This exposes FocusReason to .slint, and adds it as an argument to focus-event-changed callback on FocusScope to close#8387. It also adds two new callbacks, focus-gained and focus-lost, which are identical to focus-event-changed but are only invoked on focus gain or loss respectively.
In addition to this, it removes the FocusEventReason::AccessKit variant, replacing it with the mouse variant to hopefully make AccessKit more compatible with any Slint code that will use FocusEventReason.
Finally, I added two tests based on focus_change_event.slint, one for testing the FocusEventReason argument and another for testing the new callbacks.
close#8387
ChangeLog: Added `focus-gained` and `focus-lost` callback to FocusScope. Pass an `FocusReason` enum to the FocusScope callbacks
Closes#5992
Adds the enum FocusEventReason and makes it an argument for FocusEvent. This reason could eventually be exposed in Slint to solve #8387.
Using the focus reason tracking, I also added a select all on keyboard focus for TextInputs (except on macOS), which should close#5992.
ChangeLog: TextInput selects its content when focused with the keyboard on Windows and Linux
To be compatible with the 2024 edition, we need to wrap the
`no_mangle` attribute in `unsafe()`.
The parsing for that in cbindgen was only added in the version 0.28,
but we couldn't upgrade cbindgen before because of a regression in
cbindgen 0.27 that prevented us from upgrading.
Now that cbindgen 0.29 is released with a fix, we can prepare for the
2024 edition
... by changing the resolution for the `WindowItem` to traverse the
item tree from the current item, instead of going to the window.
This doesn't quite fix#4298 because `rem` resolution is still missing.
That requires the built-in default font size function to be fixed as
well, which is non-trivial.
cc #4298
- Add the `entries` property in the ContextMenu
- Make right click on the ContextMenu show the menu
- Use the proper technique to register ContextMenu and MenuBar as
experimental (same as ComponentContainer)
- Remove the duration threshold
- Always register the swipe even if the pointer went in another
direction before
- set the current position on the release event (in case there was no
mouve to that position before)
ChangeLog: adjusted threshold in the SwipeGestureHandler
Closes#6344
Probably also helps for #6350
The origin of this proposal is the name of the `swipe-left`, etc.
directional, boolean properties. They're missing another verb in their
name. In principle the right choice would be "recognize". That is what
the type name suggests, that's the term the documentation uses, so the
code should read `recognize-swipe-left: true;`. However that is a long
word. "Handle" is a verb that's simpler. It's also more generic (that's
a downside), but it's otherwise short enough to make things look
"right":
```
SwipeGestureHandler {
handle-swipe-left: true;
swiped => { something.naviate-left(); }
}
```
Therefore this patch proposes to rename the type to SwipeGestureHandler
and prefixes the boolean directional properties with "handle".