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GtkListStore * | gtk_list_store_new () |
GtkListStore * | gtk_list_store_newv () |
void | gtk_list_store_set_column_types () |
void | gtk_list_store_set () |
void | gtk_list_store_set_valist () |
void | gtk_list_store_set_value () |
void | gtk_list_store_set_valuesv () |
gboolean | gtk_list_store_remove () |
void | gtk_list_store_insert () |
void | gtk_list_store_insert_before () |
void | gtk_list_store_insert_after () |
void | gtk_list_store_insert_with_values () |
void | gtk_list_store_insert_with_valuesv () |
void | gtk_list_store_prepend () |
void | gtk_list_store_append () |
void | gtk_list_store_clear () |
gboolean | gtk_list_store_iter_is_valid () |
void | gtk_list_store_reorder () |
void | gtk_list_store_swap () |
void | gtk_list_store_move_before () |
void | gtk_list_store_move_after () |
GtkListStore implements GtkTreeModel, GtkTreeDragSource, GtkTreeDragDest, GtkTreeSortable and GtkBuildable.
The GtkListStore object is a list model for use with a GtkTreeView
widget. It implements the GtkTreeModel interface, and consequentialy,
can use all of the methods available there. It also implements the
GtkTreeSortable interface so it can be sorted by the view.
Finally, it also implements the tree
The GtkListStore can accept most GObject types as a column type, though
it can't accept all custom types. Internally, it will keep a copy of
data passed in (such as a string or a boxed pointer). Columns that
accept GObjects are handled a little differently. The
GtkListStore will keep a reference to the object instead of copying the
value. As a result, if the object is modified, it is up to the
application writer to call gtk_tree_model_row_changed
to emit the
"row_changed" signal. This most commonly affects lists with
GdkPixbufs stored.
Example 27. Creating a simple list store.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 |
enum { COLUMN_STRING, COLUMN_INT, COLUMN_BOOLEAN, N_COLUMNS }; { GtkListStore *list_store; GtkTreePath *path; GtkTreeIter iter; gint i; list_store = gtk_list_store_new (N_COLUMNS, G_TYPE_STRING, G_TYPE_INT, G_TYPE_BOOLEAN); for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) { gchar *some_data; some_data = get_some_data (i); /* Add a new row to the model */ gtk_list_store_append (list_store, &iter); gtk_list_store_set (list_store, &iter, COLUMN_STRING, some_data, COLUMN_INT, i, COLUMN_BOOLEAN, FALSE, -1); /* As the store will keep a copy of the string internally, we * free some_data. */ g_free (some_data); } /* Modify a particular row */ path = gtk_tree_path_new_from_string ("4"); gtk_tree_model_get_iter (GTK_TREE_MODEL (list_store), &iter, path); gtk_tree_path_free (path); gtk_list_store_set (list_store, &iter, COLUMN_BOOLEAN, TRUE, -1); } |
Internally, the GtkListStore was implemented with a linked list with a tail pointer prior to GTK+ 2.6. As a result, it was fast at data insertion and deletion, and not fast at random data access. The GtkListStore sets the GTK_TREE_MODEL_ITERS_PERSIST flag, which means that GtkTreeIters can be cached while the row exists. Thus, if access to a particular row is needed often and your code is expected to run on older versions of GTK+, it is worth keeping the iter around.
It is important to note that only the methods
gtk_list_store_insert_with_values()
and gtk_list_store_insert_with_valuesv()
are atomic, in the sense that the row is being appended to the store and the
values filled in in a single operation with regard to GtkTreeModel signaling.
In contrast, using e.g. gtk_list_store_append()
and then gtk_list_store_set()
will first create a row, which triggers the “row-inserted” signal
on GtkListStore. The row, however, is still empty, and any signal handler
connecting to "row-inserted" on this particular store should be prepared
for the situation that the row might be empty. This is especially important
if you are wrapping the GtkListStore inside a GtkTreeModelFilter and are
using a GtkTreeModelFilterVisibleFunc. Using any of the non-atomic operations
to append rows to the GtkListStore will cause the
GtkTreeModelFilterVisibleFunc to be visited with an empty row first; the
function must be prepared for that.
The GtkListStore implementation of the GtkBuildable interface allows to specify the model columns with a <columns> element that may contain multiple <column> elements, each specifying one model column. The "type" attribute specifies the data type for the column.
