Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

8313424: JavaFX controls in the title bar #1605

Open
wants to merge 38 commits into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from

Conversation

mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator

@mstr2 mstr2 commented Oct 20, 2024

Implementation of EXTENDED stage style.


Progress

  • Change must not contain extraneous whitespace
  • Change requires a CSR request matching fixVersion jfx24 to be approved (needs to be created)
  • Commit message must refer to an issue
  • Change must be properly reviewed (2 reviews required, with at least 2 Reviewers)

Issue

  • JDK-8313424: JavaFX controls in the title bar (Enhancement - P4)

Reviewing

Using git

Checkout this PR locally:
$ git fetch https://git.openjdk.org/jfx.git pull/1605/head:pull/1605
$ git checkout pull/1605

Update a local copy of the PR:
$ git checkout pull/1605
$ git pull https://git.openjdk.org/jfx.git pull/1605/head

Using Skara CLI tools

Checkout this PR locally:
$ git pr checkout 1605

View PR using the GUI difftool:
$ git pr show -t 1605

Using diff file

Download this PR as a diff file:
https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1605.diff

Using Webrev

Link to Webrev Comment

@bridgekeeper
Copy link

bridgekeeper bot commented Oct 20, 2024

👋 Welcome back mstrauss! A progress list of the required criteria for merging this PR into master will be added to the body of your pull request. There are additional pull request commands available for use with this pull request.

@openjdk
Copy link

openjdk bot commented Oct 20, 2024

❗ This change is not yet ready to be integrated.
See the Progress checklist in the description for automated requirements.

@openjdk openjdk bot added the rfr Ready for review label Oct 20, 2024
@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 20, 2024

/reviewers 2 reviewers
/csr

@openjdk
Copy link

openjdk bot commented Oct 20, 2024

@mstr2
The total number of required reviews for this PR (including the jcheck configuration and the last /reviewers command) is now set to 2 (with at least 2 Reviewers).

@openjdk openjdk bot added the csr Need approved CSR to integrate pull request label Oct 20, 2024
@openjdk
Copy link

openjdk bot commented Oct 20, 2024

@mstr2 has indicated that a compatibility and specification (CSR) request is needed for this pull request.

@mstr2 please create a CSR request for issue JDK-8313424 with the correct fix version. This pull request cannot be integrated until the CSR request is approved.

@Glavo
Copy link
Contributor

Glavo commented Oct 20, 2024

Hey, I'm glad to see this PR, but do you have any ideas for continuing to provide UNDECORATED_INTERACTIVE in the future? I think UNDECORATED_INTERACTIVE is more useful than EXTENDED for users who want to provide a consistent UI on different platforms.

@tsayao
Copy link
Collaborator

tsayao commented Oct 20, 2024

Very nice. I'll test on Linux and report back.

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 20, 2024

Hey, I'm glad to see this PR, but do you have any ideas for continuing to provide UNDECORATED_INTERACTIVE in the future? I think UNDECORATED_INTERACTIVE is more useful than EXTENDED for users who want to provide a consistent UI on different platforms.

The only difference between the two would be whether the default window buttons are provided. I don't see how a window without default window buttons would be more useful. Even heavily stylized apps like Spotify use window buttons that feel at home on the OS, that doesn't take away from a consistent look and feel.

@tsayao
Copy link
Collaborator

tsayao commented Oct 21, 2024

A few points observed on Linux:

  1. It's possible to resize it to 1px using the provided functionality with gtk_window_begin_resize_drag. An then it's not possible to resize back. The Headerbar should block resizing to the size of window controls.
  2. It's not possible to move the window if the cursor is over a control. Maybe you should just gtk_window_begin_move_drag when a drag is detected, not on click. That would be on WindowContextBase::process_mouse_motion;
  3. The application is closing if the click happens on the top right corner (that's because it's triggering the close button instead of resizing (I think 2 should solve it as well). It closes with:
    (java:16179): Gtk-CRITICAL **: 07:34:26.721: gtk_window_begin_resize_drag: assertion 'gtk_widget_get_visible (widget)' failed
  4. Alt + F8 is working (it's a desktop shortcut for resizing the window) - just pointing out to include in manual testing;
  5. I think rounded edges should be supported on the HeaderBar, since it's the default on gnome. For that to work, EXTENDED should be also transparent on Linux. It would loose the window drop shadow which can be added on the JavaFX side. gdk_window_set_shadow_width should be called with the drop shadow size, so the desktop will know the correct window bounds.

Added later:
6) It should have a "focused" state/pseudo class because on gnome (maybe others) the focused window has a different background on the HeaderBar which is darker.
7) Suggestion: Maybe make window states stylable on the HeaderBar with pseudo-classes like :maximized, :fullscreen, :focused, :solid (when it does not have rounded corners). Then it would be possible to CSS style it.
8) Maybe integrate with platform preferences and provide a way to CSS style it when it's Light or Dark?

Nice cleanup on Window.java . UndecoratedMoveResizeHelper was not going to work on Linux anyways.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

I suggest we convert this PR to Draft and first discuss this in the mailing list.

There are so many issues with the proposal that need to be ironed first: CSS support, height limitation (what happens when the app or CSS places too large of the component?), user-defined color/accents/transparency on Windows, to name just a few.

This change also may add a significant maintenance burden to the platform, for what I feel is a very small payout.

What do you think?

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 21, 2024

I suggest we convert this PR to Draft and first discuss this in the mailing list.

This has already been discussed at various points in time, and was always received positively. The previous implementation is one of the most-upvoted feature proposals since OpenJFX moved to GitHub.

There are so many issues with the proposal that need to be ironed first: CSS support, height limitation (what happens when the app or CSS places too large of the component?), user-defined color/accents/transparency on Windows, to name just a few.

What about these things? I don't understand the question, but let me try to give some answers nontheless:

  1. CSS support: HeaderBar is a normal part of the scene graph, so it fully supports CSS styling.
  2. Height limitation: the height of HeaderBar is user-configurable, just like any layout container. It can be as large as you want.
  3. User-defined color/accents/transparency: Again, since HeaderBar is a part of the scene graph, all rules are the same.

This change also may add a significant maintenance burden to the platform, for what I feel is a very small payout.

Popular demand says otherwise.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

Popular demand is good, but I would like to hear from the tech leads and the maintainers.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

To clarify about height: do all the platforms support arbitrary height? What if size set by the app/CSS exceeds the height supported by the platform?

About platform preferences: will it support all the attributes of the window decorations provided by the platform?

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 21, 2024

To clarify about height: do all the platforms support arbitrary height? What if size set by the app/CSS exceeds the height supported by the platform?

Yes, all platforms support header bars of arbitrary height. You can make the header bar the size of the entire window, in which case everything is draggable.

About platform preferences: will it support all the attributes of the window decorations provided by the platform?

If by "attributes" you mean the default behavior of platform decorations, then the anwer is mostly. These are the behaviors that are available on every platform:

  1. A resize border.
  2. Minimize, maximize, and close buttons (this includes all states these buttons can be in: available/deactivated/disabled).
  3. Click-and-drag on the header bar.
  4. Double-click to maximize on the header bar.

On Windows, native window decorations also have the "system menu", which is this thing that appears when you click on the program icon:
Ml7Pf

EXTENDED windows have no system menu, because they have no program icon.
Edit: they now have a system menu that opens with a right click on the header bar.

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 21, 2024

@tsayao Thanks for the comments. I'll have a look at the bugs that you found.

  1. It's not possible to move the window if the cursor is over a control. Maybe you should just gtk_window_begin_move_drag when a drag is detected, not on click. That would be on WindowContextBase::process_mouse_motion;

I know that dragging on interactive controls is a thing on Linux, but I don't think that we should be doing that. JavaFX applications are multi-platform apps, which means that their behavior should be consistent across platforms. Stealing mouse interactions on interactive controls is not a thing on Windows and macOS, and this has the potential to cause problems for application developers.

