Since GSettings is not supported in extensions in 3.2, all settings
have been replaced by constants in JS files (except for user-theme,
whose only purpose is to actually bridge GSettings to the shell).
Customizations are still supported in master, and distributions
packaging these extensions for system-wide install may consider
reverting this bug.
It is not used anymore, now that translations are bundled with
the extension. Also, in the zip files it ended up with my home
folder, which is not nice.
Cherry-picked from master, added code to load translation from
within the extension folder.
Prior to this fix, the variables 'enter_event' and 'leave_event' in the
handler for the 'changed' event for the
'/org/gnome/shell/extensions/dock/hide_effect' dconf key were
uninitialized. This made switching the hide effect at runtime throw an
error. By promoting these two variables to instance members and
assigning to them upon initialization, this problem should be fixed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=662389
GNOME Shell has changed internal API here and there, and this
broke some extensions.
alternate-tab and dock still have issues, I'll try to solve them
post 3.2.0
main() has been replaced by init(), enable() and disable()
not sure if it works, could cause memory leaks if disabling, because
of uncollectable cycles
Now it is possible to configure in GSettings if the dock should be
visible at all time or it should autohide when not needed. If
autohiding, it animates, and the effect is itself configurable, as
well as his duration.
Based on a patch by Miguel Aguilar <zodiac_es@yahoo.es>
Use GSettings to store configuration and make the dock position
customizabile. Currently, supported are left and right of the
primary monitor; more could be added in the future.
(Commit message edited by Giovanni Campagna)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647394
Signed-off-by: Giovanni Campagna <gcampagna@src.gnome.org>
Fix the behavior of the PopupMenu after the conversion of
St.Clickable to St.Button, and fix the invocation of ShellApp.open_new_window(),
which now accepts a workspace index as a number (as a side effect,
"New window" means one the current workspace now).