Resource Files
Routines for handling resource files
GTK+ provides resource file mechanism for configuring
various aspects of the operation of a GTK+ program
at runtime.
Default files
An application can cause GTK+ to parse a specific RC
file by calling gtk_rc_parse(). In addition to this,
certain files will be read at the end of gtk_init().
Unless modified, the files looked for will be
<SYSCONFDIR>/gtk-2.0/gtkrc
and .gtkrc-3.0 in the users home directory.
(<SYSCONFDIR> defaults to
/usr/local/etc. It can be changed with the
or options when
configuring GTK+.)
The set of these default files
can be retrieved with gtk_rc_get_default_files()
and modified with gtk_rc_add_default_file() and
gtk_rc_set_default_files().
Additionally, the GTK2_RC_FILES environment variable
can be set to a #G_SEARCHPATH_SEPARATOR_S-separated list of files
in order to overwrite the set of default files at runtime.
For each RC file, in addition to the file itself, GTK+ will look for
a locale-specific file that will be parsed after the main file.
For instance, if LANG is set to ja_JP.ujis,
when loading the default file ~/.gtkrc then GTK+ looks
for ~/.gtkrc.ja_JP and ~/.gtkrc.ja,
and parses the first of those that exists.
Pathnames and patterns
A resource file defines a number of styles and key bindings and
attaches them to particular widgets. The attachment is done
by the widget, widget_class,
and class declarations. As an example
of such a statement:
widget "mywindow.*.GtkEntry" style "my-entry-class"
attaches the style "my-entry-class" to all
widgets whose widget path matches the
pattern"mywindow.*.GtkEntry".
That is, all #GtkEntry widgets which are part of a #GtkWindow named
"mywindow".
The patterns here are given in the standard shell glob syntax.
The "?" wildcard matches any character, while
"*" matches zero or more of any character.
The three types of matching are against the widget path, the
class path and the class hierarchy. Both the
widget path and the class path consist of a "."
separated list of all the parents of the widget and the widget itself
from outermost to innermost. The difference is that in the widget path,
the name assigned by gtk_widget_set_name() is used if present, otherwise
the class name of the widget, while for the class path, the class name is
always used.
Since GTK+ 2.10,widget_class paths can also contain
<classname> substrings, which are matching
the class with the given name and any derived classes. For instance,
widget_class "*<GtkMenuItem>.GtkLabel" style "my-style"
will match #GtkLabel widgets which are contained in any kind of menu item.
So, if you have a #GtkEntry named "myentry", inside of a
horizontal box in a window named "mywindow", then the
widget path is: "mywindow.GtkHBox.myentry"
while the class path is: "GtkWindow.GtkHBox.GtkEntry".
Matching against class is a little different. The pattern match is done
against all class names in the widgets class hierarchy (not the layout
hierarchy) in sequence, so the pattern:
class "GtkButton" style "my-style"
will match not just #GtkButton widgets, but also #GtkToggleButton and
#GtkCheckButton widgets, since those classes derive from #GtkButton.
Additionally, a priority can be specified for each pattern, and styles
override other styles first by priority, then by pattern type and then
by order of specification (later overrides earlier). The priorities
that can be specified are (highest to lowest):
highestrcthemeapplicationgtklowestrc is the default for styles
read from an RC file, theme
is the default for styles read from theme RC files,
application
should be used for styles an application sets
up, and gtk is used for styles
that GTK+ creates internally.
Theme gtkrc files
Theme RC files are loaded first from under the ~/.themes/,
then from the directory from gtk_rc_get_theme_dir(). The files looked at will
be gtk-3.0/gtkrc.
When the application prefers dark themes
(see the #GtkSettings:gtk-application-prefer-dark-theme property for details),
gtk-3.0/gtkrc-dark will be loaded first, and if not present
gtk-3.0/gtkrc will be loaded.
Optimizing RC Style Matches
Everytime a widget is created and added to the layout hierarchy of a #GtkWindow
("anchored" to be exact), a list of matching RC styles out of all RC styles read
in so far is composed.
For this, every RC style is matched against the widgets class path,
the widgets name path and widgets inheritance hierarchy.
As a consequence, significant slowdown can be caused by utilization of many
RC styles and by using RC style patterns that are slow or complicated to match
against a given widget.
The following ordered list provides a number of advices (prioritized by
effectiveness) to reduce the performance overhead associated with RC style
matches:
Move RC styles for specific applications into RC files dedicated to those
applications and parse application specific RC files only from
applications that are affected by them.
