Sophie

Sophie

distrib > Mandriva > 2009.1 > x86_64 > media > main-testing > by-pkgid > 2292bb029a6b72bf3992f7f601b8fa3b > files > 2066

fpc-2.2.4-1.1mdv2009.1.x86_64.rpm

program helloworld2;

{$mode objfpc} {$H+}

uses
  Glib2, Gdk2, Gtk2;


(* Our new improved callback.  The data passed to this function
 * is printed to stdout. *)
procedure callback (widget : PGtkWidget;
                    data   : gpointer); cdecl;
begin
  writeln ('Hello again - ', Pgchar (data), ' was pressed');
end;


(* another callback *)
function delete_event (widget: PGtkWidget;
                       event : PGdkEvent;
                       data  : gpointer): gboolean; cdecl;
begin
  gtk_main_quit;
  delete_event := FALSE;
end;


var
  window,
  button,
  box1     : PGtkWidget;      (* GtkWidget is the storage type for widgets *)

begin

    (* This is called in all GTK applications. Arguments are parsed
     * from the command line and are returned to the application. *)

    gtk_init (@argc, @argv);

    (* Create a new window *)
    window := gtk_window_new (GTK_WINDOW_TOPLEVEL);

    (* This is a new call, which just sets the title of our
     * new window to "Hello Buttons!" *)
    gtk_window_set_title (GTK_WINDOW (window), 'Hello Buttons!');

    (* Here we just set a handler for delete_event that immediately
     * exits GTK. *)
    g_signal_connect (G_OBJECT (window), 'delete_event',
                              G_CALLBACK (@delete_event), NULL);

    (* Sets the border width of the window. *)
    gtk_container_set_border_width (GTK_CONTAINER (window), 10);

    (* We create a box to pack widgets into.  This is described in detail
     * in the "packing" section. The box is not really visible, it
     * is just used as a tool to arrange widgets. *)
    box1 := gtk_hbox_new (FALSE, 0);

    (* Put the box into the main window. *)
    gtk_container_add (GTK_CONTAINER (window), box1);

    (* Creates a new button with the label "Button 1". *)
    button := gtk_button_new_with_label ('Button 1');

    (* Now when the button is clicked, we call the "callback" function
     * with a pointer to "button 1" as its argument *)
    g_signal_connect (G_OBJECT (button), 'clicked',
                              G_CALLBACK (@callback), PChar('button 1'));

    (* Instead of gtk_container_add, we pack this button into the invisible
     * box, which has been packed into the window. *)
    gtk_box_pack_start (GTK_BOX(box1), button, TRUE, TRUE, 0);

    (* Always remember this step, this tells GTK that our preparation for
     * this button is complete, and it can now be displayed. *)
    gtk_widget_show (button);

    (* Do these same steps again to create a second button *)
    button := gtk_button_new_with_label ('Button 2');

    (* Call the same callback function with a different argument,
     * passing a pointer to "button 2" instead. *)
    g_signal_connect (G_OBJECT (button), 'clicked',
                              G_CALLBACK (@callback), PChar('button 2'));

    gtk_box_pack_start(GTK_BOX (box1), button, TRUE, TRUE, 0);

    (* The order in which we show the buttons is not really important, but I
     * recommend showing the window last, so it all pops up at once. *)
    gtk_widget_show (button);

    gtk_widget_show (box1);

    gtk_widget_show (window);

    (* Rest in gtk_main and wait for the fun to begin! *)
    gtk_main ();
end.