Sets a GdkWindow as composited, or unsets it. Composited
windows do not automatically have their contents drawn to
the screen. Drawing is redirected to an offscreen buffer
and an expose event is emitted on the parent of the composited
window. It is the responsibility of the parent's expose handler
to manually merge the off-screen content onto the screen in
whatever way it sees fit. See ???
for an example.
It only makes sense for child windows to be composited; see
gdk_window_set_opacity() if you need translucent toplevel
windows.
An additional effect of this call is that the area of this
window is no longer clipped from regions marked for
invalidation on its parent. Draws done on the parent
window are also no longer clipped by the child.
This call is only supported on some systems (currently,
only X11 with new enough Xcomposite and Xdamage extensions).
You must call gdk_display_supports_composite() to check if
setting a window as composited is supported before
attempting to do so.
Since 2.12
Sets a GdkWindow as composited, or unsets it. Composited windows do not automatically have their contents drawn to the screen. Drawing is redirected to an offscreen buffer and an expose event is emitted on the parent of the composited window. It is the responsibility of the parent's expose handler to manually merge the off-screen content onto the screen in whatever way it sees fit. See ??? for an example. It only makes sense for child windows to be composited; see gdk_window_set_opacity() if you need translucent toplevel windows. An additional effect of this call is that the area of this window is no longer clipped from regions marked for invalidation on its parent. Draws done on the parent window are also no longer clipped by the child. This call is only supported on some systems (currently, only X11 with new enough Xcomposite and Xdamage extensions). You must call gdk_display_supports_composite() to check if setting a window as composited is supported before attempting to do so. Since 2.12