When trying to clamp to pixel a box that is exactly in between 2
pixels, the clutter_actor_box_clamp_to_pixel() function changes the
size of the box.
Here is an example :
ClutterActorBox box = { 10.5, 10, 20.5, 20};
g_message ("%fx%f -> %fx%f", box.x1, box.y1, box.x2, box.y2);
clutter_actor_box_clamp_to_pixel (&box);
g_message ("%fx%f -> %fx%f", box.x1, box.y1, box.x2, box.y2);
Here is what you get :
** Message: 10.500000x10.000000 -> 20.500000x20.000000
** Message: 10.000000x10.000000 -> 21.000000x20.000000
That is because of the properties of the ceilf and floorf function
used to do the clamping.
For example, ceil(0.5) is 1.0, and ceil(-0.5) is 0.0.
And, floor(0.5) is 0.0, and floor(-0.5) is -1.0.
To work around that problem this patch retains the distance between x
and y coordinates and apply that difference before calling ceilf() on
x2 and y2.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689073
Export the last event received for each touch point in its entirety,
instead of duplicating ClutterEvent accessors one at a time.
examples/pan-action.c has been updated to show the type of the event
that's causing the panning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685737
TapAction is a GestureAction-subclass that handles clicks and
tap gestures. It is meant to provide a replacement for ClickAction
using GestureAction:
• it handles events trasparently without capturing them, so that it
can coexists with other GestureActions;
• the ::tap signal is not emitted if the drag threshold is exceeded;
• building upon GestureAction the amount of code is greatly reduced.
TapAction provides:
• tap signal, notifying users when a tap has been performed.
The image-content example program has been updated replacing its
ClickAction usage with TapAction.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683948
Ensure that when cancelling a gesture, either because a callback
has returned FALSE or because clutter_gesture_action_cancel() has
been called, the array tracking touch points is emptied and a whole
new set of touch points is needed before restarting the gesture.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685221
Let gesture subclasses override how the drag threshold should
be handled:
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_NONE tells GestureAction that the gesture
must begin immediately and there's no drag limit that will cause
its cancellation;
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_AFTER is the default GestureAction behaviour,
where it needs to wait until the drag threshold has been exceeded
before considering the gesture valid;
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_BEFORE will make GestureAction cancel
the gesture once the drag exceed the configured threshold.
For example, ZoomAction and RotateAction could set
CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_NONE since the use of two fingers makes the
begin of the action more self-evident, while an hypothetical Tap
gesture may use CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_BEFORE to cancel the tap if
the pointer moves too much.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685028
The code for handling key repeats (and in particular stopping on focus loss)
assumes that the repeat key is set to XKB_KEYCODE_INVALID in the default case.
This change switches to the new mechanism for loading a cursor into a buffer.
It no longer relies on having a PNG stored in a known location and instead
loads from the Wayland cursor theme.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
Add support for repeating keys to the Wayland input backend.
Unfortunately the repeat delay/interval is hardcoded into the Clutter
backend, as Wayland doesn't yet tell clients what the global values
should be.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
For Wayland, this is mostly the input protocol having changed, although
there's also the SHM pool API, the cursor API, as well as fullscreen and
ping.
Also port to the new (months-old) xkbcommon API, as used by Weston 0.95.
This involves having xkbcommon manage the state for us, where
appropriate. Fans of multi-layout keyboards (or just caps lock) will no
doubt appreciate these changes.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Looks like we need to include this directly, but also need to include
cogl/cogl.h to get COGL_HAS_EGL_SUPPORT, since cogl-egl.h doesn't
include cogl-defines.h first.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
If a button press happen on stage and the pointer is moved outside
the stage while holding the mouse button, the motion and release
events are still delivered to actors. Do the same X11 soft grab
emulation for touch events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685589
On various systems, trying to release a mutex that hasn't been acquired
will result in a run-time error.
In order to avoid this, we trylock() the Big Clutter Lock™ and
immediately unlock() it, regardless of the result; if the lock was
already acquired, trylock() will immediately fail, and we can release
it; if the lock was not acquired, trylock() will succeed, and we can
release the lock immediately.
This is necessary to maintain binary compatibility and invariants for
Clutter applications doing:
clutter_init()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_main()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
instead of the correct:
clutter_init()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
clutter_main()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
With Clutter ≥ 1.12, the idiomatic form is:
clutter_init()
...
clutter_main()
given that the public Big Clutter Lock™ acquire/release API has been
deprecated, and nobody should take the lock outside of Clutter itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679439
When the last touch has been released the stage on the
corresponding master device (eg. the virtual core pointer) is set
to NULL and no mouse events can be delivered until an ENTER event
has occurred and the stage pointer restored.
This is due to the fact that the master devices can send both
touch events and mouse events, forwarding events coming from the
attached slave devices.
