mirror of
https://github.com/brl/mutter.git
synced 2024-11-22 08:00:42 -05:00
be29c69653
2005-01-09 Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Don't focus the panel on click. Fixes #160470 (and 100470 and removes the need for the hack from 128200) * doc/how-to-get-focus-right.txt: Update section on focusing non-decorated windows (specifically, DOCKS and DESKTOPS) * src/display.c (event_callback): don't focus dock windows on click
202 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
202 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
To make choice of focus window consistent for each focus method, a
|
|
number of guidelines should be followed. (For purposes of discussion
|
|
here, I'm excluding things like the panel and the desktop from
|
|
"windows". It is technically incorrect to do this, but I'm lazy and
|
|
"windows" is shorter than something like "normal windows". See the
|
|
end of the discussion for how these special cases are handled.) The
|
|
basics are easy:
|
|
|
|
Focus method Behavior
|
|
click When a user clicks on a window, focus it
|
|
sloppy When an EnterNotify is received, focus the window
|
|
mouse Same as sloppy, but also defocus on LeaveNotify
|
|
|
|
Note that these choices (along with the choice that clicking on a
|
|
window raises it for the click focus method) introduces the following
|
|
invariants for focus from mouse activity:
|
|
|
|
Focus method Invariant
|
|
click The window on top is focused
|
|
sloppy If the mouse is in a window, then it is focused; if the
|
|
mouse is not in a window, then the most recently used
|
|
window is focused.
|
|
mouse If the mouse is in a window, then it is focused; otherwise,
|
|
the designated "no_focus_window" is focused
|
|
|
|
However, there are a number of cases where the current focus window
|
|
becomes invalid and another should be chosen. Some examples are when
|
|
a focused window is closed or minimized, or when the user changes
|
|
workspaces. In these cases, there needs to be a rule consistent with
|
|
the above about the new window to choose.
|
|
|
|
Focus method Behavior
|
|
click Focus the most recently used window (same as the window
|
|
on top)
|
|
sloppy Focus the window containing the pointer if there is such
|
|
a window, otherwise focus the most recently used window.
|
|
mouse Focus the window containing the pointer if there is one,
|
|
otherwise focus the designated "no_focus_window".
|
|
|
|
Also, sometimes a new window will be mapped (e.g. unminimizing a
|
|
window or launching a new application). Most users want to interact
|
|
with new windows right away, so these should typically be focused.
|
|
This does conflict with the invariants for sloppy and mouse focus
|
|
modes, so this wouldn't be true for a strict-pointer-focus mode. For
|
|
all other modes (non-strict-pointer-focus modes), there are only two
|
|
cases in which a new window shouldn't be focused:
|
|
|
|
1) If the window takes a while to launch and the user starts
|
|
interacting with a different application, the new window should
|
|
not take focus.
|
|
2) If the window that will appear was not launched by the user
|
|
(error dialogs, instant messaging windows, etc.), then the window
|
|
should not take focus when it appears.
|
|
|
|
To handle these cases, Metacity compares timestamps of the event that
|
|
caused the launch and the timestamp of the last interaction with the
|
|
focused window. (Case 2 is handled by providing a special timestamp
|
|
of 0 for the launch time, which ensures that the window that appears
|
|
doesn't get focus)
|
|
|
|
If the newly launched window isn't focused, some things should be done
|
|
to alert the user that there is a window to work with:
|
|
1) The _NET_WM_DEMANDS_ATTENTION hint should be set
|
|
2) If the new window isn't modal for the focused window, it should
|
|
appear below the focused window so that it doesn't obscure the
|
|
focused window that the user is interacting with.
|
|
3) If the new window is modal to the focused window, the currently
|
|
focused window should lose focus but the modal window should
|
|
appear on top.
|
|
|
|
Additionally, the user may decide to use the keyboard instead of the mouse
|
|
to navigate between windows (referred to as "keynav"). This poses no
|
|
problems for click-to-focus (because the same invariant can be
|
|
maintained), but for sloppy and mouse focus it means that EnterNotify
|
|
and LeaveNotify events should be ignored (they can be generated
|
|
without using the mouse, for example, by grabs).
|
|
|
|
Finally, windows of type WM_DOCK or WM_DESKTOP (e.g. the desktop and
|
|
the panel) present a special case, at least partially due to the lack
|
|
of decorations. For WM_DESKTOP windows, we only focus them if the
|
|
user explicitly requests it (e.g. clicks on the window, uses
|
|
Ctrl-Alt-Tab to navigate to it, uses a keybinding to show the desktop,
|
|
etc.). For WM_DOCK windows, we do not focus unless we receive a very
|
|
explicit request (e.g. Ctrl-Alt-Tab or a _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW message;
|
|
not normal clicks).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To read more about the bugs that inspired these choices:
|
|
- When a focused window becomes invalid and another should be chosen
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=135810
|
|
- When a new window is mapped
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=118372
|
|
Also, the EWMH spec, especially the parts relating to _NET_WM_USER_TIME
|
|
- Modal vs. non-modal dialogs that get denied focus when mapped
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=151996
|
|
- Ignoring EnterNotify and LeaveNotify events during keynav
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=101190
|
|
- Not focusing panels
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=160470
|
|
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=120100
|
|
|
|
There were many bugs which had to be fixed to get all the above
|
|
working; they helped form these policies and/or show the difficulties
|
|
in implementing this policy (my apologies in advance for producing a
|
|
list heavily lopsided to what I've done; it's just that these bugs are
|
|
the ones I'm the most familiar with):
|
|
bug 72314 ignore LeaveNotify events from grabs
|
|
bug 82921 focus windows on map
|
|
bug 87531 only show focus for sticky windows on active workspace (pager)
|
|
bug 94545 focus window on workspace switch is non-deterministic
|
|
bug 95747 should ignore EnterNotify events with NotifyInferior detail set
|
|
bug 97635 sticky windows always keep focus when switching workspaces
|
|
bug 102665 a window unminimized from the tasklist should be focused
|
|
bug 108643 focus in MRU order instead of stack order
|
|
bug 110970 moving a window to another workspace loses focus
|
|
bug 112031 closing a dialog can result in a strange focus window
|
|
bug 115650 add _NET_WM_USER_TIME support to gtk+ (see also 150502)
|
|
bug 120100 panel shouldn't be focused after workspace applet usage
|
|
bug 123803 need final EnterNotify after workspace switch (see also 124798)
|
|
bug 124981 focus clicked window in pager only if on current workspace
|
|
bug 128200 focus correct window on libwnck window minimize (see 107681 too)
|
|
bug 131582 fix race condition on window minimize/close
|
|
bug 133120 wrong window focused when changing workspaces
|
|
bug 135024 _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW messages need timestamps
|
|
bug 135786 middle-clicking on focused window to lower it should defocus too
|
|
bug 136581 window minimization vs. activation for mouse focus
|
|
bug 144900 fix focus choice on "un-showing" the desktop
|
|
bug 147475 don't lock keyboard on workspace change
|
|
bug 148364 DEMANDS_ATTENTION support for metacity & libwnck (and other stuff)
|
|
bug 149028 focus-stealing-prevention for metacity-dialog (and other stuff)
|
|
bug 149366 windows denied focus on map occur in wrong order in alt-tab list
|
|
bug 149543 consistent focus window when unshowing desktop
|
|
bug 149589 race in focus choice from libwnck messages
|
|
bug 150271 make sure "run application" dialog gets focused
|
|
bug 150668 update gtk+ _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW support
|
|
bug 151245 application startup notification forwarding (partially rejected)
|
|
bug 151984 Soeren's idea--backup timestamp when startup notification not used
|
|
bug 151990 prevent focus inconsistencies by only providing one focus method
|
|
bug 151996 modal dialogs denied focus should not be lowered
|
|
bug 152000 fix race on window close followed by rapid mouse movement
|
|
|
|
|
|
Addendum on sloppy and mouse focus
|
|
You may occasionally hear people refer to sloppy or mouse focus
|
|
modes as inherently buggy. This is what they mean by that:
|
|
|
|
1) Keynav doesn't maintain the same invariants as mouse navigation
|
|
for these focus modes; switching back and forth between
|
|
navigation methods, therefore, may appear to have
|
|
inconsistencies. Examples:
|
|
a) If the user uses Alt-Tab to change the window with focus, then
|
|
starts to move the mouse, at that moment the window where the
|
|
mouse is does not have focus.
|
|
b) Users expect that a workspace they previously used will not
|
|
change when the return to it. This means things like window
|
|
position and stacking order, but also the focus window.
|
|
Unfortunately, using the original focus window (which would be
|
|
the most recently used window on that workspace) will
|
|
sometimes conflict with the invariants for mouse and sloppy
|
|
focus modes. Users are much more surprised by the invariant
|
|
being broken than by having the focus window changed (see bug
|
|
94545 and probably others), so we maintain the invariant.
|
|
This only matters when using Ctrl-Alt-Arrow to switch
|
|
workspaces instead of clicking in the workspace switcher, so
|
|
this really is a keynav vs mouse issue. Either that, or a
|
|
windows-are-being-mapped exception. ;-)
|
|
c) Opening a menu, then moving the mouse to a different window,
|
|
and then pressing escape to dismiss the menu will result in
|
|
the window containing the mouse not being focused. This is
|
|
actually correct behavior (because pressing escape shows that
|
|
the user is using key navigation to interact with the window
|
|
containing the menu) but is one of those hard-to-get-right
|
|
keynav and mouse focus mixture cases. (See bug 101190 for
|
|
more details)
|
|
2) The sloppy/mouse invariants are often not strictly maintained;
|
|
for example, we provide an exception to the invariant for newly
|
|
mapped windows. (Most find that not allowing this exception is
|
|
confusing)
|
|
3) There are an awful lot of little cases to handle to get any focus
|
|
mode right, even for click-to-focus. Since mouse and sloppy
|
|
focus have sometimes been hard to even determine what correct
|
|
behavior is, it is much harder to get them completely right.
|
|
Plus mouse and sloppy focus users are a minority, decreasing the
|
|
motivation of window manager implementors to get those focus
|
|
modes right.
|
|
4) Because of -1-, -2-, and -3-, implementations are often buggy or
|
|
inconsistent and people form their opinions from usage of these
|
|
implementations.
|
|
5) Sloppy focus suffers from a bit of a discoverability problem (for
|
|
example, I have seen a scientist sit down to a computer for which
|
|
sloppy focus was in use and take a few minutes before figuring
|
|
out how window activation worked; granted the layout of the
|
|
windows in that situation was a bit unusual but it still
|
|
illustrates that sloppy focus is harder than it should be to
|
|
figure out). Mouse focus solves this problem; however, people
|
|
that have experience with other computing environments are
|
|
accustomed to being able to move their mouse outside the window
|
|
they are working with and still continue interacting with that
|
|
window, which conflicts with mouse focus.
|