If we update a transition that is currently playing, we need to check
the current easing state, and look at the eventual duration, in case
the user wants to cancel the transition.
Instead of checking the duration of the current easing state we should
check if there's a transition in progress, and update it
unconditionally.
If there is no easing state, or the easing state has a duration of zero
milliseconds, then create_transition() should bail out early and set the
requested final state.
This allows us to write:
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_set_x (actor, 200);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
[...]
clutter_actor_set_x (actor, 100);
and have the second set_x() update the easing in progress, instead of
being ignored.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672945
Commit 80626e7584 removed an
IN_DESTRUCTION check from within the add_child_internal() method,
outlining an option for bringing it back. It was too late for the 1.10
cycle to do it, and eventually pick up the pieces, but now that we're
at the beginning of the 1.11 cycle we can restore it, and add checks
elsewhere to balance it.
This patch fixes clutter to not crash when multiple animations share
the same timeline and the actors are explicitly destroyed before
the timeline completes (bug 672890)
Some of the Clutter code was using GL types for the primitive types
such as GLint and GLubyte and then passing these to Cogl. This doesn't
make much sense because the Cogl functions directly take native C
types. This patch just replaces them with either a native C type or a
glib type.
Some of the cogl conformance tests are trying to directly call GL for
example to test creating a foreign texture. These tests have been
changed to manually define the GL enum values instead of relying on a
GL header to define them.
This is necessary because Cogl may soon stop including a GL header
from its public headers.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The disjunction operator was misspelt as -O which tests whether the
following file is owned by the calling user. This doesn't take enough
arguments so bash was showing an error and the test was always
failing. This meant that NEED_XKB_UTILS was always false which should
have broken the build but the Makefile was mistakenly including
clutter-xkb-utils.c again if SUPPORT_WAYLAND is defined.
See 1b77565e for reference.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The commit 90e5088 added some extra compiler warning options that were
triggering warnings when enabling the wayland build due to missing
header includes. This adds those header includes in.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Because the wayland-server-protocol.h header includes symbols that
collide with wayland-client-protocol.h Cogl now provides top level
<cogl/cogl-wayland-server.h> and <cogl/cogl-wayland-client.h> headers so
that applications can ensure they only include one of the wayland
protocol headers in a particular compilation unit. This updates clutter
accordingly to include those headers.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Should not have been there in the first place: the animatable will be
set either using ClutterTransition API, or when adding the transition
to a ClutterActor.
When adding a transition to a ClutterActor, the actor should hold a
reference on it, and release it only when we remove it. This makes
transitions just like other objects held by ClutterActor.
The ::completed signal emission is part of the current cycle; repeating,
like the automatic reverse of the timeline's direction, happens after
the ::completed chain of handlers has been called.
We still use XKeycodeToKeysym() in a fallback path in case we're not
running on a decent enough system; XKeycodeToKeysym() is deprecated as
of version 1.12 of the X server, but since I don't want to copy a bunch
of code from GDK or, god forbid, from Xlib, for a fallback path, it's
probably more reasonable to just silence the compiler warnings - at
least until we can drop all the X compatibility crap, and just use
modern, or semi-modern, API.
Some events may contain precise scrolling information coming from
devices like trackpads and touchscreens. ClutterEvent should allow
setting and getting this information.
While you can get a per-transition notification of completion, it can be
convenient to also have a way to notify that all the transitions
involving an actor are complete. A simple signal triggered by the
removal of the last transition fits the bill pretty neatly.
When handling Configure events from the X server we update the
internal copy of the window size. Unfortunately we may be updating the
wrong stage implementation because we use the one related to the event
translator (which is the first created stage).
This patch fix flickering/redrawning issues with multi-stage by
looking for the right stage implementation associated with an XEvent.
Signed-off-by: Lionel Landwerlin <lionel.g.landwerlin@linux.intel.com>
If restore_easing_state() is called on the last easing state on the
stack, clean up the stack, so that we don't leave stale pointers
around to later segfault on.
When setting the easing mode, duration, or delay without having ever
called clutter_actor_save_easing_state(). It's confusing, and not
really nice.
In the future, we'll have a default easing state implicitly created by
the actor itself, but for the time being explicitly opting in is
preferrable.
If the pointer is inside the window frame when it's shown then we need
to synthesize and emit a NSMouseEnterEvent ourselves, as Quartz won't
do it for us.
This is a bit of a blind commit - but it's taken from an equivalent
patch that has been verified to work in GDK.