GtkExpander A container which can hide its child A #GtkExpander allows the user to hide or show its child by clicking on an expander triangle similar to the triangles used in a #GtkTreeView. Normally you use an expander as you would use any other descendant of #GtkBin; you create the child widget and use gtk_container_add() to add it to the expander. When the expander is toggled, it will take care of showing and hiding the child automatically.
Special Usage There are situations in which you may prefer to show and hide the expanded widget yourself, such as when you want to actually create the widget at expansion time. In this case, create a #GtkExpander but do not add a child to it. The expander widget has an expanded property which can be used to monitor its expansion state. You should watch this property with a signal connection as follows: expander = gtk_expander_new_with_mnemonic ("_More Options"); g_signal_connect (expander, "notify::expanded", G_CALLBACK (expander_callback), NULL); ... static void expander_callback (GObject *object, GParamSpec *param_spec, gpointer user_data) { GtkExpander *expander; expander = GTK_EXPANDER (object); if (gtk_expander_get_expanded (expander)) { /* Show or create widgets */ } else { /* Hide or destroy widgets */ } }
GtkExpander as GtkBuildable The GtkExpander implementation of the GtkBuildable interface supports placing a child in the label position by specifying "label" as the "type" attribute of a <child> element. A normal content child can be specified without specifying a <child> type attribute. A UI definition fragment with GtkExpander ]]> @expander: the object which received the signal. @label: @Returns: @label: @Returns: @expander: @expanded: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @spacing: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @label: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @use_underline: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @use_markup: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @label_widget: @expander: @Returns: @expander: @label_fill: @expander: @Returns: