gtk2/docs/reference/gtk/migrating-ClientSideWindows.sgml
Benjamin Otte 65dde2f92f API: Remove gdk_cairo_reset_clip()
You should not ever ever ever call cairo_reset_clip(). If you do, your
code is broken and you deserve everything you get.
And we should definitely not support this insanity.
2010-12-02 20:17:28 +01:00

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<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [
]>
<chapter id="gtk-migrating-ClientSideWindows">
<title>Migrating to client-side windows</title>
<para>
In version 2.18, GDK has been changed to use client-side windows. This
means that there is no longer a 1-1 correspondence between #GdkWindows
and windows in the underlying window system. In particular, it is no
longer correct to assume that each window has an associated XID.
Code that makes this assumption can sometimes be fixed by calling
gdk_window_ensure_native() on the windows in question.
Calling gdk_x11_window_get_xid() (or GDK_WINDOW_XID()) from the
X11-specific API on a non-native window will explicitly call
gdk_window_ensure_native(), so old code using this will continue to
work. A small gotcha is that the GDK_WINDOW_XID() call is no longer a
trivial accessor for the XID of the window, and thus must not be called
from another thread without taking locking precautions.
</para>
<para>
GDK looks for the <envar>GDK_NATIVE_WINDOWS</envar> environment variable
and makes all windows native if it is set. It also tries to be more
compatible with the way prior versions worked in some other ways.
</para>
<para>
Some applications assume that they can just operate on the X windows
corresponding to their GDK windows without ever telling GDK. One
example that we've seen is changing the child window stacking order
using XRestackWindows(). Fixing this properly requires to fix the code
to use GDK functions to achieve whatever it is trying to achieve.
To make this easier in the case of stacking order changes, we've added
a gdk_window_restack() function.
</para>
<para>
One change that can cause problems for some applications is that GDK
is more aggressive about optimizing away expose events. Code that does
more than just repainting exposed areas in response to expose events
may be affected by this.
</para>
<para>
Problems can also occur when using cairo for drawing. One thing that can
go wrong is clip handling. You may not use cairo_reset_clip() on a
cairo_t on a cairo context created via gdk_cairo_create() or passed to
the GtkWidget::draw signal.
</para>
<para>
Due to a weird API in XClearArea the gdk_window_clear_area() call handled
a specified width or height of zero to mean "to end of window" for
non-double-buffered drawing. This has been changed to be consistent with
the docs and what happens in the double-buffered case. All code in GTK+
that relied on this has been fixed, but it is possible (although unlikely)
that third party applications rely on this. If you need to do this, just
implement it yourself using gdk_drawable_get_size().
</para>
</chapter>