| GTK+ 3 Reference Manual | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Top | Description | ||||
#include <gtk/gtk.h>
GtkSymbolicColor;
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_literal (const GdkRGBA *color);
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_name (const gchar *name);
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_shade (GtkSymbolicColor *color,
gdouble factor);
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_alpha (GtkSymbolicColor *color,
gdouble factor);
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_mix (GtkSymbolicColor *color1,
GtkSymbolicColor *color2,
gdouble factor);
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_ref (GtkSymbolicColor *color);
void gtk_symbolic_color_unref (GtkSymbolicColor *color);
gboolean gtk_symbolic_color_resolve (GtkSymbolicColor *color,
GtkStyleProperties *props,
GdkRGBA *resolved_color);
GtkSymbolicColor is a boxed type that represents a symbolic color.
It is the result of parsing a
color expression.
To obtain the color represented by a GtkSymbolicColor, it has to
be resolved with gtk_symbolic_color_resolve(), which replaces all
symbolic color references by the colors they refer to (in a given
context) and evaluates mix, shade and other expressions, resulting
in a GdkRGBA value.
It is not normally necessary to deal directly with GtkSymbolicColors, since they are mostly used behind the scenes by GtkStyleContext and GtkCssProvider.
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_literal (const GdkRGBA *color);
Creates a symbolic color pointing to a literal color.
|
a GdkRGBA |
Returns : |
a newly created GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_name (const gchar *name);
Creates a symbolic color pointing to an unresolved named
color. See gtk_style_context_lookup_color() and
gtk_style_properties_lookup_color().
|
color name |
Returns : |
a newly created GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_shade (GtkSymbolicColor *color,gdouble factor);
Creates a symbolic color defined as a shade of another color. A factor > 1.0 would resolve to a brighter color, while < 1.0 would resolve to a darker color.
|
another GtkSymbolicColor |
|
shading factor to apply to color
|
Returns : |
A newly created GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_alpha (GtkSymbolicColor *color,gdouble factor);
Creates a symbolic color by modifying the relative alpha
value of color. A factor < 1.0 would resolve to a more
transparent color, while > 1.0 would resolve to a more
opaque color.
|
another GtkSymbolicColor |
|
factor to apply to color alpha |
Returns : |
A newly created GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_new_mix (GtkSymbolicColor *color1,GtkSymbolicColor *color2,gdouble factor);
Creates a symbolic color defined as a mix of another
two colors. a mix factor of 0 would resolve to color1,
while a factor of 1 would resolve to color2.
|
color to mix |
|
another color to mix |
|
mix factor |
Returns : |
A newly created GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
GtkSymbolicColor * gtk_symbolic_color_ref (GtkSymbolicColor *color);
Increases the reference count of color
|
a GtkSymbolicColor |
Returns : |
the same color
|
Since 3.0
void gtk_symbolic_color_unref (GtkSymbolicColor *color);
Decreases the reference count of color, freeing its memory if the
reference count reaches 0.
|
a GtkSymbolicColor |
Since 3.0
gboolean gtk_symbolic_color_resolve (GtkSymbolicColor *color,GtkStyleProperties *props,GdkRGBA *resolved_color);
If color is resolvable, resolved_color will be filled in
with the resolved color, and TRUE will be returned. Generally,
if color can't be resolved, it is due to it being defined on
top of a named color that doesn't exist in props.
props must be non-NULL if color was created using
gtk_symbolic_color_named_new(), but can be omitted in other cases.
|
a GtkSymbolicColor |
|
GtkStyleProperties to use when resolving
named colors, or NULL. [allow-none]
|
|
return location for the resolved color. [out] |
Returns : |
TRUE if the color has been resolved |
Since 3.0