| Copyright | Will Thompson Iñaki García Etxebarria and Jonas Platte |
|---|---|
| License | LGPL-2.1 |
| Maintainer | Iñaki García Etxebarria (garetxe@gmail.com) |
| Safe Haskell | None |
| Language | Haskell2010 |
GI.Gtk.Objects.FileChooserDialog
Contents
Description
FileChooserDialog is a dialog box suitable for use with
“File/Open” or “File/Save as” commands. This widget works by
putting a FileChooserWidget inside a Dialog. It exposes
the FileChooser interface, so you can use all of the
FileChooser functions on the file chooser dialog as well as
those for Dialog.
Note that FileChooserDialog does not have any methods of its
own. Instead, you should use the functions that work on a
FileChooser.
If you want to integrate well with the platform you should use the
FileChooserNative API, which will use a platform-specific
dialog if available and fall back to GtkFileChooserDialog
otherwise.
## {gtkfilechooser-typical-usage}
In the simplest of cases, you can the following code to use
FileChooserDialog to select a file for opening:
GtkWidget *dialog;
GtkFileChooserAction action = GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_OPEN;
gint res;
dialog = gtk_file_chooser_dialog_new ("Open File",
parent_window,
action,
_("_Cancel"),
GTK_RESPONSE_CANCEL,
_("_Open"),
GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT,
NULL);
res = gtk_dialog_run (GTK_DIALOG (dialog));
if (res == GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT)
{
char *filename;
GtkFileChooser *chooser = GTK_FILE_CHOOSER (dialog);
filename = gtk_file_chooser_get_filename (chooser);
open_file (filename);
g_free (filename);
}
gtk_widget_destroy (dialog);To use a dialog for saving, you can use this:
GtkWidget *dialog;
GtkFileChooser *chooser;
GtkFileChooserAction action = GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SAVE;
gint res;
dialog = gtk_file_chooser_dialog_new ("Save File",
parent_window,
action,
_("_Cancel"),
GTK_RESPONSE_CANCEL,
_("_Save"),
GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT,
NULL);
chooser = GTK_FILE_CHOOSER (dialog);
gtk_file_chooser_set_do_overwrite_confirmation (chooser, TRUE);
if (user_edited_a_new_document)
gtk_file_chooser_set_current_name (chooser,
_("Untitled document"));
else
gtk_file_chooser_set_filename (chooser,
existing_filename);
res = gtk_dialog_run (GTK_DIALOG (dialog));
if (res == GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT)
{
char *filename;
filename = gtk_file_chooser_get_filename (chooser);
save_to_file (filename);
g_free (filename);
}
gtk_widget_destroy (dialog);## {gtkfilechooserdialog-setting-up}
There are various cases in which you may need to use a FileChooserDialog:
- To select a file for opening. Use
GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_OPEN. - To save a file for the first time. Use
GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SAVE, and suggest a name such as “Untitled” withfileChooserSetCurrentName. - To save a file under a different name. Use
GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SAVE, and set the existing filename withfileChooserSetFilename. - To choose a folder instead of a file. Use
GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SELECT_FOLDER.
Note that old versions of the file chooser’s documentation suggested
using fileChooserSetCurrentFolder in various
situations, with the intention of letting the application
suggest a reasonable default folder. This is no longer
considered to be a good policy, as now the file chooser is
able to make good suggestions on its own. In general, you
should only cause the file chooser to show a specific folder
when it is appropriate to use fileChooserSetFilename,
i.e. when you are doing a Save As command and you already
have a file saved somewhere.
## {gtkfilechooserdialog-responses}
FileChooserDialog inherits from Dialog, so buttons that
go in its action area have response codes such as
GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT and GTK_RESPONSE_CANCEL. For example, you
could call gtk_file_chooser_dialog_new() as follows:
GtkWidget *dialog;
GtkFileChooserAction action = GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_OPEN;
dialog = gtk_file_chooser_dialog_new ("Open File",
parent_window,
action,
_("_Cancel"),
GTK_RESPONSE_CANCEL,
_("_Open"),
GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT,
NULL);This will create buttons for “Cancel” and “Open” that use stock
response identifiers from ResponseType. For most dialog
boxes you can use your own custom response codes rather than the
ones in ResponseType, but FileChooserDialog assumes that
its “accept”-type action, e.g. an “Open” or “Save” button,
will have one of the following response codes:
GTK_RESPONSE_ACCEPT
GTK_RESPONSE_OK
GTK_RESPONSE_YES
GTK_RESPONSE_APPLY
This is because FileChooserDialog must intercept responses
and switch to folders if appropriate, rather than letting the
dialog terminate — the implementation uses these known
response codes to know which responses can be blocked if
appropriate.
To summarize, make sure you use a
[stock response code][gtkfilechooserdialog-responses]
when you use FileChooserDialog to ensure proper operation.
- newtype FileChooserDialog = FileChooserDialog (ManagedPtr FileChooserDialog)
- class GObject o => IsFileChooserDialog o
- toFileChooserDialog :: (MonadIO m, IsFileChooserDialog o) => o -> m FileChooserDialog
- noFileChooserDialog :: Maybe FileChooserDialog
Exported types
newtype FileChooserDialog Source #
Constructors
| FileChooserDialog (ManagedPtr FileChooserDialog) |
Instances
class GObject o => IsFileChooserDialog o Source #
Instances
toFileChooserDialog :: (MonadIO m, IsFileChooserDialog o) => o -> m FileChooserDialog Source #