gnome-ui-init

Name

gnome-ui-init -- Parameters (and deprecated functions) for initializing libgnomeui applications.

Synopsis


#include <libgnomeui/libgnomeui.h>


#define     LIBGNOMEUI_MODULE
#define     LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_CRASH_DIALOG
#define     LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DISPLAY
#define     LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DEFAULT_ICON
int         gnome_init_with_popt_table      (const char *app_id,
                                             const char *app_version,
                                             int argc,
                                             char **argv,
                                             const struct poptOption *options,
                                             int flags,
                                             poptContext *return_ctx);
#define     gnome_init                      (app_id,app_version,argc,argv)

Description

The initialization functions in this module are deprecated in favour of calls to gnome_program_init() in the libgnome library.

However, this module does provide some extra parameters on top of those already defined in libgnome that can be passed to the gnome_program_init() call. These should enable libgnomeui applications to control their appearance precisely.

Details

LIBGNOMEUI_MODULE

#define LIBGNOMEUI_MODULE libgnomeui_module_info_get()

A module containing all the information required to initialize libgnomeui and its dependents. This should be passed to the gnome_program_init() call by applications using libgnomeui.


LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_CRASH_DIALOG

#define LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_CRASH_DIALOG	"show-crash-dialog"

If set to TRUE, the standard GNOME crash dialog will appear (offering the user a chance to automatically file a bug report) should the application crash while running. Application authors will almost never want to change the default value of this parameter (FALSE). The user may change it however by setting the GNOME_DISABLE_CRASH_DIALOG environment variable or passing --disable-crash-dialog on the command line.


LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DISPLAY

#define LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DISPLAY	"display"

Initially set to the value of the DISPLAY environment variable or the --display value passed on the command line, this parameter determines which X display the application will start on.


LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DEFAULT_ICON

#define LIBGNOMEUI_PARAM_DEFAULT_ICON	"default-icon"

Set to the full path of the application's default icon. This can only be set by the application.


gnome_init_with_popt_table ()

int         gnome_init_with_popt_table      (const char *app_id,
                                             const char *app_version,
                                             int argc,
                                             char **argv,
                                             const struct poptOption *options,
                                             int flags,
                                             poptContext *return_ctx);

Warning

gnome_init_with_popt_table is deprecated and should not be used in newly-written code.

Initializes the application. This sets up all of the GNOME internals and prepares them (imlib, gdk, session-management, triggers, sound, user preferences).

Unlike gnome_init, with gnome_init_with_popt_table you can provide a table of popt options (popt is the command line argument parsing library).

Deprecated, use gnome_program_init with the LIBGNOMEUI_MODULE.

app_id :

Application id.

app_version :

Application version.

argc :

argument count (for example argc as received by main)

argv :

argument vector (for example argv as received by main)

options :

poptOption table with options to parse

flags :

popt flags.

return_ctx :

if non-NULL, the popt context is returned here.

Returns :

0 (always)


gnome_init()

#define     gnome_init(app_id,app_version,argc,argv)

Warning

gnome_init is deprecated and should not be used in newly-written code.

This is identical to a call to gnome_init_with_popt_table with NULL passed in as the poptOption table.

app_id :

Application id.

app_version :

Application version.

argc :

Argument count (for example, argc as received by the main function).

argv :

Argument vector (for example, argv as received by the main function).