this just means the menu is registering a new manager, it is not really
doing anything, its just there so the children which are searching for
one are finiding one. Elm menu has not handled anything with keys in the
past and will later learn to do so.
The Efl.Ui.Focus.Manager abstracts the creation of a localization graph
and a logical tree. The localization graph is used to find a object
right left up or down of a given object. The logical tree is used to
iterate throuw the containers which are used to build a ui.
Those managers can be used bound to some layer in the ui, so for
example the window is a layer, the content of a scroller is a layer.
With those layers, we can make sure that movements of a scroller for
example just means that this graph of objects in the scroller needs to
be recalculated, and not the complete ui.
The advantage of having this to layer bound datastructures is that you
can easily debug those graphs, since the complete layer of this
managerobject can be calculated completly.
Currently, script block is removed when an edje group inherits from other group
after defining its own script block.
group { "somegroup";
script {
...
}
parts {
...
}
inherit: "othergroup"; // <= previous script block is removed here.
}
If parent group doesn't have script block, it doesn't need to overwrite previous
one. This will keep script block and print warning when script block is overwritten.
If we disable preload, then the second file set on an elm_image
object would not trigger a deletion of the first image. As a
consequence, both images would be visible... really bad if there's
alpha or different dimensions!
Thanks Anand Kumar for the report!
@fix
This fixes all warnings for "make examples" for:
-Wunused-parameter
-Wshadow
-Wformat-security
-Wenum-conversion
Some remaining warnings include:
-Wdeprecated-delcarations
Summary:
Applies the correction purely mechanically using the following shell
command-line:
src/examples/evas$ grep -sr 'fprintf(stdout' . | cut -d: -f1 | uniq | \
xargs sed -i "s/fprintf(stdout/printf(/"
This fixes a few warnings about lack of a format string:
warning: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Wformat-security]
fprintf(stdout, commands);
Reviewers: cedric
Subscribers: cedric
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D4691