Add a new policy, GTK_POLICY_EXTERNAL, which hides the scrollbar,
but does not force the scrolled windows size to be determined by
its child. This can be used to keep two scrolled windows in sync,
while sharing a single scrollbar.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730730
As an actionable (inherited from GtkButton), a GtkMenuButton
should not set its own sensitivity when it has an action-name
set, but just follow the enabled state of the associated
action.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738083
Dimmed inner colorswatch shadow to make brighter colors looks nice,
increased the padding to make button states more evident, 0 border
radius to match the padding change and no colorswatch shadows when
the button is insensitive.
The code did weird things with drawing backgrounds sometimes but not
really. Now it does this:
(1) render a background
(2) render a frame
(3) render an icon
- if no icon exists, draw the generic handle icon
We want to render a background *and* the current color (if there is
one).
This also adds a custom function gtk_render_add_content_path() which
adds the path of the current content area to a cairo_t.
This adds a CSS box (complete with padding and border) for the icon. The
box is even drawn when no icon is present. Use the ".image" as the style
class here instead of -active-color-badge.
Use this box to draw the circle around the selection icon in Adwaita.
auth_info should be a NULL-terminated array as it is used in
e.g. g_strdupv invocations iterating over its elements until
a NULL element is encountered.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737777
This is a convenient shortcut for a common case. It is implemented
by adding a .monospace style class to the text view, and letting
the theme decide about the monospace font to use.
Same here: We need to synchronize the visible child with the
selected row when setting a stack on the sidebar. I've noticed
this problem in the sidebar example in gtk3-widget-factory.
The documentation explicitly states that 0 is an allowed value for using
the same scale as the window. This 0 value is also explicitly checked
down in the call chain and handled.
Drawing text with Pango is quite expensive, and drawing text and also
blurring it is *really* expensive. To prevent us from drawing a lot of
text and then blurring it a lot is *really* expensive.
We now cache the blurred pixels for the last layout and shadow we made,
which means we can repeatedly draw labels with a blurred text-shadow
extremely fast.
To detect whether the shadow is up-to-date, we track the serial of the
PangoLayout alongside the radius of the box shadow. We don't support
inset shadows nor spread on text-shadow, so we don't need to track
these.
There is no need for a critical warning just because somebody
asked for a property that is not meaningful for the device.
Just document it as not useful for keyboard devices.