Glossaryallocation
The final size of a widget within its parent. For example, a widget
may request a minimum size of 20×20 pixels, but its
parent may decide to allocate 50×20 pixels for it
instead.
requisitionbin
A container that
can hold at most one child widget. The base class for bins is
#GtkBin.
containerchild
A container's child
is a widget contained
inside it.
column
GTK+ contains several widgets which display data in columns,
e.g. the #GtkTreeView.
These view columns in
the tree view are represented by #GtkTreeViewColumn
objects inside GTK+. They should not be confused with
model columns which
are used to organize the data in tree models.
model-view widgetcontainer
A widget that contains
other widgets; in that case, the container is the
parent of the child
widgets. Some containers don't draw anything on their own,
but rather just organize their children's geometry; for example, #GtkVBox lays out
its children vertically without painting anything on its own. Other
containers include decorative elements; for example, #GtkFrame contains
the frame's child and a label in addition to the shaded frame it draws.
The base class for containers is #GtkContainer.
widgetgeometrydisplay
GDK inherited the concept of display from the X window system,
which considers a display to be the combination
of a keyboard, a pointing device and one or more
screens.
Applications open a display to show windows and interact with the user.
In GDK, a display is represented by a #GdkDisplay.
Ellipsization is the process of replacing some part
of a text by an ellipsis (usually "...") to make the
text fit in a smaller space. Pango can ellipsize text
at the beginning, at the end or in the middle.
event
Events are the way in which GDK informs GTK+ about external events
like pointer motion, button clicks, key presses, etc.
geometry
A widget's position
and size. Within its parent, this is called the widget's
allocation.
mapping
This is the step in a widget's life cycle where it
actually shows the GdkWindows it created when it was
realized. When a
widget is mapped, it must turn on its
%GTK_MAPPED flag.
Note that due to the asynchronous nature of the X window
system, a widget's window may not appear on the screen
immediatly after one calls gdk_window_show():
you must wait for the corresponding map event to be received. You can do
this with the GtkWidget::map-event
signal.
model column
A column in a tree model, holding data of a certain type.
The types which can be stored in the columns of a model
have to be specified when the model is constructed, see
e.g. gtk_list_store_new().
view columnmodel-view widget
These widgets follow the well-known model-view pattern, which separates
the data (the model) to be displayed from the component which does the
actual visualization (the view). Examples of this pattern in GTK+ are
the #GtkTreeView/#GtkTreeModel and #GtkTextView/#GtkTextBuffer
One important advantage of this pattern is that it is possible to
display the same model in multiple views; another one that the
separation of the model allows a great deal of flexibility, as
demonstrated by e.g. #GtkTreeModelSort or #GtkTreeModelFilter.
no-window widget
A widget that does not have a GdkWindow of its own on which to
draw its contents, but rather shares its parent's. This can be tested with
the gtk_widget_get_has_window() function.
parent
A widget's parent is
the container
inside which it resides.
realization
This is the step in a widget's life cycle where it
creates its own GdkWindow, or otherwise associates itself with
its parent's
GdkWindow. If the widget has its own window, then it must
also attach a style to
it. A widget becomes unrealized by destroying its associated
GdkWindow. When a widget is realized, it must turn on its
%GTK_REALIZED flag.
Widgets that don't own the GdkWindow on which they draw are
called no-window widgets.
This can be tested with the gtk_widget_get_has_window() function. Normally,
these widgets draw on their parent's GdkWindow.
Note that when a #GtkWidget creates a window in its #GtkWidget::realize
handler, it does not actually show the window. That is, the
window's structure is just created in memory. The widget
actually shows the window when it gets mapped.
requisition
The size requisition of a widget is the minimum amount of
space it requests from its parent. Once the parent computes
the widget's final size, it gives it its size allocation.
allocationscreen
GDK inherited the concept of screen from the X window system,
which considers a screen to be a rectangular area, on which
applications may place their windows. Screens under X may have
quite dissimilar visuals.
Each screen can stretch across multiple physical monitors.
In GDK, screens are represented by #GdkScreen objects.
style
A style encapsulates what GTK+ needs to know in order to draw
a widget. Styles can be modified with
resource files.
toplevel
A widget that does not
require a parent container.
The only toplevel widgets in GTK+ are #GtkWindow and widgets derived from it.
containerunmapmappingunrealizerealizationview column
A displayed column in a tree view, represented by a
#GtkTreeViewColumn object.
model columnvisual
A visual describes how color information is stored in pixels.
A screen may support
multiple visuals. On modern hardware, the most common visuals
are truecolor visuals, which store a fixed number of bits
(typically 8) for the red, green and blue components of a color.
On ancient hardware, one may still meet indexed visuals, which
store color information as an index into a color map, or even
monochrome visuals.
widget
A control in a graphical user interface. Widgets can draw
themselves and process events from the mouse and keyboard.
Widget types include buttons, menus, text entry lines, and
lists. Widgets can be arranged into containers, and these take
care of assigning the geometry of the widgets: every
widget thus has a parent except those widgets which are
toplevels. The base
class for widgets is #GtkWidget.
container