If you want, you can declare any node in the header bar to be draggable on all platforms with HeaderBar.setDraggable(Node, boolean).

  1. I think rounded edges should be supported on the HeaderBar, since it's the default on gnome. For that to work, EXTENDED should be also transparent on Linux. It would loose the window drop shadow which can be added on the JavaFX side. gdk_window_set_shadow_width should be called with the drop shadow size, so the desktop will know the correct window bounds.

I'll have to look into that, but in general an EXTENDED window should work out of the box for all platforms, without platform-specific changes on the JavaFX side.

Added later: 6) It should have a "focused" state/pseudo class because on gnome (maybe others) the focused window has a different background on the HeaderBar which is darker. 7) Suggestion: Maybe make window states stylable on the HeaderBar with pseudo-classes like :maximized, :fullscreen, :focused, :solid (when it does not have rounded corners). Then it would be possible to CSS style it. 8) Maybe integrate with platform preferences and provide a way to CSS style it when it's Light or Dark?

While that sounds useful at first, I don't think it carries its own weight. Many platforms use different styling for windows that are focused vs. windows that are not. This not only includes the header bar, but many other parts of the user interface as well. I don't think that we should be adding what would essentially be ad-hoc pseudo-classes only to HeaderBar.

In addition to that, it is extremely easy for an application to do this by adding a listener to Stage.focused and then toggling pseudo-classes on all relevant controls.

We should definitely not do pseudo-classes for light vs. dark mode. The correct way to solve this problem is with media queries (prefers-color-scheme).

@mlbridge
Copy link

mlbridge bot commented Oct 22, 2024

Mailing list message from quizynox at gmail.com on openjfx-dev:

Hello,

Thank you so much for your effort! I'm really glad this hasn't been
forgotten. I wouldn't say it's just popular demand; it's an absolute must.
Here are a few thoughts, if you don't mind.

Every modern platform supports this feature: Electron, Tauri, Wails, Qt,
and even Swing via FlatLaf. If you use IntelliJ or VSCode, you can see it
for yourself. It's a popular design trend, which is why there's so much
demand.

Unfortunately, the current UNDECORATED stage implementation lacks two
important things: shadows and smooth resizing. Implementing shadows is
tricky but possible. However, achieving smooth resizing with Java code
alone is not feasible. There are several implementations on StackOverflow,
but they tend to be jerky and not very performant.

That's why the implementation should be handled on the native side, which
isn't something an app developer can do. We can only patiently wait for
this feature to be integrated into the core JavaFX platform.

It's indeed a complex feature. For that reason, I believe the
implementation shouldn't provide platform-dependent window controls. It
should be left to app developers to dodge theming issues. In Linux, for
example, it's common to install 3rd-party themes or decorations. You never
know what decorations the end user will use, and OS developers can change
themes over time too. It's just simpler to support this feature as a
separate library, which I'm sure will be developed.

??, 22 ???. 2024??. ? 03:24, Michael Strau? <mstrauss at openjdk.org>:

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mail.openjdk.org/pipermail/openjfx-dev/attachments/20241022/367f812e/attachment-0001.htm>

@tsayao
Copy link
Collaborator

tsayao commented Oct 22, 2024

I think we should look at use cases and design a simple solution that can be extended.

Doing this with JavaFX as it is now will be hacky, since it would need to touch internals that are not exposed by default.

Intellij Idea
image

Nautilus
image

Chrome
image

Amberol (music player).
image

App Center (Ubuntu Software Store) - This one uses flutter
image

Some of them has no title at all. Some fuses the HeaderBar with the body, like nautilus. Even chrome, the tabs on the HeaderBar are not "isolated" from the body.

On modern Gnome, everything is client side decorated. Server side decoration is legacy. It's better for rendering since the window manager does not need to calculate, draw and sync with the window. It's probably less flickery.

