Table of Contents
This document describes many of the PyGObject
version 2.12 classes and their methods and associated
functions. Deprecated classes, functions and methods have been
specifically left out of this reference though classes that have become
deprecated since PyGObject 2.0 have been left in but annotated with a
deprecation warning. This document attempts to document as much of the
PyGObject
API
as possible but there
are undoubtedly errors and omissions. If you discover any of these please
file a bug report at bugzilla.gnome.org for the
pygobject
project. Specific areas that have not been
documented include:
This reference describes the API for PyGObject
as
of version 2.11.0+ and assumes that the additional API changes for version
2.12 will not be significant. There will undoubtedly be changes that are
not reflected in this reference. The differences in the API between
version 2.0 and previous versions are denoted in this reference with a
Note that describes the availability of the object, constructor, method or
function. Any of these that do not have a notation can be assumed to be
available in all versions of PyGObject from 2.0 and up. The source code
must be consulted if this reference and your version of
PyGObject
seem to differ. You are encouraged to use the
latest version of PyGObject
that is available. See the
PyGTK
homepage for more information and more resources on how to use
PyGObject as well as help in its development.
The Reference contains a chapter for each
PyGObject
module containing the class descriptions. The
class descriptions are arranged alphabetically within the
chapters. Currently there is one module chapter:
The | The classes that are included in the
gobject module of PyGObject and are
accessed similar to: gobject.GObject. These classes are the base object
classes that the gtk and gtk.gdk
module classes are built on. |
Each PyGObject
class is described in a reference
page that has a number of sections in a fixed format. Each reference page
will have a subset of the following sections:
Name | The name and a one-line description of the class. |
Synopsis | A synopsis of the class and its methods and optionally a list of associated functions. |
Ancestry | The list of the parent classes of the class. This section may not be present in all class descriptions. |
Properties | A list of the properties (internal state)
supported by the class. This section may not be present in all classes. The
property descriptions include the name, the access operations (e.g. Read,
Write), and a brief description. Properties are accessed using the gobject.set_property ()
and gobject.get_property ()
methods that are available to every PyGObject object. This
section may not be present in all class descriptions. |
Attributes | A set of internal object state data accessible as Python
attributes (e.g. object.attr). The attribute descriptions include
a name by which the attribute data is accessed, the access mode
(e.g. Read, Write), and a brief description of the attribute. Most
PyGObject classes do not support attributes so
this section is not present in most class descriptions. |
Signal Prototypes | A list of the signals supported by the class including the signal name and a synopsis of the signal handler function prototype. This section may not be present in all class descriptions. |
Description | A description of the class and possibly some of the methods supported by the class. |
Constructor | The description of the class object constructor including the synopsis with brief parameter descriptions and a description of th use of the constructor. There may be more than one constructor description if the constructor supports different parameter lists. This section may not be present in all class descriptions. |
Methods | A list of methods supported by the class. Each method description includes: a synopsis of the method and its parameters as well as a brief description of each parameter and return value (if any); and, a description of the use of the method. |
Functions | A list of related functions. Each function description includes a synopsis of the function and its parameters and return value (if any), and a description of the use of the function. |
Signals | A list of signals including a synopsis of the signal
handler prototype function with its parameters and return value
(if any). The signal emission conditions are briefly
described. This section is not present in all class descriptions;
specifically, the gtk.gdk classes do not
usually support signals. |
The function and method synopsis parameters are displayed in
bold to denote Python keyword
parameters. Also if the parameter is optional its default value will be
displayed. For example the gobject.signal_lookup
()
function synopsis is:
def gobject.signal_lookup(name
, type
)
The parameters name
and
type
are keyword parameters that can be specified
in a call either by position or keyword (in which case position is not
important). The following calls have the same result:
id = gobject.signal_lookup("clicked", gtk.Button) id = gobject.signal_lookup("clicked", type=gtk.Button) id = gobject.signal_lookup(name="clicked", type=gtk.Button) id = gobject.signal_lookup(type=gtk.Button, name="clicked")
Parameters that are not keyword parameters are displayed in italic and must be specified positionally but may also be optional.