This test is inspired by its namesake in GTK+. We instantiate
all types, and check the default values of their properties,
with some exceptions for types that are known not to work.
Make the projects include a single property sheet as necessary, which will
in turn include the other property sheet(s) as needed, so that we can avoid
warnings where we include the same property sheets twice in a single
project.
Also make the copying of pre-configured headers into custom build rules so
that they can be removed upon the clean command from the IDE and that they
can be re-copied if their counterpart *.h.win32 are updated.
...where possible, to make application of patches easier in the future.
The README.txt's and the .sln files are still in Windows/DOS line endings
as they need to be so.
In case an object is already monitored, we lock then return without
unlocking it which can then result in a self deadlock. So properly
unlock before returning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721074
Use g_variant_parse_error_print_context() to format the error message
from the GVariant parser.
There is a slightly dubious interaction with the "parse me harder"
functionality here. We're probably going to have to deal with that
separately.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715028
This was a feature intended from the very beginning that somehow never
got written. It's a way to replace these sort of error messages out of
the GVariant parser:
1-2,10-15:unable to find a common type
with something in the style of the Vala compiler:
unable to find a common type:
[1, 2, 3, 'str']
^ ^^^^^
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715028
Most GErrors, such as GSomethingError, have a function to get
their quark that looks like g_something_error_quark(),
so bindings (such as gtkmm) would expect GVariantParseError
to have g_variant_parse_error_quark(). Instead this had
g_variant_parser_get_error_quark().
This deprecates the old function and adds the correct one,
making life easier for gtkmm (and maybe others).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708212
When installing scripts which are not generated in a
srcdir != builddir build, $< will have ../.. goo in it.
So we need to strip the directory parts before using
the filename to construct a new path.
I recently had to track down why these tests failed. Turned
out that some rogue package on my system had installed mime
types that declared all files with 3 letter names to be
'chemical/x-turbomole-vibrational'.
This change will make it more obvious what is going on by
mentioning the mime types in the assertion message.