Even though gtk4-layer-shell's documentation claims that "nobody quite
knows what it's for", some compositors (like Niri) can define custom
rules based on the layer name and it's beneficial in those cases to
define a distinct name just for our quick terminals.
The default keybinds for showing the GTK inspector (`ctrl+shift+i` and
`ctrl+shift+d`) don't work reliably in Ghostty due to the way Ghostty
handles input. You can show the GTK inspector by setting the environment
variable `GTK_DEBUG` to `interactive` before starting Ghostty but that's
not always convenient.
This adds a keybind action that will show the GTK inspector. Due to
API limitations toggling the GTK inspector using the keybind action is
impractical because GTK does not provide a convenient API to determine
if the GTK inspector is already showing. Thus we limit ourselves to
strictly showing the GTK inspector. To close the GTK inspector the user
must click the close button on the GTK inspector window. If the GTK
inspector window is already visible but is hidden, calling the keybind
action will not bring the GTK inspector window to the front.
This commit changes a LOT of areas of the code to use decl literals
instead of redundantly referring to the type.
These changes were mostly driven by some regex searches and then manual
adjustment on a case-by-case basis.
I almost certainly missed quite a few places where decl literals could
be used, but this is a good first step in converting things, and other
instances can be addressed when they're discovered.
I tested GLFW+Metal and building the framework on macOS and tested a GTK
build on Linux, so I'm 99% sure I didn't introduce any syntax errors or
other problems with this. (fingers crossed)
'g_application_id_is_valid' doesn't allow empty elements or elements
that start with digits.
This commit updates 'isValidAppId' to be more consistant with
'g_application_id_is_valid' avoiding the app id defaulting to 'GTK
Application' for app ids like '0foo.bar' or 'foo..bar'.
The origin of these keys are old sun keyboards.
They are getting picked up by the custom (progammable) keyboard scene
(see https://github.com/manna-harbour/miryoku for a popular layout).
Support in ghosty is quite handy because it allows to bind copy/paste in
a way that doesn't overlap with ctrl-c/ctrl-v, which can have special
bindings in some terminal applications.
This fixes an issue where stack traces were unreliable on some platforms
(namely aarch64-linux in a MacOS VM). I'm unsure if this is a bug in Zig
(defaults should be changed?) or what, because this isn't necessary on
other platforms, but this works around the issue.
I've unconditionally enabled this for all platforms, depending on build
mode (debug/test) and not the target. This is because I don't think
there is a downside for other platforms but if thats wrong we can fix
that quickly.
Some binaries have this unconditionally enabled regardless of build mode
(e.g. the Unicode tables generator) because having symbols in those
cases is always useful.
Some unrelated GTK test fix is also included here. I'm not sure why CI
didn't catch this (perhaps we only run tests for none-runtime) but all
tests pass locally and we can look into that elsewhere.
It's been a lot of D-Bus related pain and suffering, but here it is.
I'm not sure about how well this is integrated inside App, but I'm fairly
proud of the standalone logic.
Also fixes crashes in both vanilla GTK and Adwaita implementations of
`closeTab`, which erroneously close windows twice when there are no
more tabs left (we probably already handle it somewhere else).
Changes:
1. Require `blueprint-compiler` 0.16.0 (or newer) for building from a
git checkout. With #6822 distributions that can't meet that requirement
can use generated source tarballs to build.
2. Remove all `.ui` files as they are unnecessary.
3. Simplify the `Builder` interface since raw `.ui` files are no longer
used.
4. Removed build-time check of raw `.ui` files.
Changes:
1. Require `blueprint-compiler` 0.16.0 (or newer) for building from
a git checkout. With #6822 distributions that can't meet that
requirement can use generated source tarballs to build.
2. Remove all `.ui` files as they are unnecessary.
3. Simplify the `Builder` interface since raw `.ui` files are no
longer used.
4. Removed build-time check of raw `.ui` files.
This introduces a command palette (inspired by @pluiedev's work in
#5681, but not using it as a base) for macOS.
The command palette is available in the `View` menu and also bindable
via `toggle_command_palette`, default binding is `cmd+shift+p` to match
VSCode.
The commands in the command palette must map to a _bindable_ action,
though they may not have an associated keybinding. This means that any
new binding actions we add in the future can be represented here and
also makes it easy in the future to add configuration to add new custom
entries to the command palette. For this initial PR, the available
commands are hardcoded (`src/input/commands.zig`).
I've noticed in other programs (VSCode, Zed), the command palette
contains pretty much _all available actions_ even if they're basically
useless in the context of a command palette. For example, Zed has the
"toggle command palette" action in the command palette and it... does
nothing (it probably should hide the palette). I followed @pluiedev's
lead and made this subjective in this PR but I wonder if we should
actually force all binding actions to be available.
There are various other improvements I'd like to make but omitted from
this PR for the sake of limiting scope:
* Instead of an entry with no matches doing nothing, we can allow users
to manually input _any_ configurable binding.
* Localization, since macOS doesn't have any yet. But for Linux when we
port this we probably have to change our strings extraction.
## Demo
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a2155cfb-d86b-4c1a-82b5-74ba927e4d69
This reverts commit 14134d61fb4b1bbf4ce80bb9b3ed849908bf9344, reversing
changes made to 6a876ef8ec3e2aeb3d15df0dfb0e07677e49ff03.
This causes translation failures, this should be reintroduced when the
CI check passes.