Since JavaFx accounts the title as part of the window size, the current glass implementation is very hacky because it needs to request the decoration sizes from the window manager and then recalculate it. Having it on the client side is better, because no hacky solution is required.

@nlisker
Copy link
Collaborator

nlisker commented Oct 22, 2024

Adding some more examples.

Vivaldi browser actually allows you to switch between two modes:
image

which can be switched with
image

to
image

So in the first mode, the menu is compressed vertically into the Vivaldi button.

Here is Discord:
image

Very compact.

As for the payout of this feature, while personally I don't have a need for it, I will probably use it if it's not too much trouble. Regardless of my own opinion, this has been one of the most requested features, along with tray icon support, and it's available in the main "competition" frameworks. I would say that a very strong case will need to be made for this to not be added. The question that remains, as it often does, is if this is the right implementation. Hopefully the review process will figure that out.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

andy-goryachev-oracle commented Oct 22, 2024

Continuing on window attributes. I would like to know what is and is not supported by platform, by feature.

For example:

Windows

  • translucency
  • color gradient
  • system menu on right click, on the toolbar and on the app components
  • color accent on hover over window buttons
  • window borders
  • round corners
  • double click to maximize
  • drag to reposition the window
  • dark/light theme
  • accessibility: keyboard focus, accessible focus, narrator

Did I miss anything?

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

For the HeaderBar, I would like to see the explanation of different layout options, including the cases when all the information does not fit the window width. Which parts are contracted? How is overflow handled?

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

andy-goryachev-oracle commented Oct 22, 2024

May be I am late to the party, but I would suggest to discuss the JEP first. I would like to see the summary by platform by feature, I would like to see details of the layout, and the description if and how the proposed design responds to user preferences changes dynamically.

I would also like to see alternatives. Perhaps the app developers has all the tools already (for example, creating an overlay transparent scene on top of the platform title bar?), or maybe this functionality should be rather implemented in a library.

Lastly, there is a concern of adding a huge maintenance burden on the platform. Next time the major OS vendor changes the L&F or adds something to the window decorations, we are on the hook for supporting that.

I am not even qualified to access the impact of this feature in the Linux world. There are so many frameworks and opinions - how do you propose to handle that? Is it going to be supported on Wayland?

@tsayao
Copy link
Collaborator

tsayao commented Oct 22, 2024

Gtk does work on Mac and Windows, maybe we can see how it handles it's HeaderBar, for reference.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

Another aspect is whether this should be a conditional feature.
If not, how will it be supported on Android/iOS? RaspPI?

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Oct 22, 2024

Continuing on window attributes. I would like to know what is and is not supported by platform, by feature.

For example:

Windows

  • translucency
  • color gradient
  • system menu on right click, on the toolbar and on the app components
  • color accent on hover over window buttons
  • window borders
  • round corners
  • double click to maximize
  • drag to reposition the window
  • dark/light theme
  • accessibility: keyboard focus, accessible focus, narrator

Did I miss anything?

I'll eagerly invite you to dissect this PR for its merits, its pros and cons. However, your questions lead me to conclude that you haven't really looked at what I'm proposing. Half of your questions are answered just by looking at the documentation for StageStyle.EXTENDED and HeaderBar. These are the two primary APIs that I've mentioned over and over again in this PR.

Let me try to explain StageStyle.EXTENDED in different terms:

  1. EXTENDED is like UNDECORATED in the following ways: The application controls the entirety of the window. There is no non-client area (i.e. no title bar), and you can place scene graph nodes everywhere. Since there is no non-client title bar, applications will have to provide their own HeaderBar and their own system menu (if they so desire).

  2. EXTENDED is like DECORATED in the following ways: The window has a resize border, shadows, and window animations. It has the platform window buttons (minimize, maximize, close) superimposed over the application window. Just as with a decorated window, applications have no control over whether corners are rounded, how borders look like, and so on.

Since there is no non-client title bar, all questions regarding the appearance or accessibility of the HeaderBar (color gradient, dark/light theme, etc.) are left to the purview of application developers. HeaderBar is a control just like any other JavaFX control, and application developers will decide how it looks like. Notably, there is no translucency, because JavaFX does not support window-level translucency. This has nothing to do with this feature proposal, and should be discussed on its own merits.

