Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
I'm using 4.3.0-42 and have noticed that the following minor bug in multi-window operation when running on Win2K and WinXPPro: Two windows (terminal or otherwise) are overlapped and the topmost one has it's "Always on top" attribute set (by right-clicking on the windows title bar). The topmost window is then minimised, leaving a copy of its contents on the desktop, viewable by moving the remaining window over the portion of the desktop previously occupied by the other window. Regards, Mike
Re: Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
Mike Parker wrote: I'm using 4.3.0-42 and have noticed that the following minor bug in multi-window operation when running on Win2K and WinXPPro: Two windows (terminal or otherwise) are overlapped and the topmost one has it's "Always on top" attribute set (by right-clicking on the windows title bar). The topmost window is then minimised, leaving a copy of its contents on the desktop, viewable by moving the remaining window over the portion of the desktop previously occupied by the other window. Confirmed. Does anyone know how other window managers usually handle the always-on-top-then-minimized use case? -JT
Re: Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
This is probably related: using multi-window mode, open an emacs over ssh. Click on a menu (e.g, "File"), leave it droppped down, and minimize the emacs window. Result: emacs gets minimized, but the dropped down menu stays behind. -JT
Re: Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
Hi Mike... At 08:29 AM 1/25/2004 +, Mike wrote: I'm using 4.3.0-42 and have noticed that the following minor bug in multi-window operation when running on Win2K and WinXPPro: Two windows (terminal or otherwise) are overlapped and the topmost one has it's "Always on top" attribute set (by right-clicking on the windows title bar). The topmost window is then minimised, leaving a copy of its contents on the desktop, viewable by moving the remaining window over the portion of the desktop previously occupied by the other window. It's been a while since I submitted a patch, but since this problem is due to my code I'll be nice and fix it. Basically, whenever we get a WM_SYSCOMMAND:SC_MINIMIZE we need to disable the HWND_TOPMOST attribute and let the X system recognize it. On a WM_SYSCOMMAND:SC_RESTORE we just need to reset that attribute to what it was before. I'm attaching a patch *against the CVS -r CYGWIN tree* because I cannot get the XWin-4.3.0-42 source available on http://xfree86.cygwin.com/devel/server/changelog.html to compile properly, whereas the freedesktop CVS goes thru without a hitch. It adds a boolean fAlwaysOnTop to the window privates; caches the AOT value on a WM_SYSCOMMAND:SC_MINIMIZE and removes top-z attributes from the window; restores the AOT value on a WM_SYSCOMMAND:SC_RESTORE; and changes the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED event handler to always allow the Windoze DefWindowProc() to be called (necessary for the changes I did, and doesn't seem to have any negative effects). -Earle F. Philhower, III [EMAIL PROTECTED] cdrlabel - ZipLabel - FlpLabel http://www.cdrlabel.com fixaot.patch Description: Binary data
Re: Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
Earle, Any reason for the following in your patch: @@ -893,7 +909,7 @@ if (s_pScreenPriv != NULL) s_pScreenPriv->fWindowOrderChanged = TRUE; } - return 0; + break; The thing that strikes me as odd is that you have to return from the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED message without calling DefWindowProc (which will get called if you change that return to a break) in order to prevent Windows from breaking that message down into a WM_SIZE and WM_MOVE message and sending those in addition. My worry is that you may have essentially found a bug in the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED handling that was fixed by allowing the WM_SIZE and WM_MOVE messages to be generated and handled, when we should really fix such a bug instead of accidentally masking its existance. I'm not comfortable removing this change from your patch since it will then need to be tested again to verify that things work as expected. Since you have already been testing it, I figured it would be easier for you to do the testing :) Let me know what to do with your patch, Harold
Re: Minimising window with "Always on top" attribute leaves contents in underlying window
Howdy Harold, I thought you were taking it easy for a while! At 11:37 PM 1/25/2004 -0500, you wrote: Any reason for the following in your patch: @@ -893,7 +909,7 @@ if (s_pScreenPriv != NULL) s_pScreenPriv->fWindowOrderChanged = TRUE; } - return 0; + break; The thing that strikes me as odd is that you have to return from the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED message without calling DefWindowProc (which will get called if you change that return to a break) in order to prevent Windows from breaking that message down into a WM_SIZE and WM_MOVE message and sending those in addition. My worry is that you may have essentially found a bug in the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED handling that was fixed by allowing the WM_SIZE and WM_MOVE messages to be generated and handled, when we should really fix such a bug instead of accidentally masking its existance. I'm not comfortable removing this change from your patch since it will then need to be tested again to verify that things work as expected. Since you have already been testing it, I figured it would be easier for you to do the testing :) I did extensive testing without that change, actually, because it took me a while to figure out why the minimize button and sysmenus worked but the taskbar left-click 2x didn't. ;) You can remove it, but minimizing the window by 2x-clicking on the Windows taskbar won't propagate the Z order change w/the same messages as if you were to use the system menu or the minimize button. Why? AFAICT the minimize button or menu item send a wm-move, even if you don't let DefWindowProc() do its thing. I suspect Explorer sends its own messages when you click on the taskbar, and they are not the same as the frame WndProc()'s. FWIW I can't really see any reason not to allow DefWindowProc to have a shot at the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED message, but I'll admit that I've not gone through all of Kensuke's code... -Earle F. Philhower, III [EMAIL PROTECTED] cdrlabel - ZipLabel - FlpLabel http://www.cdrlabel.com