The internal copy of JSON-GLib was meant to go away right after the 1.0
release, given that JSON-GLib was still young and relatively unknown.
Nowadays, many projects started depending on this little library, and
distributions ship it and keep it up to date.
Keeping a copy of JSON-GLib means keeping it up to date; unfortunately,
this would also imply updating the code not just for the API but for the
internal implementations.
Starting with the 1.2 release, Clutter preferably dependend on the
system copy; with the 1.4 release we stopped falling back automatically.
The 1.6 cycle finally removes the internal copy and requires a copy of
JSON-GLib installed on the target system in order to compile Clutter.
* clutter/clutter-scriptable.[ch]: Rename ::set_name and ::get_name
to ::set_id and ::get_id, to avoid potential confusion with the
ClutterActor:name property.
* clutter/clutter-script.h:
* clutter/clutter-script.c (clutter_script_construct_object): Use
clutter_scriptable_set_id().
(clutter_get_script_id): Add a public function to retrieve the ID
used in the UI definition files from an object.
* clutter/clutter-actor.c: Do not set the name of the actor with
the ID set in the UI definition files.
* tests/test-script.c: Test clutter_get_script_id().
* clutter.symbols: Update with the new symbols.
* clutter/Makefile.am:
* clutter/clutter.h:
* clutter/clutter-scriptable.[ch]: Add the ClutterScriptable
interface; by implementing this interface, a class can
override the UI definition parsing and transform complex data
types into GObject properties, or allow custom properties.
* clutter/clutter-script.c:
* clutter/clutter-script-parser.c:
* clutter/clutter-script-private.h: Rearrange the code and
use the ClutterScriptable interface to parse and build the
custom properties. This cleans up the code and also it makes
it more reliable (the complex type parsing is now done using
the target type and not just the name of the property).