Copy link
Contributor

@andy-goryachev-oracle andy-goryachev-oracle left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

first batch of comments up until and including HeaderBar.
to be continued...

buildSrc/win.gradle Outdated Show resolved Hide resolved
* All children will be resized to their preferred widths and extend the height of the {@code HeaderBar}.
* {@code HeaderBar} honors the minimum, preferred, and maximum sizes of its children. If the child's
* resizable range prevents it from be resized to fit within its position, it will be vertically centered
* relative to the available space; this alignment can be customized with a layout constraint.
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

what if the components are too large to fit, will clipping occur? should this behavior be mentioned?

Copy link
Collaborator Author

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

The components can't be too large to fit:
{@code HeaderBar} honors the minimum, preferred, and maximum sizes of its children.

Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I want to know what happens when the layout is over-constrained. For example, consider the layout to have the leading, the center, and the trailing nodes set, and the leading one has minWidth set to 10_000. What happens?

Will the center and the trailing nodes be shown or clipped? will the layout attempt to squeeze all three to fit the available space?

Can I get this answer from the javadoc?

Copy link
Collaborator Author

@mstr2 mstr2 Nov 7, 2024

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I've added another sentence to the javadocs of HeaderBar:

 * All children will be resized to their preferred widths and extend the height of the {@code HeaderBar}.
 * {@code HeaderBar} honors the minimum, preferred, and maximum sizes of its children. As a consequence,
 * its computed minimum size is sufficient to accommodate all of its children.

Does that help?

Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

it is probably ok - I am curious what @kevinrushforth might think.

it might be either obvious that the window will cut off the HB if it is wider than the window width, or it should be explicitly mentioned (there is probably enough text to go through to kind of understand the behavior in the case of over-constrained HB, or the dev can just try it).

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Nov 5, 2024

There is, however, one problem in RTL mode on Win11: something is wrong with the hover area of the native close ([x]) button. If I click on the center of the X, nothing happens, and it does not show the hover status. If I move the mouse pointer closer to the edge of the [x] button, the hover decoration comes on and the window can be closed.

Can you check please?

Thanks for discovering this, there was a problem with mirrored coordinates in RTL windows. Should be fixed now.

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Nov 5, 2024

I think it's fine, but is the window controls overlay supposed to take the whole window? I've set the background color just to demonstrate, it has no practical utility.

Yes, the overlay is resizable and will always stretch the entire window. As you point out, there's no practical significance, as overlays are not part of the scene graph and applications will never be able to interact with them.

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Nov 5, 2024

I'm not sure if it's feasible, but having a GtkOverlay seems to work on a basic app paintable C app:

Gtk4 even has WindowControls.

I started to play with the CSS to make it transparent, but it does not seem much straightforward, but possible.

Running the program with GTK_DEBUG=interactive makes it easier.

The main problem with this approach is that it presupposes that the drawing is only done in GTK callbacks. But that's not how JavaFX interacts with GTK, so I think it will probably not work. I haven't found a way to simultaneously use the current JavaFX rendering approach and mix in GTK widgets on the same surface.

@tsayao
Copy link
Collaborator

tsayao commented Nov 5, 2024

I'm not sure if it's feasible, but having a GtkOverlay seems to work on a basic app paintable C app:
Gtk4 even has WindowControls.
I started to play with the CSS to make it transparent, but it does not seem much straightforward, but possible.
Running the program with GTK_DEBUG=interactive makes it easier.

The main problem with this approach is that it presupposes that the drawing is only done in GTK callbacks. But that's not how JavaFX interacts with GTK, so I think it will probably not work. I haven't found a way to simultaneously use the current JavaFX rendering approach and mix in GTK widgets on the same surface.

Yeah, didn't work. In theory it should work with Wayland and a subsurface, like libdecor does. X11 has the concept of multiple stacked Windows, in theory it's possible, I just don't know how to sync it.

