ghostty/macos/Sources/Features/Terminal/Window Styles/TitlebarTabsTahoeTerminalWindow.swift
2025-06-13 12:22:29 -07:00

270 lines
10 KiB
Swift

import AppKit
import SwiftUI
/// `macos-titlebar-style = tabs` for macOS 26 (Tahoe) and later.
///
/// This inherits from transparent styling so that the titlebar matches the background color
/// of the window.
class TitlebarTabsTahoeTerminalWindow: TransparentTitlebarTerminalWindow, NSToolbarDelegate {
/// The view model for SwiftUI views
private var viewModel = ViewModel()
deinit {
tabBarObserver = nil
}
// MARK: NSWindow
override var title: String {
didSet {
viewModel.title = title
}
}
override var toolbar: NSToolbar? {
didSet{
guard toolbar != nil else { return }
// When a toolbar is added, remove the Liquid Glass look because we're
// abusing the toolbar as a tab bar.
if let glass = titlebarContainer?.firstDescendant(withClassName: "NSGlassContainerView") {
glass.isHidden = true
}
}
}
override func awakeFromNib() {
super.awakeFromNib()
// We must hide the title since we're going to be moving tabs into
// the titlebar which have their own title.
titleVisibility = .hidden
// Create a toolbar
let toolbar = NSToolbar(identifier: "TerminalToolbar")
toolbar.delegate = self
toolbar.centeredItemIdentifiers.insert(.title)
self.toolbar = toolbar
toolbarStyle = .unifiedCompact
}
override func becomeMain() {
super.becomeMain()
// Check if we have a tab bar and set it up if we have to. See the comment
// on this function to learn why we need to check this here.
setupTabBar()
}
// This is called by macOS for native tabbing in order to add the tab bar. We hook into
// this, detect the tab bar being added, and override its behavior.
override func addTitlebarAccessoryViewController(_ childViewController: NSTitlebarAccessoryViewController) {
// If this is the tab bar then we need to set it up for the titlebar
guard isTabBar(childViewController) else {
super.addTitlebarAccessoryViewController(childViewController)
return
}
// Some setup needs to happen BEFORE it is added, such as layout. If
// we don't do this before the call below, we'll trigger an AppKit
// assertion.
childViewController.layoutAttribute = .right
super.addTitlebarAccessoryViewController(childViewController)
// Setup the tab bar to go into the titlebar.
DispatchQueue.main.async {
// HACK: wait a tick before doing anything, to avoid edge cases during startup... :/
// If we don't do this then on launch windows with restored state with tabs will end
// up with messed up tab bars that don't show all tabs.
self.setupTabBar()
}
}
override func removeTitlebarAccessoryViewController(at index: Int) {
guard let childViewController = titlebarAccessoryViewControllers[safe: index],
isTabBar(childViewController) else {
super.removeTitlebarAccessoryViewController(at: index)
return
}
super.removeTitlebarAccessoryViewController(at: index)
removeTabBar()
}
// MARK: Tab Bar Setup
private var tabBarObserver: NSObjectProtocol? {
didSet {
// When we change this we want to clear our old observer
guard let oldValue else { return }
NotificationCenter.default.removeObserver(oldValue)
}
}
/// Take the NSTabBar that is on the window and convert it into titlebar tabs.
///
/// Let me explain more background on what is happening here. When a tab bar is created, only the
/// main window actually has an NSTabBar. When an NSWindow in the tab group gains main, AppKit
/// creates/moves (unsure which) the NSTabBar for it and shows it. When it loses main, the tab bar
/// is removed from the view hierarchy.
///
/// We can't detect this via `addTitlebarAccessoryViewController` because AppKit
/// _always_ creates an accessory view controller for every window in the tab group, but puts a
/// zero-sized NSView into it (that the tab bar is then attached to later).
///
/// The best way I've found to detect this is to search for and setup the tab bar anytime the
/// window gains focus. There are probably edge cases to check but to resolve all this I made
/// this function which is idempotent to call.
///
/// There are more scenarios to look out for and they're documented within the method.
func setupTabBar() {
// We only want to setup the observer once
guard tabBarObserver == nil else { return }
// Find our tab bar. If it doesn't exist we don't do anything.
guard let tabBar = contentView?.rootView.firstDescendant(withClassName: "NSTabBar") else { return }
// View model updates must happen on their own ticks.
