The function convert-to-screen
finds the appropriate screen or container for the CAPI object
object
.
If
object
is nil
,
result
is the default screen.
object
defaults to nil
.
If
object
is a pane inside a MDI interface, then
result
is the capi:container
of the interface, rather than the real screen, because this is more useful in most cases. To obtain the real screen, call convert-to-screen
on the top level interface. See document-frame for a description of MDI interfaces.
object
can be a keyword representing the CAPI library. This is equivalent to using the :library
key in the plist case below.
object
can also be the special keyword :if-any
, which finds a screen if there is any active screen, otherwise it returns nil
.
object can be a plist. The keys below are supported on GTK+ and Motif. Other libraries ignore them.
The value is an X Window System display string describing the X display and screen to use. The default value is derived from the DISPLAY
environment variable or (on Motif) the -display
command-line option, or (on GTK+) the --display
command-line option. If neither is supplied, the default is to use the default screen on the local host.
The name of the host to use for the X Window System display. This key is valid only if no :display
key/value is supplied. The default value is the local host.
The number of the display server to use for the X Window System display. This key is valid only if no :display
key/value is supplied. The default value is 0.
The number of the screen to use for the X Window System display. This key is valid only if no :display
key/value is supplied. The default value is the default screen of the display.
The value is a string naming the application class used for X Window System resources. The default value is "Lispworks". When running a delivered LispWorks image, you should specify the :application-class
key if you want to provide application-specific resources.
On GTK+ the value is used for constructing the default
widget-name
for top-level interfaces. The application-class is prepended to the interface name followed by a ".", so if
application-class
is "my-application"
, a top-level-interface of class my-interface
will have a default
widget-name
"my-application.my-interface"
.
See element for the description of widget-name .
Example GTK+ resource files are in lib/7-1-0-0/examples/gtk/
On GTK+ the fallback resources are global, so they cannot be used to define different resources for different screens. Each call to convert-to-screen where fallback-resources is passed overrides the previous call. The value of fallback-resources is either a single string or a list of strings. In either case each string must be a complete specification according to the standard resource specification of GTK+ resource files (gtk_rc_parse_string should be able to parse it).
On Motif the value is a list of strings representing the set of application context fallback resources to use (see XtAppSetFallbackResources
). Each string corresponds to a single line of an X resource file.
The value specifies the CAPI library. This is useful on Linux, FreeBSD, AIX and x86/x64 Solaris platforms, and in the Mac OS X/GTK+ image, to choose between :gtk
and :motif
if the deprecated "capi-motif" module is loaded.
This keys is supported on Motif only. Other libraries ignore it.
The value is a list of strings representing the set of command-line arguments to pass to XtOpenDisplay
. Each string corresponds to a single argument. The default value is derived from the command line used to start Lisp.
The resources are used only when no other system resource files can be found. When running a non-delivered LispWorks image, the default value of the :fallback-resources
key is read from the file whose name is the value of the :application-class
key in the app-defaults
directory of the current LispWorks library. When running a delivered LispWorks image, you should specify the :fallback-resources
key if your application needs fallback resources.
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Windows version) - 3 Aug 2017