It turns out that when we were painting the shadows, we painted the them
with the base color once, which contained the alpha, and then blurred it
and used it as a mask for the fill, which has the fill again.
To fix this, always paint the base surface with full alpha. The existing
code applies the blur conditionally sometimes in weird ways, so the code
shuffling fix may not look correct, but be assured it is. If the blur
happens, the new cr we return has the *default* color applied, which is
fully opaque black, which works perfectly against the A8 surface.
The fallback spinner code needs some modification, since it is
intentionally using the alpha to paint the lobes which are "in the past".
Since we shouldn't be hitting this fallback path very often, we use a
temporary group and paint it with paint_with_alpha, even though it is
slow.
Introduce a new debug category "actions" and write some messages from
GtkActionHelper about if we can find the actions or not.
We will probably soon want to add some similar messages to
GtkMenuTrackerItem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733965
X11 backend doesn't, and for good reason - main code body does not check
that the window it sets opacity for is, in fact, toplevel.
Just silently fail to do anything for non-toplevel windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733769
This leads to an assertion failure, because parent window is never registered
in the first place, widget's own GdkWindow is. But that window is unregistered
in a generic fashion by GtkWidget code, so there's nothing for us to do here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733766
Instead of slavishly following the naming spec, group the icons
into categories that are more likely to be useful for application
developers. Based on input from Allan Day and Jakup Steiner.
So far, gtk_window_set_focus just did not work when called on
a hidden window. Change it to record the desired focus widget
for hidden windows, and apply it when the window gets shown.
This is similar to how we tread other window properties that
can't be set before the window is realized, like maximized
or fullscreen.
This is related to
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734033
The previous code for computing the clip rectangle forgot to respect
the text-shadow CSS property. This is usually not very visible because
text shadows usually don't extend the ink rectangle by very much.
See attached testcase for an example.
Support environment variable GDK_WIN32_FONT_RESOLUTION that can be set to
a desired dpi (72, 96, 130, etc) to override system settings. Useful for
debugging, since changing system font scaling requires the user to log off
and log on again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734038
Although there is the "changed" signal, it is more correct to notify the
"text" property too. It can be useful for a small text view, where the
text is saved e.g. to gsettings with a binding to the text property.
The "text" property includes only the text, not child widgets or images,
so the notify signal is sent too many times (also for child widgets and
images), but it's not a big problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624791
Currently, when loading an image from a GResource or file we don't take
the scale factor of the display into consideration, and let
GtkIconHelper scale it accordingly.
While this in general works for non-scalable images, we can take
advantage of the native loader's scaling for e.g. SVG images, and load
them at the right scale factor automatically.
This is achieved by switching to a pixbuf loader instead of using the
native function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733416
Use (cairo) input shape of the window to check whether a point is inside or not
inside the window.
If it is, let the default window procedure do its thing (which seems to be
working all right in all known cases).
If it isn't, override the default window procedure and tell WM what we think.
Don't do any of the above if the window has CSD-incompatible styles (WS_BORDER
or WS_THICKFRAME).
This is a crude kind of substitute for window input shape support (which W32
does not seem to have). Still probably enough to be positive about input shapes
support.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733679
This allows subclasses to render things below and above the text
in the text view. This allows e.g. GtkSourceView to highlight the
cursor row and to render overlays for colum 80. This used to be done
by rendering before/after chaining up to the parent, but that doesn't
work anymore since the view now renders a background, and due to the
use of the pixel cache.
This reverts commit 1ac13435b7.
We want to instead replace this with special vfunc for drawing
below/above the main text so that gtksourceview can use it.