Chapter 15. Widgets Without X-Windows

Table of Contents

Some Widgets do not have an associated X-Window, so they therefore do not receive X events. This means that the signals described in the X event signals section will not be emitted. If you want to capture events for these widgets you can use a special container called Gtk::EventBox, which is described in the EventBox section.

Here is a list of some of these Widgets:

Gtk::Alignment (deprecated from gtkmm version 3.14)
Gtk::Arrow (deprecated from gtkmm version 3.14)
Gtk::AspectFrame
Gtk::Bin
Gtk::Box
Gtk::Button
Gtk::CheckButton
Gtk::Fixed
Gtk::Frame
Gtk::Grid
Gtk::Image
Gtk::Label
Gtk::MenuItem
Gtk::Notebook
Gtk::Paned
Gtk::RadioButton
Gtk::Range
Gtk::ScrolledWindow
Gtk::Separator
Gtk::Table (deprecated from gtkmm version 3.4)
Gtk::Toolbar

These widgets are mainly used for decoration or layout, so you won't often need to capture events on them. They are intended to have no X-Window in order to improve performance.

EventBox

Some gtkmm widgets don't have associated X windows; they draw on their parents' windows. Because of this, they cannot receive events. Also, if they are incorrectly sized, they don't clip, so you can get messy overwriting etc. To receive events on one of these widgets, you can place it inside an EventBox widget and then call Gtk::Widget::set_events() on the EventBox before showing it.

Although the name EventBox emphasises the event-handling method, the widget can also be used for clipping (and more; see the example below).

The constructor for Gtk::EventBox is:

Gtk::EventBox();

A child widget can be added to the EventBox using:

event_box.add(child_widget);

Reference

Example

The following example demonstrates both uses of an EventBox - a label is created that is clipped to a small box, and set up so that a mouse-click on the label causes the program to exit. Resizing the window reveals varying amounts of the label.

Figure 15.1. EventBox

EventBox

Source Code

File: examplewindow.h (For use with gtkmm 3, not gtkmm 2)

#ifndef GTKMM_EXAMPLEWINDOW_H
#define GTKMM_EXAMPLEWINDOW_H

#include <gtkmm.h>

class ExampleWindow : public Gtk::Window
{
public:
  ExampleWindow();
  virtual ~ExampleWindow();

protected:
  //Signal handlers:
  bool on_eventbox_button_press(GdkEventButton* button_event);

  //Child widgets:
  Gtk::EventBox m_EventBox;
  Gtk::Label m_Label;
};

#endif //GTKMM_EXAMPLEWINDOW_H

File: main.cc (For use with gtkmm 3, not gtkmm 2)

#include "examplewindow.h"
#include <gtkmm/application.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
  auto app = Gtk::Application::create(argc, argv, "org.gtkmm.example");

  ExampleWindow window;

  //Shows the window and returns when it is closed.
  return app->run(window);
}

File: examplewindow.cc (For use with gtkmm 3, not gtkmm 2)

#include "examplewindow.h"

ExampleWindow::ExampleWindow()
: m_Label("Click here to quit, quit, quit, quit, quit")
{
  set_title ("EventBox");
  set_border_width(10);

  add(m_EventBox);

  m_EventBox.add(m_Label);

  //Clip the label short:
  set_default_size(110, 20);
  m_Label.set_size_request(110, 20);
  m_Label.set_ellipsize(Pango::ELLIPSIZE_END);

  //And bind an action to it:
  m_EventBox.set_events(Gdk::BUTTON_PRESS_MASK);
  m_EventBox.signal_button_press_event().connect(
    sigc::mem_fun(*this, &ExampleWindow::on_eventbox_button_press) );

  m_EventBox.set_tooltip_text("Click me!");

  show_all_children();
}

ExampleWindow::~ExampleWindow()
{
}

bool ExampleWindow::on_eventbox_button_press(GdkEventButton*)
{
  hide();
  return true;
}