This reduces the overall amount of RC styles that have to be considered
for a match across a group of applications.
Merge multiple styles which use the same matching rule, for instance:
style "Foo" { foo_content }
class "X" style "Foo"
style "Bar" { bar_content }
class "X" style "Bar"
is faster to match as:
style "FooBar" { foo_content bar_content }
class "X" style "FooBar"
Use of wildcards should be avoided, this can reduce the individual RC style
match to a single integer comparison in most cases.
To avoid complex recursive matching, specification of full class names
(for class matches) or full path names (for
widget and widget_class matches)
is to be preferred over shortened names
containing "*" or "?".
If at all necessary, wildcards should only be used at the tail or head
of a pattern. This reduces the match complexity to a string comparison
per RC style.
When using wildcards, use of "?" should be preferred
over "*". This can reduce the matching complexity from
O(n^2) to O(n). For example "Gtk*Box" can be turned into
"Gtk?Box" and will still match #GtkHBox and #GtkVBox.
The use of "*" wildcards should be restricted as much
as possible, because matching "A*B*C*RestString" can
result in matching complexities of O(n^2) worst case.
Toplevel declarations
An RC file is a text file which is composed of a sequence
of declarations. '#' characters delimit comments and
the portion of a line after a '#' is ignored when parsing
an RC file.
The possible toplevel declarations are:
binding name
{ ... }Declares a binding set.class pattern
[ style | binding ][ : priority ]
nameSpecifies a style or binding set for a particular
branch of the inheritance hierarchy.include filenameParses another file at this point. If
filename is not an absolute filename,
it is searched in the directories of the currently open RC files.
GTK+ also tries to load a
locale-specific variant of
the included file.
module_path pathSets a path (a list of directories separated
by colons) that will be searched for theme engines referenced in
RC files.pixmap_path pathSets a path (a list of directories separated
by colons) that will be searched for pixmaps referenced in
RC files.im_module_file pathnameSets the pathname for the IM modules file. Setting this from RC files
is deprecated; you should use the environment variable GTK_IM_MODULE_FILE
instead.style name [ =
parent ] { ... }Declares a style.widget pattern
[ style | binding ][ : priority ]
nameSpecifies a style or binding set for a particular
group of widgets by matching on the widget pathname.widget_class pattern
[ style | binding ][ : priority ]
nameSpecifies a style or binding set for a particular
group of widgets by matching on the class pathname.setting = valueSpecifies a value for a setting.
Note that settings in RC files are overwritten by system-wide settings
(which are managed by an XSettings manager on X11).Styles
A RC style is specified by a style
declaration in a RC file, and then bound to widgets
with a widget, widget_class,
or class declaration. All styles
applying to a particular widget are composited together
with widget declarations overriding
widget_class declarations which, in
turn, override class declarations.
Within each type of declaration, later declarations override
earlier ones.
Within a style declaration, the possible
elements are:
bg[state] =
color
Sets the color used for the background of most widgets.
fg[state] =
color
Sets the color used for the foreground of most widgets.
base[state] =
color
Sets the color used for the background of widgets displaying
editable text. This color is used for the background
of, among others, #GtkText, #GtkEntry, #GtkList, and #GtkCList.
text[state] =
color
Sets the color used for foreground of widgets using
base for the background color.
xthickness =
number
Sets the xthickness, which is used for various horizontal padding
values in GTK+.
ythickness =
number
Sets the ythickness, which is used for various vertical padding
values in GTK+.
bg_pixmap[state] =
pixmap
Sets a background pixmap to be used in place of
the bg color (or for #GtkText,
in place of the base color. The special
value "<parent>" may be used to indicate that the widget should
use the same background pixmap as its parent. The special value
"<none>" may be used to indicate no background pixmap.
font = font
Starting with GTK+ 2.0, the "font" and "fontset"
declarations are ignored; use "font_name" declarations instead.
fontset = font
Starting with GTK+ 2.0, the "font" and "fontset"
declarations are ignored; use "font_name" declarations instead.
font_name = font
Sets the font for a widget. font must be
a Pango font name, e.g. "Sans Italic 10".
