1 /* 2 * This file is part of gtkD. 3 * 4 * gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License 6 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 7 * of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with 8 * some exceptions, please read the COPYING file. 9 * 10 * gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 11 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 12 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 13 * GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 14 * 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 16 * along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software 17 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA 18 */ 19 20 // generated automatically - do not change 21 // find conversion definition on APILookup.txt 22 // implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage 23 24 25 module gtk.MessageDialog; 26 27 private import glib.ConstructionException; 28 private import glib.Str; 29 private import gobject.ObjectG; 30 private import gtk.Dialog; 31 private import gtk.VBox; 32 private import gtk.Widget; 33 private import gtk.Window; 34 private import gtkc.gtk; 35 public import gtkc.gtktypes; 36 37 38 /** 39 * #GtkMessageDialog presents a dialog with some message text. It’s simply a 40 * convenience widget; you could construct the equivalent of #GtkMessageDialog 41 * from #GtkDialog without too much effort, but #GtkMessageDialog saves typing. 42 * 43 * One difference from #GtkDialog is that #GtkMessageDialog sets the 44 * #GtkWindow:skip-taskbar-hint property to %TRUE, so that the dialog is hidden 45 * from the taskbar by default. 46 * 47 * The easiest way to do a modal message dialog is to use gtk_dialog_run(), though 48 * you can also pass in the %GTK_DIALOG_MODAL flag, gtk_dialog_run() automatically 49 * makes the dialog modal and waits for the user to respond to it. gtk_dialog_run() 50 * returns when any dialog button is clicked. 51 * 52 * An example for using a modal dialog: 53 * |[<!-- language="C" --> 54 * GtkDialogFlags flags = GTK_DIALOG_DESTROY_WITH_PARENT; 55 * dialog = gtk_message_dialog_new (parent_window, 56 * flags, 57 * GTK_MESSAGE_ERROR, 58 * GTK_BUTTONS_CLOSE, 59 * "Error reading “%s”: %s", 60 * filename, 61 * g_strerror (errno)); 62 * gtk_dialog_run (GTK_DIALOG (dialog)); 63 * gtk_widget_destroy (dialog); 64 * ]| 65 * 66 * You might do a non-modal #GtkMessageDialog as follows: 67 * 68 * An example for a non-modal dialog: 69 * |[<!-- language="C" --> 70 * GtkDialogFlags flags = GTK_DIALOG_DESTROY_WITH_PARENT; 71 * dialog = gtk_message_dialog_new (parent_window, 72 * flags, 73 * GTK_MESSAGE_ERROR, 74 * GTK_BUTTONS_CLOSE, 75 * "Error reading “%s”: %s", 76 * filename, 77 * g_strerror (errno)); 78 * 79 * // Destroy the dialog when the user responds to it 80 * // (e.g. clicks a button) 81 * 82 * g_signal_connect_swapped (dialog, "response", 83 * G_CALLBACK (gtk_widget_destroy), 84 * dialog); 85 * ]| 86 * 87 * # GtkMessageDialog as GtkBuildable 88 * 89 * The GtkMessageDialog implementation of the GtkBuildable interface exposes 90 * the message area as an internal child with the name “message_area”. 91 */ 92 public class MessageDialog : Dialog 93 { 94 /** the main Gtk struct */ 95 protected GtkMessageDialog* gtkMessageDialog; 96 97 /** Get the main Gtk struct */ 98 public GtkMessageDialog* getMessageDialogStruct() 99 { 100 return gtkMessageDialog; 101 } 102 103 /** the main Gtk struct as a void* */ 104 protected override void* getStruct() 105 { 106 return cast(void*)gtkMessageDialog; 107 } 108 109 protected override void setStruct(GObject* obj) 110 { 111 gtkMessageDialog = cast(GtkMessageDialog*)obj; 112 super.setStruct(obj); 113 } 114 115 /** 116 * Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class. 117 */ 118 public this (GtkMessageDialog* gtkMessageDialog, bool ownedRef = false) 119 { 120 this.gtkMessageDialog = gtkMessageDialog; 121 super(cast(GtkDialog*)gtkMessageDialog, ownedRef); 122 } 123 124 /** 125 * Creates a new message dialog, which is a simple dialog with an icon 126 * indicating the dialog type (error, warning, etc.) and some text the 127 * user may want to see. When the user clicks a button a "response" 128 * signal is emitted with response IDs from GtkResponseType. See 129 * GtkDialog for more details. 130 * Params: 131 * parent = transient parent, or NULL for none 132 * flags = flags 133 * type = type of message 134 * buttons= set of buttons to use 135 * messageFormat = printf()-style format string, or NULL 136 * message = the message - should be null, any formatting should be done prior to call this constructor 137 * arguments for message_format 138 * Returns: 139 * a new GtkMessageDialog 140 */ 141 public this (Window parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, GtkMessageType type, GtkButtonsType buttons, string messageFormat, string message=null ) 142 { 143 this(parent, flags, type, buttons, false, messageFormat, message ); 144 } 145 146 /** 147 * Creates a new message dialog, which is a simple dialog with an icon 148 * indicating the dialog type (error, warning, etc.) and some text which 149 * is marked up with the Pango text markup language. 