e8aa9b0440 introduced a new debug mode
that highlights resizes. Unfortunately it has the side effect of
always queueing redraws even when the debug mode is not enabled.
Make the redraw conditional.
When a gtk_widget_queue_allocate() on some widget increases the clip,
widget->parent's clip was not updated. This appraoch naively just
unions widget's new clip with widget->parent's clip.
This of course only works if widget and parent share the same GDK
window. In the cases where they don't we can't do anything and need a
better fix.
Fixes label-text-shadow-changes-modify-clip.ui reftest.
The g_print documentation explicitly says not to do this, since
g_print is meant to be redirected by applications. Instead use
g_message for logging that can be triggered via GTK_DEBUG.
GtkWidget uses gtk_container_foreach() to iterate over children and
check whether they need their allocation reset.
However, that leaves out internal children, such as scrollbars of a
GtkScrolledWindow. Use gtk_container_forall() instead.
Now selecting a widget by class name no longer works.
This is probably most relevant for users outside of GTK that want to
style their own widgets. Those widgets should now either add their own
style classes (if they want to adjust existing CSS) or use
gtk_widget_class_set_css_name() themselves (if they want to get rid of
all "upstream" styling).
Check that non-native window are indeed children of the event window and
only then confirm that they should be drawn.
Fixes Glade thinking that it's okay to have the draw function do
different things depending on what window to draw. (This should really
be fixed in Glade.)
... and remove the also forgotten void function that lingered around
with it.
Fixes opacity=0 parts like inactive spinners or sort indicators in
treeview headers being drawn since last commit.
Oops.
Previously, we had a special cae to draw subwindows of widgets.
This is not necessary as conformant widgets should be able to properly
render themselves when all windows need to be painted.
From now on assume that is the case.
We therefore paint nonnative GDK windows "inline" by just returning TRUE
for gtk_cairo_should_draw_window() for those windows.
This speeds up hilighting different rows in the listbox gtk-demo example
tremendously (by a factor of 10 or more) as the previous code was
O(<number of non-window subwidgets> *
<number of subwindows>) which in the listbox example were ~15,000 and
~2,000 respectively.
If a GtkGestureSingle is set as touch-only, pointer events would be
discarded without giving an opportunity to the regular GtkGesture
handler to manage those.
Because the pointer events weren't actually managed by the gesture,
gtk_gesture_get_sequence_state() (rather unhelpfully here) will resort
to returning GTK_EVENT_SEQUENCE_NONE, which is in turn interpreted
by _gtk_widget_consumes_motion() as "may be handling the events for
this sequence", because gestures in this state presumably handle
the events, just that it's not "claimed" yet.
Instead, use gtk_gesture_handles_sequence(), which will perform the
expected check on the event sequence being managed, as we expect
here.
In https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=601425 the annotations
were changed to int as they not only take the predefined enum values
but also user defined values registered through gtk_icon_size_register()
As a result the typelib doesn't contain any information about
GtkIconSize for those arguments and the Python docstring only
shows the corresponding Python type "int".
This changes the argument docs to mention the type explicitly
so the Python doc generator can add a link to Gtk.IconSize
which contains the most useful predefined values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757411
Previously, the ID was only set on the CSS node as a side-effect
of calling gtk_widget_get_style_context. This was showing up
in CSS style tests as nodes lacking their IDs.
gdk_widget_get_frame_clock can return NULL. In particular,
this can happen when the drag window is destroyed at the end
of a DND operation. Handle this gracefully when it happens.
When setting the parent of a widget, queue_resize() on the widget will
be optimized away if the widget already had a resize queued.
Plus, we do not need to resize the widget as its size request is not
going to change.
This makes sure that hidden widgets always have priv->alloc_needed set
on them.
The constructor sets that flag, so we want to have it back when we
revert to this state.
This fixes GtkWindow skipping a size_allocate() when reshowing a
previously hidden window and thereby not updating its allocation and
clip. And that in turn would lead to draws not happening and us beig
left with a black window.
There are currently three widget that implement such a property, and
there are other widgets for which the behavior can make sense. It
seems like a good time to add the property to GtkWidget itself so
subclasses can choose to respect it without adding their own property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757269
Mirror the behavior of gtk_widget_queue_resize() and always queue a
redraw. If we ever want to cause allocates without redraws we can add
gtk_widget_queue_allocate_no_redraw() then.
I had initially assumed gtk_widget_size_allocate() would take care of
queueing redraws, but it does not do that when neither size nor position
change. And that is obviously what's happening after
gtk_widget_queue_allocate().
Fixes buttons sometimes not redrawing (the record button in
widget-factory after locking it, all buttons when switching to the dark
theme).
When gtk_widget_show() or gtk_widget_hide() is called, don't queue a
resize on the widget itself but on the parent.
The widget itself may already be marked as in need of a resize and
the call would be optimized out and never reach the parent.
The parent size will change though because a child widget just changed
its visibility.
Fixes a bunch of issues with menus appearing black, toolbas not hiding
in widget-factory and also various reftests.