For details about Pango font names, see
pango_font_description_from_string().
stock["stock-id"] = { icon source specifications }
Defines the icon for a stock item.
color["color-name"] = color specification
Since 2.10, this element can be used to defines symbolic colors. See below for
the syntax of color specifications.
engine "engine" { engine-specific
settings }
Defines the engine to be used when drawing with this style.
class::property = value
Sets a style property for a widget class.
The colors and background pixmaps are specified as a function of the
state of the widget. The states are:
NORMAL
A color used for a widget in its normal state.
ACTIVE
A variant of the NORMAL color used when the
widget is in the %GTK_STATE_ACTIVE state, and also for
the trough of a ScrollBar, tabs of a NoteBook
other than the current tab and similar areas.
Frequently, this should be a darker variant
of the NORMAL color.
PRELIGHT
A color used for widgets in the %GTK_STATE_PRELIGHT state. This
state is the used for Buttons and MenuItems
that have the mouse cursor over them, and for
their children.
SELECTED
A color used to highlight data selected by the user.
for instance, the selected items in a list widget, and the
selection in an editable widget.
INSENSITIVE
A color used for the background of widgets that have
been set insensitive with gtk_widget_set_sensitive().
Colors can be specified as a string containing a color name (GTK+ knows
all names from the X color database /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt),
in one of the hexadecimal forms #rrrrggggbbbb,
#rrrgggbbb, #rrggbb,
or #rgb, where r,
g and b are
hex digits, or they can be specified as a triplet
{ r, g,
b}, where r,
g and b are either integers in
the range 0-65535 or floats in the range 0.0-1.0.
Since 2.10, colors can also be specified by refering to a symbolic color, as
follows: @color-name, or by using expressions to combine
colors. The following expressions are currently supported:
mix (factor, color1, color2)
Computes a new color by mixing color1 and
color2. The factor
determines how close the new color is to color1.
A factor of 1.0 gives pure color1, a factor of
0.0 gives pure color2.
shade (factor, color)
Computes a lighter or darker variant of color.
A factor of 1.0 leaves the color unchanged, smaller
factors yield darker colors, larger factors yield lighter colors.
lighter (color)
This is an abbreviation for
shade (1.3, color).
darker (color)
This is an abbreviation for
shade (0.7, color).
Here are some examples of color expressions:
mix (0.5, "red", "blue")
shade (1.5, mix (0.3, "#0abbc0", { 0.3, 0.5, 0.9 }))
lighter (@foreground)
In a stock definition, icon sources are specified as a
4-tuple of image filename or icon name, text direction, widget state, and size, in that
order. Each icon source specifies an image filename or icon name to use with a given
direction, state, and size. Filenames are specified as a string such
as "itemltr.png", while icon names (looked up
in the current icon theme), are specified with a leading
@, such as @"item-ltr".
The * character can be used as a
wildcard, and if direction/state/size are omitted they default to
*. So for example, the following specifies different icons to
use for left-to-right and right-to-left languages:
stock["my-stock-item"] =
{
{ "itemltr.png", LTR, *, * },
{ "itemrtl.png", RTL, *, * }
}
This could be abbreviated as follows:
stock["my-stock-item"] =
{
{ "itemltr.png", LTR },
{ "itemrtl.png", RTL }
}
You can specify custom icons for specific sizes, as follows:
stock["my-stock-item"] =
{
{ "itemmenusize.png", *, *, "gtk-menu" },
{ "itemtoolbarsize.png", *, *, "gtk-large-toolbar" }
{ "itemgeneric.png" } /* implicit *, *, * as a fallback */
}
The sizes that come with GTK+ itself are "gtk-menu",
"gtk-small-toolbar", "gtk-large-toolbar",
"gtk-button", "gtk-dialog". Applications
can define other sizes.
It's also possible to use custom icons for a given state, for example:
stock["my-stock-item"] =
{
{ "itemprelight.png", *, PRELIGHT },
{ "iteminsensitive.png", *, INSENSITIVE },
{ "itemgeneric.png" } /* implicit *, *, * as a fallback */
}
When selecting an icon source to use, GTK+ will consider text direction most
important, state second, and size third. It will select the best match based on
those criteria. If an attribute matches exactly (e.g. you specified
PRELIGHT or specified the size), GTK+ won't modify the image;
if the attribute matches with a wildcard, GTK+ will scale or modify the image to
match the state and size the user requested.
Key bindings
Key bindings allow the user to specify actions to be
taken on particular key presses. The form of a binding
set declaration is:
binding name {
bind key {
signalname (param, ...)
...
}
...
