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livetrax/libs/gtkmm2/gtk/gtkmm/main.h
Carl Hetherington 61c990dfba Upgrade gtkmm to 2.10.8, glibmm to 2.13.3 and add cairomm 1.2.4
git-svn-id: svn://localhost/ardour2/trunk@2630 d708f5d6-7413-0410-9779-e7cbd77b26cf
2007-11-12 23:44:49 +00:00

286 lines
9.5 KiB
C++

// -*- c++ -*-
// Generated by gtkmmproc -- DO NOT MODIFY!
#ifndef _GTKMM_MAIN_H
#define _GTKMM_MAIN_H
#include <glibmm.h>
/* $Id$ */
/* main.h
*
* Copyright (C) 1998-2003 The gtkmm Development Team
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Library General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free
* Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#include <gtk/gtkmain.h>
#include <sigc++/sigc++.h>
#include <gdkmm/types.h>
namespace Gtk
{
class Widget;
class Window;
//**********************************************************************
#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS
//Actually, I'd like to just keep these out of the alphabetical list. murrayc.
/// Run Signal Class (internal)
class RunSig
{
public:
typedef sigc::slot<void> SlotType;
sigc::connection connect(const SlotType& slot);
protected:
static gboolean gtk_callback(gpointer data);
};
/// Quit Signal Class (internal)
class QuitSig
{
public:
typedef sigc::slot<bool> SlotType;
sigc::connection connect(const SlotType& slot, guint main_level = 0);
protected:
static gboolean gtk_callback(gpointer data); //gtk+ calls this, which then calls our slot.
};
/// KeySnooper Signal Class (internal)
class KeySnooperSig
{
public:
typedef sigc::slot<int, Widget*, GdkEventKey*> SlotType;
sigc::connection connect(const SlotType& slot);
protected:
static int gtk_callback(GtkWidget* widget, GdkEventKey* event, gpointer data);
};
#endif /* DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS */
//**********************************************************************
/** Main application class
* Every application must have one of these objects.
* It may not be global and must be the first Gtk object created.
* It is a singleton so declaring more than one will simply access the first
* created.
*
* Normal use of this class is in the main() function to give argc and argv
* to the gtk initialization. Widgets can use Gtk::Main::quit()
* to exit from the application.
*
* The internals of the widget have been disguised as signals
* so that the user can easily connect using the same methods
* used throughout the widget interface.
*
* Minimal gtkmm application is something like this:
* @code
* int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
* Gtk::Main kit(argc, argv);
* ... create some widgets ...
* kit.run();
* }
* @endcode
*/
class Main : public sigc::trackable
{
public:
//This offers the same functionality as gtk_init_with_args():
/** Scans the argument vector, and strips off all parameters parsed by GTK+ or your @a option_context.
* Add a Glib::OptionGroup to the Glib::OptionContext to parse your own command-line arguments.
*
* Note: The argument strings themself won't be modified, although the
* pointers to them might change. This makes it possible to create your
* own argv of string literals, which have the type 'const char[]' in
* standard C++. (You might need to use const_cast<>, though.)
*
* This function automatically generates nicely formatted
* <option>--help</option> output. Note that your program will
* be terminated after writing out the help output.
*
* @param argc a reference to the number of command line arguments.
* @param argv a reference to the array of command line arguments.
* @parameter_string a string which is displayed in the first line of <option>--help</option> output,
* after <literal><replaceable>programname</replaceable> [OPTION...]</literal>
* @param option_context A Glib::OptionContext containing Glib::OptionGroups which described the command-line arguments taken by your program.
*
* @throw Glib::OptionError
*/
Main(int& argc, char**& argv, Glib::OptionContext& option_context);
/** Scans the argument vector, and strips off all parameters known to GTK+.
* Your application may then handle the remaining arguments.
*
* Note: The argument strings themself won't be modified, although the
* pointers to them might change. This makes it possible to create your
* own argv of string literals, which have the type 'const char[]' in
* standard C++. (You might need to use const_cast<>, though.)
*/
Main(int* argc, char*** argv, bool set_locale = true);
/// See Main(int* argc, char*** argv, bool set_locale).
