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.Dialog; 26 27 private import gdk.Screen; 28 private import glib.ConstructionException; 29 private import glib.Str; 30 private import gobject.ObjectG; 31 private import gobject.Signals; 32 private import gtk.Button; 33 private import gtk.HButtonBox; 34 private import gtk.VBox; 35 private import gtk.Widget; 36 private import gtk.Window; 37 public import gtkc.gdktypes; 38 private import gtkc.gtk; 39 public import gtkc.gtktypes; 40 41 42 /** 43 * Dialog boxes are a convenient way to prompt the user for a small amount 44 * of input, e.g. to display a message, ask a question, or anything else 45 * that does not require extensive effort on the user’s part. 46 * 47 * GTK+ treats a dialog as a window split vertically. The top section is a 48 * #GtkVBox, and is where widgets such as a #GtkLabel or a #GtkEntry should 49 * be packed. The bottom area is known as the 50 * “action area”. This is generally used for 51 * packing buttons into the dialog which may perform functions such as 52 * cancel, ok, or apply. 53 * 54 * #GtkDialog boxes are created with a call to gtk_dialog_new() or 55 * gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons(). gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons() is 56 * recommended; it allows you to set the dialog title, some convenient 57 * flags, and add simple buttons. 58 * 59 * If “dialog” is a newly created dialog, the two primary areas of the 60 * window can be accessed through gtk_dialog_get_content_area() and 61 * gtk_dialog_get_action_area(), as can be seen from the example below. 62 * 63 * A “modal” dialog (that is, one which freezes the rest of the application 64 * from user input), can be created by calling gtk_window_set_modal() on the 65 * dialog. Use the GTK_WINDOW() macro to cast the widget returned from 66 * gtk_dialog_new() into a #GtkWindow. When using gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons() 67 * you can also pass the #GTK_DIALOG_MODAL flag to make a dialog modal. 68 * 69 * If you add buttons to #GtkDialog using gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons(), 70 * gtk_dialog_add_button(), gtk_dialog_add_buttons(), or 71 * gtk_dialog_add_action_widget(), clicking the button will emit a signal 72 * called #GtkDialog::response with a response ID that you specified. GTK+ 73 * will never assign a meaning to positive response IDs; these are entirely 74 * user-defined. But for convenience, you can use the response IDs in the 75 * #GtkResponseType enumeration (these all have values less than zero). If 76 * a dialog receives a delete event, the #GtkDialog::response signal will 77 * be emitted with a response ID of #GTK_RESPONSE_DELETE_EVENT. 78 * 79 * If you want to block waiting for a dialog to return before returning 80 * control flow to your code, you can call gtk_dialog_run(). This function 81 * enters a recursive main loop and waits for the user to respond to the 82 * dialog, returning the response ID corresponding to the button the user 83 * clicked. 84 * 85 * For the simple dialog in the following example, in reality you’d probably 86 * use #GtkMessageDialog to save yourself some effort. But you’d need to 87 * create the dialog contents manually if you had more than a simple message 88 * in the dialog. 89 * 90 * An example for simple GtkDialog usage: 91 * |[<!-- language="C" --> 92 * // Function to open a dialog box with a message 93 * void 94 * quick_message (GtkWindow *parent, gchar *message) 95 * { 96 * GtkWidget *dialog, *label, *content_area; 97 * GtkDialogFlags flags; 98 * 99 * // Create the widgets 100 * flags = GTK_DIALOG_DESTROY_WITH_PARENT; 101 * dialog = gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons ("Message", 102 * parent, 103 * flags, 104 * _("_OK"), 105 * GTK_RESPONSE_NONE, 106 * NULL); 107 * content_area = gtk_dialog_get_content_area (GTK_DIALOG (dialog)); 108 * label = gtk_label_new (message); 109 * 110 * // Ensure that the dialog box is destroyed when the user responds 111 * 112 * g_signal_connect_swapped (dialog, 113 * "response", 114 * G_CALLBACK (gtk_widget_destroy), 115 * dialog); 116 * 117 * // Add the label, and show everything we’ve added 118 * 119 * gtk_container_add (GTK_CONTAINER (content_area), label); 120 * gtk_widget_show_all (dialog); 121 * } 122 * ]| 123 * 124 * # GtkDialog as GtkBuildable 125 * 126 * The GtkDialog implementation of the #GtkBuildable interface exposes the 127 * @vbox and @action_area as internal children with the names “vbox” and 128 * “action_area”. 