to retreive paper size specific hard margins and use this
to set the hard margins in the print context.
(modified by Marek Kasik <mkasik@redhat.com>)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686109
The shortcuts inhibitors hash table is created when we create a
GdkWaylandWindow implementation for a GdkWindow, and it's destroyed once
we finalize the instance. The fake "root" window we create for the
Wayland display does not have a backing native window, so the shortcuts
inhibitors hash table is set to NULL; this causes a critical error
message when calling g_hash_table_destroy() on it. The finalization of
the root window happens when we close a display connection.
We should use g_clear_pointer(), instead, as it's NULL safe.
Without this change, the displayclose test fails, as all warnings are
considered fatal.
We expect these files to be regenerated even when building GTK+ from a
release tarball, so there's no point in distributing them if they are
going to be ignored.
Epoxy 1.4 has new ad hoc API that we can use to check whether GLX is
available on the current system.
If we didn't use this API, we'd have to manually dlopen libGL (or its
equivalent on different OSes) and check if it had GLX symbols; since
Epoxy already does all of this internally, we can simply ask it instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775279
(cherry picked from commit 02eb344950)
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
.linked assumes the container is a GtkBox, which is documented as never
flipping children in RTL, so :first-child is always the left child, etc.
GtkBox does that by reordering its CSS nodes when the direction changes.
But most widgets don’t do that, so :first|last-child are 1st/last ADDED
and swap sides in RTL. GtkPathBar is so, and ignoring that in our themes
meant that in RTL, its left/right buttons got each other’s borders. Yuk!
This patch adds the groundwork for supporting widgets like that, via the
%linked_flippable placeholder, and applies that to override buttons in
filechooser .path-bar.linked > button
so that the correct borders get applied to those buttons when using RTL.
Note that I select only PathBars within a FileChooser because we also
have NautilusPathBar, which also uses widget.path-bar – but *does* flip
its nodes for RTL already, so letting that get affected broke it again!
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772817
Otherwise, if the Popover is destroyed before the MenuButton, the latter
still had a non-NULL but invalid instance and tried to use it in dispose
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/199
A user in #gtk+ was confused what to do instead of creating a Button via
gtk_button_new_from_stock(). Our docs could stand to be clearer on this
point; it only costs a few lines. So, link from that constructor* to the
GtkStock doc, and add a banner there telling folk they shouldn’t use it.
* not that most [of these][links] even work right now…
Use g_signal_connect_data() instead of g_signal_connect_object()
to make sure the callback gets disconnected when the data object
is destroyed. This avoids problems in garbage-collected bindings.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789215
The GVariant we are getting here might not be coming
from GTK+, but rather from some other source. Best to
be forgiving and deal with missing data without crashing.
This was causing the GTK+ portal backends to crash on
print requests from Qt.
Gtkplacesview finalization fixes
See merge request GNOME/gtk!119
(cherry picked from commit e30176a522)
f9452957 gtkplacesview: unset entry_pulse_timeout_id before removing it
4900c3eb gtkplacesview: disconnect from server list monitor changes on destroy
This will be used in subsequent commits to fix the sign by which the
value is changed in response to directional scroll or keypress events.
The idea is: you have a movement to make – in the form of a delta that
follows widget directions, i.e. −1 means left or up, +1 means right or
down – and you want to know whether that delta needs to be inverted in
order to produce the intuitively expected directional change of :value.
The existing should_invert() is not sufficient: it just determines
whether to invert visually, but we need more nuance than that for input.
To answer that – while not doubling up the work for scrolls and keys – I
add a helper should_invert_move(), which considers other relevant state:
• A parallel movement on priv->orientation should just use the existing
should_invert(), which already worked OK for this case (not others).
• Movements on the other orientation now depend on priv->orientation:
◦ For a horizontal Range, always invert, so up (i.e. −ve in terms of
widget coords) always means increase value & vice-versa. This was
done in get_wheel_delta(), but move it here for use with keys too.
◦ For a vertical Range, ignore :invert as it’s only relevant to the
parallel orientation. Do not care about text direction here either
as RTL locales do not invert number lines, Cartesian plots, etc.
This returns TRUE if the delta should be inverted before applying to the
value, and we can now use this function in both scroll and key handlers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=407242https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791802
.set_accel_path(): Use (nullable) instead of (allow-none), and explain
what a NULL means (albeit very briefly)
.set_title(): Annotate @title as (nullable), and explain NULL’s meaning
...from CellRenderer::start-editing, to point people in the direction of
info about the lifecycle of the Editable and how to do generic setup.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/154
Drop the line copied from .activate(), replace it with a description of
what this method actually does, and explain what a NULL result means.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/154
* Note in the intro that we're really thinking about temporary widgets
* Mention a gotcha regarding GtkEntry and how ::focus-out stops editing
* Give some examples of what you'd want to do in ::editing-done
* Be a bit more precise about what ::remove-widget represents
* Summarise the lifecycle between Renderer/Editable in .start_editing()
* Emphasise again there that this should be viewed as a temporary widget
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/154
... and use it to not connect anything to the frameclock if it isn't
set.
This gets around the problem that the frame clock is disconnected before
GtkWidgetClass.unrealize() is called but the widget is still marked as
realized and the frame clock is available during the vfunc, which makes
calls like gtk_widget_queue_resize() reconnect to the frame clock.
Closes#168