This is necessary to give back focus to the Broadway elements when
content is embedded in an IFrame.
Signed-off-by: Mickael Istria <mistria@redhat.com>
The @filename@ directive will use the full path of the file being parsed
for enumeration types; we should use @basename@, instead, as it improves
the reproducibility of the build by using only the file name.
Some of the flags got lost in the meson transition or were demoted from
error flags to warning flags.
This commit reintroduces them.
It also includes fixes for the code that had warnings with those flags.
The big one being -Wshadow.
Setting it as qdata on the object doesn't save any memory since we use
the user_data as the event target, which every event has set these days.
This way is also faster since just reffing the object doesn't do any
locking.
g-ir-scanner incorrectly evaluates macro definition that include
references to other macro definitions. Provide a correct value as an
annotation.
Differences in generated gir files:
```diff
@@ -19017 +19017 @@
- <constant name="PRIORITY_REDRAW" value="20" c:type="GDK_PRIORITY_REDRAW">
+ <constant name="PRIORITY_REDRAW" value="120" c:type="GDK_PRIORITY_REDRAW">
@@ -74229,3 +74229,3 @@
</constant>
- <constant name="PRIORITY_RESIZE" value="10" c:type="GTK_PRIORITY_RESIZE">
+ <constant name="PRIORITY_RESIZE" value="110" c:type="GTK_PRIORITY_RESIZE">
<doc xml:space="preserve">Use this priority for functionality related to size allocation.
@@ -106786,3 +106786,3 @@
<constant name="TEXT_VIEW_PRIORITY_VALIDATE"
- value="5"
+ value="125"
c:type="GTK_TEXT_VIEW_PRIORITY_VALIDATE">
```
See !472
Tools on the same physical item have the same serial number, so the eraser
and the pen part of a single pen share that serial number. With the current
lookup code, we'll always return whichever tool comes first into proximity.
Change the code to use the hw id in addition to the serial number, this way we
can differ between two tools.
Generic tools (Bamboo, built-in tablets) always have the same serial number
assigned by the wacom driver. This includes the touch tool when the wacom
driver handles the touch evdev node (common where users require the wacom
gestures to work).
When the first device is the touch device, a tool is created with that serial.
All future tools now return the touch tool on lookup since they all share the
same serial number. Worse, this happens *across* devices, so the pen
event node gets assigned the touch tool because they all have the same serial.
Since we don't actually care about the touch as a tool, let's skip any unknown
tool. This captures pads as well.
Any wacom device currently sets the tool type to UNKNOWN. The wacom driver has
a property that exports the tool type as one of stylus, eraser, cursor, pad or
touch. Only three of those are useful here but that's better than having all
of them as unknown.
* We don't output spaces anywhere in the code, unlike the doc suggested.
* CSS explicitly forbids whitespace between function names and lparens:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13877198
This makes apps use "Segoe UI 9" by default instead of whatever matches "Sans 10".
It also cleans up the code and uses some new pango API while at it.
This was previously disabled in 9e686d1fb5 because it led to a poor glyph coverage
on certain versions of Windows which don't default to "Segoe UI 9" (Chinese, Korean, ..)
because the font fallback list was missing in pango.
This is about to get fixed in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/pango/merge_requests/34
so enable it again when we detect a new enough pango version.
(See !436 for the original MR)
GTK widgets expect the scroll deltas to be 1 or -1 and calculate a scroll value from that.
Multiplying the delta by the Windows scroll line setting (which defaults to 3) results
in a much larger delta and vastly different behaviour for running a GTK app on Windows
vs on Linux. For example text view and tree view scroll by 9 lines per scroll wheel tick
per default this way while on Linux it is around 3.
Remove the multiplication for now.
See !426 for the gtk3 MR
Enables hinting, antialiasing and set the subpixel orientation according to the
active clear type setting. This ensures that font rendering with the fontconfig backend
looks similar to the win32 backend, at least with the default system font.
See !437
As per the spec:
> The back buffer can
> either be reported as invalid (has an age of 0) or it may be
> reported to contain the contents from n frames prior to the
> current frame.
So a buffer age of 1 means that the buffer was used in the last frame.
We were handling buffer_age==1 the same as buffer_age==0, i.e. we
returned the full damage for the surface.
[1] https://www.khronos.org/registry/EGL/extensions/EXT/EGL_EXT_buffer_age.txt
When we decide to fall back because the settings portal
is not present, adhere to that decision elsewhere. And
treat the fontconfig-timestamp like the other special-cased
settings, with G_TYPE_NONE.
Under Wayland, we are currently directly using GSettings
for desktop settings. But in a sandbox, we may not have
access to dconf, so this may fail. Use the new settings
portal instead.
As GSettings now supports session-specific defaults, GNOME Classic
no longer uses a separate schema and the decoration layout is always
determined by the regular schema.
This essentially reverts commit add67b516c (although the code was
moved since then).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/merge_requests/400
By returning a default surface. The situation where there's no
currentContext arises when GtkCSS is trying to determine the
layout sizes so no actual display is necessary.
Closes: #1411
Do not lie to W32 about the formats that we provide or accept.
Originally the logic behind such lies was that GdkPixbuf allows us to
convert any supported image to BMP or PNG, and therefore we should
announce that we always provide/accept BMP and PNG along with other
formats.
But that's not how it works. GDK has built-in serializers and
deserializers for all pixbuf formats (where it just invokes GdkPixbuf
API) and will use them automatically to read or write GdkTexture
objects (internally wrapping GdkPixbuf objects where necessary). The
encoding and decoding of images is handled
by GdkContent(De)Serializers, backend has nothing to do with it.
Therefore W32 GDK backend should only offer formats that it can
actually do conversion for by itself (such as image/bmp <-> CF_DIB,
or text/uri-list <-> CFSTR_SHELLIDLIST).
Instead we just cache the monitor number and get
out of it the nsscreen when it is needed. This is
a requirement since it nsscreen it is not supposed
to be cached.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1312
This leverages the normal input context switching mechanism in GTK
by making it think that the gtk-im-module setting changed.
The backend returns gtk-im-module value as "ime" if W32
IME API says that an IME is in use. Otherwise it returns
and empty string - this still triggers an input context
switching code, which, not being able to create the desired context
(which is and empty string), falls back to looking at current
keyboard layout (currently that code is still a FIXME).
Paired with the code that signals gtk-im-module change on keyboard layout
switches, this is sufficient to make GTK capable of switching to
the appropriate IM context at runtime. At least, the kinds of context
that specify languages for which they are used automatically by default
(once locale matching is implemented), and the IME context.
Loading other kinds of IM context might still work via specifying
the gtk-im-module setting in gtk ini file, but doing so will likely
make GTK incapable of using the IME context that is used
for Korean, Chinese and Japanese (and some other languages).
Until someone figures out a way to actually change gtk-im-module
setting on Windows at runtime with meaningful values, the behaviour
introduced by this commit seems like a sufficient workaround.