Remove the StBoxLayout:spacing GObject property, and instead make
BoxLayout look up the spacing from the CSS style. This makes it
consistent with padding and will allow the use of units. (The
removal of the GObject property entirely instead of making it an
override is consistent with how we handle color, font, padding, etc.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=596803
StBoxLayout: Make consistent that the area scrolled and clipped
to is the content area (excluding borders and padding.) Translate
back appropriately when chaining up so that the parent background
is drawn at the right place and picking on the box (if it's reactive)
picks at the right place on the screen.
clip-to-allocation is removed from StScrollView since it's just
not right - if the child has any non-moving elements, like headers or
borders, it will need to set a narrower clip. And even if the entire
child scrolls, we want to clip to an arrow that excludes the scrollbars.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=595997
When a StBoxLayout is allocated a size less than its natural size,
think "shrink" needs to be divided among the children that have
a smaller minimum size than natural size.
This is done by preferentially shrinking the children that are most
expanded from their minimum size and then increasing that set of
children until we've found enough total shrink.
A new method is used of allocating children at integral sizes - instead
of rounding the per-child extra amount to an integer (which causes
cumulative round-off errors), compute the position as we go along in
floats and round individually for each child widget.
Extend the box-layout test to include of a test of a box being set
to various widths, starting quite narrow.
http://bugzilla.moblin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6311https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=595995
If the actor isn't in a stage, then setting up the adjustment
based on the actor's size (which we can't compute) and the
size of the default stage (which isn't relevant), doesn't make
sense. Just use arbitrary default values.
The adjustments will be updated to reasonable values when first
the box is first allocated.
It's not entirely clear to me why we ever want to compute the
adjustment settings this way; perhaps we should always use
default values.
http://bugzilla.moblin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6307https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=595996
Rather than repeating the computation of borders in many different
widget subclasses, add helper functions:
st_theme_node_adjust_for_height()
st_theme_node_adjust_preferred_width()
st_theme_node_adjust_for_width()
st_theme_node_adjust_preferred_height()
st_theme_node_get_content_box()
That are used in get_preferred_width()/get_preferred_height() and
allocate() methods to consistently apply the necessary adjustments.
This allows removing the StPadding type.
Queueing a relayout when the borders/padding change is moved from
st_widget_real_style_changed() to the invoking code to allow access
to the old StThemeNode for comparison. (Should this be added as
a parameter to the signal?)
Borders are included in the geometry adjustments, but borders
are not yet drawn.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=595993
To each .c and .h file, add:
/* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu"; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*- */
'gnu' is the default anyways for Emacs, but indent-tabs-mode is not,
so this sets things up to correspond to the policy of no-tabs.
http://bugzilla.moblin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6467