Previously the argument order for Margins was (left, top, right,
bottom). To make it more familiar and closer to how CSS does it, the
argument order is now (top, right, bottom, left).
This feels a bit awkward right now, and needs code duplication - I think
adding a mechanism to the AppFile class to run the executable would be
neat, especially if we add an arguments field to app files - but this
will do for now.
This makes it easy for the user to just throw the mouse at the corner
of the screen and obtain the desired outcome (eg. opening the start
menu), without having to precisely position the cursor over one of the
buttons.
We already do this in most places, so the style should be consistent.
Also, Clang does not like it, as this could cause an unexpected compile
error if some statements are added to the default label or a new label
is added above it.
We care about showing 'Assistant' app as fast as possible when the
hotkey is pressed. In order to do that, we can parse the `.af` file
ahead of time and have it ready to use.
To make Assistant useful we need a way to quickly trigger it. I've
added a new specialized event coming from the window server for when a
user is holding down 'Super' and hits 'Space'.
The Taskbar will be able to listen for this event and spawn a new
instance of the Assistant if it's not already running.
This allows WindowServer to use multiple framebuffer devices and
compose the desktop with any arbitrary layout. Currently, it is assumed
that it is configured contiguous and non-overlapping, but this should
eventually be enforced.
To make rendering efficient, each window now also tracks on which
screens it needs to be rendered. This way we don't have to iterate all
the windows for each screen but instead use the same rendering loop and
then only render to the screen (or screens) that the window actually
uses.
Make the taskbar 27 pixels tall instead of 28. This makes the button
icons and applets vertically centered.
On a related note, this required touching *way* too many places..
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
Since WM operations are moved to a separate endpoint pair, Taskbar now
uses those to perform window management related operations.
Additionally, it now explicitly declares to WindowServer that it is a
window manager.
I hereby declare these to be full nouns that we don't split,
neither by space, nor by underscore:
- Breadcrumbbar
- Coolbar
- Menubar
- Progressbar
- Scrollbar
- Statusbar
- Taskbar
- Toolbar
This patch makes everything consistent by replacing every other variant
of these with the proper one. :^)
WindowServer now collects applet windows into an "applet area" which is
really just a window that a WM (window management) client can position
via IPC.
This is rather hackish, and I think we should come up with a better
architecture eventually, but this brings back the missing applets since
the global menu where they used to live is gone.
This way it's easier to find the right window when many are open at the
same time, as all buttons share a limited amount of horizontal space and
titles get truncated quickly.
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
We didn't add buttons for certain window types or states when the
window was created, but when a window with a button changed its
state to where we would not have created the button, we didn't
remove the existing button.
Window icons in Taskbar were previously received in WM events with
shbuf ID's. Now that Gfx::ShareableBitmap is backed by anonymous files,
we can easily switch to using those.