kwin/tests/screenedgeshowtest.cpp

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Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
/*
2020-08-02 22:22:19 +00:00
SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2014 Martin Gräßlin <mgraesslin@kde.org>
SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only OR GPL-3.0-only OR LicenseRef-KDE-Accepted-GPL
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
*/
2022-01-13 13:54:03 +00:00
#include "utils/xcbutils.h"
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
#include <QApplication>
#include <QCheckBox>
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
#include <QHBoxLayout>
#include <QMenu>
#include <QPlatformSurfaceEvent>
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
#include <QPushButton>
#include <QScreen>
#include <QTimer>
#include <QToolButton>
#include <QWidget>
#include <QWindow>
#if QT_VERSION >= QT_VERSION_CHECK(6, 0, 0)
#include <private/qtx11extras_p.h>
#else
#include <QX11Info>
#endif
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
#include <KWindowSystem>
#include <KWayland/Client/connection_thread.h>
#include <KWayland/Client/plasmashell.h>
#include <KWayland/Client/registry.h>
#include <KWayland/Client/surface.h>
class ScreenEdgeHelper : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
protected:
ScreenEdgeHelper(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent = nullptr);
QWindow *window() const
{
return m_widget->windowHandle();
}
virtual void restore() = 0;
public:
Run clang-tidy with modernize-use-override check Summary: Currently code base of kwin can be viewed as two pieces. One is very ancient, and the other one is more modern, which uses new C++ features. The main problem with the ancient code is that it was written before C++11 era. So, no override or final keywords, lambdas, etc. Quite recently, KDE compiler settings were changed to show a warning if a virtual method has missing override keyword. As you might have already guessed, this fired back at us because of that ancient code. We had about 500 new compiler warnings. A "solution" was proposed to that problem - disable -Wno-suggest-override and the other similar warning for clang. It's hard to call a solution because those warnings are disabled not only for the old code, but also for new. This is not what we want! The main argument for not actually fixing the problem was that git history will be screwed as well because of human factor. While good git history is a very important thing, we should not go crazy about it and block every change that somehow alters git history. git blame allows to specify starting revision for a reason. The other argument (human factor) can be easily solved by using tools such as clang-tidy. clang-tidy is a clang-based linter for C++. It can be used for various things, e.g. fixing coding style(e.g. add missing braces to if statements, readability-braces-around-statements check), or in our case add missing override keywords. Test Plan: Compiles. Reviewers: #kwin, davidedmundson Reviewed By: #kwin, davidedmundson Subscribers: davidedmundson, apol, romangg, kwin Tags: #kwin Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D22371
2019-07-22 16:52:26 +00:00
~ScreenEdgeHelper() override;
virtual void hide() = 0;
virtual void raiseOrShow(bool raise) = 0;
virtual void init(){};
virtual void moveToTop();
virtual void moveToRight();
virtual void moveToBottom();
virtual void moveToLeft();
virtual void moveToFloating();
void hideAndRestore()
{
hide();
m_timer->start(10000);
}
private:
QWidget *m_widget;
QTimer *m_timer;
};
class ScreenEdgeHelperX11 : public ScreenEdgeHelper
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
ScreenEdgeHelperX11(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent = nullptr);
Run clang-tidy with modernize-use-override check Summary: Currently code base of kwin can be viewed as two pieces. One is very ancient, and the other one is more modern, which uses new C++ features. The main problem with the ancient code is that it was written before C++11 era. So, no override or final keywords, lambdas, etc. Quite recently, KDE compiler settings were changed to show a warning if a virtual method has missing override keyword. As you might have already guessed, this fired back at us because of that ancient code. We had about 500 new compiler warnings. A "solution" was proposed to that problem - disable -Wno-suggest-override and the other similar warning for clang. It's hard to call a solution because those warnings are disabled not only for the old code, but also for new. This is not what we want! The main argument for not actually fixing the problem was that git history will be screwed as well because of human factor. While good git history is a very important thing, we should not go crazy about it and block every change that somehow alters git history. git blame allows to specify starting revision for a reason. The other argument (human factor) can be easily solved by using tools such as clang-tidy. clang-tidy is a clang-based linter for C++. It can be used for various things, e.g. fixing coding style(e.g. add missing braces to if statements, readability-braces-around-statements check), or in our case add missing override keywords. Test Plan: Compiles. Reviewers: #kwin, davidedmundson Reviewed By: #kwin, davidedmundson Subscribers: davidedmundson, apol, romangg, kwin Tags: #kwin Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D22371
2019-07-22 16:52:26 +00:00
~ScreenEdgeHelperX11() override = default;
void hide() override;
void raiseOrShow(bool raise) override;
void moveToTop() override;
void moveToRight() override;
void moveToBottom() override;
