Review Request 120149: [OS X] improved menubar experience: protected Preferences menu and cleaner "system tray"

René J.V. Bertin rjvbertin at gmail.com
Wed Sep 17 21:24:43 BST 2014



> On Sept. 17, 2014, 8:13 p.m., Pino Toscano wrote:
> > kdeui/notifications/kstatusnotifieritem.cpp, lines 728-730
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120149/diff/3/?file=312870#file312870line728>
> >
> >     What is this used for?
> >     If it is not used, please remove it, otherwise just include it unconditionally at the top (and not in the middle of the file, and just for Q_OS_MAC).

Oops, a leftover to get the (a) previous version to build.


> On Sept. 17, 2014, 8:13 p.m., Pino Toscano wrote:
> > kdeui/actions/kaction.cpp, lines 150-179
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120149/diff/3/?file=312869#file312869line150>
> >
> >     The whole setTextWithCorrectMenuRole is totally broken from an i18n point of view:
> >     - we don't use Qt's tr() in kdelibs
> >     - mess up an already translated string is totally no-no, you don't know what it will contain
> >     - you cannot translate single bits of messages as standalone messages, they can have a different declension
> >     
> >     Honestly, I don't see a way to make this marking as "preferences role" automatic, based on the action text. Unless there's something I'm missing, the only solution left is to mark such application-specific preferences actions as such.

Please see my reply to Ian's comment all at the top. It contains a copy of Qt's "heuristic" code. I copied that code in the you tripped over in order to undo its (and only its) effect (i.e. to do a very targeted `setMenuRole(NoRole)`. There is an additional step, an attempt to be able to do `setMenuRole(PreferencesRole)` when appropriate. That's an attempt I made, and I'll gladly accept that it's guaranteed not to work in all possible languages.

@pino: do your remarks apply to my bit of code only or also to the code copied from Qt? I've opened a ticket about this whole "feature" but would love to be able to make a stronger case than possible with my educated guessing (pun not really intended). I'd also be fine with initialising the menu role to `NoRole` (unconditionally or on OS X only), but that as long as Qt doesn't incorporate this, that will only introduce a larger gap between KDE4 and KF5 (where KAction is no longer there to override unwanted QAction features).

Note also that Qt5 actually *extends* the guesstimating to the Cut, Copy, Paste and SelectAll menu roles ...


- René J.V.


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On Sept. 17, 2014, 7:48 p.m., René J.V. Bertin wrote:
> 
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit:
> https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120149/
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> 
> (Updated Sept. 17, 2014, 7:48 p.m.)
> 
> 
> Review request for KDE Software on Mac OS X, kdelibs, KDEPIM, Marco Martin, and Olivier Goffart.
> 
> 
> Repository: kdelibs
> 
> 
> Description
> -------
> 
> This review is for 2 sets of changes; an initial one to the way "system tray" are rendered, and a newer set that protects the Preferences menu from getting linked to any action with an appropriate title.
> 
> -- the system tray:
> Until now, "system tray" menus had some rendering issues on Mac OS X:
> 
> - The menu title, the 1st menu item that on Linux shows the application name, remained empty
> - Menu items that can (in principle, potentially) show an icon always showed the icon
> 
> Point 1 was resolved by emulating the Linux addTitle/setTitle action in `KStatusNotifierItemPrivate::init()` : the menu title is implemented as a deactive standard menuitem followed by a separator. This makes the item stand out on a GUI that doesn't support the kind of formatting in menus as used in the Linux implementation.
> 
> Point 2 was identified as a Qt issue: `isIconVisibleInMenu` is ignored for systray menus. It was resolved by adding `KMenu::addAction` methods that overload the ones from QMenu that were hitherto inherited unchanged by KMenu. The only different method is `addAction(QAction*)` which removes the icon from the `QAction` if `isIconVisibleInMenu()` is false. The other `addAction` methods are "overloaded with themselves" with `using QMenu::addAction;` in the header file.
> 
> -- the Preferences menu item
> This is a menu item living in the Application menu, a menu that sits in the menubar between the Apple (?) menu and the File menu. This menu also contains the Quit command.
> KDE and Qt applications typically do not set up their menus in this fashion, so Qt provides an automatic way to put relevant menu items (actions) in the Application menu, using Apple's naming. The algorithm is described under QMenuBar in the Qt documentation: for the Preferences action, it will consider any action that has a text containing `config`, `options`, `settings` or `preferences`, and put it under the Preferences label if its menu role is set to `heuristic` (which appears to be the default).
> In practice, many applications provide a series of menu actions with names that trigger this method, and they do not always create their own preferences/settings/configuration menu first. Yet it is the first menu action that matches that will be installed under the Preferences menu, with the Command-, shortcut. A good example is KDevelop: it will have a Preferences menu that activates the `Configure Selection` action - which does not open a settings dialog but launches the configure or cmake procedure for the selected project ...
> 
> My proposed solution overrides this Qt behaviour. On OS X, the `KAction(const QString &text, QObject *parent)` constructor calls a modified (static) function `setTextWithCorrectMenuRole` which checks the text against the patterns Qt will consider for `PreferencesRole`. If it finds a match, it will force the role to `NoRole`, unless it is a perfect match with the standard KDE configuration action for the application (`"&Configuration appName..."`) in which case it sets the role to `PreferencesRole`. This latter consideration allows kdelibs to "catch" the configuration menu for applications like KMail, which appear not to be created using KStandardActions.
> This approach can be extended to other menu actions that end up incorrectly in the OS X Application menu.
> 
> Applications that create menu actions using QAction or a different KAction constructor will see no change (and should use `setMenuRole` selectively on OS X).
> 
> 
> Diffs
> -----
> 
>   kdeui/actions/kaction.cpp 9e8f7fb 
>   kdeui/notifications/kstatusnotifieritem.cpp 1b15d40 
> 
> Diff: https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120149/diff/
> 
> 
> Testing
> -------
> 
> Testing was done with kdelibs git/master and KDE/MacPorts on OS X 10.6.8 . The modified code is in compile-time conditional blocks used only on OS X, so no regressions are to be expected on other platforms.
> 
> KF5 is not production ready on OS X, so I am not currently able to port these modifications beyond KDE4. However, I did see that Qt5 has a new approach to adding titles to menus, which can be described as a "labelled separator". Backporting that function from the Qt5 source to kdelibs gave menu items that had the separator but not the text (title) label. It is thus likely that some kind of emulation will also be required with KF5, on OS X.
> 
> I considered doing the addTitle/setTitle emulation in kmenu.cpp, but decided against that for now. Menu titles are rendered as under Linux in menus that are not attached to the OS X toplevel menubar (say in context menus). Without knowing how to distinguish the kind of menu in KMenu methods the emulation will have to remain in the client code.
> 
> The Preferences menu protection should carry over easily to KF5, supposing Qt5 uses the same heuristics to place relevant menu actions under the OS X application menu, and supposing `KAction` has made the transition to KF5.
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> René J.V. Bertin
> 
>

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