Presents a window to the user. This may mean raising the window
in the stacking order, deiconifying it, moving it to the current
desktop, and/or giving it the keyboard focus, possibly dependent
on the user’s platform, window manager, and preferences.
If @window is hidden, this function calls gtk_widget_show()
as well.
This function should be used when the user tries to open a window
that’s already open. Say for example the preferences dialog is
currently open, and the user chooses Preferences from the menu
a second time; use gtk_window_present() to move the already-open dialog
where the user can see it.
If you are calling this function in response to a user interaction,
it is preferable to use gtk_window_present_with_time().
Presents a window to the user. This may mean raising the window in the stacking order, deiconifying it, moving it to the current desktop, and/or giving it the keyboard focus, possibly dependent on the user’s platform, window manager, and preferences.
If @window is hidden, this function calls gtk_widget_show() as well.
This function should be used when the user tries to open a window that’s already open. Say for example the preferences dialog is currently open, and the user chooses Preferences from the menu a second time; use gtk_window_present() to move the already-open dialog where the user can see it.
If you are calling this function in response to a user interaction, it is preferable to use gtk_window_present_with_time().