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https://github.com/italicsjenga/winit-sonoma-fix.git
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1ddceeb063
* `ns_string_id_ref` convenience fn * Unbundled app activation hack * Greatly improved solution * Shortened names * Remove cruft I left here a year ago * Doc improvements * Use `AtomicBool` for `activationHackFlag` * Add CHANGELOG entry * Doc improvements * Fix `did_finish_launching` return type + delay more * More reliable activation checking * Fix merge goof * ...fix other merge goof Co-authored-by: Freya Gentz <zegentzy@protonmail.com> Co-authored-by: Bogaevsky <vbogaevsky@gmail.com>
209 lines
8.7 KiB
Rust
209 lines
8.7 KiB
Rust
// Normally when you run or distribute a macOS app, it's bundled: it's in one
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// of those fun little folders that you have to right click "Show Package
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// Contents" on, and usually contains myriad delights including, but not
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// limited to, plists, icons, and of course, your beloved executable. However,
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// when you use `cargo run`, your app is unbundled - it's just a lonely, bare
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// executable.
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//
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// Apple isn't especially fond of unbundled apps, which is to say, they seem to
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// barely be supported. If you move the mouse while opening a winit window from
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// an unbundled app, the window will fail to activate and be in a grayed-out
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// uninteractable state. Switching to another app and back is the only way to
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// get the winit window into a normal state. None of this happens if the app is
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// bundled, i.e. when running via Xcode.
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//
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// To workaround this, we just switch focus to the Dock and then switch back to
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// our app. We only do this for unbundled apps, and only when they fail to
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// become active on their own.
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//
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// This solution was derived from this Godot PR:
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// https://github.com/godotengine/godot/pull/17187
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// (which appears to be based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/7602677)
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// The curious specialness of mouse motions is touched upon here:
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// https://github.com/godotengine/godot/issues/8653#issuecomment-358130512
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//
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// We omit the 2nd step of the solution used in Godot, since it appears to have
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// no effect - I speculate that it's just technical debt picked up from the SO
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// answer; the API used is fairly exotic, and was historically used for very
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// old versions of macOS that didn't support `activateIgnoringOtherApps`, i.e.
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// in previous versions of SDL:
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// https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/c0bcc39a3491/src/video/cocoa/SDL_cocoaevents.m#l322
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//
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// The `performSelector` delays in the Godot solution are used for sequencing,
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// since refocusing the app will fail if the call is made before it finishes
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// unfocusing. The delays used there are much smaller than the ones in the
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// original SO answer, presumably because they found the fastest delay that
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// works reliably through trial and error. Instead of using delays, we just
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// handle `applicationDidResignActive`; despite the app not activating reliably,
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// that still triggers when we switch focus to the Dock.
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//
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// The Godot solution doesn't appear to skip the hack when an unbundled app
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// activates normally. Checking for this is difficult, since if you call
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// `isActive` too early, it will always be `NO`. Even though we receive
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// `applicationDidResignActive` when switching focus to the Dock, we never
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// receive a preceding `applicationDidBecomeActive` if the app fails to
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// activate normally. I wasn't able to find a proper point in time to perform
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// the `isActive` check, so we instead check for the cause of the quirk: if
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// any mouse motion occurs prior to us receiving `applicationDidResignActive`,
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// we assume the app failed to become active.
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//
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// Fun fact: this issue is still present in GLFW
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// (https://github.com/glfw/glfw/issues/1515)
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//
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// A similar issue was found in SDL, but the resolution doesn't seem to work
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// for us: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3051
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use super::util;
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use cocoa::{
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appkit::{NSApp, NSApplicationActivateIgnoringOtherApps},
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base::id,
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foundation::NSUInteger,
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};
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use objc::runtime::{Object, Sel, BOOL, NO, YES};
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use std::{
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os::raw::c_void,
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sync::atomic::{AtomicBool, Ordering},
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};
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#[derive(Debug, Default)]
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pub struct State {
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// Indicates that the hack has either completed or been skipped.
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activated: AtomicBool,
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// Indicates that the mouse has moved at some point in time.
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mouse_moved: AtomicBool,
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// Indicates that the hack is in progress, and that we should refocus when
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// the app resigns active.
