Setting event compression to false will allow inter-frame
mouse motion events to be delivered, which are necessary
for painting applications to produce smooth strokes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702392
This is based on the rolling hashes code from
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~krh/weston/log/?h=remote
It works by incrementally calculating hashes for every 32x32 block
in each frame sent, and then refering back to such blocks when
encoding the next frame. This means we detect when a block matches
an existing block in the previous frame in a different position.
This is great for detecting scrolling, which we need now that
the gdk level scrolling is neutered.
* gtk/gtkprintunixdialog.c (printer_status_cb): Do not reset the
waiting_for_printer on status change as the default printer might
get added later.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=577642
Call gtk_cell_layout_clear() on the area instead of the completion in
gtk_entry_completion_clear_text_column_renderer(), because it is also
called from within gtk_entry_completion_clear().
gtk_entry_completion_set_text_column() always added a cell renderer,
regardless of whether there was an existing one already installed. This
patch reuses an old renderer if it exists, but only if it was added by a
previous call to this function.
To avoid conflicts, all renderers that were added manually are removed
when calling this function. Also, the renderer added by this function is
removed when manually adding new renderers. This effectively gives
GtkEntryCompletion two modes (managed and manual cell renderers) and
allows seamless switching between the two.
This is a minor API break. However, this shouldn't be an issue in
practice as applications couldn't call set_text_column() more than once
because of this bug. Also, it is unlikely that many applications mix
set_text_column() and custom cell renderers. The interaction between the
two modes was erratic and not documented well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=635499