The original code was assuming that getDay() on a Sunday would
return 7 rather than 0. This broke the "Next Week" logic
in several places.
This commit introduces a dayInWeek variable which takes the following
values on the according days:
weekstart = 1:
Mo: 0
Tu: 1
We: 2
Th: 3
Fr: 4
Sa: 5
Su: 6
weekstart = 0:
Su: 0
Mo: 1
Tu: 2
We: 3
Th: 4
Fr: 5
Sa: 6
Using this we can simplify and fix the conditional that decides
whether to show "This week" or "Next week" which was broken on
Sundays.
This commit also fixes the period that gets shown for "Next week"
on Sundays. Due to the bug it was 13 + 1 - 0 or 13 + 0 - 0 on
Sundays:
weekStart = 1:
saturday: saturday + 13 - day_in_week = saturday + 8 = sunday next week
sunday: sunday + 13 - day_in_week = sunday + 7 = sunday next week
weekStart = 0:
friday: friday + 13 - day_in_week = friday + 8 = saturday next week
saturday: saturday + 13 - day_in_week = friday + 7 = saturday next week
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682198
With the latest changes to the overview, the application view is now
clearly on a different level compared to the window picker. For that
reason it now makes sense to close it on Escape rather than hiding
the overview directly, as we do for search.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
Rather than relying on implementation details of StWidget's keyboard
navigation to "hide" the focusTrap from arrow key navigation, implement
the desired behavior explicitly in a custom widget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=663901
Tabs used to provide an abstraction for a page and the control used to
activate it. As the latter has now been replaced with external controls
handled directly in the viewSelector, the abstraction itself doesn't make
much sense anymore. In preparation of replacing it, move the search
handling provided by the SearchTab directly in the viewSelector.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
We pass the dash’s showApps button to the viewSelector, and we connect it
to the showing and hiding of the appsView. This is necessary because there
are different mechanisms for switching the views, and it has to stay in
sync with the button’s state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
In the new designs, we no longer need favRemoveTarget. As it shares a lot
of its functionality with the new showAppsIcon, we refactor and restyle it
accordingly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
We’ll be repurposing the favRemoveTarget, which calls for it the be
permanently visibe. The favRemoveTarget used to be added to the dash when
needed and removed again when it wasn’t. This made that it always appeared
at the bottom of the dash. Now that we always show it, we also need to
explicitly define it to be at the bottom of the dash.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
The entry should be positioned in the center of the overview. This makes
that its position can’t be set in the viewSelector without making things
overly complicated. Therefore we move the entry to the overview.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
Design calls for views being accessible by other means than the current tab
system, so we have no longer a need for the public viewTab API. Move the
initialization of tabs to the viewSelector and make
viewSelector.addViewTab() private.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682109
The original design for the overview had buttons for searching for
Wikipedia and Google, but in practice this is a bad idea. The buttons
are the default activations, meaning that using the overview as a
fluent motion of launching something - "firefxo<Enter>", will launch
Google/Wikipedia.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670168
This code was originally here to close the summary box pointer if it was
already open, but it seems that it isn't necessary, and is causing all
sorts of problems.
Displaying a close button provides a discoverable way to close notifications.
Clicking the close button on new notifications, dismisses them, but doesn't
remove the notification source from the message tray if it is resident.
Clicking the close button on summary notifications acts the same way as clicking
"Remove" option in the right click menu, which is to remove the notification
stack and its source, even if it is resident or a tray icon.
When we enter the overview, we don't explicitly don't take a grab, so we
shouldn't connect to key-focus-changed and things like that, otherwise
random overview code will drop our grab for us.
This fixes escape in the overview not dropping when a notification is up.
Make sure to account for modalCount properly, rather than just
tracking modalCount for the last actor on the stack. Additionally,
traverse the popped actors in the reverse order so that onUngrabbed
callbacks are called at the proper place in time.
If the user is already active when the notification pops up, we
won't get an idle watcher because there's no transition from
active to idle or vice versa. Correct this by initializing the
state correctly from XSync.
StScrollBar was intercepting motion events by using captured-event on
the stage, which required additional dirty tricks, which required
additional hacks. Simplify it by just using clutter_grab_pointer()
instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=671001
The designers would like the message-tray to use different styles
depending on whether it is shown in the overview or not, so use
an :overview pseudo class as the top bar.
1) straddling windows get clipped at the monitor boundary
2) we move the bottom monitor and not the primary because that is
where the tray is
3) to stop the wallpaper from the bottom monitor leaking into the
primary, we adjust the clip as the clone animates up/down
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681392