We now consider non-native windows non-opaque, which means any invalid
area in a subwindow will also be invalid all the way up to the nearest
native windows. We take advantage of this by ignoring all expose events
on non-native windows (which typically means just the toplevel) and instead
propagating down the draw() calls to children directly via
gtk_container_propagate_draw.
This is nice as it means we always draw widgets the same way, and it
will let us do some interesting ways in the future.
We also clean up the GtkWidget opacity handling as we can now always
rely on the draing happening via cairo.
We can't really just draw by walking down the widget hierarchy, as
this doesn't get the clipping right (so e.g. widgets doing cairo_paint
may draw outside the expected gdkwindow subarea) nor does it let
us paint window backgrounds.
So, we now do multiple draws for each widget, once for each GdkWindow,
although we still do it on the same base cairo_t that we get for the
toplevel native window. The difference is only the clipping, the rendering
order, and which other widgets we propagate into.
We also collect all the windows of a widget so we can expose them inside
the same opacity group if needed.
NOTE: This change neuters gtk_widget_set_double_buffered for
widgets without native windows. Its impossible to disable
the double buffering in this model.
Some utilities such as GIR and gtk-doc, initialize class vtables without
initializing GTK+, with composite templates accessing resources this
causes a hand full of unneeded warnings.
The workaround for now is the use a private function _gtk_ensure_resources()
which is both called while initializing GTK+, and at the beginning of
gtk_widget_class_set_template_from_resource() (the private function
ensures that the resource will only ever be registered GOnce).
Don't mention "auto mnemonics", since those methods are purely about
scheduling a delayed display, and that makes understanding the code a
bit harder.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697144
When event capturing is enabled, stop propagating scroll events
at insensitive widgets, but don't handle them (don't return TRUE),
so they can bubble up again and reach their handling widgets.
I'll add a bunch of fixes for gcc complaining about
-Wmissing-declarations after finding a bunch of cases today where I had
forgotten to make functions static in the CSS code.
A thorn in those patches is G_DEFINE_TYPE() which doesn't allow making
the get_type() function static, so I added definitions for that function
above the G_DEFINE_TYPE().
After those patches, GTK should compile without warnings when this flag
is enabled.
Showing mnemonics immediately on modifier press can be annoying and
distracting when the user is just trying to Alt+Tab into another
application/window since the mnemonic will show up and quickly vanish
again when we receive the focus out event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672431
See inline comments for what it does. Its main use is figuring out if
something has been caused by GTK's caching of CSS properties or if it's
a different problem.
If the touch sequence happens on a window with GDK_TOUCH_MASK set,
a GdkTouchGrabInfo is created to back it up. Else a device grab is
only created if the sequence emulates the pointer.
If both a device and a touch grab are present on a window, the later
of them both is obeyed, Any grab on the device happening after a
touch grab generates grab-broken on all the windows an implicit
touch grab was going on.
This patch adds a capture phase to GTK+'s event propagation
model. Events are first propagated from the toplevel (or the
grab widget, if a grab is in place) down to the target widget
and then back up. The second phase is using the existing
::event signal, the new capture phase is using a private
API instead of a public signal for now.
This mechanism can be used in many places where we currently
have to prevent child widgets from getting events by putting
an input-only window over them. It will also be used to implement
kinetic scrolling in subsequent patches.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641836
We automatically request more motion events in behalf of
the original widget if it listens to motion hints. So
the capturing widget doesn't need to handle such
implementation details.
We are not making event capture part of the public API for 3.4,
which is why there is no ::captured-event signal.
_gtk_widget_set_device_window() is suppose to make accounting of
the topmost widget under the device at each time, so avoid setting
it on virtual crossing events as the device is already in another
window.
Now that ATK no longer uses a key snooper but is invoked directly,
checking in advance for existing snoopers is wrong and stops ATK from
working.
Also: code reduction without performance loss == good thing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669176
Move internal accel map API there and update all users.
Also, add an internal function to create an accel path for
an action and parameter, and use it in gtkapplication.c and
gtkmodelmenuitem.c instead of duplicating that code.
- add gtkmodulesprivate.h and move stuff there from gtkprivate.h
- add gtkprivate.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- add gtkwin32.c and move stuff there from gtkmain.c
- don't redefine GTK_DATADIR and friends in gtkprivate.h
- have _gtk_get_datadir() and friends on all platforms
- remove the horrid hacks where gtkprivate.h can't be included,
or must be included later due to redefinition of the compile-time
directories
and finish the port to using the new modifier abstraction API.
This commit has some evilness, it uses the default display for
the lack of a widget context, and the change to gtkstock.c
is very ugly, but I can't think of anything better given
GtkStockItem needs an accel mask instead of a proper accel
string.
Add _gtk_button_event_triggers_context_menu() and use it instead
of checking for event->button == 3, so context menus are invoked
correctly on the Mac.
This commit introduces a new setting, gtk-visible-focus, backed
by the Gtk/VisibleFocus X setting. Its three values control how
focus rectangles are displayed.
'always' is equivalent to the traditional GTK+ behaviour of always
rendering focus rectangles.
'never' does what it says, and is intended for keyboardless
situations, e.g. tablets.
'automatic' hides focus rectangles initially, until the user
interacts with the keyboard, at which point focus rectangles
become visible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=649567
It is now no longer possible to disable it.
This doesn't matter though because GTK will not instantiate a11y
objects until you actually use it. So nothing changes in practice.
* gtk/gtkmain.c: (gtk_init): Mention that argc and argv can be 0,
using the new text from the g_applicatoin_run() documentation.
There was already introspection annotation about that.
(gtk_init_check, gtk_init_with_args): Use the same text here.
See bug #643649 comment 2.