Additionally, it is possible to specify content for the list store in the UI definition, with the <data> element. It can contain multiple <row> elements, each specifying to content for one row of the list model. Inside a <row>, the <col> elements specify the content for individual cells.
Note that it is probably more common to define your models in the code, and one might consider it a layering violation to specify the content of a list store in a UI definition, data, not presentation, and common wisdom is to separate the two, as far as possible.
Example 28. A UI Definition fragment for a list store
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<object class="GtkListStore"> <columns> <column type="gchararray"/> <column type="gchararray"/> <column type="gint"/> </columns> <data> <row> <col id="0">John</col> <col id="1">Doe</col> <col id="2">25</col> </row> <row> <col id="0">Johan</col> <col id="1">Dahlin</col> <col id="2">50</col> </row> </data> </object> |
GtkListStore * gtk_list_store_new (gint n_columns
,...
);
Creates a new list store as with n_columns
columns each of the types passed
in. Note that only types derived from standard GObject fundamental types
are supported.
As an example, gtk_tree_store_new (3, G_TYPE_INT, G_TYPE_STRING,
GDK_TYPE_PIXBUF);
will create a new GtkListStore with three columns, of type
int, string and GdkPixbuf respectively.
GtkListStore * gtk_list_store_newv (gint n_columns
,GType *types
);
Non-vararg creation function. Used primarily by language bindings.
n_columns |
number of columns in the list store |
|
types |
an array of GType types for the columns, from first to last. |
[array length=n_columns] |
void gtk_list_store_set_column_types (GtkListStore *list_store
,gint n_columns
,GType *types
);
This function is meant primarily for GObjects that inherit from GtkListStore, and should only be used when constructing a new GtkListStore. It will not function after a row has been added, or a method on the GtkTreeModel interface is called.
list_store |
||
n_columns |
Number of columns for the list store |
|
types |
An array length n of GTypes. |
[array length=n_columns] |
void gtk_list_store_set (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,...
);
Sets the value of one or more cells in the row referenced by iter
.
The variable argument list should contain integer column numbers,
each column number followed by the value to be set.
The list is terminated by a -1. For example, to set column 0 with type
G_TYPE_STRING
to "Foo", you would write gtk_list_store_set (store, iter,
0, "Foo", -1)
.
The value will be referenced by the store if it is a G_TYPE_OBJECT
, and it
will be copied if it is a G_TYPE_STRING
or G_TYPE_BOXED
.
void gtk_list_store_set_valist (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,va_list var_args
);
See gtk_list_store_set()
; this version takes a va_list for use by language
bindings.
list_store |
||
iter |
A valid GtkTreeIter for the row being modified |
|
var_args |
va_list of column/value pairs |
void gtk_list_store_set_value (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,gint column
,GValue *value
);
Sets the data in the cell specified by iter
and column
.
The type of value
must be convertible to the type of the
column.
list_store |
||
iter |
A valid GtkTreeIter for the row being modified |
|
column |
column number to modify |
|
value |
new value for the cell |
void gtk_list_store_set_valuesv (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,gint *columns
,GValue *values
,gint n_values
);
A variant of gtk_list_store_set_valist()
which
takes the columns and values as two arrays, instead of
varargs. This function is mainly intended for
language-bindings and in case the number of columns to
change is not known until run-time.
list_store |
||
iter |
A valid GtkTreeIter for the row being modified |
|
columns |
an array of column numbers. |
[array length=n_values] |
values |
an array of GValues. |
[array length=n_values] |
n_values |
the length of the |
Since 2.12
gboolean gtk_list_store_remove (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
);
Removes the given row from the list store. After being removed,
iter
is set to be the next valid row, or invalidated if it pointed
to the last row in list_store
.
void gtk_list_store_insert (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,gint position
);
Creates a new row at position
. iter
will be changed to point to this new
row. If position
is larger than the number of rows on the list, then the
new row will be appended to the list. The row will be empty after this
function is called. To fill in values, you need to call
gtk_list_store_set()
or gtk_list_store_set_value()
.