129 * 130 * GtkDialog supports a custom <action-widgets> element, which can contain 131 * multiple <action-widget> elements. The “response” attribute specifies a 132 * numeric response, and the content of the element is the id of widget 133 * (which should be a child of the dialogs @action_area). To mark a response 134 * as default, set the “default“ attribute of the <action-widget> element 135 * to true. 136 * 137 * GtkDialog supports adding action widgets by specifying “action“ as 138 * the “type“ attribute of a <child> element. The widget will be added 139 * either to the action area or the headerbar of the dialog, depending 140 * on the “use-header-bar“ property. The response id has to be associated 141 * with the action widget using the <action-widgets> element. 142 * 143 * An example of a #GtkDialog UI definition fragment: 144 * |[ 145 * <object class="GtkDialog" id="dialog1"> 146 * <child type="action"> 147 * <object class="GtkButton" id="button_cancel"/> 148 * </child> 149 * <child type="action"> 150 * <object class="GtkButton" id="button_ok"> 151 * <property name="can-default">True</property> 152 * </object> 153 * </child> 154 * <action-widgets> 155 * <action-widget response="cancel">button_cancel</action-widget> 156 * <action-widget response="ok" default="true">button_ok</action-widget> 157 * </action-widgets> 158 * </object> 159 * ]| 160 */ 161 public class Dialog : Window 162 { 163 /** the main Gtk struct */ 164 protected GtkDialog* gtkDialog; 165 166 /** Get the main Gtk struct */ 167 public GtkDialog* getDialogStruct() 168 { 169 return gtkDialog; 170 } 171 172 /** the main Gtk struct as a void* */ 173 protected override void* getStruct() 174 { 175 return cast(void*)gtkDialog; 176 } 177 178 protected override void setStruct(GObject* obj) 179 { 180 gtkDialog = cast(GtkDialog*)obj; 181 super.setStruct(obj); 182 } 183 184 /** 185 * Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class. 186 */ 187 public this (GtkDialog* gtkDialog, bool ownedRef = false) 188 { 189 this.gtkDialog = gtkDialog; 190 super(cast(GtkWindow*)gtkDialog, ownedRef); 191 } 192 193 /** 194 * Both title and parent can be null. 195 */ 196 this(string title, Window parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, string[] buttonsText, ResponseType[] responses) 197 { 198 auto p = gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons(Str.toStringz(title), (parent is null) ? null : parent.getWindowStruct(), flags, Str.toStringz(buttonsText[0]), responses[0], null); 199 if(p is null) 200 { 201 throw new ConstructionException("null returned by gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons"); 202 } 203 204 this(cast(GtkDialog*)p); 205 206 addButtons(buttonsText[1 .. $], responses[1 .. $]); 207 } 208 209 /** ditto */ 210 this(string title, Window parent, GtkDialogFlags flags, StockID[] stockIDs, ResponseType[] responses) 211 { 212 auto p = gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons(Str.toStringz(title), (parent is null) ? null : parent.getWindowStruct(), flags, Str.toStringz(stockIDs[0]), responses[0], null); 213 if(p is null) 214 { 215 throw new ConstructionException("null returned by gtk_dialog_new_with_buttons"); 216 } 217 218 this(cast(GtkDialog*)p); 219 220 addButtons(stockIDs[1 .. $], responses[1 .. $]); 221 } 222 223 /** */ 224 public Button addButton(StockID stockID, int responseId) 225 { 226 auto p = gtk_dialog_add_button(gtkDialog, Str.toStringz(stockID), responseId); 227 228 if ( p is null ) 229 { 230 return null; 231 } 232 233 return new Button(cast(GtkButton*)p); 234 } 235 236 /** */ 237 public void addButtons(string[] buttonsText, ResponseType[] responses) 238 { 239 for ( int i=0 ; i<buttonsText.length && i<responses.length ; i++) 240 { 241 addButton(buttonsText[i], responses[i]); 242 } 243 } 244 245 /** */ 246 public void addButtons(StockID[] stockIDs, ResponseType[] responses) 247 { 248 for ( int i=0 ; i<stockIDs.length && i<responses.length ; i++) 249 { 250 addButton(stockIDs[i], responses[i]); 251 } 252 } 253 254 //Return the corect class instead of Widget 255 /** 256 * Returns the action area of dialog. 257 * Since: 2.14 258 * Returns: the action area. 259 */ 260 public HButtonBox getActionArea() 261 { 262 auto p = gtk_dialog_get_action_area(gtkDialog); 263 if(p is null) 264 { 265 return null; 266 } 267 return new HButtonBox(cast(GtkHButtonBox*) p); 268 } 269 270 //Return the corect class instead of Widget 271 /** 272 * Returns the content area of dialog. 273 * Since: 2.14 274 * Returns: the content area GtkVBox. 275 */ 276 public VBox getContentArea() 277 { 278 auto p = gtk_dialog_get_content_area(gtkDialog); 279 if(p is null) 280 { 281 return null; 282 } 283 return new VBox(cast(GtkVBox*) p); 284 } 285 286 /** 287 */ 288 289 public static GType getType() 290 { 291 return gtk_dialog_get_type(); 292 } 293 294 /** 295 * Creates a new dialog box. 296 * 297 * Widgets should not be packed into this #GtkWindow 298 * directly, but into the @vbox and @action_area, as described above. 299 * 300 * Return: the new dialog as a #GtkWidget 301 * 302 * Throws: ConstructionException GTK+ fails to create the object. 303 */ 304 public this() 305 { 306 auto p = gtk_dialog_new(); 307 308 if(p is null) 309 { 310 throw new ConstructionException("null returned by new"); 311 } 312 313 this(cast(GtkDialog*) p); 314 } 315 316 /** 317 * Adds an activatable widget to the action area of a #GtkDialog, 318 * connecting a signal handler that will emit the #GtkDialog::response 319 * signal on the dialog when the widget is activated. The widget is 320 * appended to the end of the dialog’s action area. If you want to add a 321 * non-activatable widget, simply pack it into the @action_area field 322 * of the #GtkDialog struct. 323 * 324 * Params: 325 * child = an activatable widget 326 * responseId = response ID for @child 327 */ 328 public void addActionWidget(Widget child, int responseId) 329 { 330 gtk_dialog_add_action_widget(gtkDialog, (child is null) ? null : child.getWidgetStruct(), responseId); 331 } 332 333 /** 334 * Adds a button with the given text and sets things up so that 335 * clicking the button will emit the #GtkDialog::response signal with 336 * the given @response_id. The button is appended to the end of the 337 * dialog’s action area. The button widget is returned, but usually 338 * you don’t need it. 339 * 340 * Params: 341 * buttonText = text of button 342 * responseId = response ID for the button 343 * 344 * Return: the #GtkButton widget that was added 345 */ 346 public Widget addButton(string buttonText, int responseId) 347 { 348 auto p = gtk_dialog_add_button(gtkDialog, Str.toStringz(buttonText), responseId); 349 350 if(p is null) 351 { 352 return null; 353 } 354 355 return ObjectG.getDObject!(Widget)(cast(GtkWidget*) p); 356 } 357 358 /** 359 * Returns the header bar of @dialog. Note that the 360 * headerbar is only used by the dialog if the 361 * #GtkDialog:use-header-bar property is %TRUE. 362 * 363 * Return: the header bar 364 * 365 * Since: 3.12 366 */ 367 public Widget getHeaderBar() 368 { 369 auto p = gtk_dialog_get_header_bar(gtkDialog); 370 371 if(p is null) 372 { 373 return null; 374 } 375 376 return ObjectG.getDObject!(Widget)(cast(GtkWidget*) p); 377 } 378 379 /** 380 * Gets the response id of a widget in the action area 381 * of a dialog. 