* Try XOpenIM with different locale modifiers
Implements the solution suggested in
https://github.com/tomaka/winit/issues/277#issuecomment-337751136.
* Use empty XSetLocaleModifiers beforehand
Also, for modifiers, convert from length-based UTF-8 strings to
null-terminated bytestrings.
* Add CHANGELOG entry and comments
* make windows without decorations resizable and movable in macos
fixes#368
The subclassing logic was copied from servo's fork of glutin:
63026a0f4c/src/api/cocoa/mod.rs (L418)
* remove `isMovableByWindowBackground` and `mouseDownCanMoveWindow`
* revert example changes
* remove resizable mask from decoration: false
* avoid duplicate class declarations
* update changelog
* fix changelog
* changelog whitespace
* Add min/max size setting for win32 and wayland backends
* Implement dynamic min/max size on macos
* Add min/max size setting for x11
* Add empty functions for remaining platforms
* Improved min/max size setting for x11
* Added CHANGELOG entry for new min/max methods
* Added documentation for new min/max methods
* On win32, bound window size to min/max dimensions on window creation
* On win32, force re-check of window size when changing min/max dimensions
* Fix freeze when setting min and max size
Fixes#79#414
This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage,
offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this
entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was
previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window.
Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button
on the window actually closes it now.
The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly
permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex
locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop.
While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave
this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to
inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the
window.
This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events
for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not
expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events
were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be
WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no
longer existing.
* macOS: Move the window if there is no title bar
On macOS by default windows can only be moved by clicking and
dragging on the titlebar, if we spawn a window without one we
need to set the `movableByWindowBackground` property.
Partial fix for #368
* macOS: Make moveByWindowBackground optional
Implements setting the property via WindowBuilderExt:
WindowBuilder::new()
.with_decorations(false)
.with_movable_by_window_background(true)
* Update CHANGELOG
This has been stubbed on all platforms other than X11. The X11 implementation has also been
revised to toggle correctly, as it was previously only able to remove decorations.
Fixes#256
`get_xlib_window` and `get_xlib_screen_id` previously returned `Option<*mut c_void>` by
casting integer IDs into pointers, which while producing no functionality issues, is
semantically incorrect and rather surprising. Worse still, the docs for `get_xlib_window`
stated that it was in fact a valid pointer.
Additionally, now all `unix::WindowExt` methods return `std::os::raw` types rather than
`libc` types; note that the two versions of `c_void` are not interchangeable in the eyes of
the compiler, so those wanting the `libc` type will need to explicitly cast.
This is a breaking change, and will require some trivial changes to glutin.
* Explicit mouse-related DeviceEvents
This makes the API more intuitive for common use-cases and allows us
to better propagate platform knowledge of motion semantics.
* Improve event naming consistency
* Clarify axis event forwards-compatibility
* Rename WindowEvent::MouseMoved/Entered/Left to CursorMoved/...
This emphasizes the difference between motion of the host GUI cursor,
as used for clicking on things, and raw mouse(-like) input data, as
used for first-person controls.
* Add support for windows and OSX, fix merging
* Fix warnings and errors on Linux
* Remove unnecessary breaking changes
* Add MouseWheel events to windows and OSX
* Fix bad push call.
* Fix docs, naming, and x11 events
* Remove mutability warning
* Add changelog entry
* Fix no primary monitor panic in XWayland
In this case try to use the first existing monitor instead of panicking.
Fixes#317
* Shift no monitor panic to x11::get_primary_monitor
* Update changelog with xll get_primary_monitor fallback
* Implement public API for high-DPI #105
* Recover get_inner_size_points and get_inner_size_pixels and change their implementation assuming get_inner_size() returns size in pixels
* Update changelog for high-DPI changes
* Add an i386 target to travis
* Fix X11 on 32bit architectures
One would hope 32bit X11 was dead by now but apparently not :). Fix
the window hint setting code to not assume window IDs are 64bit as
apparently they are not in 32bit arches.
* wayland: don't create a second event_queue
As each EventsLoop has its own context, this is no longer necessary.
* wayland: buffer events rather than direct dispatch
Changes the behavior of the event loop to first internally
buffer the events generated by the wayland handlers, and then
dispatch them to the client's closure.
- It simplifies the event loop logic
- It makes it possible for the user to call window methods such as
`set_title()` or `set_inner_size()` without causing a deadlock
* wayland: add is_ready() & fix protocol errors
Adds a `is_ready()` method to the windows to advertize
when it is legal to start drawing, and fix a few wayland
protocol mishandling in the process.