Otherwise gcc complains when we use these as arguments to g_new() on
32bit architectures with:
../gtk/gtkcomposetable.c: In function ‘gtk_compose_table_list_add_array’:
/usr/include/glib-2.0/glib/gmem.h:217:10: warning: argument 1 range [2147483648, 4294967295] exceeds maximum object size 2147483647 [-Walloc-size-larger-than=]
__p = g_##func##_n (__n, __s); \
~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/glib-2.0/glib/gmem.h:279:42: note: in expansion of macro ‘_G_NEW’
#define g_new0(struct_type, n_structs) _G_NEW (struct_type, n_structs, malloc0)
^~~~~~
../gtk/gtkcomposetable.c:851:22: note: in expansion of macro ‘g_new0’
gtk_compose_seqs = g_new0 (guint16, length);
^~~~~~
/usr/include/glib-2.0/glib/gmem.h:96:10: note: in a call to allocation function ‘g_malloc0_n’ declared here
gpointer g_malloc0_n (gsize n_blocks,
^~~~~~~~~~~
gdk_win32_keymap_check_compose() shouldn't be called for
non-W32 displays (i.e. when using broadway or other backends
that could be made to run on Windows).
This renames the GdkWindow class and related classes (impl, backend
subclasses) to surface. Additionally it renames related types:
GdkWindowAttr, GdkWindowPaint, GdkWindowWindowClass, GdkWindowType,
GdkWindowTypeHint, GdkWindowHints, GdkWindowState, GdkWindowEdge
This is an automatic conversion using the below commands:
git sed -f g GdkWindowWindowClass GdkSurfaceSurfaceClass
git sed -f g GdkWindow GdkSurface
git sed -f g "gdk_window\([ _\(\),;]\|$\)" "gdk_surface\1" # Avoid hitting gdk_windowing
git sed -f g "GDK_WINDOW\([ _\(]\|$\)" "GDK_SURFACE\1" # Avoid hitting GDK_WINDOWING
git sed "GDK_\([A-Z]*\)IS_WINDOW\([_ (]\|$\)" "GDK_\1IS_SURFACE\2"
git sed GDK_TYPE_WINDOW GDK_TYPE_SURFACE
git sed -f g GdkPointerWindowInfo GdkPointerSurfaceInfo
git sed -f g "BROADWAY_WINDOW" "BROADWAY_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "broadway_window" "broadway_surface"
git sed -f g "BroadwayWindow" "BroadwaySurface"
git sed -f g "WAYLAND_WINDOW" "WAYLAND_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "wayland_window" "wayland_surface"
git sed -f g "WaylandWindow" "WaylandSurface"
git sed -f g "X11_WINDOW" "X11_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "x11_window" "x11_surface"
git sed -f g "X11Window" "X11Surface"
git sed -f g "WIN32_WINDOW" "WIN32_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "win32_window" "win32_surface"
git sed -f g "Win32Window" "Win32Surface"
git sed -f g "QUARTZ_WINDOW" "QUARTZ_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "quartz_window" "quartz_surface"
git sed -f g "QuartzWindow" "QuartzSurface"
git checkout NEWS* po-properties
Unlike what commit d01ea18dc3 says, X11 is
not a requirement for Wayland, so a Wayland-only build is possible. We
just use the same logic as other non-X11 platforms.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784615
Signed-off-by: Quentin Glidic <sardemff7+git@sardemff7.net>
When generating introspection data, we instantiate types without
calling gtk_init, so make sure that extension points are registered
before the type is trying to implement them.
Add an extension point called gtk-im-module, which requires
the type GtkIMContext. Simplify the loading by using GIO
infrastructure. Drop the locale filtering for now, I don't
think it is really necessary nowadays.
Convert existing platform modules to gio modules.
Sill to do: Drop the conditional build machinery.
Either always include them, or never.
Remove all the old 2.x and 3.x version annotations.
GTK+ 4 is a new start, and from the perspective of a
GTK+ 4 developer all these APIs have been around since
the beginning.
As reported in https://github.com/ibus/ibus/issues/1944,
typing u201e while holding Ctrl+Shift used to give a „
when letting go of Ctrl+Shift. This broke when we introduced
Ctrl+Shift+e to start Emoji sequences. Fix this by only
looking for Ctrl+Shift+e if we are not already in a hex
sequence.
Don't beep when modifiers are released in entries.
This was an inadvertent change that snuck in with
the emoji support.
Also, don't beep while entering an emoji name.
There is entirely too much beeping here.
This commit adds some basic support for entering emoji by name
to GtkIMContextSimple. To begin an emoji sequence, use Ctrl-Shift-e
instead of Ctrl-Shift-u that is used for hex input. Otherwise, the
behavior is the same: you can can let go of the modifier keys and
end the sequence with space or enter, or hold on to the modifier
keys and end the sequence by releasing them.
Only a limited, fixed set of names is supported at this time, see
the GtkIMContextSimple docs for a full list.
Pick the W32 API for possible deadkey+<something> combinations
and prefer these to other sources of deadkey combos.
Specifically, if W32 API supports at least one combo for a particular
deadkey, only use that data and do not attempt to do other, unsupported
combinations, even if they make sense otherwise.
This is needed to, for example, correctly support US-International
keyboard layout, which produces a combined character for <' + a>
combo, but not for <' + s>, for example.
This is achieved by stashing all the deadkeys that we find in
an array, then doing extra loop through all virtual key codes and
trying to combine them with each of these deadkeys. Any combinations
that produce a single character are cached for later use.
In GTK Simple IM context, call a new GDK W32 function to do a lookup
on that cached combination table early on, among the "special cases"
(which are now partially obsolete).
A limitation of this code is that combinations with more than
one deadkey are not supported, except for combinations that consist
entirely of 2 known deadkeys. The upshot is that lookups should
be relatively fast, as deadkey array stays small and the combination
tree stays shallow.
Note that the use of ToUnicodeEx() seems suboptimal, as it should
be possible to just load a keyboard library (KBD*.DLL) manually
and obtain and use its key table directly. However, that is much more
complicated and would result in a significant rewrite of gdkkeys-win32.
The code from this commit, though hacky, is a direct addition to
existing code and should cover vast majority of the use-cases.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=569581
Since a41f02f9b1, GtkIMContextSimple
uses threads to load X Compose files. It does that every time a new
im context object is initialized, so we can easily end up with multiple
threads accessing the shared global_tables list at the same time.
Use a lock to prevent that.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1276432
Only use the hard-coded build-time path given by X11_PREFIX on X11 and
Wayland where a X11 package is normally available. On other platforms,
get the datadir of the running system and mimic the behavior by
constructing the path dynamically. This avoids hardcoding the path for
searching for compose tables where we want to have relocatability.
This fixes the build on Windows/MSVC as well, where we don't normally have
any X11 packages available.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757984
fr(bepo) XKB keymap sends dead_stroke with AltGr+l keys
and gtk-im-simple-context should send '/' with
dead_stroke+dead_stroke keys but gtkimcontextsimpleseqs.h
was not sorted in the descending order and failed to get
dead_stroke.
Also need to add dead_currency for Shift+AltGr+e and
dead_belowcomma for Shift+AltGr+Cedilla.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736250