382 * 383 * Params: 384 * widget = a widget in the action area of @dialog 385 * 386 * Return: the response id of @widget, or %GTK_RESPONSE_NONE 387 * if @widget doesn’t have a response id set. 388 * 389 * Since: 2.8 390 */ 391 public int getResponseForWidget(Widget widget) 392 { 393 return gtk_dialog_get_response_for_widget(gtkDialog, (widget is null) ? null : widget.getWidgetStruct()); 394 } 395 396 /** 397 * Gets the widget button that uses the given response ID in the action area 398 * of a dialog. 399 * 400 * Params: 401 * responseId = the response ID used by the @dialog widget 402 * 403 * Return: the @widget button that uses the given 404 * @response_id, or %NULL. 405 * 406 * Since: 2.20 407 */ 408 public Widget getWidgetForResponse(int responseId) 409 { 410 auto p = gtk_dialog_get_widget_for_response(gtkDialog, responseId); 411 412 if(p is null) 413 { 414 return null; 415 } 416 417 return ObjectG.getDObject!(Widget)(cast(GtkWidget*) p); 418 } 419 420 /** 421 * Emits the #GtkDialog::response signal with the given response ID. 422 * Used to indicate that the user has responded to the dialog in some way; 423 * typically either you or gtk_dialog_run() will be monitoring the 424 * ::response signal and take appropriate action. 425 * 426 * Params: 427 * responseId = response ID 428 */ 429 public void response(int responseId) 430 { 431 gtk_dialog_response(gtkDialog, responseId); 432 } 433 434 /** 435 * Blocks in a recursive main loop until the @dialog either emits the 436 * #GtkDialog::response signal, or is destroyed. If the dialog is 437 * destroyed during the call to gtk_dialog_run(), gtk_dialog_run() returns 438 * #GTK_RESPONSE_NONE. Otherwise, it returns the response ID from the 439 * ::response signal emission. 440 * 441 * Before entering the recursive main loop, gtk_dialog_run() calls 442 * gtk_widget_show() on the dialog for you. Note that you still 443 * need to show any children of the dialog yourself. 444 * 445 * During gtk_dialog_run(), the default behavior of #GtkWidget::delete-event 446 * is disabled; if the dialog receives ::delete_event, it will not be 447 * destroyed as windows usually are, and gtk_dialog_run() will return 448 * #GTK_RESPONSE_DELETE_EVENT. Also, during gtk_dialog_run() the dialog 449 * will be modal. You can force gtk_dialog_run() to return at any time by 450 * calling gtk_dialog_response() to emit the ::response signal. Destroying 451 * the dialog during gtk_dialog_run() is a very bad idea, because your 452 * post-run code won’t know whether the dialog was destroyed or not. 453 * 454 * After gtk_dialog_run() returns, you are responsible for hiding or 455 * destroying the dialog if you wish to do so. 456 * 457 * Typical usage of this function might be: 458 * |[<!-- language="C" --> 459 * gint result = gtk_dialog_run (GTK_DIALOG (dialog)); 460 * switch (result) 461 * { 462 * case GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT: 463 * do_application_specific_something (); 464 * break; 465 * default: 466 * do_nothing_since_dialog_was_cancelled (); 467 * break; 468 * } 469 * gtk_widget_destroy (dialog); 470 * ]| 471 * 472 * Note that even though the recursive main loop gives the effect of a 473 * modal dialog (it prevents the user from interacting with other 474 * windows in the same window group while the dialog is run), callbacks 475 * such as timeouts, IO channel watches, DND drops, etc, will 476 * be triggered during a gtk_dialog_run() call. 477 * 478 * Return: response ID 479 */ 480 public int run() 481 { 482 return gtk_dialog_run(gtkDialog); 483 } 484 485 /** 486 * Sets an alternative button order. If the 487 * #GtkSettings:gtk-alternative-button-order setting is set to %TRUE, 488 * the dialog buttons are reordered according to the order of the 489 * response ids in @new_order. 490 * 491 * See gtk_dialog_set_alternative_button_order() for more information. 492 * 493 * This function is for use by language bindings. 