One type of interprocess communication supported by X and GTK is
selections. A selection identifies a chunk of data, for
instance, a portion of text, selected by the user in some fashion, for
instance, by dragging with the mouse. Only one application on a
display (the owner) can own a particular selection at one
time, so when a selection is claimed by one application, the previous
owner must indicate to the user that selection has been
relinquished. Other applications can request the contents of a
selection in different forms, called targets. There can be
any number of selections, but most X applications only handle one, the
primary selection.
In most cases, it isn't necessary for a GTK application to deal with
selections itself. The standard widgets, such as the Entry widget,
already have the capability to claim the selection when appropriate
(e.g., when the user drags over text), and to retrieve the contents of
the selection owned by another widget or another application (e.g.,
when the user clicks the second mouse button). However, there may be
cases in which you want to give other widgets the ability to supply
the selection, or you wish to retrieve targets not supported by
default.
A fundamental concept needed to understand selection handling is that
of the atom. An atom is an integer that uniquely identifies a
string (on a certain display). Certain atoms are predefined by the X
server, and in some cases there are constants in gtk.h
corresponding to these atoms. For instance the constant
GDK_PRIMARY_SELECTION corresponds to the string "PRIMARY".
In other cases, you should use the functions
gdk_atom_intern(), to get the atom corresponding to a string,
and gdk_atom_name(), to get the name of an atom. Both
selections and targets are identified by atoms.
This converts the selection into the form specified by
target. If at all possible, the time field should be the time
from the event that triggered the selection. This helps make sure that
events occur in the order that the user requested them. However, if it
is not available (for instance, if the conversion was triggered by a
"clicked" signal), then you can use the constant
GDK_CURRENT_TIME.
When the selection owner responds to the request, a
"selection_received" signal is sent to your application. The handler
for this signal receives a pointer to a GtkSelectionData
structure, which is defined as:
selection and target are the values you gave in your
gtk_selection_convert() call. type is an atom that
identifies the type of data returned by the selection owner. Some
possible values are "STRING", a string of latin-1 characters, "ATOM",
a series of atoms, "INTEGER", an integer, etc. Most targets can only
return one type. format gives the length of the units (for
instance characters) in bits. Usually, you don't care about this when
receiving data. data is a pointer to the returned data, and
length gives the length of the returned data, in bytes. If
length is negative, then an error occurred and the selection
could not be retrieved. This might happen if no application owned the
selection, or if you requested a target that the application didn't
support. The buffer is actually guaranteed to be one byte longer than
length; the extra byte will always be zero, so it isn't
necessary to make a copy of strings just to null terminate them.
In the following example, we retrieve the special target "TARGETS",
which is a list of all targets into which the selection can be
converted.
/* example-start selection gettargets.c */
#include <gtk/gtk.h>
void selection_received( GtkWidget *widget,
GtkSelectionData *selection_data,
gpointer data );
/* Signal handler invoked when user clicks on the "Get Targets" button */
void get_targets( GtkWidget *widget,
gpointer data )
{
static GdkAtom targets_atom = GDK_NONE;
/* Get the atom corresponding to the string "TARGETS" */
if (targets_atom == GDK_NONE)
targets_atom = gdk_atom_intern ("TARGETS", FALSE);
/* And request the "TARGETS" target for the primary selection */
gtk_selection_convert (widget, GDK_SELECTION_PRIMARY, targets_atom,
GDK_CURRENT_TIME);
}
/* Signal handler called when the selections owner returns the data */
void selection_received( GtkWidget *widget,
GtkSelectionData *selection_data,
gpointer data )
{
GdkAtom *atoms;
GList *item_list;
int i;
/* **** IMPORTANT **** Check to see if retrieval succeeded */
if (selection_data->length < 0)
{
g_print ("Selection retrieval failed\n");
return;
}
/* Make sure we got the data in the expected form */
if (selection_data->type != GDK_SELECTION_TYPE_ATOM)
{
g_print ("Selection \"TARGETS\" was not returned as atoms!\n");
return;
}
/* Print out the atoms we received */
atoms = (GdkAtom *)selection_data->data;
item_list = NULL;
for (i=0; i<selection_data->length/sizeof(GdkAtom); i++)
{
char *name;
name = gdk_atom_name (atoms[i]);
if (name != NULL)
g_print ("%s\n",name);
else
g_print ("(bad atom)\n");
}
return;
}
int main( int argc,
char *argv[] )
{
GtkWidget *window;
GtkWidget *button;
gtk_init (&argc, &argv);
/* Create the toplevel window */
window = gtk_window_new (GTK_WINDOW_TOPLEVEL);
gtk_window_set_title (GTK_WINDOW (window), "Event Box");
gtk_container_set_border_width (GTK_CONTAINER (window), 10);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT (window), "destroy",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (gtk_exit), NULL);
/* Create a button the user can click to get targets */
button = gtk_button_new_with_label ("Get Targets");
gtk_container_add (GTK_CONTAINER (window), button);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT(button), "clicked",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (get_targets), NULL);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT(button), "selection_received",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (selection_received), NULL);
gtk_widget_show (button);
gtk_widget_show (window);
gtk_main ();
return 0;
}
/* example-end */
Supplying the selection is a bit more complicated. You must register
handlers that will be called when your selection is requested. For
each selection/target pair you will handle, you make a call to:
widget, selection, and target identify the requests
this handler will manage. When a request for a selection is received,
the "selection_get" signal will be called. info can be used as an
enumerator to identify the specific target within the callback function.
