Instead, add a function gtk_image_set_icon_size() for the cases where
overriding the icon size is necessary.
Treat icon sizes the same way as pixel sizes, too. So gtk_image_clear()
no longer unsets the icon size.
This patch makes that work using 1 of 2 options:
1. Add all missing enums to the switch statement
or
2. Cast the switch argument to a uint to avoid having to do that (mostly
for GdkEventType).
I even found a bug while doing that: clearing a GtkImage with a surface
did not notify thae surface property.
The reason for enabling this flag even though it is tedious at times is
that it is very useful when adding values to an enum, because it makes
GTK immediately warn about all the switch statements where this enum is
relevant.
And I expect changes to enums to be frequent during the GTK4 development
cycle.
Since setting a clip is mandatory for almost all widgets, we can as well
change the size-allocate signature to include a out_clip parameter, just
like GtkCssGadget did. And since we now always propagate baselines, we
might as well pass that one on to size-allocate.
This way we can also make sure to transform the clip returned from
size-allocate to parent-coordinates, i.e. the same coordinate space
priv->allocation is in.
This widget is a bit unusual in that it is a box that acts as
the drop target, while the visible content is a child of the box.
Propagate :drop(active) to the child to make the highlight visible.
Its very easy to get extra references to the NativeDialog so that
when you release your last reference any visible dialog is not
hidden. We handle this by adding a destroy method similar to how
you destroy regular toplevels.
The differences between the existing properties and the newly added
GtkWidget:focus-on-click property are minimal (different owner_type
in GParamSpec), so it is extremely unlikely that dropping the former
would break anything.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757269
GtkFileSystem has a complicated way to handle cancellables.
You keep the cancellable pointer that is returned by
_gtk_file_system_get_info and similar methods so that you can
cancel the operation, but you do not own a reference to it.
The only place where it is ok to unref a cancellable is in
your callback, which gets handed a cancellable that you need
to unref at the end. You are expected to compare it to the
pointer you stashed away to find out if the operation has
already been superseded by a newer call, in which case you
disregard the results.
GtkFileChooserButton was following these rules for most of
the cancellables it keeps around, but it was sometimes unreffing
the cancellables that are stored in the model, which could lead
to refcount confusion and crashes. This commit makes it follow
the rules for that case too, which fixes the crash in the bug
below, and does not show up any leaks in valgrind under light
testing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737804
They were updated in style-changed, causing the label to get set to
(None), then to the actual file name again a frame later, both of the
updates cause the GtkFileChooserButton to resize, possibly to the
minimal width, causing the layout to jump. Fix this by only updating
icon/label in style-updated when the icon theme actually changed, which
is the only case we care about here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752509
It seems that alternate implementations of GtkFileChooserWidget
never materialized. The split between GtkFileChooserWidget and
GtkFileChooserDefault is awkward. The immediate problem is that
it makes it difficult to document the keybinding signals. So it
makes sense to drop the abstraction and just have one thing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723157