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See https://reuse.software/ for details.
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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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These names were confusing because a view is not necessarily a window. Since
there's no room for ambiguity here, simply drop the superfluous word.
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This allows the application to control how recursive loops are handled rather
than have Pugl impose behavior which can get in the way. For example, an
application may not want to continuously animate while being resized, or set up
its rendering differently in this situation. For example, with Vulkan, setting
up a different swapchain can be necessary for smooth performance while live
resizing on Windows, and Pugl has no ability to do this.
I think it was a mistake to add this timer to Pugl itself, because it was
always a bit of a leaky abstraction, and not very appropriate for a library
that is supposed to be a thin abstraction layer. Though it almost seemed like
things ran as usual while resizing on Windows and MacOS, the main event loop
being stalled can be confusing, and there was no way to detect this. This way,
applications must explicitly handle this situation and can implement the
behavior they want without Pugl getting in the way.
This also simplifies the Pugl implementation a bit, which is always nice.
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Unfortunately there is no warning like Wpadded but only for internal padding,
so that can't be turned on, but if there was, after this commit the build would
be clean with it. Maybe some day...
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Not really sure why I used a web link here (maybe because it's more stable),
but this is more conventional.
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