When a hardware keyboard is attached, it can take over 100 ms for the keyboard event to generate text input. In that case we want to record that we recently received a keyboard event so we don't synthesize duplicate virtual key press/release events for the input text.
This is another attempt to make sure we don't cause beeps from unhandled key presses while still allowing full text input functionalty.
If this isn't selective enough, we might need to go up the responder chain to see what's going to handle the event before passing it along.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/6962
When a hardware keyboard is attached to an iPad, you can easily trigger a set of on-screen keyboard transitions that will take place over time, and we need to track whether we're currently showing or hiding the keyboard and make sure we don't clobber the existing state during those transitions.
Testing:
* Connected a hardware keyboard to an iPad
* Launched checkkeys
* Noted the keyboard bar was active at the bottom of the screen and text input was active
* Tapped with both fingers to quickly toggle text input off and back on
* Noted the keyboard bar slid down and then back up, and text input was active
* Tapped on the keyboard bar to bring up the full on-screen keyboard and then closed it so the keyboard bar was still active, and text input was still active
* Tapped on the screen to turn text input off, noted the keyboard bar slid down
* Tapped with both fingers to quickly toggle text input on and back off
* Noted that the keyboard bar slid up and then back down, and text input was inactive
* Tapped on the screen to turn text input on, tapped on the keyboard bar to bring up the full on-screen keyboard, and text input was active
* Pressed a key on the physical keyboard, the on-screen keyboard closed, the key press and release was delivered (with no text input) and then the keyboard bar slid up, and text input was active again
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7979
Render targets are a core feature of SDL 3.0, so this flag has been removed.
The OpenGL ES renderer still doesn't support them, but we'll deal with that later.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/8059
This adds support for the back paddles, and the "..." key
which are not automatically detected.
* "Back" is mapped to the top left "two windows" key.
* "Start" is mapped to the top right "hambuger menu" key.
* "Guide" is mapped to the "Steam" key.
* The "..." key is just a generic button.
When looking at the screen, paddles are number
* P1: Top right
* P2: Top left
* P3: Bottom right
* P4: Botom Left
The new controller mapping was created with the SDL3 gamepadmap tool.
The mouse->CreateCursor function pointer will always be null if checked before the video backend is initialized, so a dummy default cursor with null internal structures was being created in all cases, not just for backends lacking cursor functionality. Move the check to after the video subsystem is initialized, when the function pointer check is valid.
Passing this dummy cursor with null internal structures to the Wayland backend would cause a crash, as it requires the internal cursor structures to be valid in order to store cursor backing data, even for default system cursors.
When using the Wayland video driver or X11 under XWayland, create a renderer and present a frame as part of window creation, as Wayland requires that a frame be presented for the window to be fully mapped and displayed onscreen. This fixes the grab and expected window size tests.
This also disables the window positioning tests when running under the Wayland driver, as Wayland does not allow application windows to position themselves in the desktop space, which renders the tests unreliable and subject to spurious failure.