ghostty/macos/Sources/Features/Terminal/Window Styles/TransparentTitlebarTerminalWindow.swift
2025-06-11 15:18:02 -07:00

179 lines
6.9 KiB
Swift

import AppKit
/// A terminal window style that provides a transparent titlebar effect. With this effect, the titlebar
/// matches the background color of the window.
class TransparentTitlebarTerminalWindow: TerminalWindow {
/// Stores the last surface configuration to reapply appearance when needed.
/// This is necessary because various macOS operations (tab switching, tab bar
/// visibility changes) can reset the titlebar appearance.
private var lastSurfaceConfig: Ghostty.SurfaceView.DerivedConfig?
/// KVO observation for tab group window changes.
private var tabGroupWindowsObservation: NSKeyValueObservation?
private var tabBarVisibleObservation: NSKeyValueObservation?
override func awakeFromNib() {
super.awakeFromNib()
// Setup all the KVO we will use, see the docs for the respective functions
// to learn why we need KVO.
setupKVO()
}
deinit {
tabGroupWindowsObservation?.invalidate()
tabBarVisibleObservation?.invalidate()
}
override func becomeMain() {
super.becomeMain()
guard let lastSurfaceConfig else { return }
syncAppearance(lastSurfaceConfig)
// This is a nasty edge case. If we're going from 2 to 1 tab and the tab bar
// automatically disappears, then we need to resync our appearance because
// at some point macOS replaces the tab views.
if tabGroup?.windows.count ?? 0 == 2 {
DispatchQueue.main.asyncAfter(deadline: .now() + .milliseconds(50)) { [weak self] in
self?.syncAppearance(self?.lastSurfaceConfig ?? lastSurfaceConfig)
}
}
}
// MARK: Appearance
override func syncAppearance(_ surfaceConfig: Ghostty.SurfaceView.DerivedConfig) {
super.syncAppearance(surfaceConfig)
// Save our config in case we need to reapply
lastSurfaceConfig = surfaceConfig
// Everytime we change appearance, set KVO up again in case any of our
// references changed (e.g. tabGroup is new).
setupKVO()
if #available(macOS 26.0, *) {
syncAppearanceTahoe(surfaceConfig)
} else {
syncAppearanceVentura(surfaceConfig)
}
}
@available(macOS 26.0, *)
private func syncAppearanceTahoe(_ surfaceConfig: Ghostty.SurfaceView.DerivedConfig) {
// When we have transparency, we need to set the titlebar background to match the
// window background but with opacity. The window background is set using the
// "preferred background color" property.
//
// As an inverse, if we don't have transparency, we don't bother with this because
// the window background will be set to the correct color so we can just hide the
// titlebar completely and we're good to go.
if !isOpaque {
if let titlebarView = titlebarContainer?.firstDescendant(withClassName: "NSTitlebarView") {
titlebarView.wantsLayer = true
titlebarView.layer?.backgroundColor = preferredBackgroundColor?.cgColor
}
}
// In all cases, we have to hide the background view since this has multiple subviews
// that force a background color.
titlebarBackgroundView?.isHidden = true
}
@available(macOS 13.0, *)
private func syncAppearanceVentura(_ surfaceConfig: Ghostty.SurfaceView.DerivedConfig) {
guard let titlebarContainer else { return }
titlebarContainer.wantsLayer = true
titlebarContainer.layer?.backgroundColor = preferredBackgroundColor?.cgColor
}
// MARK: View Finders
private var titlebarBackgroundView: NSView? {
titlebarContainer?.firstDescendant(withClassName: "NSTitlebarBackgroundView")
}
private var titlebarContainer: NSView? {
// If we aren't fullscreen then the titlebar container is part of our window.
if !styleMask.contains(.fullScreen) {
return titlebarContainerView
}
// If we are fullscreen, the titlebar container view is part of a separate
// "fullscreen window", we need to find the window and then get the view.
for window in NSApplication.shared.windows {
// This is the private window class that contains the toolbar
guard window.className == "NSToolbarFullScreenWindow" else { continue }
// The parent will match our window. This is used to filter the correct
// fullscreen window if we have multiple.
guard window.parent == self else { continue }
return titlebarContainerView
}
return nil
}
private var titlebarContainerView: NSView? {
contentView?.firstViewFromRoot(withClassName: "NSTitlebarContainerView")
}
// MARK: Tab Group Observation
private func setupKVO() {
// See the docs for the respective setup functions for why.
setupTabGroupObservation()
setupTabBarVisibleObservation()
}
/// Monitors the tabGroup windows value for any changes and resyncs the appearance on change.
/// This is necessary because when the windows change, the tab bar and titlebar are recreated
/// which breaks our changes.
private func setupTabGroupObservation() {
// Remove existing observation if any
tabGroupWindowsObservation?.invalidate()
tabGroupWindowsObservation = nil
// Check if tabGroup is available
guard let tabGroup else { return }
// Set up KVO observation for the windows array. Whenever it changes
// we resync the appearance because it can cause macOS to redraw the
// tab bar.
tabGroupWindowsObservation = tabGroup.observe(
\.windows,
options: [.new]
) { [weak self] _, change in
// NOTE: At one point, I guarded this on only if we went from 0 to N
// or N to 0 under the assumption that the tab bar would only get
// replaced on those cases. This turned out to be false (Tahoe).
// It's cheap enough to always redraw this so we should just do it
// unconditionally.
guard let self else { return }
guard let lastSurfaceConfig else { return }
self.syncAppearance(lastSurfaceConfig)
}
}
/// Monitors the tab bar for visibility. This lets the "Show/Hide Tab Bar" manual menu item
/// to not break our appearance.
private func setupTabBarVisibleObservation() {
// Remove existing observation if any
tabBarVisibleObservation?.invalidate()
tabBarVisibleObservation = nil
// Set up KVO observation for isTabBarVisible
tabBarVisibleObservation = tabGroup?.observe(
\.isTabBarVisible,
options: [.new]
) { [weak self] _, change in
guard let self else { return }
guard let lastSurfaceConfig else { return }
self.syncAppearance(lastSurfaceConfig)
}
}
}