I'm a beginner developer in Gtk and also in Pyt开发者_运维问答hon. I'm trying to create a gtk.StatusIcon displaying a text string in place of a icon. How can I accomplish this with PixBuf, or any other way?
Thanks.
Example using Python and GTK3:
from gi.repository import Gtk
class TextStatusIcon:
def __init__(self):
self.statusicon = Gtk.StatusIcon()
self.statusicon.connect("popup-menu", self.right_click_event)
window = Gtk.OffscreenWindow()
window.add(Gtk.Label("text"))
window.connect("damage-event", self.draw_complete_event)
window.show_all()
def draw_complete_event(self, window, event):
self.statusicon.set_from_pixbuf(window.get_pixbuf())
def right_click_event(self, icon, button, time):
Gtk.main_quit()
TextStatusIcon()
Gtk.main()
Unfortunately, most system trays limit the height of icons to a very small size, and Gtk.StatusIcon automatically scales down the PixBuf so that both the width and height are smaller than the height limit. This severely limits the amount of text you can effectively display with Gtk.StatusIcon.
See https://github.com/PaulSD/Tray_Apps/tree/master/gtktrayicon for a library (that can be installed in addition to Gtk) that provides an API for implementing more generic system tray applets, and supports arbitrary length text strings. See https://github.com/PaulSD/Tray_Apps for sample code that uses this library.
This is possible - two ideas come to mind:
a.) Use an offscreen GtkLabel and then call gdk_pixbuf_get_from_drawable (gtk_widget_get_snapshot (label))
(a GdkPixmap is a GdkDrawable.) This will do an XGetImage to get pixels from the X server.
b.) Or you could use Cairo to draw text to the pixbuf - this is the technique that was used for the keyboard status icon in GNOME: http://blogs.gnome.org/sudaltsov/category/general/
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