Copy link
Contributor

@andy-goryachev-oracle andy-goryachev-oracle left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

second batch of comments

* All children will be resized to their preferred widths and extend the height of the {@code HeaderBar}.
* {@code HeaderBar} honors the minimum, preferred, and maximum sizes of its children. If the child's
* resizable range prevents it from be resized to fit within its position, it will be vertically centered
* relative to the available space; this alignment can be customized with a layout constraint.
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I want to know what happens when the layout is over-constrained. For example, consider the layout to have the leading, the center, and the trailing nodes set, and the leading one has minWidth set to 10_000. What happens?

Will the center and the trailing nodes be shown or clipped? will the layout attempt to squeeze all three to fit the available space?

Can I get this answer from the javadoc?

}

.close-button > .glyph {
-fx-shape: "m 8.1464844,8.1464844 a 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0,0.7070312 L 11.292969,12 8.1464844,15.146484 a 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0,0.707032 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0.7070312,0 L 12,12.707031 l 3.146484,3.146485 a 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0.707032,0 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0,-0.707032 L 12.707031,12 15.853516,8.8535156 a 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 0,-0.7070312 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 -0.707032,0 L 12,11.292969 8.8535156,8.1464844 a 0.5,0.5 0 0 0 -0.7070312,0 z";
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

minor: we could probably minimize the path by rounding to 2 or 3 decimal points
(same comment for all .css changes)

}

.maximize-button.restore > .glyph {
-fx-shape: "m 7.6491699,2.5192871 q 0,-0.3444824 -0.1369629,-0.6495361 Q 7.3752441,1.5646973 7.1407471,1.338501 6.90625,1.1123047 6.5970459,0.98156738 6.2878418,0.85083008 5.9475098,0.85083008 H 1.7722168 Q 1.838623,0.65991211 1.9589844,0.50219727 2.0793457,0.34448242 2.2370605,0.23242188 2.3947754,0.12036133 2.5836182,0.06018066 2.7724609,0 2.9758301,0 H 5.9475098 Q 6.4746094,0 6.9394531,0.20129395 7.4042969,0.40258789 7.7508545,0.74707031 8.0974121,1.0915527 8.2987061,1.5563965 8.5,2.0212402 8.5,2.5483398 V 5.5241699 Q 8.5,5.7275391 8.4398193,5.9163818 8.3796387,6.1052246 8.2675781,6.2629395 8.1555176,6.4206543 7.9978027,6.5410156 7.8400879,6.661377 7.6491699,6.7277832 Z M 1.253418,8.5 Q 1.0043945,8.5 0.77612305,8.3983154 0.54785156,8.2966309 0.37561035,8.1243896 0.20336914,7.9521484 0.10168457,7.723877 0,7.4956055 0,7.246582 V 2.9550781 Q 0,2.7019043 0.10168457,2.475708 0.20336914,2.2495117 0.37561035,2.0772705 0.54785156,1.9050293 0.77404785,1.8033447 1.0002441,1.7016602 1.253418,1.7016602 h 4.2915039 q 0.2531738,0 0.4814453,0.1016845 0.2282715,0.1016846 0.3984375,0.2718506 0.170166,0.170166 0.2718506,0.3984375 0.1016845,0.2282715 0.1016845,0.4814453 V 7.246582 q 0,0.2531739 -0.1016845,0.4793701 Q 6.5949707,7.9521484 6.4227295,8.1243896 6.2504883,8.2966309 6.024292,8.3983154 5.7980957,8.5 5.5449219,8.5 Z M 5.5241699,7.6491699 q 0.087158,0 0.1639405,-0.033203 0.076782,-0.033203 0.1369628,-0.091309 0.060181,-0.058105 0.093384,-0.1348877 0.033203,-0.076782 0.033203,-0.1639404 v -4.25 q 0,-0.087158 -0.033203,-0.1660156 Q 5.8852539,2.730957 5.8271484,2.6728516 5.769043,2.6147461 5.6901855,2.581543 5.6113281,2.5483398 5.5241699,2.5483398 h -4.25 q -0.087158,0 -0.1639404,0.033203 -0.076782,0.033203 -0.1348877,0.093384 -0.0581055,0.060181 -0.0913086,0.1369628 -0.0332031,0.076782 -0.0332031,0.1639405 v 4.25 q 0,0.087158 0.0332031,0.1639404 0.0332031,0.076782 0.0913086,0.1348877 0.0581055,0.058105 0.1348877,0.091309 0.076782,0.033203 0.1639404,0.033203 z";
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

