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GObject ╰── GInitiallyUnowned ╰── GtkWidget ╰── GtkContainer ╰── GtkBin ╰── GtkWindow ╰── GtkShortcutsWindow
A GtkShortcutsWindow shows brief information about the keyboard shortcuts and gestures of an application. The shortcuts can be grouped, and you can have multiple sections in this window, corresponding to the major modes of your application.
Additionally, the shortcuts can be filtered by the current view, to avoid showing information that is not relevant in the current application context.
The recommended way to construct a GtkShortcutsWindow is with GtkBuilder, by populating a GtkShortcutsWindow with one or more GtkShortcutsSection objects, which contain GtkShortcutsGroups that in turn contain objects of class GtkShortcutsShortcut.
This example has as single section. As you can see, the shortcut groups are arranged in columns, and spread across several pages if there are too many to find on a single page.
The .ui file for this example can be found here.
This example shows a GtkShortcutsWindow that has been configured to show only the shortcuts relevant to the "stopwatch" view.
The .ui file for this example can be found here.
This example shows a GtkShortcutsWindow with two sections, "Editor Shortcuts" and "Terminal Shortcuts".
The .ui file for this example can be found here.
“section-name”
property “section-name” char *
The name of the section to show.
This should be the section-name of one of the GtkShortcutsSection objects that are in this shortcuts window.
Owner: GtkShortcutsWindow
Flags: Read / Write
Default value: "internal-search"
“view-name”
property “view-name” char *
The view name by which to filter the contents.
This should correspond to the “view” property of some of the GtkShortcutsGroup objects that are inside this shortcuts window.
Set this to NULL
to show all groups.
Owner: GtkShortcutsWindow
Flags: Read / Write
Default value: NULL
“close”
signalvoid user_function (GtkShortcutsWindow *shortcutswindow, gpointer user_data)
The ::close signal is a keybinding signal which gets emitted when the user uses a keybinding to close the window.
The default binding for this signal is the Escape key.
Flags: Action
“search”
signalvoid user_function (GtkShortcutsWindow *shortcutswindow, gpointer user_data)
The ::search signal is a keybinding signal which gets emitted when the user uses a keybinding to start a search.
The default binding for this signal is Control-F.
Flags: Action