Variant.this
- this(GVariant* gVariant, bool ownedRef)
- this(VariantType childType, Variant[] children)
- this(bool value)
- this(char value)
- this(Variant key, Variant value)
- this(double value)
- this(VariantType elementType, void* elements, size_t nElements, size_t elementSize)
- this(VariantType type, Bytes bytes, bool trusted)
- this(VariantType type, ubyte[] data, bool trusted, GDestroyNotify notify, void* userData)
- this(short value)
- this(int value)
- this(long value)
- this(VariantType childType, Variant child)
- this(string format, void** app)
- this(string string_)
- this(string[] strv)
- this(Variant[] children)
- this(ushort value)
- this(uint value)
- this(ulong value)
- this(string formatString, string[] endptr, void** app)
- this(Variant value)
glib Variant Variant
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This function is intended to be used by libraries based on #GVariant that want to provide g_variant_new()-like functionality to their users.
The API is more general than g_variant_new() to allow a wider range of possible uses.
@format_string must still point to a valid format string, but it only needs to be nul-terminated if @endptr is %NULL. If @endptr is non-%NULL then it is updated to point to the first character past the end of the format string.
@app is a pointer to a #va_list. The arguments, according to @format_string, are collected from this #va_list and the list is left pointing to the argument following the last.
Note that the arguments in @app must be of the correct width for their types specified in @format_string when collected into the #va_list. See the [GVariant varargs documentation][gvariant-varargs].
These two generalisations allow mixing of multiple calls to g_variant_new_va() and g_variant_get_va() within a single actual varargs call by the user.
The return value will be floating if it was a newly created GVariant instance (for example, if the format string was "(ii)"). In the case that the format_string was '*', '?', 'r', or a format starting with '@' then the collected #GVariant pointer will be returned unmodified, without adding any additional references.
In order to behave correctly in all cases it is necessary for the calling function to g_variant_ref_sink() the return result before returning control to the user that originally provided the pointer. At this point, the caller will have their own full reference to the result. This can also be done by adding the result to a container, or by passing it to another g_variant_new() call.