494 * 495 * Deprecated: Deprecated 496 * 497 * Params: 498 * nParams = the number of response ids in @new_order 499 * newOrder = an array of response ids of 500 * @dialog’s buttons 501 * 502 * Since: 2.6 503 */ 504 public void setAlternativeButtonOrder(int[] newOrder) 505 { 506 gtk_dialog_set_alternative_button_order_from_array(gtkDialog, cast(int)newOrder.length, newOrder.ptr); 507 } 508 509 /** 510 * Sets the last widget in the dialog’s action area with the given @response_id 511 * as the default widget for the dialog. Pressing “Enter” normally activates 512 * the default widget. 513 * 514 * Params: 515 * responseId = a response ID 516 */ 517 public void setDefaultResponse(int responseId) 518 { 519 gtk_dialog_set_default_response(gtkDialog, responseId); 520 } 521 522 /** 523 * Calls `gtk_widget_set_sensitive (widget, @setting)` 524 * for each widget in the dialog’s action area with the given @response_id. 525 * A convenient way to sensitize/desensitize dialog buttons. 526 * 527 * Params: 528 * responseId = a response ID 529 * setting = %TRUE for sensitive 530 */ 531 public void setResponseSensitive(int responseId, bool setting) 532 { 533 gtk_dialog_set_response_sensitive(gtkDialog, responseId, setting); 534 } 535 536 int[string] connectedSignals; 537 538 void delegate(Dialog)[] onCloseListeners; 539 /** 540 * The ::close signal is a 541 * [keybinding signal][GtkBindingSignal] 542 * which gets emitted when the user uses a keybinding to close 543 * the dialog. 544 * 545 * The default binding for this signal is the Escape key. 546 */ 547 void addOnClose(void delegate(Dialog) dlg, ConnectFlags connectFlags=cast(ConnectFlags)0) 548 { 549 if ( "close" !in connectedSignals ) 550 { 551 Signals.connectData( 552 this, 553 "close", 554 cast(GCallback)&callBackClose, 555 cast(void*)this, 556 null, 557 connectFlags); 558 connectedSignals["close"] = 1; 559 } 560 onCloseListeners ~= dlg; 561 } 562 extern(C) static void callBackClose(GtkDialog* dialogStruct, Dialog _dialog) 563 { 564 foreach ( void delegate(Dialog) dlg; _dialog.onCloseListeners ) 565 { 566 dlg(_dialog); 567 } 568 } 569 570 void delegate(int, Dialog)[] onResponseListeners; 571 /** 572 * Emitted when an action widget is clicked, the dialog receives a 573 * delete event, or the application programmer calls gtk_dialog_response(). 574 * On a delete event, the response ID is #GTK_RESPONSE_DELETE_EVENT. 575 * Otherwise, it depends on which action widget was clicked. 576 * 577 * Params: 578 * responseId = the response ID 579 */ 580 void addOnResponse(void delegate(int, Dialog) dlg, ConnectFlags connectFlags=cast(ConnectFlags)0) 581 { 582 if ( "response" !in connectedSignals ) 583 { 584 Signals.connectData( 585 this, 586 "response", 587 cast(GCallback)&callBackResponse, 588 cast(void*)this, 589 null, 590 connectFlags); 591 connectedSignals["response"] = 1; 592 } 593 onResponseListeners ~= dlg; 594 } 595 extern(C) static void callBackResponse(GtkDialog* dialogStruct, int responseId, Dialog _dialog) 596 { 597 foreach ( void delegate(int, Dialog) dlg; _dialog.onResponseListeners ) 598 { 599 dlg(responseId, _dialog); 600 } 601 } 602 603 /** 604 * Returns %TRUE if dialogs are expected to use an alternative 605 * button order on the screen @screen. See 606 * gtk_dialog_set_alternative_button_order() for more details 607 * about alternative button order. 608 * 609 * If you need to use this function, you should probably connect 610 * to the ::notify:gtk-alternative-button-order signal on the 611 * #GtkSettings object associated to @screen, in order to be 612 * notified if the button order setting changes. 613 * 614 * Deprecated: Deprecated 615 * 616 * Params: 617 * screen = a #GdkScreen, or %NULL to use the default screen 618 * 619 * Return: Whether the alternative button order should be used 620 * 621 * Since: 2.6 622 */ 623 public static bool alternativeDialogButtonOrder(Screen screen) 624 { 625 return gtk_alternative_dialog_button_order((screen is null) ? null : screen.getScreenStruct()) != 0; 626 } 627 }