The value property is only getting notified when it's unset
or when it's set from gdk_drop_real_value_async(). Make sure
to always notify :value when its changed
The term "cancelling" is used with GCancellable, a user clicking a close
button is not that.
User input is usually described as "dismissing", so we use that term.
A screen reader user is not interested in GTK internals, for example,
he does not care whether a button is an image button or not,
and a screen reader will report the fact that it is a button anyway.
Same applies for GtkEntry widgets, for example.
This actually is sufficient to fix gnome-control-center#2244.
And, according to the discussion in #5145, it should be fine.
ClutterInputFocus/GtkIMContext uses char based offset for
delete_surrounding, however, text_input_v3 uses byte based offset for
it. Currently only GTK with mutter can work correctly via text_input_v3
because they both forget to convert between char based offset and byte
based offset.
This commit fixes it in GTK by converting byte based offset to char
based offset with the UTF-8 encoded surrounding text.
Fixes <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/4566>.
If the drag events are claimed by another gesture (e.g. a GtkDragSource
in an item widget), list base still commits a rubberband selection, for
a rubberband which wasn't even visible yet. This is a problem for the
GNOME Files application which needs both rubberbanding and drag-n-drop.
My previous fix[0] was enough for the case where the event sequence is
claimed right before the first GtkDragGesture::drag-update emission,
but it's useless if the event is claimed later (e.g. after the drag
treashold), because a rubberband already exists by that time.
Therefore, the complete solution requres checking whether the event
sequence is no longer being handled by our gesture, and commit the
selection changes only if it is, but otherwise cleanup the rubberband.
This is what GtkFlowBox does already, so let's do the same here.
[0] commit dc4540fae9
Dummy dependencies are not required to execute a subproject
automatically for providing a program, nor do you need to explicitly
call subproject() to do that.
A `[provide]` section in the wrap file is enough.
The tooltips from the Grid View & List View buttons are unnecessarily long and look different from the tooltips used in Nautilus.
This commit makes the tooltips to be consistent with Nautilus and, consequently, makes them shorter.
Accept labels can be used for additional context regarding
the purpose of a file. The old GtkFileChooser APIs allowed
developers to set it, but the initial FileDialog API was missing
this functionality.
This commit adds `gtk_file_dialog_set_accept_label ()` to
restore the missing functionality.
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5421
The EventControllerFocus on the list item, updates the list base focus
tracker and scrolled to position any time the list item enters focus.
This works when interacting within a single window, but has unexpected
results when changing focus between multiple windows.
Instead of using the focus controller workaround, just make
gtk_list_base_update_focus_tracker the set_focus_child vfunc
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5433
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5432
The path bar does a lot of manual management of buttons, mostly to
be able to show navigation arrows when there's not enough space to
show the full path.
Since the GTK4 migration, this is slightly broken in some cases, due
to the 'need_sliders' variable being always set to TRUE. Furthermore,
after the introduction of the Recent button as a special cased fake
root, the allocation of the buttons is generating warnings.
Reimplement the path bar as a GtkBox, inside a GtkScrolledWindow.
This mimics what Nautilus does, and allows us to make navigation more
predictable, and remove most of the complexity from GtkPathBar. It
also prevents it from generating allocation warnings.
The path bar itself now doesn't override GtkWidget.measure nor
GtkWidget.allocate; instead, it delegates layout to the GtkBinLayout
layout manager.
CSS is adjusted to account for the changed hierarchy of buttons.