To restore delivery of mouse events we need to ensure that the
stage is set on each ButtonPress, ButtonRelease and Motion event
coming from master devices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684509
When using the new ActorAlign flags we must get the real alignment for
the horizontal axis, as clutter_actor_allocate() will compute the
effective alignment by itself; if we use the effective alignment then
ClutterActor.allocate() will swap it, and undo our work.
When using the old BinAlignment flags we should reverse the alignment
depending on whether the text direction of the child is RTL or LTR.
See bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684214
It should be possible to destroy the actor currently being dragged from
within the ::drag-end signal. In order to do this, we need to keep a
reference on the action for the duration of the emit_drag_end() function
as well as resetting the action's state inside the dispose()
implementation, to avoid trying to access cleared data.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681814
Modified Return key presses don't trigger ::activate so we would end
up adding an unprintable character to a single paragraph mode pango
layout which renders it as a box.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=623344
The code for calculating the content box when the aspect ratio is
greater than 1 was broken. The same code that did the calculation for
aspect ratio less than 1 should be used in all cases.
Fixes: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/682161
When we miss button release events (eg. when they happen outside
of our window) we must ensure that the corresponding point is
removed from the array of tracked points, otherwise GestureAction
will get very confused and will cancel all subsequent gestures.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683471
When starting a new gesture before the momentum of the previous one
has finished the ::pan-stopped was counter-intuitively emitted
after the new ::gesture-begin.
Make use of gesture_prepare() to reset the state of the action
right before emitting ::gesture-begin.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683431
We often mean that when key_focus == NULL, it's assumed to be on the
stage, and clutter_stage_get_key_focus() reflects this. We also do a
lot of check around the lines of key_focus == NULL instead of also
checking for the stage, so make sure to normalize it so that explicitly
grabbing the stage's key focus will not change our behaviour.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683301
The ClutterEventSequence structure is a fully opaque type; on X11, it is
just an unsigned integer that gets converted into a pointer, but in the
future it may become a fully fledged data structure.
Obviously, we cannot tell people to just dereference the pointer into an
integer in order to use it, and still retain the ability to change the
type; for this reason, we need a proper accessor function to convert the
EventSequence into a touch detail, to be used with the XInput API.
The ordering of the evdev button numbers is the opposite of the
order in Clutter (the middle button is 3 instead of 2) so we need to
manually map the button numbers when creating a ClutterButtonEvent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680255
803b3bafb6 introduced a new issue for
multi touch events.
In the case where 2 touch events for 2 different touch points are
processed in the same iteration, a call to
_clutter_stage_remove_device() when processing the first event will
remove the stage setting of the InputDevice. That means Clutter will
skip the second event, because it can't find a stage to which relate
the event, so no related actor and so no emission.
To fix this we move the _clutter_stage_(add/remove)_device() calls
into the input device. This way the input device can find out exactly
when to call these functions (i.e. when no touch point were previously
active or when no touch point remain active).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682362
Interpolating between two transformations expressed using a 3D matrix
can be achieved by decomposing the matrices into their transformations
and do a simple numeric interpolation between the initial and final
states, like we do for other data types.
Luckily for us, the CSS Transforms specification from the W3C provides
the decomposition algorithm, using the "unmatrix" code taken from the
book "Graphics Gems II, edited by Jim Arvo".
Once the matrices have been decomposed, we can simply interpolate the
transformations, and re-apply them onto the result matrix, using the
facilities that Clutter provides for interpolating between two known
GTypes.
Since Cogl version 1.11.2, Cogl no longer includes the EGL headers
from cogl.h if COGL_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_2_0_API is defined. Instead
the application needs to include cogl-egl.h so that we can avoid
polluting the global namespace with X defines. Clutter defines the 2.0
define in its configure.ac and it is relying on Cogl to include the
right EGL header in clutter-egl-headers.h so we need to change which
header it includes.
When changing an implicit transition mid flight we may end up with an
easing state with a duration of zero milliseconds; this leads to the
implicit transition machinery setting the final state directly onto the
actor. If there is a running transition, though, we need to remove it
from the transitions table, otherwise it will keep running.
This regression happened when the update_transition() internal function
was merged into the create_transition() one.
Tested-by: Lionel Landwerlin <llandwerlin@gmail.com>
PanAction is a GestureAction-subclass that implements the panning
concept for scrollable actors, with the ability to emit interpolated
signals to emulate the kinetic inertia of the panning. PanAction provides:
• pan signal, notifying users of the panning gesture status;
• pan-stopped signal, emitted at the end of the interpolated phase
of the panning gesture, if enabled;
• pan-axis property, to allow constraining the dragging to a specific
axis;
• interpolated property, to enable or disable the inertial behaviour;
• deceleration property, to customize the rate at which the momentum
of the panning will be slowed down;
• acceleration-factor property, applied to the inertial momentum when
starting the interpolated sequence.