150 * When the user clicks a button a "response" signal is emitted with 151 * response IDs from GtkResponseType. See GtkDialog for more details. 152 * 153 * If Markup is true special XML characters in the printf() arguments passed to this 154 * function will automatically be escaped as necessary. 155 * (See g_markup_printf_escaped() for how this is implemented.) 156 * Usually this is what you want, but if you have an existing 157 * Pango markup string that you want to use literally as the 158 * label, then you need to use gtk_message_dialog_set_markup() 159 * instead, since you can't pass the markup string either 160 * as the format (it might contain '%' characters) or as a string 161 * argument. 162 * Since 2.4 163 * Examples: 164 * -------------------- 165 * GtkWidget *dialog; 166 * dialog = gtk_message_dialog_new (main_application_window, 167 * GTK_DIALOG_DESTROY_WITH_PARENT, 168 * GTK_MESSAGE_ERROR, 169 * GTK_BUTTONS_CLOSE, 170 * NULL); 171 * gtk_message_dialog_set_markup (GTK_MESSAGE_DIALOG (dialog), 172 * markup); 173 * -------------------- 174 * Params: 175 * parent = transient parent, or NULL for none 176 * flags = flags 177 * type = type of message 178 * buttons = set of buttons to use 179 * messageFormat = printf()-style format string, or NULL 180 * message = the message - should be null, any formatting should be done prior to call this constructor 181 * Throws: ConstructionException GTK+ fails to create the object. 182 */ 183 public this (Window parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, GtkMessageType type, GtkButtonsType buttons, bool markup, string messageFormat, string message=null ) 184 { 185 GtkMessageDialog* p; 186 187 if ( markup ) 188 { 189 // GtkWidget* gtk_message_dialog_new_with_markup (GtkWindow *parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, GtkMessageType type, GtkButtonsType buttons, const gchar *message_format, ...); 190 p = cast(GtkMessageDialog*)gtk_message_dialog_new_with_markup( 191 parent is null ? null : parent.getWindowStruct(), 192 flags, 193 type, 194 buttons, 195 Str.toStringz(messageFormat), 196 Str.toStringz(message), // this should be null 197 null 198 ); 199 } 200 else 201 { 202 // GtkWidget* gtk_message_dialog_new (GtkWindow *parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, GtkMessageType type, GtkButtonsType buttons, const gchar *message_format, ...); 203 p = cast(GtkMessageDialog*)gtk_message_dialog_new( 204 parent is null ? null : parent.getWindowStruct(), 205 flags, 206 type, 207 buttons, 208 Str.toStringz(messageFormat), 209 Str.toStringz(message), // this should be null 210 null 211 ); 212 } 213 214 if(p is null) 215 { 216 throw new ConstructionException("null returned by gtk_button_new()"); 217 } 218 219 this(p); 220 } 221 222 /** 223 * Since 2.22 224 * Returns: A GtkVBox corresponding to the "message area" in the message_dialog. This is the box where the dialog's primary and secondary labels are packed. You can add your own extra content to that box and it will appear below those labels, on the right side of the dialog's image (or on the left for right-to-left languages). See gtk_dialog_get_content_area() for the corresponding function in the parent GtkDialog. 225 */ 226 public VBox getMessageArea() 227 { 228 // GtkWidget * gtk_message_dialog_get_message_area (GtkMessageDialog *message_dialog); 229 auto p = gtk_message_dialog_get_message_area(gtkMessageDialog); 230 if(p is null) 231 { 232 return null; 233 } 234 return new VBox(cast(GtkVBox*) p); 235 } 236 237 /** 238 */ 239 240 public static GType getType() 241 { 242 return gtk_message_dialog_get_type(); 243 } 244 245 /** 246 * Gets the dialog’s image. 247 * 248 * Deprecated: Use #GtkDialog for dialogs with images 249 * 250 * Return: the dialog’s image 251 * 252 * Since: 2.14 253 */ 254 public Widget getImage() 255 { 256 auto p = gtk_message_dialog_get_image(gtkMessageDialog); 257 258 if(p is null) 259 { 260 return null; 261 } 262 263 return ObjectG.getDObject!(Widget)(cast(GtkWidget*) p); 264 } 265 266 /** 267 * Sets the dialog’s image to @image. 268 * 269 * Deprecated: Use #GtkDialog to create dialogs with images 270 * 271 * Params: 272 * image = the image 273 * 274 * Since: 2.10 275 */ 276 public void setImage(Widget image) 277 { 278 gtk_message_dialog_set_image(gtkMessageDialog, (image is null) ? null : image.getWidgetStruct()); 279 } 280 281 /** 282 * Sets the text of the message dialog to be @str, which is marked 283 * up with the [Pango text markup language][PangoMarkupFormat]. 284 * 285 * Params: 286 * str = markup string (see [Pango markup format][PangoMarkupFormat]) 287 * 288 * Since: 2.4 289 */ 290 public void setMarkup(string str) 291 { 292 gtk_message_dialog_set_markup(gtkMessageDialog, Str.toStringz(str)); 293 } 294 }