If the Window Manager supports the _NET_WM_STATE_HIDDEN, we use it to use
the _NET_WM_STATE protocol when de-iconifying windows (iconification is
unchanged, via XIconifyWindow). Additionally, we no longer interpret all
UnmapNotify events for our window as the result of iconification.
(Based on patch by Tomas Frydrych <tf@linux.intel.com>)
Previously we kept a Selector object for every "simple selector" (term
from CSS spec). Now we keep one for every match operation. So given the
selector
".a b:focus"
we will have 4 elements:
- pseudoclass ":focus"
- element "b"
- match any desendant (the space)
- class ".a"
Each of those is represented by a "selector class" which is basically
the collection of vfuncs for this selector.
NSEvent -scrollingDeltaX and -scrollingDeltaY aren't defined before
10.7, so objc assumes that they return a pointer. Trying to cast to a
float generates a compiler error.
If delta_x/y information is provided in scroll events, use it
to modify the underlying adjustment in steps proportional to
the deltas provided.
If the child widget of a scrolledwindow doesn't set
GDK_SMOOTH_SCROLL_MASK, regular scroll events will be dispatched,
and still handled by these 2 widgets.
XInput >= 2.1 allows for implementing smooth scrolling,
reporting the different scrolling axes as valuators.
Any change in those will be reported as GdkEventScroll
events with delta_x/y information.
the older kind of scroll events is still handled, and
emulated in devices able to provide smooth scrolling,
setting _gdk_event_set_pointer_emulated() in that case.
nsevent scrollingDeltaX/Y (available on OSX >= Lion) is used to
provide the smooth scrolling values. In any case, old fashioned
events are still sent, setting _gdk_event_set_pointer_emulated()
if the event contains both smooth and non-smooth values.
Events of type GDK_SCROLL will be received if the client side window
event mask has either GDK_SCROLL_MASK or GDK_SMOOTH_SCROLL_MASK.
GDK_BUTTON_PRESS_MASK has been removed from type_masks[GDK_SCROLL]
as that bit is often set for other-than-scrolling purposes, and
yet have the window receive scroll events. In GTK+, this forces
non-smooth events bubbling, even if the widgets above want smooth
events, and legitimately set GDK_[SMOOTH_]SCROLL_MASK.
If a device provides both smooth and non-smooth events, the latter will be
flagged with _gdk_event_set_pointer_emulated() so the client side window
receives one or the other. If a device is only able to deliver non-smooth
events, those will be sent, so both direction/deltas may need to be handled.
get_event_window() just checked on GDK_TOUCH_MASK, including for emulated
pointer events, so at the very least those should also match evmasks with
no touch events whatsoever