The Geometry struct gives the window manager information about a window’s geometry constraints.
Normally you would set these on the GTK+ level using gtk_window_set_geometry_hints
. GtkWindow
then sets the
hints on the Window it creates.
set_geometry_hints expects the hints to be fully valid already and simply
passes them to the window manager; in contrast, gtk_window_set_geometry_hints
performs some interpretation. For example,
GtkWindow
will apply the hints to the geometry widget instead of the toplevel window, if you set a geometry widget. Also, the
min_width
/min_height
/max_width
/max_height
fields may be set to -1, and
GtkWindow
will substitute the size request of the window or geometry widget. If the minimum size hint is not provided,
GtkWindow
will use its requisition as the minimum size. If the minimum size is provided and a geometry widget is set,
GtkWindow
will take the minimum size as the minimum size of the geometry widget rather than the entire window. The base size is
treated similarly.
The canonical use-case for gtk_window_set_geometry_hints
is to get a terminal widget to resize properly. Here, the terminal
text area should be the geometry widget; GtkWindow
will then automatically set the base size to the size of other widgets in
the terminal window, such as the menubar and scrollbar. Then, the width_inc
and height_inc
fields should be set
to the size of one character in the terminal. Finally, the base size should be set to the size of one character. The net effect is that
the minimum size of the terminal will have a 1x1 character terminal area, and only terminal sizes on the “character grid” will be
allowed.
Here’s an example of how the terminal example would be implemented, assuming a terminal area widget called “terminal” and a toplevel window “toplevel”:
GdkGeometry hints;
hints.base_width = terminal->char_width;
hints.base_height = terminal->char_height;
hints.min_width = terminal->char_width;
hints.min_height = terminal->char_height;
hints.width_inc = terminal->char_width;
hints.height_inc = terminal->char_height;
gtk_window_set_geometry_hints (GTK_WINDOW (toplevel),
GTK_WIDGET (terminal),
&hints,
GDK_HINT_RESIZE_INC |
GDK_HINT_MIN_SIZE |
GDK_HINT_BASE_SIZE);
The other useful fields are the min_aspect
and max_aspect
fields; these contain a width/height ratio as a
floating point number. If a geometry widget is set, the aspect applies to the geometry widget rather than the entire window. The most
common use of these hints is probably to set min_aspect
and max_aspect
to the same value, thus forcing the
window to keep a constant aspect ratio.