📄 text_widget.sgml
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<refentry id="TextWidget" revision="18 Oct 2000"><refmeta><refentrytitle>Text Widget Overview</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum><refmiscinfo>GTK Library</refmiscinfo></refmeta><refnamediv><refname>Text Widget Overview</refname><refpurpose>Overview of GtkTextBuffer, GtkTextView, and friends</refpurpose></refnamediv><refsect1><title>Conceptual Overview</title><para>GTK+ has an extremely powerful framework for multiline text editing. Theprimary objects involved in the process are #GtkTextBuffer, which represents the text being edited, and #GtkTextView, a widget which can display a #GtkTextBuffer. Each buffer can be displayed by any number of views.</para><para>One of the important things to remember about text in GTK+ is that it's in theUTF-8 encoding. This means that one character can be encoded as multiplebytes. Character counts are usually referred to as<firstterm>offsets</firstterm>, while byte counts are called<firstterm>indexes</firstterm>. If you confuse these two, things will work finewith ASCII, but as soon as your buffer contains multibyte characters, bad things will happen.</para><para>Text in a buffer can be marked with <firstterm>tags</firstterm>. A tag is anattribute that can be applied to some range of text. For example, a tag might be called "bold" and make the text inside the tag bold. However, the tagconcept is more general than that; tags don't have to affect appearance. They can instead affect the behavior of mouse and key presses, "lock" a range of text so the user can't edit it, or countless other things. A tag is represented by a #GtkTextTag object. One #GtkTextTag can be applied to any number of text ranges in any number of buffers.</para><para>Each tag is stored in a #GtkTextTagTable. A tag table defines a set oftags that can be used together. Each buffer has one tag table associated withit; only tags from that tag table can be used with the buffer. A single tagtable can be shared between multiple buffers, however.</para><para>Tags can have names, which is convenient sometimes (for example, you can nameyour tag that makes things bold "bold"), but they can also be anonymous (whichis convenient if you're creating tags on-the-fly).</para><para>Most text manipulation is accomplished with <firstterm>iterators</firstterm>,represented by a #GtkTextIter. An iterator represents a position between two characters in the text buffer. #GtkTextIter is a struct designed to be allocated on the stack; it's guaranteed to be copiable by value and never contain any heap-allocated data. Iterators are not valid indefinitely; whenever the buffer is modified in a way that affects the number of characters in the buffer, all outstanding iterators become invalid. (Note that deleting 5 characters and then reinserting 5 still invalidates iterators, though you end up with the same number of characters you pass through a state with a different number).</para><para>Because of this, iterators can't be used to preserve positions across buffermodifications. To preserve a position, the #GtkTextMark object is ideal. Youcan think of a mark as an invisible cursor or insertion point; it floats in the buffer, saving a position. If the text surrounding the mark is deleted, the mark remains in the position the text once occupied; if text is inserted at the mark, the mark ends up either to the left or to the right of the new text, depending on its <firstterm>gravity</firstterm>. The standard text cursor in left-to-right languages is a mark with right gravity, because it stays to the right of inserted text.</para><para>Like tags, marks can be either named or anonymous. There are two marks built-into #GtkTextBuffer; these are named <literal>"insert"</literal> and <literal>"selection_bound"</literal> and refer to the insertion point and the boundary of the selection which is not the insertion point, respectively. If no text is selected, these two marks will be in the same position. You can manipulate what is selected and where the cursor appears by moving these marks around.<footnote><para>If you want to place the cursor in response to a user action, be sure to usegtk_text_buffer_place_cursor(), which moves both at once without causing a temporary selection (moving one then the other temporarily selects the range in between the old and new positions).</para></footnote></para><para>Text buffers always contain at least one line, but may be empty (thatis, buffers can contain zero characters). The last line in the textbuffer never ends in a line separator (such as newline); the otherlines in the buffer always end in a line separator. Line separatorscount as characters when computing character counts and characteroffsets. Note that some Unicode line separators are represented with multiple bytes in UTF-8, and the two-character sequence "\r\n" is alsoconsidered a line separator.</para></refsect1><refsect1><title>Simple Example</title><para>The simplest usage of #GtkTextView might look like this:<informalexample><programlisting> GtkWidget *view; GtkTextBuffer *buffer; view = gtk_text_view_new (<!-- -->); buffer = gtk_text_view_get_buffer (GTK_TEXT_VIEW (view)); gtk_text_buffer_set_text (buffer, "Hello, this is some text", -1); /* Now you might put the view in a container and display it on the * screen; when the user edits the text, signals on the buffer * will be emitted, such as "changed", "insert_text", and so on. */</programlisting></informalexample>In many cases it's also convenient to first create the buffer with gtk_text_buffer_new(), then create a widget for that buffer with gtk_text_view_new_with_buffer(). Or you can change the buffer the widget displays after the widget is created with gtk_text_view_set_buffer().</para></refsect1><refsect1><title>Example of Changing Text Attributes</title><para>There are two ways to affect text attributes in #GtkTextView.You can change the default attributes for a given #GtkTextView, and you can apply tags that change the attributes for a region of text. For text features that come from the theme — such as font and foreground color — use standard #GtkWidget functions such as gtk_widget_modify_font() or gtk_widget_modify_text(). For other attributes there are dedicated methods on #GtkTextView such as gtk_text_view_set_tabs().<informalexample><programlisting> GtkWidget *view; GtkTextBuffer *buffer; GtkTextIter start, end; PangoFontDescription *font_desc; GdkColor color; GtkTextTag *tag; view = gtk_text_view_new (<!-- -->); buffer = gtk_text_view_get_buffer (GTK_TEXT_VIEW (view)); gtk_text_buffer_set_text (buffer, "Hello, this is some text", -1); /* Change default font throughout the widget */ font_desc = pango_font_description_from_string ("Serif 15"); gtk_widget_modify_font (view, font_desc); pango_font_description_free (font_desc); /* Change default color throughout the widget */ gdk_color_parse ("green", &color); gtk_widget_modify_text (view, GTK_STATE_NORMAL, &color); /* Change left margin throughout the widget */ gtk_text_view_set_left_margin (GTK_TEXT_VIEW (view), 30); /* Use a tag to change the color for just one part of the widget */ tag = gtk_text_buffer_create_tag (buffer, "blue_foreground", "foreground", "blue", NULL); gtk_text_buffer_get_iter_at_offset (buffer, &start, 7); gtk_text_buffer_get_iter_at_offset (buffer, &end, 12); gtk_text_buffer_apply_tag (buffer, tag, &start, &end);</programlisting></informalexample></para><para>The <application>gtk-demo</application> application that comes withGTK+ contains more example code for #GtkTextView.</para></refsect1></refentry>
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