3 To fix bug [458](http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=458), which
4 identifies that it is hard to hit the thin window frame corner to resize the
5 window. It would be better to have a resize hit area (called widget from now on)
6 in the corner, as we currently have for edit boxes for example.
12 This is specific to the Windows OS. On the Mac, Cocoa automatically adds a
13 resize widget (Not sure about Linux, we should double check). On Windows, those
14 resize widgets are at the extreme right of a status bar. For example, if you
15 remove the status bar from a Windows Explorer window, you lose the resize
16 widget. But since Chrome never ever has a status bar and simply take over the
17 bottom of the window for specific tasks (like the download shelf for example),
18 we need to find a creative way of giving access to a resize widget.
20 The bottom corners where we would like to add the resize widget are currently
21 controlled by the browser view, which can have either the tab contents view or
22 other dynamic views (like the download shelf view) displayed in this area.
26 Since there is no status bar to simply fix a resize widget to, we must
27 dynamically create a widget that can be laid either on the tab contents view or
28 on other views that might temporarily take over the bottom part of the browser
31 When no dynamic view is taking over the bottom of the browser view, the resize
32 widget can sit in the bottom right corner of the tab contents view, over the tab
35 ![Resize Corner](http://lh6.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaNi6TWYI/AAAAAAAAGmI/89jCYQ1Cxsw/ResizeCorner-2.png)
37 The resize widget must have the same width and height as
38 the scroll bars so that it can fit in the corner currently left empty when both
39 scroll bars are visible. If only one scroll bar is visible (either the
40 horizontal or the vertical one), that scroll bar must still leave room for the
41 resize widget to fit there (as it currently leave room for the empty corner when
42 both scroll bars are visible), yet, only when the resize widget is laid on top
43 of the tab contents view, not when a dynamic shelf is added at the bottom of the
46 ![Resize Corner](http://lh6.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaNjqr_iI/AAAAAAAAGmA/56hzjdnkVRI/ResizeCorner-1.png)
47 ![Resize Corner](http://lh3.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaN_wDEUI/AAAAAAAAGmQ/7B4CTZTXOmk/ResizeCorner-3.png)
48 ![Resize Corner](http://lh6.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaN7yme9I/AAAAAAAAGmY/EaniiAbwi-Q/ResizeCorner-4.png)
50 If another view (e.g., again, the download shelf) is added at the bottom of the
51 browser view, below the tab contents view, and covers the bottom corners, then
52 the resize widget must be laid on top of this other child view. Of course, all
53 child views that can potentially be added at the bottom of the browser view,
54 must be designed in a way that leaves enough room in the bottom corners for the
57 ![Resize Corner](http://lh3.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaN17TIrI/AAAAAAAAGmg/6bljNQ_vZkI/ResizeCorner-5.png)
58 ![Resize Corner](http://lh4.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaWINHA6I/AAAAAAAAGmo/-VG5FGC8Xds/ResizeCorner-6.png)
59 ![Resize Corner](http://lh6.ggpht.com/_2OD0ww7UZAs/SUAaWDUpo0I/AAAAAAAAGmw/8USPzoMpgu0/ResizeCorner-7.png)
61 Since the bottom corners might have different colors, based on the state and
62 content of the browser view, the resize widget must have a transparent
65 The resize widget is not animated itself. It might move with the animation of
66 the view it is laid on top of (e.g., when the download shelf is being animated
67 in), but we won't attempt to animate the resize widget itself (or fix it in the
68 bottom right corner of the browser view while the other views get animated it).
72 Unfortunately, we must deal with the two different cases (with or without a
73 dynamic bottom view) in two different and distinct ways.
75 ### Over a Dynamic View
77 For the cases where there is a dynamic view at the bottom of the browser view, a
78 new view class (named `BrowserResizerView`) inheriting from
79 [views::View](http://src.chromium.org/svn/trunk/src/chrome/views/view.h) is used
80 to display the resize widget. It is set as a child of the dynamic view laid at
81 the bottom of the browser view. The Browser view takes care of properly setting
82 the bounds of the resize widget view, based on the language direction.
84 Also, it is easier and more efficient to let the browser view handle the mouse
85 interactions to resize the browser. We can let Windows take care of properly
86 resizing the view by returning the HTBOTTOMLEFT or HTBOTTOMRIGHT flags from the
87 NCClientHitTest windows message handler when they occur over the resize widget.
88 The browser view also takes care of changing the mouse cursor to the appropriate
89 resizing arrows when the mouse hovers over the resize widget area.
91 ### Without a Dynamic View
93 To make sure that the scroll bars (handled by `WebKit`) are not drawn on top of
94 the resizer widget (or vice versa), we need to properly implement the callback
95 specifyinhg the rectangle covered by the resizer. This callback is implemented
96 on the `RenderWidget` class that can delegate to a derive class via a new
97 virtual method which returns an empty rect on the base class. Via a series of
98 delegate interface calls, we eventually get back to the browser view which can
99 return the size and position of the resize widget, but only if it is laid out on
100 top of the tabs view, it returns an empty rect when there is a dynamic view.
102 To handle the drawing of the resize widget over the render widget, we need to
103 add code to the Windows specific version of the render widget host view which
104 receives the bitmap rendered by WebKit so it can layer the transparent bitmap
105 used for the resize widget. That same render widget host view must also handle
106 the mouse interaction and use the same trick as the browser view to let Windows
107 take care of resizing the whole frame. It must also take care of changing the
108 mouse cursor to the appropriate resizing arrows when the mouse hovers over the
113 You can find the changes made to make this work in patch
114 [16488](http://codereview.chromium.org/16488).
116 ## Alternatives Considered
118 We could have tried to reuse the code that currently takes care of resizing the
119 edit boxes within WebKit, but this code is wired to the overflow style of HTML
120 element and would have been hard to rewire in an elegant way to be used in a
121 higher level object like the browser view. Unless we missed something.
123 We might also decide to go with the easier solution of only showing the resize
124 corner within the tab contents view. In that case, it would still be recommended
125 that the resize widget would not appear when dynamic views are taking over the
126 bottom portion of the browser view, since it would look weird to have a resize
127 corner widget that is not in the real... corner... of the browser view ;-)
129 We may decide that we don't want to see the resize widget bitmap hide some
130 pixels from the tab contents (or dynamic view) yet we would still have the
131 resizing functionality via the mouse interaction and also get visual feedback
132 with the mouse cursor changes while we hover over the resize widget area.
134 We may do more research to find a way to solve this problem in a single place as
135 opposed to the current dual solution, but none was found so far.