... especially here

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

please link your JEP from this PR

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Nov 5, 2024

Yeah, didn't work. In theory it should work with Wayland and a subsurface, like libdecor does. X11 has the concept of multiple stacked Windows, in theory it's possible, I just don't know how to sync it.

I like the idea of having different subsurfaces for JavaFX client-side rendering and window decorations. We'd need a working Wayland backend, though...

@@ -275,30 +234,25 @@ void alignmentOfCenterChild_resizable_withNonEmptyLeadingAndTrailingChild(String
"BOTTOM_CENTER, 450, 40, 100, 50",
"BOTTOM_RIGHT, 740, 40, 100, 50"
})
void alignmentOfCenterChild_notResizable_withNonEmptyLeadingAndTrailingChild(String arg) {
String[] args = arg.split(",");
void alignmentOfCenterChild_notResizable_withNonEmptyLeadingAndTrailingChild(
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

minor suggestion:

long test names do not help much (and actually may cause problems, see https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8334497)

also rather inconvenient to see in the logs, or IDEs. You can use comments for human-readability and short(er) method names.

@mstr2
Copy link
Collaborator Author

mstr2 commented Nov 6, 2024

@andy-goryachev-oracle Can you mark conversations resolved if you think the issue has been discussed appropriately? This would help to organize all of the remaining points.

@andy-goryachev-oracle
Copy link
Contributor

Can you mark conversations resolved

we are hitting the a github design problem here - as you correctly expect, the originator should, in theory, be able to mark conversation as resolved, but the only person who could is the PR submitter.

I started to use thumbsUp emoji to mark resolved/accepted answers, and I can go through and do the remaining ones, or mark the points that have not been answered yet (those exist).

Any other suggestions?

@kevinrushforth
Copy link
Member

Can you mark conversations resolved

we are hitting the a github design problem here - as you correctly expect, the originator should, in theory, be able to mark conversation as resolved, but the only person who could is the PR submitter.

This is, indeed, a limitation of GitHub.

I started to use thumbsUp emoji to mark resolved/accepted answers, and I can go through and do the remaining ones, or mark the points that have not been answered yet (those exist).

Any other suggestions?

I can't think of a better approach.

*/
public final class WindowControlsOverlay extends Region {

private static final CssMetaData<WindowControlsOverlay, HorizontalDirection> BUTTON_PLACEMENT_METADATA =
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

BTW, check out StyleablePropertyFactory. It can be used if one doesn't do lazy initialization, or if one doesn't need e.g. IntegerProperties.

Copy link
Contributor

@beldenfox beldenfox left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

Kudos for tackling this and doing such a thorough job. I'll try to look over the Windows code in the next couple of weeks.

GLASS_ASSERT_MAIN_JAVA_THREAD(env);
GLASS_POOL_ENTER;
{
NSString* preferredLanguage = [[NSLocale preferredLanguages] objectAtIndex:0];
Copy link
Contributor

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

Is there some reason you're not using the NSWindow.windowTitlebarLayoutDirection property?

Copy link
Collaborator Author

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

It just doesn't seem to work. NSWindow.windowTitlebarLayoutDirection always returns NSUserInterfaceLayoutDirectionLeftToRight, even when my system layout direction clearly is right-to-left. I haven't been able to find out why that is.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
csr Need approved CSR to integrate pull request rfr Ready for review
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

7 participants