Main(int& argc, char**& argv, bool set_locale = true);
virtual ~Main();
/// Access to the one global instance of Gtk::Main.
static Gtk::Main* instance();
/** Start the event loop.
* This begins the event loop which handles events. No
* events propagate until this has been called. It may be
* called recursively to popup dialogs
*/
static void run();
/** Returns from the main loop when the window is closed.
* When using this override, you should not use Gtk::Main::quit() to close
* the application, but just call hide() on your Window class.
*
* @param window The window to show. This method will return when the window is hidden.
*/
static void run(Window& window);
/** Makes the innermost invocation of the main loop return when it regains control.
*/
static void quit();
static guint level();
//This attempts to provide the same functionality as gtk_get_option_group():
/** Add a Glib::OptionGroup, for the commandline arguments recognized
* by GTK+ and GDK, to a Glib::OptionContext, so that these commandline arguments will
* be processed in addition to the existing commandline arguments specified by the Glib::OptionContext.
*
* You do not need to use this method if you pass your Glib::OptionContext to the Main constructor, because
* it adds the gtk option group automatically.
*
* @param option_context Option Context to which the group will be added.
* @param open_default_display Whether to open the default display when parsing the commandline arguments.
*/
static void add_gtk_option_group(Glib::OptionContext& option_context, bool open_default_display = true);
/** Runs a single iteration of the main loop.
* If no events are waiting to be processed GTK+ will block until the next event is noticed.
* If you don't want to block then pass false for @a blocking or check if any events are pending with
* pending() first.
*
* @param blocking Whether the caller must wait until the next event is noticed, or return immediately if there are no events.
* @result true if quit() has been called for the innermost main loop.
*/
static bool iteration(bool blocking = true);
/** Checks if any events are pending. This can be used to update the GUI and invoke timeouts etc. while doing some time intensive computation.
*
* Example: Updating the GUI during a long computation.
* @code
* // computation going on
* while( Gtk::Main::events_pending() )
* Gtk::Main::iteration();
*
* // computation continued
* @endcode
*
* @result true if any events are pending, false otherwise.
*/
static bool events_pending();
/** Run signal
* @return void
*/
static RunSig& signal_run();
/** Quit signal
* You can connect signal handlers to invoke actions when Gtk::Main::quit()
* has been called. Note that main loops can be nested by calling
* Gtk::Main::run() recursively, therefore receiving this signal doesn't
* necessarily mean the application is about to be terminated. If you want
* to receive a signal only when the last main loop quits, call connect()
* with <tt>main_level&nbsp;=&nbsp;1</tt>.
* @code
* bool thisclass::mymethod() { return false; }
* Gtk::Main::signal_quit().connect(sigc::mem_fun(this, &thisclass::mymethod));
* @endcode
* @return bool - @c false means callback is removed, @c true means
* it'll be called again the next the main loop quits.
*/
static QuitSig& signal_quit();
/** KeySnooper signal
* Allows you to channel keypresses to a signal handler
* without registering with the widget.
*
* @return KeySnooperSig A Signal to which you can connect a sigc::slot< int, Widget *, GdkEventKey * >
*
* It is the responsibility of the snooper to pass the keypress
* to the widget, however, care must be taken that the keypress is
* not passed twice.
*/
static KeySnooperSig& signal_key_snooper();
// Initialize table of wrap_new functions.
// Doesn't need an instance of Gtk::Main.
static void init_gtkmm_internals();
protected:
Main();
void init(int* argc, char*** argv, bool set_locale);
// TODO: implement this to use the new Glib::OptionEntry argument parsing classes.
//void init(int* argc, char*** argv, const std::string& parameter_string, const Glib::ArrayHandle<const Glib::OptionEntry&>& entries, const std::string& translation_domain);
virtual void run_impl();
virtual void quit_impl();
virtual guint level_impl();
virtual bool iteration_impl(bool blocking);
virtual bool events_pending_impl();
// Signal handlers:
virtual void on_window_hide();
// Signal proxies:
static RunSig signal_run_;
static QuitSig signal_quit_;
static KeySnooperSig signal_key_snooper_;
private:
static Main* instance_;
};
} // namespace Gtk
#endif /* _GTKMM_MAIN_H */