void moveToLeft() override;
void moveToFloating() override;
protected:
void restore() override;
private:
uint32_t m_locationValue = 2;
uint32_t m_actionValue = 0;
KWin::Xcb::Atom m_atom;
};
class ScreenEdgeHelperWayland : public ScreenEdgeHelper
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
ScreenEdgeHelperWayland(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent = nullptr);
Run clang-tidy with modernize-use-override check Summary: Currently code base of kwin can be viewed as two pieces. One is very ancient, and the other one is more modern, which uses new C++ features. The main problem with the ancient code is that it was written before C++11 era. So, no override or final keywords, lambdas, etc. Quite recently, KDE compiler settings were changed to show a warning if a virtual method has missing override keyword. As you might have already guessed, this fired back at us because of that ancient code. We had about 500 new compiler warnings. A "solution" was proposed to that problem - disable -Wno-suggest-override and the other similar warning for clang. It's hard to call a solution because those warnings are disabled not only for the old code, but also for new. This is not what we want! The main argument for not actually fixing the problem was that git history will be screwed as well because of human factor. While good git history is a very important thing, we should not go crazy about it and block every change that somehow alters git history. git blame allows to specify starting revision for a reason. The other argument (human factor) can be easily solved by using tools such as clang-tidy. clang-tidy is a clang-based linter for C++. It can be used for various things, e.g. fixing coding style(e.g. add missing braces to if statements, readability-braces-around-statements check), or in our case add missing override keywords. Test Plan: Compiles. Reviewers: #kwin, davidedmundson Reviewed By: #kwin, davidedmundson Subscribers: davidedmundson, apol, romangg, kwin Tags: #kwin Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D22371
2019-07-22 16:52:26 +00:00
~ScreenEdgeHelperWayland() override = default;
void hide() override;
void raiseOrShow(bool raise) override;
void init() override;
bool eventFilter(QObject *watched, QEvent *event) override;
protected:
void restore() override;
private:
void setupSurface();
KWayland::Client::PlasmaShell *m_shell = nullptr;
KWayland::Client::PlasmaShellSurface *m_shellSurface = nullptr;
bool m_autoHide = true;
};
ScreenEdgeHelper::ScreenEdgeHelper(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent)
: QObject(parent)
, m_widget(widget)
, m_timer(new QTimer(this))
{
m_timer->setSingleShot(true);
connect(m_timer, &QTimer::timeout, this, &ScreenEdgeHelper::restore);
}
ScreenEdgeHelper::~ScreenEdgeHelper() = default;
void ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToTop()
{
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
m_widget->setGeometry(geo.x(), geo.y(), geo.width(), 100);
}
void ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToRight()
{
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
m_widget->setGeometry(geo.x(), geo.y(), geo.width(), 100);
}
void ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToBottom()
{
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
m_widget->setGeometry(geo.x(), geo.y() + geo.height() - 100, geo.width(), 100);
}
void ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToLeft()
{
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
m_widget->setGeometry(geo.x(), geo.y(), 100, geo.height());
}
void ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToFloating()
{
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
m_widget->setGeometry(QRect(geo.center(), QSize(100, 100)));
}
ScreenEdgeHelperX11::ScreenEdgeHelperX11(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent)
: ScreenEdgeHelper(widget, parent)
, m_atom(QByteArrayLiteral("_KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW"))
{
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::hide()
{
uint32_t value = m_locationValue | (m_actionValue << 8);
xcb_change_property(QX11Info::connection(), XCB_PROP_MODE_REPLACE, window()->winId(), m_atom, XCB_ATOM_CARDINAL, 32, 1, &value);
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::restore()
{
xcb_delete_property(QX11Info::connection(), window()->winId(), m_atom);
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::raiseOrShow(bool raise)
{
m_actionValue = raise ? 1 : 0;
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::moveToBottom()
{
ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToBottom();
m_locationValue = 2;
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::moveToFloating()
{
ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToFloating();
m_locationValue = 4;
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::moveToLeft()
{
ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToLeft();
m_locationValue = 3;
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::moveToRight()
{
ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToRight();
m_locationValue = 1;
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperX11::moveToTop()
{
ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToTop();
m_locationValue = 0;
}
using namespace KWayland::Client;
ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::ScreenEdgeHelperWayland(QWidget *widget, QObject *parent)
: ScreenEdgeHelper(widget, parent)
{
ConnectionThread *connection = ConnectionThread::fromApplication(this);
Registry *registry = new Registry(connection);
registry->create(connection);
connect(registry, &Registry::interfacesAnnounced, this,
[registry, this] {
