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Dropping Window doesn't close it (X11) #79
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jrmuizel
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Mar 29, 2017
…=frewsxcv Downgrade our `core-graphics-rs` version so that we don't pull in serde 0.7. Servo isn't ready for that upgrade yet. r? @metajack (or whoever) <!-- Reviewable:start --> --- This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.svg" height="35" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/servo/glutin/79) <!-- Reviewable:end -->
The window also doesn't close when pressing the X button either, even though the This is particularly evident in the multiwindow.rs example as you can press the X button on the same window 3 times to exit the loop. I guess most folks haven't run across this in practise as
This is my experience on the latest Gnome at least. |
francesca64
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Mar 4, 2018
Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
francesca64
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Mar 4, 2018
Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
francesca64
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Mar 11, 2018
Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
francesca64
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Mar 15, 2018
Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
francesca64
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Mar 15, 2018
Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
tomaka
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Mar 23, 2018
Fixes #79 #414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
francesca64
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Mar 26, 2018
…#416) Fixes rust-windowing#79 rust-windowing#414 This changes the implementation of Drop for Window to send a WM_DELETE_WINDOW ClientMessage, offloading all the cleanup and window destruction to the event loop. Unsurprisingly, this entails that the event loop now handles WM_DELETE_WINDOW using the behavior that was previously contained in Window's Drop implementation, along with destroying the Window. Not only does this mean that dropped windows are closed, but also that clicking the × button on the window actually closes it now. The previous implemention of Drop was also broken, as the event loop would be (seemingly permenanently) frozen after its invocation. That was caused specifically by the mutex locking, and is no longer an issue now that the locking is done in the event loop. While I don't have full confidence that it makes sense for the Drop implementation to behave this way, this is nonetheless a significant improvement. The previous behavior led to inconsistent state, panics, and event loop breakage, along with not actually destroying the window. This additionally makes the assumption that users don't need Focused or CursorLeft events for the destroyed window, as Closed is adequate to indicate unfocus, and users may not expect to receive events for closed/dropped windows. In my testing, those specific events were sent immediately after the window was destroyed, though this sort of behavior could be WM-specific. I've opted to explicitly suppress those events in the case of the window no longer existing.
This was referenced Mar 12, 2020
madsmtm
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Jun 11, 2022
…droid remove the accidental `#[inline]` in android
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Original: rust-windowing/glutin#805
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