An pass_through window is something you can draw in but does not
affect event handling. Normally if a window has with no event mask set
for a particular event then input events in it go to its parent window
(X11 semantics), whereas if pass_through is enabled the window below
the window will get the event. The later mode is useful when the
window is partially transparent. Note that an pass-through windows can
have child windows that are not pass-through so they can still get events
on some parts.
Semantically, this behaves the same as an regular window with
gdk_window_set_child_input_shapes() called on it (and re-called any
time a child is changed), but its far more efficient and easy to use.
This allows us to fix the testoverlay input stacking test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750568https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90917
In this case we have a bunch of interactive main children
of the overlay, and then a centered overlay that contains both
non-interactive (labels) and interactive (entry) widgets.
This shows off a problem where the non-interactive parts (the labels)
steals input from the overlay main children (breaks button click and
hover effects).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750568https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90917
For functions that take state flags as an argument we need to special
case the situation where the passed in flags don't match the current
state.
Previously we would create a copy of the style info, change its state
and do the lookup from there.
Now that GtkCssNode has replaced style infos, this doesn't work as well
anymore as copying a GtkCssNode is not possible.
However, unike style infos, GtkCssNodes are instant-apply, so we don't
need to copy anymore, we can just change the state of the node.
This causes some invalidations to be queued, but we can take that
performance hit as this is fallback code.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1228852
Instead of having padding outside the notebook containing
all pages, put each page in an extra box and add the padding
there. This is in preparation for allowing pages without
padding.
We can't add properties to the interface, since it breaks
3rd party implementations of the GtkFontChooser interface.
These exist, for example in gnumeric.
So, instead of a new property, add getter/setter vfuncs.
The font chooser delays creating the font description from the font face
as long as possible (it's slow). Because we use fixed height mode, we
only have to create font descriptions for rows we are actually going to
show.
This was achieved by looking at the font description column and if it
was NULL, we created a font description and gtk_list_stiore_set() it.
Unfortunately this caused a "row-changed" signal to be emitted and this
emission could happen during the cell data func.
And that caused infinite loops with accessibility when you were unlucky.
This change replaces the NULL font description with an empty one and
instead of setting the correct font description, we
pango_font_description_merge() it in. This way, the list store doesn't
change and no signals are emitted.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1197267
Due to popover modality itself, there's quite high chances the popover
stealing focus has been triggered from within, so stay friendly to it.
Hiding the popover here will only hide the grabbing popover too if this
happens.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750741
When recoloring symbolic SVG, do not modify the original width and
height of the passed-in file; the function later will scale the image
through gdk_pixbuf_new_from_stream_at_scale(), but we should still
use the original size to create the proxy SVG, or the image will
possibly be doubly-resized or blurry.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750605
show_or_hide_handles() tries to disable visibility when the popover is
shown, although it triggers a bit late, and lets the handles flash briefly
if both popover and handles try to show at the same time (eg. when
pressing on the selection of a previously unfocused textview, the handles
were previously hidden, so they try to show again on focus in).
The handles might fall outside the visible area, and shouldn't be shown
then. Just call gtk_text_view_update_handles() which will perform these
checks, and keep the handle conveniently hidden.
This was leading to unexpectedly visible handles (and in the
wrong/previous position, the handle code doesn't relocate the widget
it's about to hide) when "select all" was selected in the popover on
a textview needing scrollbars.
and extending the selection beyond the view above and/or below.
The check used to hide the popover if the pointed area fell partly out of
the widget allocation, textviews now can trigger that with text selections
too close to the visible edge, as a small extra area around is now reserved.
The check has been changed to only hide the popover if the pointed area
falls completely outside the widget allocation.