Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class.
Creates a #GtkSearchBar. You will need to tell it about which widget is going to be your text entry using gtk_search_bar_connect_entry().
Connects the #GtkEntry widget passed as the one to be used in this search bar. The entry should be a descendant of the search bar. This is only required if the entry isn’t the direct child of the search bar (as in our main example).
Get the main Gtk struct
Returns whether the search mode is on or off.
Returns whether the close button is shown.
the main Gtk struct as a void*
This function should be called when the top-level window which contains the search bar received a key event.
Switches the search mode on or off.
Shows or hides the close button. Applications that already have a “search” toggle button should not show a close button in their search bar, as it duplicates the role of the toggle button.
the main Gtk struct
the main Gtk struct
Get the main Gtk struct
the main Gtk struct as a void*
Gets the child of the #GtkBin, or %NULL if the bin contains no child widget. The returned widget does not have a reference added, so you do not need to unref it.
#GtkSearchBar is a container made to have a search entry (possibly with additional connex widgets, such as drop-down menus, or buttons) built-in. The search bar would appear when a search is started through typing on the keyboard, or the application’s search mode is toggled on.
For keyboard presses to start a search, events will need to be forwarded from the top-level window that contains the search bar. See gtk_search_bar_handle_event() for example code. Common shortcuts such as Ctrl+F should be handled as an application action, or through the menu items.
You will also need to tell the search bar about which entry you are using as your search entry using gtk_search_bar_connect_entry(). The following example shows you how to create a more complex search entry.
CSS nodes
GtkSearchBar has a single CSS node with name searchbar.
Creating a search bar
A simple example