Use the enum to make a single fullscreen API that's much more
consistent. Both set_fullscreen() and with_fullscreen() take the
same enum and support all the variations so you can build the window
however you want and switch between the modes at runtime.
There are two kinds of fullscreen. One where you take over the whole
output the other where you just set the window size to the screen
size and get rid of decorations. The first one already existed,
implement the second which is more common for normal desktop apps.
Use an enum to consolidate all the fullscreen states.
When X's evdev input module is configured to emulate scroll events (as
used with e.g. trackpoints), it generates non-emulated scroll button
presses and does not generate motion events. This is contrary to the
behavior of all other hardware I've tested, and contrary to the
behavior of libinput, but nonetheless should be supported.
X11 always return the geometry in pixel units. Since
window.get_inner_size returns the size in points in other window manager
implementations X11 should also return in points instead of pixels.
This removes the need for the EventsLoop::interrupt method by inroducing
a ControlFlow type. This new type is to be returned by the user's
callback and indicates whether the `EventsLoop` should continue waiting
for events or break from the loop.
Only the wayland, x11 and api_transition backends have been updated so
far, and only the wayland backend has actually been tested.
X11 and Wayland implementations are now half implemented, however both
still do not correctly break from the inner blocking event dispatch
functions when `wakeup` is called, which they should do.
If the interrupted flag were set going into poll_events, it would only
ever handle the first event in the queue. Now, the flag is reset at the
start so events are processed until the caller requests otherwise.
This is the same behavior as with WindowProxy::wakeup_event_loop in
previous versions.
Unfortunately, `EventsLoop::interrupt` is also the recommend way to exit
a `run_forever` loop from within the event handler callback. Pushing an
extra event on the queue in that case is simply wasteful. Changing this
would require a refactor taking one of two possible forms:
1. Add a method *in addition* to interrupt intended for waking up the
event loop
2. Add a return type to the event callback like
enum Continue { True, False }
which would be used in lieu of the atomic interrupt flag.
It was only processing a single event per call. The docs say
> Fetches all the events that are pending, calls the callback function
> for each of them, and returns.
which suggests that was incorrect.
All platforms should now receive events in the following order:
1. KeyboardInput(ElementState::Pressed, ..)
2. ReceivedCharacter
3. KeyboardInput(ElementState::Released, ..)
cc https://github.com/tomaka/glutin/issues/878
ICCCM 4.1.2.5 (https://tronche.com/gui/x/icccm/sec-4.html#WM_CLASS)
states that:
> This property must be present when the window leaves the Withdrawn
> state and may be changed only while the window is in the Withdrawn
> state.
Previously, we would first map the window, and then set these
properties, causing sadness for window managers (#167,
tomaka/glutin#879). This patch changes that by setting the class and
name attributes immediately after the window is created, and before it
is mapped.
Fixes#167.
This expands input events to represent sub-pixel mouse positions, devices responsible for generating events, and raw
device-oriented events. The X11 back end is refactored to make full use of the new expressiveness. Other backends have
had new functionality minimally stubbed out, save for the macos backend which already supports sub-pixel mouse
positions.