When the theme-specified default font has a localized name,
using it as a Pango faily name doesn't work, with the result that
text on controls could be truncated. Get a Pango-friendly
name by converting a LOGFONT to a Pango font description and
getting the name from the font description.
"My" -> "Racket". The "My" prefix was from initial experiments,
of course, and I just never got around to changing it before.
I think these names go into a global namespace, though, at the
ObjC level, so they need to have a distinct and Racket-specific
prefix.
Also, use keywords for `make-pen' and `make-brush'.
Adding `make-pen' and `make-color' creates many conflicts among
teaching libraries, such as `2htdp/image'. These are easy to fix
up in the tree, but adding such obvious names to `racket/draw'
may create other compatibility problems, so we might have to reconsider
the names.
In consultation with Asumu.
When an eventspace is created, its thread implicitly calls
`yield'. It now effectively loops with `yield' and while
catching continuation aborts.
Closes PR 12566
Use the system-supplied region to intersect with the
window region, so that drawng the border doesn't replace
the window content.
See also Kieron Hardy's post on the users' list, 2/7/12.
exceptions instead of exn:fail exceptions for errors having to do
with the actual attempt to change/retrieve the creator and type
(but leaving alone the type errors)
closes PR 12400
After all the previous attempts, the problem seems almost trivial:
although Apple documents `NSAnyEventMask' as the constant #xFFFFFFFF,
it's actually NSUIntegerMax (and the difference matters in 64-bit
mode).
Merge to 5.2.
This fix uses the same`run'-vs-`finishLaunch' technique as before,
but patches up the modal-dialog problem by calling `run' again
with a callback to start a modal loop.
Merge to 5.2.
Calling NSApplication's `run' works better than calling `finishLaunching'
directly, particularly in 64-bit Lion for some reason.
Relevant to PR 12102
Relevant to PR 12257
Especially for gtk, where a client-resize notification was
getting mixed up with a frame-configure notification. On all
platforms, `on-size' and `on-move' for a frame% were queued
at too high a priority.
GRacket registers witht a global table to indicate that
no transform is needed. (This change was intended to address
a 64-bit problem on Lion. It didn't help, but this seems
better than ignoring an error.)