va_copy() is not universally available, and we already have a G_VA_COPY
macro that emulates the behaviour of va_copy() when it's not available, or
simply calls va_copy() if it's there
This patch adds a capture phase to GTK+'s event propagation
model. Events are first propagated from the toplevel (or the
grab widget, if a grab is in place) down to the target widget
and then back up. The second phase is using the existing
::event signal, the new capture phase is using a private
API instead of a public signal for now.
This mechanism can be used in many places where we currently
have to prevent child widgets from getting events by putting
an input-only window over them. It will also be used to implement
kinetic scrolling in subsequent patches.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641836
We automatically request more motion events in behalf of
the original widget if it listens to motion hints. So
the capturing widget doesn't need to handle such
implementation details.
We are not making event capture part of the public API for 3.4,
which is why there is no ::captured-event signal.
We don't want to fallback for 'random' touch sequences, since
that could lead to all kinds of pairedness and other violations.
Since the X server already tells us what touch events it would
have used for emulating pointer events, we just use that information
here.
gtk_window_get/set_attached_to() is a new API that allows for windows to
be attached to a GtkWidget.
The attachment is a logical binding between the toplevel window and the
widget that generated it; this kind of information is currently used to
propagate style information from the widget to the window, but is also
useful e.g. for accessibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666103
'window-unfocused' is too long and mentions "focus" which is historically
loaded with the meaning "input focus".
'backdrop' isn't generally used in GUI speak and still conveys the state the
widgets in an unfocused or background toplevel window are in.
Move internal accel map API there and update all users.
Also, add an internal function to create an accel path for
an action and parameter, and use it in gtkapplication.c and
gtkmodelmenuitem.c instead of duplicating that code.
Even if we can't change our sensitivity because the parent is insensitive we
should still flip the sensitive flag. Otherwise, with and insensitive parent,
child.set_sensitive(True)
...
parent.set_sensitive(True)
would result in child still being insensitive.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666392
In many cases we used to set focus_child to NULL all the way up
to the top and then to the right value, even if there was
a common ancestor, meaning these see a temporary NULL value for
focus_child. Only when the new focus widgets direct parent was
in the previous ancestor list did we stop early.
This fixes that by always stopping propagation when reaching
the common ancestor.
This function returns the accessible if it already exists. This way we
can call functions on the accessible from the widget itself instead of
having to rely on signals.
This is kind of a hack to get rid of infinite loops that occur when
child accessibles try to set their parent upon creation but the parent
accessible creates its children in the initialize vfunc. Because in that
case, the parent will not have an accessible set when the child tries to
access it, because it is still initializing itself. Which will cause a
new accessible to be created.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=660687
Add enum GdkModifierIntent which identifies use cases for modifier masks
and GdkKeyMap::get_modifier_mask(). Add a default implementation which returns
what is currently hardcoded all over GTK+, and an implementation in the
quartz backend. Also add gtk_widget_get_modifier_mask() which simplifies
things by doing widget->display->keymap->get_modifier_mask().
This commit introduces a new setting, gtk-visible-focus, backed
by the Gtk/VisibleFocus X setting. Its three values control how
focus rectangles are displayed.
'always' is equivalent to the traditional GTK+ behaviour of always
rendering focus rectangles.
'never' does what it says, and is intended for keyboardless
situations, e.g. tablets.
'automatic' hides focus rectangles initially, until the user
interacts with the keyboard, at which point focus rectangles
become visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649567
We want the role to be kept in the accessible object. Using
gtk_widget_class_set_accessible_role() is only meant as a quick
workaround to requiring subclassing of the accessibles in the quite
common case where a subclass does not change the accessible
implementation at all and only has a different role.