if this isn't explicitly blocked by config options then allowing resizes
on the unmaximized axes is necessary in order to avoid accidentally
queuing a full unmaximize
according to ICCCM 4.1.4:
Only the client can effect a transition into or out of the Withdrawn state
withdrawn windows cannot be shown under any circumstances. the best that can
be done is to try mapping the window and hope it decides to appear.
to prevent any inadvertent showing of the window before it leaves the
withdrawn state, we play games with the E_Client->ignored flag in order
to skip client evals until we get notified that maybe we want to stop
skipping those evals
ref T2745
gtk apps set an atom which provides information about the area
where non-window content (eg. shadows) may be drawn; this area
must not be used in placement calculations.
the easiest method for implementing this functionality was to add
a case to the compositor geometry interceptors which effectively
flip the client struct geometry values such that the E_Client->client
is outside of the more commonly used E_Client->x/y/w/h
fix T2744
when working with Extremely Serious effects, it may be the case that
a user is rendering at such an advanced level that any attempt by
enlightenment to perform rendering will be like a child trying to
reproduce a masterpiece of art while using fingerpaints
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tY6qag5KFx0&hd=1
it's a pretty trivial thing to hand-composite a client, so this will
allow someone to do something like render out a gaussian blur to an fbo
using a client's texture and then render the fbo onto the compositor
canvas with minimal overhead
it's impossible to determine this at the time of calling without adding
some sort of callback here; edje signals are deferred, meaning that
an interested user will not be able to check the state of a client
when it begins to hide
when a client is set to "Always on Top", it will be on the same layer
as override clients. this can cause strange stacking and mouse eventing
in cases where these windows occupy the same space and the normal client
is stacked over the override
in the case of recursive desk flips, toggling a desk's visibility may
erroneously send queued evas events to the client's frame object, leading
to a focus-set (mouse-based focus models) which triggers a desk flip
inside the original desk flip. this "inner" desk flip is spurious and
should be ignored
based on testing, this breaks all rendering of related objects. I
suspect that the image border needs to be manually scaled based on
image::mirror proportions in order for this to work as expected, but
adding the required code seems like too much complexity for nearly zero
gain
under wayland, some surfaces (eg. cursors) would attempt to show prior to
having acquired their actual size. these show attempts should be rejected
until the size has been set to ensure that rendering can proceed as expected
fix T2557
this is more of an academic case than any existing scenario, but
it's possible that an effect may be stopped by something attempting
to trigger another effect during the animation
previously the animating flag would receive an additional increment for
every effect, even if it was currently animating a prior effect, leading
to objects which were never deleted