The previous commit prioritized hotspots before bar bindings for press events,
which matches i3's behaviour. However, since hotspots don't need to do any
processing on release events, those were not handled, and simply fell through
to `bindsym --release` bar bindings (if any).
This is counter-intuitive, and doesn't match i3's behaviour. Instead in case
a hotspot handles the press event, it should also handle the release event,
doing nothing, but blocking the event from triggering a --release bar binding.
E.g., in Sway, without this commit, this config. shows a text on tray clicks:
bar {
# ...
bindsym --release button1 exec swaynag -m I_got_the_release_event.
}
But the same configuration in i3 (with i3-nagbar) doesn't show the text.
Signed-off-by: Joan Bruguera <joanbrugueram@gmail.com>
24e8ba048aef4751c6fa1d5982ee634f921e6cf6 did not take scaling into account.
The hotspot size used pixel coordinates, the absolute coordinates were logical,
and the relative coordinates were completely wrong.
This commit makes all coordinates use logical values. If
`"float_event_coords":true` is sent in the handshake message, coordinates are
sent as floating-point values.
The "scale" field is an integer containing the scale value.
This is the first in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This changes parse_color to return whether it was success and
no longer uses 0xFFFFFFFF as the fallback color. This also verifies that
the string actually contains a valid hexadecimal number along with
the length checks.
In the process of altering the calls to parse_color, I also took the
opportunity to heavily refactor swaybar's ipc_parse_colors function.
This allowed for several lines of duplicated code to be removed.
This modifies `bar_cmd_bindsym` to use `get_mouse_bindsym` for parsing
mouse buttons. This also introduces `cmd_bar_bindcode`, which will use
`get_mouse_bindcode` for parsing mouse buttons. Like sway bindings, the
two commands are encapsulated in a single file with shared code.
This also modifies swaybar to operate off of event codes rather than x11
button numbers, which allows for any mouse button to be used.
This introduces two new IPC properties:
- For `get_bar_config`, `event_code` has been added to the `bindings`
section and will include to event code for the button. If the event code
can be mapped to a x11 button, `input_code` will still be the x11 button
number. Otherwise, `input_code` will be `0`.
- Likewise for `click_events`, `event` has been added and will include
the event code for the button clicked. If the event code can be mapped
to a x11 button, `button` will still be the x11 button number.
Otherwise, `button` will be `0`.