The GailWindow error commes from the GTK+. I have looked into that
without finding the source. However, I think a lot of GTK application
have that message, so may well be this is something more general.
However in generall our GTK implementation is flawed. We call some wrong
functions, I documented all I figured somewhere...
The 'Failed to load module "atk-bridge"' does not sound familiar atm.
On 30.12.20 13:11, Rory O'Farrell wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Dec 2020 06:37:18 -0500
> Jim Jagielski <
[hidden email]> wrote:
>
>> Hmmm. Scanning both trunk and AOO419 for 'GailWindow', I'm not seeing any code level diffs between the 2.
>>
>> I wonder if it's related to this:
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/commits-list/2011-July/msg00596.html>>
>>> On Dec 30, 2020, at 5:43 AM, Rory O'Farrell <
[hidden email]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Starting 4.19 in a terminal I get
>>>
>>>> Gtk-Message: 10:33:16.929: Failed to load module "atk-bridge"
>>>> ** (soffice:6909): WARNING **: 10:33:16.936: Unknown type: GailWindow
>>> The Unknown type GailWindow has been around for quite some time.
>>>
>>> I think the 'Failed to load module "atk-bridge"' is new; a similar error cropped up recently on en-Forum related to a Sigserv fault in connection with tables; that thread is
>>>
https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=103974#p503393>>>
>>> The references in that thread (rather acrimonious!) are summed up in this post
>>>
>>>
https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=103974&start=30#p503634>>>
>>> which is possibly all one will need to read
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Rory O'Farrell <
[hidden email]>
>>>
> Running the 4.5.0 dev version has also thrown up the GailWindow error. The analysis in the post I referenced above on Forum (...p503634) indicates GailWindow to be in the Accessible GTK+ applications framework, as is the atk-bridge.
>
> If the suggestion to which you refer (... msg00596) is relevant and eliminates need for ~500 lines of code then that would be a Good Thing!
>
> (Off topic: A "Good Thing", in capital letters, is a normally reference to a comic history of England "1066 and All That", by WC Sellar and RJ Yeatman, [London 1930], which boiled all English history down into 103 Good Things, 5 Bad Kings, and 2 Genuine Dates. For people my age (now mid 70s), their division of history into Good Things and Bad Things greatly simplified the historical scene!)
>
>
>
--
This is the Way!
http://www.apache.org/theapacheway/index.html---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail:
[hidden email]
For additional commands, e-mail:
[hidden email]