}
key is a string consisting of a
series of modifiers followed by the name of a key. The
modifiers can be:
<alt><ctl><control><meta><hyper><super><mod1><mod2><mod3><mod4><mod5><release><shft><shift><shft> is an alias for
<shift>,
<ctl> is an alias for
<control>,
and
<alt> is an alias for
<mod1>.
The action that is bound to the key is a sequence
of signal names (strings) followed by parameters for
each signal. The signals must be action signals.
(See g_signal_new()). Each parameter can be
a float, integer, string, or unquoted string
representing an enumeration value. The types of
the parameters specified must match the types of the
parameters of the signal.
Binding sets are connected to widgets in the same manner as styles,
with one difference: Binding sets override other binding sets first
by pattern type, then by priority and then by order of specification.
The priorities that can be specified and their default values are the
same as for styles.
The #GtkRcStyle structure is used to represent a set
of information about the appearance of a widget.
This can later be composited together with other
#GtkRcStyle structures to form a #GtkStyle.
@name:
@bg_pixmap_name:
@font_desc:
@color_flags:
@fg:
@bg:
@text:
@base:
@xthickness:
@ythickness:
The #GtkRcFlags enumeration is used as a bitmask
to specify which fields of a #GtkRcStyle have been
set for each state.
@GTK_RC_FG: If present, the foreground color has been set for this state.
@GTK_RC_BG: If present, the background color has been set for this state.
@GTK_RC_TEXT: If present, the text color has been set for this state.
@GTK_RC_BASE: If present, the base color has been set for this state.
The #GtkRcTokenType enumeration represents the tokens
in the RC file. It is exposed so that theme engines
can reuse these tokens when parsing the theme-engine
specific portions of a RC file.
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_INVALID:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_INCLUDE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_NORMAL:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_ACTIVE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_PRELIGHT:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_SELECTED:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_INSENSITIVE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_FG:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_BG:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_TEXT:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_BASE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_XTHICKNESS:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_YTHICKNESS:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_FONT:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_FONTSET:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_FONT_NAME:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_BG_PIXMAP:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_PIXMAP_PATH:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_STYLE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_BINDING:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_BIND:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_WIDGET:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_WIDGET_CLASS:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_CLASS:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_LOWEST:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_GTK:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_APPLICATION:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_THEME:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_RC:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_HIGHEST:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_ENGINE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_MODULE_PATH:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_IM_MODULE_PATH:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_IM_MODULE_FILE:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_STOCK:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_LTR:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_RTL:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_COLOR:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_UNBIND:
@GTK_RC_TOKEN_LAST:
@void:
@Returns:
@widget:
@Returns:
@settings:
@widget_path:
@class_path:
@type:
@Returns:
Parses a given resource file.
@filename: the filename of a file to parse. If @filename is not absolute, it
is searched in the current directory.
Parses resource information directly from a string.
@rc_string: a string to parse.
@void:
@Returns:
@settings:
@force_load:
@Returns:
@settings:
@filename:
@void:
@Returns:
@filenames:
@scanner:
@color:
@Returns:
@scanner:
@style:
@color:
@Returns:
Parses a #GtkStateType variable from the format expected
in a RC file.
@scanner: a #GtkScanner (must be initialized for parsing an RC file)
@state: A pointer to a #GtkStateType variable in which to
store the result.
@Returns: %G_TOKEN_NONE if parsing succeeded, otherwise the token
that was expected but not found.
Parses a #GtkPathPriorityType variable from the format expected
in a RC file.
@scanner: a #GtkScanner (must be initialized for parsing an RC file)
@priority: A pointer to #GtkPathPriorityType variable in which
to store the result.
@Returns: %G_TOKEN_NONE if parsing succeeded, otherwise the token
that was expected but not found.
@module_file: The name of the module to search for.
@Returns:
@settings:
@scanner: a #GtkScanner. Used for printing out warning messages
if the file is not found.
@pixmap_file: The name of the file to search for.
@Returns: The filename, if found (must be freed with g_free()),
otherwise %NULL.
@void:
@Returns:
@void:
@Returns:
@void:
@Returns:
Returns the standard directory in which themes should
be installed. (GTK+ does not actually use this directory
itself.)
@void:
@Returns: The directory (must be freed with g_free()).
Creates a new #GtkRcStyle with no fields set and
a reference count of 1.
@void:
@Returns: the newly-created #GtkRcStyle
@orig:
@Returns: