The element containing this element.
The interface containing this element.
Specifies that the element should accept input.
An object used for lookup of help. Default value t
.
A string designator.
Specifies constraints (geometry hints) that apply to the element during the creation of the element's interface, but not after the interface is displayed.
The following initargs are geometry hints, influencing the initial size and position of an element and constraining its size:
The x position of the element in a pinboard.
The y position of the element in a pinboard.
The minimum width of the element in its parent.
The minimum height of the element in its parent.
The maximum width of the element in its parent.
The maximum height of the element in its parent.
The minimum visible width of the element.
The minimum visible height of the element.
The maximum visible width of the element.
The maximum height of the element.
The minimum width of the display region.
The minimum height of the display region.
The class element
contains the slots
parent
and
interface
which contain the element and the interface that the element is contained in respectively. The writer method element-parent
can be used to re-parent an element into another parent (or to remove it from a container entirely by setting its parent to nil
). Note that an element should not be used in more than one place at a time.
The initarg
accepts-focus-p
specifies that the element can accept input. The default value is t
. In some subclasses including display-pane and title-pane the default value of
accepts-focus-p
is nil
. A pane accepts the input focus if and only if the function accepts-focus-p returns true.
accepts-focus-p
also influences whether a pane is a tabstop on Microsoft Windows, where a pane acts as a tabstop if and only if the function accepts-focus-p returns true and the :accepts-focus-p
initarg value is :force
. On Motif and Cocoa, a pane acts as a tabstop if and only if the function accepts-focus-p returns true.
help-key
is used to determine how help is displayed for the pane. The value nil
means that no help is displayed. Otherwise,
help-key
is passed to the
help-callback
, except when
help-key
is t
, when the name of the pane is passed to the
help-callback
. For details of
help-callback
, see interface.
widget-name specifies the widget name of the element. This is used to match resources on GTK+ and Motif. Note that this name will be in the path only if the element has a representation. tab-layout and pinboard-layout always have a representation, as do all elements that show anything on the screen. Other layouts may or may not have a representation and so you should not supply widget-name for these.
The actual widget name is the result of a call to cl:string
, except when
widget-name
is a symbol, in which case the symbol name is downcased to derive the widget name.
If widget-name is not supplied, the system constructs a default widget name which is the name of the class of the widget (downcased), except for top level interfaces on GTK+ where the application-class is prepended followed by a dot.
Example GTK+ resource files are in lib/7-1-0-0/examples/gtk/
Note: When widget-name is supplied, the GTK+ library does not prepend the application-class .
The accessor element-widget-name
gets and (with setf
) sets the
widget-name
.
widget-name
is used when the widget is created, that is when display is called on the top level interface of the element. Setting
widget-name
afterwards has no effect.
All elements accept initargs (listed above) representing hints as to the initial size and position of the element. By default elements have a minimum pixel size of one by one, and a maximum size of nil
(meaning no maximum), but the hints can be specified to change these values. For the detailed interpretation of, and possible values for, these hints see Width and height hints.
:text-height
as the default value of :visible-min-height
, ensuring that the text is visible.nil
is used in the ratios then the associated pane(s) will be fixed at their minimum size.(capi:display (make-instance 'capi:interface
:title "Test"
:visible-min-width 300))
(capi:display (make-instance 'capi:interface
:title "Test"
:visible-min-width 300
:visible-max-height 200))
Here is a simple example that demonstrates the use of the element-parent
accessor to place elements.
(setq pinboard (capi:contain
(make-instance
'capi:pinboard-layout)
:visible-min-width 520
:visible-min-height 395))
(setq object
(make-instance
'capi:image-pinboard-object
:x 10 :y 10
:image
(example-file "capi/graphics/Setup.bmp")
:parent pinboard))
(capi:apply-in-pane-process
pinboard #'(setf capi:element-parent) nil object)
(capi:apply-in-pane-process
pinboard #'(setf capi:element-parent) pinboard object)
These final two examples illustrate the effect of initial-constraints .
Create a pane that starts at least 600 pixels high, but can be made shorter by the user:
(capi:contain
(make-instance 'capi:output-pane
:initial-constraints '(:visible-min-height 600)))
Compare with this, which creates a pane at least 600 pixels high but which cannot be made shorter.
(capi:contain
(make-instance 'capi:output-pane
:visible-min-height 600))
set-hint-table
Focus
Hierarchy of panes
Tooltips
Matching resources for GTK+
Laying Out CAPI Panes
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Windows version) - 3 Aug 2017