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Reverse hscrollbar min-height hack on OS X...
Reverse hscrollbar min-height hack on OS X OS X has optional behavior to only draw scrollbars during scroll, which causes problems for CodeMirror's scrollbars. CodeMirror's solution is to set a minimum size for their scrollbars, which is always present. The trade is that the container overlays most of the last line, swallowing click events when there is scrolling to do, even when no scrollbar is visible. This reverses the trade, recovering the click events at the expense of never showing the horizontal scrollbar on OS X when this option is enabled.

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r20298:2907e856
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gtkembed.py
86 lines | 3.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""GUI support for the IPython ZeroMQ kernel - GTK toolkit support.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2010-2011 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING.txt, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# stdlib
import sys
# Third-party
import gobject
import gtk
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes and functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class GTKEmbed(object):
"""A class to embed a kernel into the GTK main event loop.
"""
def __init__(self, kernel):
self.kernel = kernel
# These two will later store the real gtk functions when we hijack them
self.gtk_main = None
self.gtk_main_quit = None
def start(self):
"""Starts the GTK main event loop and sets our kernel startup routine.
"""
# Register our function to initiate the kernel and start gtk
gobject.idle_add(self._wire_kernel)
gtk.main()
def _wire_kernel(self):
"""Initializes the kernel inside GTK.
This is meant to run only once at startup, so it does its job and
returns False to ensure it doesn't get run again by GTK.
"""
self.gtk_main, self.gtk_main_quit = self._hijack_gtk()
gobject.timeout_add(int(1000*self.kernel._poll_interval),
self.iterate_kernel)
return False
def iterate_kernel(self):
"""Run one iteration of the kernel and return True.
GTK timer functions must return True to be called again, so we make the
call to :meth:`do_one_iteration` and then return True for GTK.
"""
self.kernel.do_one_iteration()
return True
def stop(self):
# FIXME: this one isn't getting called because we have no reliable
# kernel shutdown. We need to fix that: once the kernel has a
# shutdown mechanism, it can call this.
self.gtk_main_quit()
sys.exit()
def _hijack_gtk(self):
"""Hijack a few key functions in GTK for IPython integration.
Modifies pyGTK's main and main_quit with a dummy so user code does not
block IPython. This allows us to use %run to run arbitrary pygtk
scripts from a long-lived IPython session, and when they attempt to
start or stop
Returns
-------
The original functions that have been hijacked:
- gtk.main
- gtk.main_quit
"""
def dummy(*args, **kw):
pass
# save and trap main and main_quit from gtk
orig_main, gtk.main = gtk.main, dummy
orig_main_quit, gtk.main_quit = gtk.main_quit, dummy
return orig_main, orig_main_quit