Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class.
Creates a new #GtkArrow widget.
Get the main Gtk struct
the main Gtk struct as a void*
Sets the direction and style of the #GtkArrow, @arrow.
the main Gtk struct
the main Gtk struct
Get the main Gtk struct
the main Gtk struct as a void*
Gets the X and Y alignment of the widget within its allocation. See gtk_misc_set_alignment().
Gets the padding in the X and Y directions of the widget. See gtk_misc_set_padding().
Sets the alignment of the widget.
Sets the amount of space to add around the widget.
GtkArrow should be used to draw simple arrows that need to point in one of the four cardinal directions (up, down, left, or right). The style of the arrow can be one of shadow in, shadow out, etched in, or etched out. Note that these directions and style types may be amended in versions of GTK+ to come.
GtkArrow will fill any space alloted to it, but since it is inherited from #GtkMisc, it can be padded and/or aligned, to fill exactly the space the programmer desires.
Arrows are created with a call to gtk_arrow_new(). The direction or style of an arrow can be changed after creation by using gtk_arrow_set().
GtkArrow has been deprecated; you can simply use a #GtkImage with a suitable icon name, such as “pan-down-symbolic“. When replacing GtkArrow by an image, pay attention to the fact that GtkArrow is doing automatic flipping between #GTK_ARROW_LEFT and #GTK_ARROW_RIGHT, depending on the text direction. To get the same effect with an image, use the icon names “pan-start-symbolic“ and “pan-end-symbolic“, which react to the text direction.