The GtkSelectionData is the same as above, but this time, we're
responsible for filling in the fields type, format,
data, and length. (The format field is actually
important here - the X server uses it to figure out whether the data
needs to be byte-swapped or not. Usually it will be 8 - i.e. a
character - or 32 - i.e. a. integer.) This is done by calling the
function:
This function takes care of properly making a copy of the data so that
you don't have to worry about keeping it around. (You should not fill
in the fields of the GtkSelectionData structure by hand.)
When prompted by the user, you claim ownership of the selection by
calling:
gint gtk_selection_owner_set( GtkWidget *widget,
GdkAtom selection,
guint32 time );
If another application claims ownership of the selection, you will
receive a "selection_clear_event".
As an example of supplying the selection, the following program adds
selection functionality to a toggle button. When the toggle button is
depressed, the program claims the primary selection. The only target
supported (aside from certain targets like "TARGETS" supplied by GTK
itself), is the "STRING" target. When this target is requested, a
string representation of the time is returned.
/* example-start selection setselection.c */
#include <gtk/gtk.h>
#include <time.h>
/* Callback when the user toggles the selection */
void selection_toggled( GtkWidget *widget,
gint *have_selection )
{
if (GTK_TOGGLE_BUTTON(widget)->active)
{
*have_selection = gtk_selection_owner_set (widget,
GDK_SELECTION_PRIMARY,
GDK_CURRENT_TIME);
/* if claiming the selection failed, we return the button to
the out state */
if (!*have_selection)
gtk_toggle_button_set_active (GTK_TOGGLE_BUTTON(widget), FALSE);
}
else
{
if (*have_selection)
{
/* Before clearing the selection by setting the owner to NULL,
we check if we are the actual owner */
if (gdk_selection_owner_get (GDK_SELECTION_PRIMARY) == widget->window)
gtk_selection_owner_set (NULL, GDK_SELECTION_PRIMARY,
GDK_CURRENT_TIME);
*have_selection = FALSE;
}
}
}
/* Called when another application claims the selection */
gint selection_clear( GtkWidget *widget,
GdkEventSelection *event,
gint *have_selection )
{
*have_selection = FALSE;
gtk_toggle_button_set_active (GTK_TOGGLE_BUTTON(widget), FALSE);
return TRUE;
}
/* Supplies the current time as the selection. */
void selection_handle( GtkWidget *widget,
GtkSelectionData *selection_data,
guint info,
guint time_stamp,
gpointer data )
{
gchar *timestr;
time_t current_time;
current_time = time(NULL);
timestr = asctime (localtime(¤t_time));
/* When we return a single string, it should not be null terminated.
That will be done for us */
gtk_selection_data_set (selection_data, GDK_SELECTION_TYPE_STRING,
8, timestr, strlen(timestr));
}
int main( int argc,
char *argv[] )
{
GtkWidget *window;
GtkWidget *selection_button;
static int have_selection = FALSE;
gtk_init (&argc, &argv);
/* Create the toplevel window */
window = gtk_window_new (GTK_WINDOW_TOPLEVEL);
gtk_window_set_title (GTK_WINDOW (window), "Event Box");
gtk_container_set_border_width (GTK_CONTAINER (window), 10);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT (window), "destroy",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (gtk_exit), NULL);
/* Create a toggle button to act as the selection */
selection_button = gtk_toggle_button_new_with_label ("Claim Selection");
gtk_container_add (GTK_CONTAINER (window), selection_button);
gtk_widget_show (selection_button);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT(selection_button), "toggled",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (selection_toggled), &have_selection);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT(selection_button), "selection_clear_event",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (selection_clear), &have_selection);
gtk_selection_add_target (selection_button,
GDK_SELECTION_PRIMARY,
GDK_SELECTION_TYPE_STRING,
1);
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT(selection_button), "selection_get",
GTK_SIGNAL_FUNC (selection_handle), &have_selection);
gtk_widget_show (selection_button);
gtk_widget_show (window);
gtk_main ();
return 0;
}
/* example-end */