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.viewModel.hasTabBar = true
}
// Find our clip view
guard let clipView = tabBar.firstSuperview(withClassName: "NSTitlebarAccessoryClipView") else { return }
guard let accessoryView = clipView.subviews[safe: 0] else { return }
guard let titlebarView = clipView.firstSuperview(withClassName: "NSTitlebarView") else { return }
guard let toolbarView = titlebarView.firstDescendant(withClassName: "NSToolbarView") else { return }
// The container is the view that we'll constrain our tab bar within.
let container = toolbarView
// The padding for the tab bar. If we're showing window buttons then
// we need to offset the window buttons.
let leftPadding: CGFloat = switch(self.derivedConfig.macosWindowButtons) {
case .hidden: 0
case .visible: 70
}
// Constrain the accessory clip view (the parent of the accessory view
// usually that clips the children) to the container view.
clipView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
accessoryView.translatesAutoresizingMaskIntoConstraints = false
// Setup all our constraints
NSLayoutConstraint.activate([
clipView.leftAnchor.constraint(equalTo: container.leftAnchor, constant: leftPadding),
clipView.rightAnchor.constraint(equalTo: container.rightAnchor),
clipView.topAnchor.constraint(equalTo: container.topAnchor, constant: 2),
clipView.heightAnchor.constraint(equalTo: container.heightAnchor),
accessoryView.leftAnchor.constraint(equalTo: clipView.leftAnchor),
accessoryView.rightAnchor.constraint(equalTo: clipView.rightAnchor),
accessoryView.topAnchor.constraint(equalTo: clipView.topAnchor),
accessoryView.heightAnchor.constraint(equalTo: clipView.heightAnchor),
])
clipView.needsLayout = true
accessoryView.needsLayout = true
// We need to setup an observer for the NSTabBar frame. When we change system
// appearance, the tab bar temporarily becomes width/height 0 and breaks all our
// constraints and AppKit responds by nuking the whole tab bar cause it doesn't
// know what to do with it. We need to detect this before bad things happen.
tabBar.postsFrameChangedNotifications = true
tabBarObserver = NotificationCenter.default.addObserver(
forName: NSView.frameDidChangeNotification,
object: tabBar,
queue: .main
) { [weak self] _ in
guard let self else { return }
// Check if either width or height is zero
guard tabBar.frame.size.width == 0 || tabBar.frame.size.height == 0 else { return }
// Remove the observer so we can call setup again.
self.tabBarObserver = nil
// Wait a tick to let the new tab bars appear and then set them up.
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.setupTabBar()
}
}
}
func removeTabBar() {
// View model needs to be updated on another tick because it
// triggers view updates.
DispatchQueue.main.async {
self.viewModel.hasTabBar = false
}
// Clear our observations
self.tabBarObserver = nil
}
// MARK: NSToolbarDelegate
func toolbarAllowedItemIdentifiers(_ toolbar: NSToolbar) -> [NSToolbarItem.Identifier] {
return [.title, .flexibleSpace, .space]
}
func toolbarDefaultItemIdentifiers(_ toolbar: NSToolbar) -> [NSToolbarItem.Identifier] {
return [.flexibleSpace, .title, .flexibleSpace]
}
func toolbar(_ toolbar: NSToolbar,
itemForItemIdentifier itemIdentifier: NSToolbarItem.Identifier,
willBeInsertedIntoToolbar flag: Bool) -> NSToolbarItem? {
switch itemIdentifier {
case .title:
let item = NSToolbarItem(itemIdentifier: .title)
item.view = NSHostingView(rootView: TitleItem(viewModel: viewModel))
item.visibilityPriority = .user
item.isEnabled = true
return item
default:
return NSToolbarItem(itemIdentifier: itemIdentifier)
}
}
// MARK: SwiftUI
class ViewModel: ObservableObject {
@Published var title: String = "👻 Ghostty"
@Published var hasTabBar: Bool = false
}
}
extension NSToolbarItem.Identifier {
/// Displays the title of the window
static let title = NSToolbarItem.Identifier("Title")
}
extension TitlebarTabsTahoeTerminalWindow {
/// Displays the window title
struct TitleItem: View {
@ObservedObject var viewModel: ViewModel
var title: String {
// An empty title makes this view zero-sized and NSToolbar on macOS
// tahoe just deletes the item when that happens. So we use a space
// instead to ensure there's always some size.
return viewModel.title.isEmpty ? " " : viewModel.title
}
var body: some View {
if !viewModel.hasTabBar {
Text(title)
.lineLimit(1)
.truncationMode(.tail)
} else {
// 1x1.gif strikes again! For real: if we render a zero-sized
// view here then the toolbar just disappears our view. I don't
// know.
Color.clear.frame(width: 1, height: 1)
}
}
}
}