from sending the crossing events if there's an
implicit grab, those events must be sent on button release when
the implicit grab is broken.
Check the grab widget (both explicit and implicit) and check for a cursor
from the target widget up to this grab widget. If the target widget is
outside the grab widget, only the grab wigdet's cursor will be checked.
This also means that we have to ensure the cursor is updated on button
releases, as an implicit grab being deactivated must trigger a cursor
lookup from the target widget.
Unlike GTK+ grabs which are global to all/one device, the implicit grab
is per focus, which means each may have implicit grabs on different or
the same widget.
Implement target finding per-pointer/touchpoint through GtkPointerFocus and
_gtk_toplevel_pick(). Focus changes are handled through the emission of
crossing events between the old target and the new one.
gtk_init() removed its support for supporting arguments, so we ought to do
likewise for Windows, which actually defines items that call gtk_init()
the old way (and also get rid of argument support in those functions,
since the direction is to not support them).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
We want to simplify our initialization code and remove all commandline
argument handling from it. The first stop for this is to reduce the
number of gtk_init variants we have.
This causes the snapshotting algorithm to dump all widget nodes into
their own container node. We then name that group accordingly (ie
"GtkSwitch<0xdeadbeef>") so you can easily see which node belongs where.
The feature is toggleable in the inspector's visual tab.
There's a few problems with it, becuse GtkSnapshot optimized container
nodes away if they are not needed, so we are losing some widgets...
Includes the ability to turn on updates in the inspector. Animations are
now run via a tick function which allows us to neatly overlay a
semi-transparent red rectangle and fade it out over time.
It also probably enables way more, but somebody with more UI neatness
than me needs to figure out what it eanbles first...
The update tracking code was ugly and using deprecated drawing APIs. It
was also in the wrong place.
So instead of trying to keep it working, I'll remove it. We need to find
a better way to put it and make it work there.