When a new client is spawned, fullscreen isn't disabled for all clients
in that monitor any more.
Instead, all fullscreen clients are kept fullscreen, while other clients
spawn in the background.
When fullscreen is disabled, all clients are rearranged.
This is made to make dwl more flexible allowing multiple fullscreen
clients at the same time, have floating clients on top of a fullscreen
one and let stuff happen without quitting fullscreen, like many other
WMs and DEs.
Disable fullscreen on all visible clients in that monitor also before
enabling it on another client.
quitallfullscreen() is reintroduced becouse is now more useful
set c->isfullscreen later to avoid making quitallfullscreen() disable
fullscreen on the current client
quitfullscreen() was replicating the functionalities of setfullscreen(c,
0)
Reusing setfullscreen() in quitfullscreen() leads to a 3 line function,
which is useless since quitfullscreen() is used once anyway
This fixes the bug that happens when changing workspace (or any time
arrange() is called) where there are fullscreen windows, which are still
fullscreen but leave the space for layer surfaces like waybar (which
should be hidden when going fullscreen)
Also as soon one fullscreen window is found hte function returns to
improve efficiency
When a monitor is created or removed, the geometries of the old ones
must be updated. This is also more efficient than before since we
calculate the monitor geometries only when creating and destroying
monitors. arrangelayers() is needed to recalculate m->w. arrange() is so
clients don't move to the left monitor when plugging or unplugging
monitors (clients keep the same coordinates but the field below them
changes).
The bug was caused by usable_area's x and y not being set in
arrangelayers. For example if on a 2nd HD monitor, x should be 1920
while the first one ends at 1919. So I don't see why m->m should be
recalculated after creating the monitor.
If you don't recalculate the monitor's geometry before arranging,
clients get arranged in the first monitor. I don't understand why this
fixes the bug since tile() uses m->w rather than m->m, nor why it needs
to be recalculated after creating the monitor but sway does it too.
Although not necessary to fix the bug I also made arrangelayer() do like
sway again and recalculate usable_area instead of reusing m->m, since
m->m seems to be incorrect until it gets recalculated shortly after in
arrange(), so I suspect that leaving usable_area = m->m will cause
issues under certain circumstances.
Someone with a multi-monitor setup or better knowledge of Wayland may be
able to figure out the cause of the bug. For now, this makes layer shell
work.
When a layer surface is destroyed focus should be returned to the last
client. Luckily if there are multiple overlays the previous overlay
still gets focused.
Store position and size of windows before going fullscreen. This is more
efficient than arrange() and also works with floating windows
All the clients keep their original position because arrange() isn't
used after quitting fullscreen