This code confused me. I tried to understand it. I tried to simplify it
while keeping the functional style. But in the end, this just seems too
complicated for its own good. Just doing the exact same thing with a
match statement and the question mark operator makes it sooo much more
obvious what is happening.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
* Clean up macOS and iOS monitor code a bit
* Clean up window size methods
Use `setContentSize`, `setContentMinSize`, `setContentMaxSize` and `contentRectForFrameRect` to let the windowing system figure out the required scaling, instead of us doing it manually.
* Use a flipped NSView coordinate system
* Clean up window position methods
* Use icrate's window structs and enums
* Properly implement protocols
* Use icrate's NSWindow
We were previously using undocumented methods on `NSWindowTabGroup`
* Use icrate's NSApplication
And clean up some doc comments regarding NSApplication
* Refactor winit-specific cursor logic out of appkit module
* Add relevant AppKit features that we depend on
* Use icrate's NSImageRep and NSBitmapImageRep
* Use icrate's NSImage
* Use icrate's NSCursor
* Use icrate's NSAppearance
* Use icrate's NSScreen
* Use icrate's NSButton
* Use icrate's NSAppKitVersionNumber
* Use icrate's NSTextInputContext
* Use icrate's NSColor
* Use icrate's NSEvent
* Use icrate's NSMenu and NSMenuItem
* Use icrate's NSPasteboard
* Use icrate's NSResponder
* Use icrate's NSTextInputClient
* Use icrate's NSView
There seems to be many PRs relating to this issue, but they don't include all
platforms and for some reason lost steam. This PR again tries to make this
feature happen, and does it for all desktop platforms (x11, wayland, macos,
windows, web).
I think the best user of this feature and the reason I'm doing this is Bevy and
game engines in general. There non laggy hardware cursors with custom images are
very important. Game devs also like their PNGs so supporting platform native
cursor files is not that important, but I guess could be added too.
Co-authored-by: daxpedda <daxpedda@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mads Marquart <mads@marquart.dk>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Chibisov <contact@kchibisov.com>
This protocol is only used for (optional) Client Side Decorations
(where) the compositor still takes the burden of compositing various
window parts together, via subsurfaces that all belong to a single
window.
If this core protocol is not available, as is the case on gamescope,
disable CSD.
The only breaking change is that x11rb no longer reports an error when
querying the WmSizeHints of a window that does not have this property
set. For this reason, the return type of WmSizeHintsCookie::Reply()
changed from Result<WmSizeHints, SomeError> to
Result<Option<WmSizeHints>, SomeError>.
In update_normal_hints(), previously a cryptic error would be reported
to the caller. Instead, this now uses unwrap_or_default() to get a
WmSizeHints. All fields of WmSizeHints are Options, so this produces an
empty object.
resize_increments() queries a value from the window and returns an
Option. Previously, the error for "missing property" was turned into
None via .ok(). This commit adds a call to flatten() to also turn
"property not set" into None.
Finally, request_user_attention() queries a window's WmHints property
and updates one field of it. The code already uses unwrap_or_default()
to deal with missing properties, so just a call to flatten() is needed
to merge "missing property" and "error while querying" into one.
Other changes in x11rb do not seem to affect this crate.
x11rb's MSRV increased from 1.56 to 1.63, which is still below the MSRV
of this crate, which is 1.65.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>