list_store |
||
iter |
An unset GtkTreeIter to set to the new row. |
[out] |
position |
position to insert the new row |
void gtk_list_store_insert_before (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,GtkTreeIter *sibling
);
Inserts a new row before sibling
. If sibling
is NULL
, then the row will
be appended to the end of the list. iter
will be changed to point to this
new row. The row will be empty after this function is called. To fill in
values, you need to call gtk_list_store_set()
or gtk_list_store_set_value()
.
list_store |
||
iter |
An unset GtkTreeIter to set to the new row. |
[out] |
sibling |
A valid GtkTreeIter, or |
[allow-none] |
void gtk_list_store_insert_after (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,GtkTreeIter *sibling
);
Inserts a new row after sibling
. If sibling
is NULL
, then the row will be
prepended to the beginning of the list. iter
will be changed to point to
this new row. The row will be empty after this function is called. To fill
in values, you need to call gtk_list_store_set()
or gtk_list_store_set_value()
.
list_store |
||
iter |
An unset GtkTreeIter to set to the new row. |
[out] |
sibling |
A valid GtkTreeIter, or |
[allow-none] |
void gtk_list_store_insert_with_values (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,gint position
,...
);
Creates a new row at position
. iter
will be changed to point to this new
row. If position
is larger than the number of rows on the list, then the
new row will be appended to the list. The row will be filled with the
values given to this function.
Calling
gtk_list_store_insert_with_values(list_store, iter, position...)
has the same effect as calling
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gtk_list_store_insert (list_store, iter, position); gtk_list_store_set (list_store, iter, ...); |
with the difference that the former will only emit a row_inserted signal,
while the latter will emit row_inserted, row_changed and, if the list store
is sorted, rows_reordered. Since emitting the rows_reordered signal
repeatedly can affect the performance of the program,
gtk_list_store_insert_with_values()
should generally be preferred when
inserting rows in a sorted list store.
list_store |
||
iter |
An unset GtkTreeIter to set to the new row, or |
[out][allow-none] |
position |
position to insert the new row |
Since 2.6
void gtk_list_store_insert_with_valuesv (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,gint position
,gint *columns
,GValue *values
,gint n_values
);
A variant of gtk_list_store_insert_with_values()
which
takes the columns and values as two arrays, instead of
varargs. This function is mainly intended for
language-bindings.
list_store |
||
iter |
An unset GtkTreeIter to set to the new row, or |
[out][allow-none] |
position |
position to insert the new row |
|
columns |
an array of column numbers. |
[array length=n_values] |
values |
an array of GValues. |
[array length=n_values] |
n_values |
the length of the |
Since 2.6
void gtk_list_store_prepend (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
);
Prepends a new row to list_store
. iter
will be changed to point to this new
row. The row will be empty after this function is called. To fill in
values, you need to call gtk_list_store_set()
or gtk_list_store_set_value()
.
void gtk_list_store_append (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
);
Appends a new row to list_store
. iter
will be changed to point to this new
row. The row will be empty after this function is called. To fill in
values, you need to call gtk_list_store_set()
or gtk_list_store_set_value()
.
void
gtk_list_store_clear (GtkListStore *list_store
);
Removes all rows from the list store.
gboolean gtk_list_store_iter_is_valid (GtkListStore *list_store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
);
Checks if the given iter is a valid iter for this GtkListStore.
Since 2.2
void gtk_list_store_reorder (GtkListStore *store
,gint *new_order
);
Reorders store
to follow the order indicated by new_order
. Note that
this function only works with unsorted stores.
store |
A GtkListStore. |
|
new_order |
an array of integers mapping the new position of each child
to its old position before the re-ordering,
i.e. |
[array] |
Since 2.2
void gtk_list_store_swap (GtkListStore *store
,GtkTreeIter *a
,GtkTreeIter *b
);
Swaps a
and b
in store
. Note that this function only works with
unsorted stores.
Since 2.2
void gtk_list_store_move_before (GtkListStore *store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,GtkTreeIter *position
);
Moves iter
in store
to the position before position
. Note that this
function only works with unsorted stores. If position
is NULL
, iter
will be moved to the end of the list.
Since 2.2
void gtk_list_store_move_after (GtkListStore *store
,GtkTreeIter *iter
,GtkTreeIter *position
);
Moves iter
in store
to the position after position
. Note that this
function only works with unsorted stores. If position
is NULL
, iter
will be moved to the start of the list.
Since 2.2