An interactive test is also provided.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681648
Add some accessors to simplify common tasks for GestureAction users:
• clutter_gesture_action_get_motion_delta() to get the delta
on the X and Y axis in stage coordinates since the last motion
event, and the scalar distance travelled;
• clutter_gesture_action_get_velocity() to get an estimate of the
speed of the last motion event along the X and Y axis and as a
scalar value in pixels per millisecond.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681648
When appending (with a negative row/column parameter), the row/column
count should be incremented by 1, not 2. This also fixes layout errors
when using column/row spacing: The amount of extra space required was
calculated incorrectly due to the wrong column count.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679990
When setting a drag handle, transform the original press
coordinates using the drag handle as reference instead of the
associated actor.
This causes the initial misplacement of drag handle in
example/drag-action when holding down the Shift key: the handle
gets placed at the main actor origin on the first drag event,
instead of following the mouse pointer.
All subsequent motion events already use the right actor when
transforming the coordinates, thus they are not affected.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681746
If the DragAction has a drag handle that gets destroyed inside the
::drag-end signal handler, the destruction sequence will trigger a
callback we have in place to check if the handle is being destroyed
mid-drag, e.g. from a ::drag-motion event.
The callback on the drag handle destruction will check if we are still
in the middle of a drag and emit the ::drag-end signal to allow cleaning
up; the callback erroneously uses the drag handle as the argument for
the emit_drag_end() function — instead of the actor to which the drag
action has been attached. Also, by the time we emit the ::drag-end, we
are not dragging the actor any more, so we shouldn't be emitted the
::drag-end signal twice.
The fix is, thus, made of two parts:
- reset the in_drag boolean before emitting the ::drag-end signal
so that destroying the drag handle will not result in a double
signal emission;
- use the correct actor when calling emit_drag_end().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681814
If the actor has a fixed position set, but it's not using the BinLayout
alignment enumeration to set its alignment, then we force the alignment
factor to 0.0; this is consistent with what happens with an explicit
alignment of CLUTTER_BIN_ALIGNMENT_FIXED.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682265
Event handling should only apply to editable ClutterText actors, but we
also have the :selectable property to care about.
The button/touch press should position the cursor inside an editable
ClutterText; the :selectable property should be used to allow selecting
the text, either through pointer or touch dragging, via the keyboard, or
by multiple pointer clicks. If neither of these two conditions are met,
the ClutterText should just propagate the event handling further.
Allow setting a ClutterRect on the drag action and force the
dragged actor's position to be always within that rectangle (relative
to the actor's parent).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681168
The boolean_handled accumulator will stop the signal emission if TRUE is
returned by a signal handler; the boolean_continue accumulator will stop
the signal emission if FALSE is returned. The first one is used for
event-related signals, while the latter is used for action-related
signals.
Only the signal connection. When using G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC there will be
a warning for every signal connection.
We should try and discourage people from ever using the paint signal
ever again, until we can safely remove it in Clutter 2.0.
We cannot fully deprecate Geometry, because ClutterActor and ClutterText
are actually using the type in signals and properties; but we can
deprecate the API that uses this type, so that 2.0 will be able to avoid
it entirely.
The :clip property still uses ClutterGeometry, which is a very bad
rectangle type. Since we cannot change the type of the property
compatibly, we should introduce a new property using ClutterRect
instead. This also matches the ClutterActor.set_clip() API, which uses a
decomposed rectangle with floating point values, like we do with
set_position() and set_size().
Instead of only relying on the (now) deprecated BinAlignment.FIXED
enumeration value, we just ask the actor if a fixed position has been
explicitly set, under the assumption that if a developer decided to call
set_x(), set_y(), or set_position() on an actor inside a BinLayout then
she wanted the fixed position to be honoured.
This removes the last (proper) use of the BinAlignment enumeration.
The Geometry type is an *awful* representation of a integer rectangle,
as it uses unsigned integers for its size, leading to overflow issues
when unioning and intersecting. We have better rectangle types in
Cairo and Clutter, these days.
When dragging/scrolling using touch events, we want the same behaviour
than for motion events. We need to honor the user's calls to
clutter_stage_set_motion_events_enabled() to deactive event
bubbling/captured sequences on the actor located under the pointer and
just transmit events to the stage/grab actor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680751
We need to make sure that ClutterActor::transition-stopped is emitted
after the transition was removed from the actor's list of transitions.
We cannot just remove the TransitionClosure from the hash table that
holds the transitions associated to an actor, and let the
TransitionClosure free function stop the timeline, thus emitting the
::transition-stopped signal - otherwise, stopping the timeline will end
up trying to remove the transition from the hash table, and we'll get
either a warning or a segfault.
Since we know we're removing the timeline anyway, we can emit the signal
ourselves in case the timeline is playing, in both the implicit and
explicit cases.
The :transform property controls the modelview matrix of an actor; it
can be used to set a custom modelview matrix on the actor, as opposed
to the decomposed transformations (rotation, scaling, translation)
provided by the ClutterActor class.