Creating New ItemsCreating New Items — how to create new canvas items. |
There are 3 ways to create new canvas items, listed here in increasing order of complexity:
These will be discussed in turn below. (It is also possible to create new container items by subclassing GooCanvasGroup, but that is not covered here.)
The final part of this section covers creating item models.
For items that consist of a simple graphic element such
as a line, rectangle or circle, it is possible to create a subclass
of GooCanvasItemSimple and override just one method,
simple_create_path()
. (This method is used for the GooCanvasEllipse
and GooCanvasPath items.)
The simple_create_path()
method should create a path using the given
cairo context. The path will be drawn using the stroke, fill and
other painting properties from GooCanvasItemSimple.
This example shows the simple_create_path()
method for a simple
rectangular item, MyItem:
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static void my_item_simple_create_path (GooCanvasItemSimple *simple, cairo_t *cr) { MyItem *item = (MyItem*) simple; cairo_rectangle (cr, item->x, item->y, item->width, item->height); } |
Whenever the item is changed in some way it should call
goo_canvas_item_simple_changed()
, passing a boolean value indicating
whether the item's bounds need to be recalculated or if it only needs
to be repainted. The GooCanvasItemSimple code will take care of
updating the item and repainting the appropriate parts of the canvas.
Most items will need more than a simple line or rectangle, so they
will need to create a subclass of GooCanvasItemSimple and override
three methods, simple_update()
, simple_paint()
and simple_is_item_at()
.
The simple_update()
method should compute the bounds of the item, in the
item's coordinate space, and place them in the bounds member of
GooCanvasItemSimple. Note that the cairo context passed to
this function may have transformations applied to it, so
cairo_identity_matrix()
should be called before using it.
The simple_paint()
method should paint the item using the given cairo
context. To use the stroke and fill properties from GooCanvasItemSimple
to paint parts of the item call goo_canvas_style_set_stroke_options()
and goo_canvas_style_set_fill_options()
before calling cairo_stroke()
and cairo_fill()
. (The item's style can be found in
GOO_CANVAS_ITEM_SIMPLE (item)->simple_data->style).
The simple_is_item_at()
method should return TRUE
if the
given coordinate (in the item's coordinate space) is inside the item.
(The is_pointer_event argument can be ignored for most purposes since
the GooCanvasItemSimple code will take care of it.)
This example code shows the simple_update()
, simple_paint()
and
simple_is_item_at()
methods for a rectangular item (the complete
item's source code can be found in the GooCanvas demo directory, in
demo-item.h and demo-item.c):
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static void goo_demo_item_update (GooCanvasItemSimple *simple, cairo_t *cr) { GooDemoItem *demo_item = (GooDemoItem*) simple; /* Compute the new bounds. */ simple->bounds.x1 = demo_item->x; simple->bounds.y1 = demo_item->y; simple->bounds.x2 = demo_item->x + demo_item->width; simple->bounds.y2 = demo_item->y + demo_item->height; } static void goo_demo_item_paint (GooCanvasItemSimple *simple, cairo_t *cr, const GooCanvasBounds *bounds) { GooDemoItem *demo_item = (GooDemoItem*) simple; cairo_move_to (cr, demo_item->x, demo_item->y); cairo_line_to (cr, demo_item->x, demo_item->y + demo_item->height); cairo_line_to (cr, demo_item->x + demo_item->width, demo_item->y + demo_item->height); cairo_line_to (cr, demo_item->x + demo_item->width, demo_item->y); cairo_close_path (cr); goo_canvas_style_set_fill_options (simple->simple_data->style, cr); cairo_fill (cr); } static gboolean goo_demo_item_is_item_at (GooCanvasItemSimple *simple, gdouble x, gdouble y, cairo_t *cr, gboolean is_pointer_event) { GooDemoItem *demo_item = (GooDemoItem*) simple; if (x < demo_item->x || (x > demo_item->x + demo_item->width) || y < demo_item->y || (y > demo_item->y + demo_item->height)) return FALSE; return TRUE; } |
As with the simple GooCanvasItemSimple subclass, the item should
call goo_canvas_item_simple_changed()
whenever it is changed, to
ensure that the item's bounds are recomputed and it is repainted
if necessary.
The most complicated way to create new canvas items is to implement the GooCanvasItem interface directly. This should not be needed in most cases, but may be desired if the developer wants to avoid the memory and processor overheads associated with the GooCanvasItemSimple class, or if the developer wants to turn an existing application object into a canvas item.
At a minimum the canvas item must implement these 6 methods:
get_parent()
- the item's parent should be returned.
set_parent()
- the item's parent should be stored (though it
should not add a reference to the parent).
get_bounds()
- returns the bounds of the item, in canvas space.
The item should ensure that the bounds are up-to-date before
returning them, calling goo_canvas_item_ensure_updated()
if
necessary.
update()
- if the item has been changed since the last update,
or if the entire_tree flag is TRUE
, the item's bounds should
be recomputed (in canvas space). It should also request a redraw
of the old bounds and the new bounds, so the display is updated
appropriately. The new bounds should be returned in the bounds
argument.
paint()
- if the item's bounds intersect the given bounds then
the item should be painted on the given cairo context.
The scale parameter is only used to check if the item should be
visible, according to the item's “visibility” and
“visibility-threshold” property settings.
get_items_at()
- if the given point is inside the item then
a pointer to the item should be added to the start of the list
of found items. The list is then returned.
The canvas item must also implement the “parent”, “title”, “description”, “visibility”, “visibility-threshold”, “transform” and “pointer-events” properties. (The last 4 properties can simply be ignored if the application doesn't intend to use them.)
If the canvas item will be used within a container that does item layout, such as GooCanvasTable, it must implement the first two methods here at least:
get_requested_area()
- returns the requested area of the item,
in the parent's coordinate space.
allocate_area()
- allocates the item's area, in the parent's
coordinate space.
get_requested_height()
- returns the requested height of the
item, given a particular allocated width, in the parent's
coordinate space. (This only needed for items that change height
as their width is changed, such as text items.)
If the canvas item supports a transformation matrix it must implement:
get_transform()
- returns the item's transformation matrix.
set_transform()
- sets the item's transformation matrix.
If the canvas item supports a GooCanvasStyle setting, it must implement:
get_style()
- returns the item's style.
set_style()
- sets the item's style.
Since GooCanvasItemSimple implements most of the above methods and properties its source code is a good place to look for help.
As with creating canvas items, to create item models it is possible to subclass GooCanvasItemModelSimple or to implement the GooCanvasItemModel interface directly.
Subclassing GooCanvasItemModelSimple is very easy, since only one
method from the GooCanvasItemModel interface must be implemented -
create_item()
. This should return a new canvas item for viewing the
item model in a canvas. (It may be called multiple times if multiple
canvases are viewing the same canvas model.)
The GooCanvasItemModelSimple subclass should emit the "changed" signal whenever it has changed, with a boolean flag indicating if the bounds need to be recomputed. The canvas items will connect to this signal and request an update or a redraw as appropriate.
To implement the GooCanvasItemModel interface directly, the class
must implement the get_parent()
, set_parent()
and create_item()
methods. It may also implement get_transform()
, set_transform()
,
get_style()
and set_style()
methods if desired.
The class must also implement the “parent”, “title”, “description”, “can-focus”, “visibility”, “visibility-threshold”, “transform” and “pointer-events” properties. (The last 4 properties can simply be ignored if the application doesn't intend to use them.)