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This is mainly used to allow the window manager to close locked or otherwise
misbehaving windows. The PID and hostname properties are both required to
properly support this, but may also be used for other things.
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This implements a more powerful protocol for working with clipboards, which
supports datatype negotiation, and fixes various issues by mapping more
directly to how things work on X11.
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This changes to getting cursors by name from the cursor theme, which makes the
cursor match the ones used in modern desktop environments. As far as I can
tell, there is no real standard for names, these ones seem to work for me in
GNOME, KDE, and Xfce.
I am not sure about the compatibility concerns here, but X11 without Xcursor
themes strikes me as either too esoteric or too ancient to worry about,
especially since cursor switching isn't critical functionality anyway.
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Since this is essentially a destructor, I don't think there's anything really
useful to do with errors here, and in practice no backends actually used it
anyway.
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See https://reuse.software/ for details.
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Stub backends were a dependency of other backends to allow some code reuse.
However, that can cause conflicting symbols if multiple backends are linked
into the same binary, which should be possible.
To avoid this, move the shared code into the platform implementation, and
export those symbols so that backends can use them. This adds some semi-public
platform-specific API that can only be used by backends included with pugl.
They are undocumented, subject to change at any time without a corresponding
version change, and may not be used by third parties (for example by custom
backends in an application).
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X11 Window managers set WM_STATE to notify about minimization, often without
sending core X visibility events (which seems odd to me, but that's what Gnome
does anyway). So, implement this protocol and send map/unmap events to the
view, and adjust the Windows implementation to do the same for consistency
across all platforms.
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These will not be used in the Sphinx documentation, and most were
self-explanatory and only there to make the Doxygen index look nice anyway.
Where there was actually useful information, it has been preserved as regular
comments.
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I think this attempt to be optionally header-only was misguided, particularly
installing source code to the system include path. Typically anyone vendoring
code just includes the repository and builds from there anyway.
This commit moves all the implementation code to a typical src directory (Don't
Be Weird).
I still think there is some value in simple "inline" deployment, but that would
be better achieved another way, like producing a single-file amalgamation that
builds anywhere, ala sqlite.
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