Window builder is always accessed by winit on the thread event loop
is on, thus it's safe to mark the data it gets as `Send + Sync`.
Each unsafe object is marked individually as `Send + Sync` instead
of just implementing `Send` and `Sync` for the whole builder.
Hook `Occluded` event to foreground/background evens on iOS.
This commit also enabled the `MemoryWarning` event, since it's
emitted from the windowing system.
Co-authored-by: Dusty DeWeese <dustin.deweese@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
Add a method to request a system menu. The implementation
is provided only on Windows for now.
Co-authored-by: daxpedda <daxpedda@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
* Make Linux platforms less dependent on the root monitor handle
* Add various functions to the Wayland platform to reduce cfgs
* Don't use a cfg in listen_device_events
* Don't use a cfg in set_content_protected
* Fix instance of a target_os cfg
* macOS & iOS: Refactor EventWrapper
* macOS & iOS: Make EventLoopWindowTarget independent of the user event
* iOS: Use MainThreadMarker instead of marking functions unsafe
* Make iOS thread safe
Inner panics could make it hard to trouble shoot the issues and for some
users it's not desirable.
The inner panics were left only when they are used to `assert!` during
development.
This reverts commit 9f91bc413fe20618bd7090829832bb074aab15c3 which
reverted the original patch which was merged without a proper review.
Fixes: #500.
Inner panics could make it hard to trouble shoot the issues and for some
users ints not desirable.
The inner panics were left only when they are used to `assert!` during
development.
There's no need to force the static on the users, given that internally
some backends were not using static in the first place.
Co-authored-by: daxpedda <daxpedda@gmail.com>
Nothing changed from the user point of view, other than they should
use the `raw-window-handle`, which is objectively better, given that
it reduces the amount of `cfg` guards in downstream code.
Lifetimes don't work nicely when dealing with multithreaded environments
in the current design of the existing winit's event handling model, so
remove it in favor of `InnerSizeWriter` fences passed to client, so they
could try to update the size.
Fixes#1387.
The idea that redraw events are dispatched with a specific ordering
that makes it possible to specifically report when we have finished
dispatching redraw events isn't portable and the way in which we
dispatched RedrawEventsCleared was inconsistent across backends.
More generally speaking, there is no inherent relationship between
redrawing and event loop iterations. An event loop may wake up at any
frequency depending on what sources of input events are being listened
to but redrawing is generally throttled and in some way synchronized
with the display frequency.
Similarly there's no inherent relationship between a single event loop
iteration and the dispatching of any specific kind of "main" event.
An event loop wakes up when there are events to read (e.g. input
events or responses from a display server / compositor) and goes back
to waiting when there's nothing else to read.
There isn't really a special kind of "main" event that is dispatched
in order with respect to other events.
What we can do more portably is emit an event when the event loop
is about to block and wait for new events.
In practice this is very similar to how MainEventsCleared was
implemented except it wasn't the very last event previously since
redraw events could be dispatched afterwards.
The main backend where we don't strictly know when we're going to
wait for events is Web (since the real event loop is internal to
the browser). For now we emulate AboutToWait on Web similar to how
MainEventsCleared was dispatched.
In practice most applications almost certainly shouldn't care about
AboutToWait because the frequency of event loop iterations is
essentially arbitrary and usually irrelevant.
Considering the possibility of re-running an event loop via run_ondemand
then it's more correct to say that the loop is about to exit without
assuming it's going to be destroyed.
Some systems could resize the window immediately and we'd rather
inform the users right away if that was the case, so they could
create e.g. EGLSurface without waiting for resize, which is really
important for Wayland.
Fixes#2868.
* Make iOS declared classes not use &mut
* Prepare `init` methods for not having access to &mut self
* Prepare WinitWindow methods for not having access to &mut self
* Convert a bit of WinitView's to use interior mutability
* Convert a bit more of WinitView's to use interior mutability
* Convert the rest of WinitView to use interior mutability
* Use interior mutability instead of a Mutex for the CursorState
* Use interior mutability in WinitWindowDelegate
Overhaul the keyboard API in winit to mimic the W3C specification
to achieve better crossplatform parity. The `KeyboardInput` event
is now uses `KeyEvent` which consists of:
- `physical_key` - a cross platform way to refer to scancodes;
- `logical_key` - keysym value, which shows your key respecting the
layout;
- `text` - the text produced by this keypress;
- `location` - the location of the key on the keyboard;
- `repeat` - whether the key was produced by the repeat.
And also a `platform_specific` field which encapsulates extra
information on desktop platforms, like key without modifiers
and text with all modifiers.
The `Modifiers` were also slightly reworked as in, the information
whether the left or right modifier is pressed is now also exposed
on platforms where it could be queried reliably. The support was
also added for the web and orbital platforms finishing the API
change.
This change made the `OptionAsAlt` API on macOS redundant thus it
was removed all together.
Co-authored-by: Artúr Kovács <kovacs.artur.barnabas@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
Co-authored-by: daxpedda <daxpedda@gmail.com>
Fixes: #2631.
Fixes: #2055.
Fixes: #2032.
Fixes: #1904.
Fixes: #1810.
Fixes: #1700.
Fixes: #1443.
Fixes: #1343.
Fixes: #1208.
Fixes: #1151.
Fixes: #812.
Fixes: #600.
Fixes: #361.
Fixes: #343.
Makes WindowAttributes public and adds window_attributes() getter to
WindowBuilder.
In version 0.27, the WindowAttributes struct was made private, but this
removed the ability to introspect the default WindowBuilder values.
* Use a bit less `unsafe` on iOS
I did test this in XCode 11.3's "Debug View Heirarchy", the NSStringRust problem is no longer applicable (likely because Rust got better at emitting correct debug info).
* Avoid using `id` on iOS
* fix clippy lints on Windows
* fix lints on other platforms
* a couple more
* again
* don't know what's goging on anymore
* fix examples
* comon
* how about now?
* this is getting annoying
* hmmm
* explicitly set a type
* 😢
* don't cast on x64 targets
* apply code review requests
* fix attributes on expressions
* fix ios
* On Windows and macOS, add API to enable/disable window controls
* fix build
* missing import
* use `WindowButtons` flags
* rename to `[set_]enabled_buttons`
* add example, fix windows impl for minimize
* macOS: Fix button enabling close/minimize while disabling maximized
* Update src/platform_impl/windows/window.rs
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
* compose the flags on a sep line, use `bool::then`
Co-authored-by: Mads Marquart <mads@marquart.dk>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
This adds `Window::set_window_level` to control the preferred
z level of the window.
Co-authored-by: Markus Siglreithmaier <m.siglreith@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
Co-authored-by: Mads Marquart <mads@marquart.dk>