const auto interface = registry->interface(Registry::Interface::PlasmaShell);
if (interface.name == 0) {
return;
}
m_shell = registry->createPlasmaShell(interface.name, interface.version);
});
registry->setup();
connection->roundtrip();
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::init()
{
window()->installEventFilter(this);
setupSurface();
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::setupSurface()
{
if (!m_shell) {
return;
}
if (auto s = Surface::fromWindow(window())) {
m_shellSurface = m_shell->createSurface(s, window());
m_shellSurface->setRole(PlasmaShellSurface::Role::Panel);
m_shellSurface->setPanelBehavior(PlasmaShellSurface::PanelBehavior::AutoHide);
m_shellSurface->setPosition(window()->position());
}
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::hide()
{
if (m_shellSurface && m_autoHide) {
m_shellSurface->requestHideAutoHidingPanel();
}
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::restore()
{
if (m_shellSurface && m_autoHide) {
m_shellSurface->requestShowAutoHidingPanel();
}
}
void ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::raiseOrShow(bool raise)
{
m_autoHide = !raise;
if (m_shellSurface) {
if (raise) {
m_shellSurface->setPanelBehavior(PlasmaShellSurface::PanelBehavior::WindowsCanCover);
} else {
m_shellSurface->setPanelBehavior(PlasmaShellSurface::PanelBehavior::AutoHide);
}
}
}
bool ScreenEdgeHelperWayland::eventFilter(QObject *watched, QEvent *event)
{
if (watched != window() || !m_shell) {
return false;
}
if (event->type() == QEvent::PlatformSurface) {
QPlatformSurfaceEvent *pe = static_cast<QPlatformSurfaceEvent *>(event);
if (pe->surfaceEventType() == QPlatformSurfaceEvent::SurfaceCreated) {
setupSurface();
} else {
delete m_shellSurface;
m_shellSurface = nullptr;
}
}
if (event->type() == QEvent::Move) {
if (m_shellSurface) {
m_shellSurface->setPosition(window()->position());
}
}
return false;
}
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
QApplication::setApplicationDisplayName(QStringLiteral("Screen Edge Show Test App"));
ScreenEdgeHelper *helper = nullptr;
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
QScopedPointer<QWidget> widget(new QWidget(nullptr, Qt::FramelessWindowHint));
if (KWindowSystem::isPlatformX11()) {
app.setProperty("x11Connection", QVariant::fromValue<void *>(QX11Info::connection()));
helper = new ScreenEdgeHelperX11(widget.data(), &app);
} else if (KWindowSystem::isPlatformWayland()) {
helper = new ScreenEdgeHelperWayland(widget.data(), &app);
}
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
if (!helper) {
return 2;
}
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
QPushButton *hideWindowButton = new QPushButton(QStringLiteral("Hide"), widget.data());
QObject::connect(hideWindowButton, &QPushButton::clicked, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::hide);
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
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QPushButton *hideAndRestoreButton = new QPushButton(QStringLiteral("Hide and Restore after 10 sec"), widget.data());
QObject::connect(hideAndRestoreButton, &QPushButton::clicked, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::hideAndRestore);
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
QToolButton *edgeButton = new QToolButton(widget.data());
QCheckBox *raiseCheckBox = new QCheckBox("Raise:", widget.data());
QObject::connect(raiseCheckBox, &QCheckBox::toggled, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::raiseOrShow);
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
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edgeButton->setText(QStringLiteral("Edge"));
edgeButton->setPopupMode(QToolButton::MenuButtonPopup);
QMenu *edgeButtonMenu = new QMenu(edgeButton);
QObject::connect(edgeButtonMenu->addAction("Top"), &QAction::triggered, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToTop);
QObject::connect(edgeButtonMenu->addAction("Right"), &QAction::triggered, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToRight);
QObject::connect(edgeButtonMenu->addAction("Bottom"), &QAction::triggered, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToBottom);
QObject::connect(edgeButtonMenu->addAction("Left"), &QAction::triggered, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToLeft);
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
edgeButtonMenu->addSeparator();
QObject::connect(edgeButtonMenu->addAction("Floating"), &QAction::triggered, helper, &ScreenEdgeHelper::moveToFloating);
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
edgeButton->setMenu(edgeButtonMenu);
QHBoxLayout *layout = new QHBoxLayout(widget.data());
layout->addWidget(hideWindowButton);
layout->addWidget(hideAndRestoreButton);
layout->addWidget(edgeButton);
widget->setLayout(layout);
const QRect geo = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen()->geometry();
widget->setGeometry(geo.x(), geo.y() + geo.height() - 100, geo.width(), 100);
widget->show();
helper->init();
Screenedge show support for Clients This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin. As value it takes: * 0: top edge * 1: right edge * 2: bottom edge * 3: left edge KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel again. The exact process is described in the documentation of ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the property. If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is tried to create the edge as described. As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to provide an own implementation. The implementation comes with a small test application showing how the feature is intended to be used. REVIEW: 115910
2014-02-20 11:39:23 +00:00
return app.exec();
}
#include "screenedgeshowtest.moc"