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needs_refocus: AtomicBool,
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}
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impl State {
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pub fn name() -> &'static str {
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"activationHackState"
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}
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pub fn new() -> *mut c_void {
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let this = Box::new(Self::default());
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Box::into_raw(this) as *mut c_void
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}
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pub unsafe fn free(this: *mut Self) {
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Box::from_raw(this);
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}
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pub unsafe fn get_ptr(obj: &Object) -> *mut Self {
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let this: *mut c_void = *(*obj).get_ivar(Self::name());
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assert!(!this.is_null(), "`activationHackState` pointer was null");
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this as *mut Self
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}
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pub unsafe fn set_activated(obj: &Object, value: bool) {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).activated.store(value, Ordering::Release);
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}
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unsafe fn get_activated(obj: &Object) -> bool {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).activated.load(Ordering::Acquire)
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}
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pub unsafe fn set_mouse_moved(obj: &Object, value: bool) {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).mouse_moved.store(value, Ordering::Release);
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}
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pub unsafe fn get_mouse_moved(obj: &Object) -> bool {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).mouse_moved.load(Ordering::Acquire)
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}
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pub unsafe fn set_needs_refocus(obj: &Object, value: bool) {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).needs_refocus.store(value, Ordering::Release);
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}
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unsafe fn get_needs_refocus(obj: &Object) -> bool {
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let this = Self::get_ptr(obj);
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(*this).needs_refocus.load(Ordering::Acquire)
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}
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}
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// This is the entry point for the hack - if the app is unbundled and a mouse
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// movement occurs before the app activates, it will trigger the hack. Because
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// mouse movements prior to activation are the cause of this quirk, they should
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// be a reliable way to determine if the hack needs to be performed.
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pub extern "C" fn mouse_moved(this: &Object, _: Sel, _: id) {
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trace!("Triggered `activationHackMouseMoved`");
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unsafe {
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if !State::get_activated(this) {
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// We check if `CFBundleName` is undefined to determine if the
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// app is unbundled.
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if let None = util::app_name() {
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info!("App detected as unbundled");
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unfocus(this);
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} else {
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info!("App detected as bundled");
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}
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}
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}
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trace!("Completed `activationHackMouseMoved`");
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}
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// Switch focus to the dock.
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unsafe fn unfocus(this: &Object) {
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// We only perform the hack if the app failed to activate, since otherwise,
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// there'd be a gross (but fast) flicker as it unfocused and then refocused.
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// However, we only enter this function if we detect mouse movement prior
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// to activation, so this should always be `NO`.
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//
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// Note that this check isn't necessarily reliable in detecting a violation
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// of the invariant above, since it's not guaranteed that activation will
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// resolve before this point. In other words, it can spuriously return `NO`.
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// This is also why the mouse motion approach was chosen, since it's not
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// obvious how to sequence this check - if someone knows how to, then that
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// would almost surely be a cleaner approach.
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let active: BOOL = msg_send![NSApp(), isActive];
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if active == YES {
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error!("Unbundled app activation hack triggered on an app that's already active; this shouldn't happen!");
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} else {
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info!("Performing unbundled app activation hack");
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let dock_bundle_id = util::ns_string_id_ref("com.apple.dock");
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let dock_array: id = msg_send![
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class!(NSRunningApplication),
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runningApplicationsWithBundleIdentifier: *dock_bundle_id
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];
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let dock_array_len: NSUInteger = msg_send![dock_array, count];
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if dock_array_len == 0 {
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error!("The Dock doesn't seem to be running, so switching focus to it is impossible");
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} else {
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State::set_needs_refocus(this, true);
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let dock: id = msg_send![dock_array, objectAtIndex: 0];
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// This will trigger `applicationDidResignActive`, which will in
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// turn call `refocus`.
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let status: BOOL = msg_send![
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dock,
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activateWithOptions: NSApplicationActivateIgnoringOtherApps
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];
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if status == NO {
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error!("Failed to switch focus to Dock");
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}
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}
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}
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}
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// Switch focus back to our app, causing the user to rejoice!
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pub unsafe fn refocus(this: &Object) {
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if State::get_needs_refocus(this) {
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State::set_needs_refocus(this, false);
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let app: id = msg_send![class!(NSRunningApplication), currentApplication];
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// Simply calling `NSApp activateIgnoringOtherApps` doesn't work. The
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// nuanced difference isn't clear to me, but hey, I tried.
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let success: BOOL = msg_send![
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app,
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activateWithOptions: NSApplicationActivateIgnoringOtherApps
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];
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if success == NO {
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error!("Failed to refocus app");
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}
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}
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}
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