Derive Macro gtk4_macros::CompositeTemplate
source · #[derive(CompositeTemplate)]
{
// Attributes available to this derive:
#[template]
#[template_child]
}
Expand description
Derive macro for using a composite template in a widget.
The template
attribute specifies where the template should be loaded
from; it can be a file
, a resource
, or a string
.
The template_child
attribute is used to mark all internal widgets
we need to have programmatic access to. It can take two parameters:
id
which defaults to the item name if not definedinternal_child
whether the child should be accessible as an “internal-child”, defaults tofalse
Example
Specify that MyWidget
is using a composite template and load the
template file the composite_template.ui
file.
Then, in the ObjectSubclass
implementation you will need to call
bind_template
in the class_init
function, and init_template
in
instance_init
function.
use gtk::prelude::*;
use gtk::glib;
use gtk::CompositeTemplate;
use gtk::subclass::prelude::*;
mod imp {
use super::*;
#[derive(Debug, Default, CompositeTemplate)]
#[template(file = "test/template.ui")]
pub struct MyWidget {
#[template_child]
pub label: TemplateChild<gtk::Label>,
#[template_child(id = "my_button_id")]
pub button: TemplateChild<gtk::Button>,
}
#[glib::object_subclass]
impl ObjectSubclass for MyWidget {
const NAME: &'static str = "MyWidget";
type Type = super::MyWidget;
type ParentType = gtk::Box;
fn class_init(klass: &mut Self::Class) {
klass.bind_template();
}
fn instance_init(obj: &glib::subclass::InitializingObject<Self>) {
obj.init_template();
}
}
impl ObjectImpl for MyWidget {}
impl WidgetImpl for MyWidget {}
impl BoxImpl for MyWidget {}
}
glib::wrapper! {
pub struct MyWidget(ObjectSubclass<imp::MyWidget>) @extends gtk::Widget, gtk::Box;
}
impl MyWidget {
pub fn new() -> Self {
glib::Object::new(&[])
}
}