The #GtkLevelBar is a bar widget that can be used
as a level indicator. Typical use cases are displaying the strength
of a password, or showing the charge level of a battery.
Use gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setValue to set the current value, and
gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.addOffsetValue to set the value offsets at which
the bar will be considered in a different state. GTK will add a few
offsets by default on the level bar: #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_LOW,
#GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_HIGH and #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_FULL, with
values 0.25, 0.75 and 1.0 respectively.
Note that it is your responsibility to update preexisting offsets
when changing the minimum or maximum value. GTK+ will simply clamp
them to the new range.
static GtkWidget *
create_level_bar (void)
{
GtkWidget *widget;
GtkLevelBar *bar;
widget = gtk_level_bar_new ();
bar = GTK_LEVEL_BAR (widget);
// This changes the value of the default low offset
gtk_level_bar_add_offset_value (bar,
GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_LOW,
0.10);
// This adds a new offset to the bar; the application will// be able to change its color CSS like this://// levelbar block.my-offset {// background-color: magenta;// border-style: solid;// border-color: black;// border-style: 1px;// }
gtk_level_bar_add_offset_value (bar, "my-offset", 0.60);
return widget;
}
The default interval of values is between zero and one, but it’s possible to
modify the interval using gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setMinValue and
gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setMaxValue. The value will be always drawn in proportion to
the admissible interval, i.e. a value of 15 with a specified interval between
10 and 20 is equivalent to a value of 0.5 with an interval between 0 and 1.
When #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_MODE_DISCRETE is used, the bar level is rendered
as a finite number of separated blocks instead of a single one. The number
of blocks that will be rendered is equal to the number of units specified by
the admissible interval.
For instance, to build a bar rendered with five blocks, it’s sufficient to
set the minimum value to 0 and the maximum value to 5 after changing the indicator
mode to discrete.
GtkLevelBar was introduced in GTK+ 3.6.
GtkLevelBar as GtkBuildable
The GtkLevelBar implementation of the GtkBuildable interface supports a
custom <offsets> element, which can contain any number of <offset> elements,
each of which must have "name" and "value" attributes.
GtkLevelBar has a main CSS node with name levelbar and one of the style
classes .discrete or .continuous and a subnode with name trough. Below the
trough node are a number of nodes with name block and style class .filled
or .empty. In continuous mode, there is exactly one node of each, in discrete
mode, the number of filled and unfilled nodes corresponds to blocks that are
drawn. The block.filled nodes also get a style class .level-name corresponding
to the level for the current value.
In horizontal orientation, the nodes are always arranged from left to right,
regardless of text direction.
The #GtkLevelBar is a bar widget that can be used as a level indicator. Typical use cases are displaying the strength of a password, or showing the charge level of a battery.
Use gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setValue to set the current value, and gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.addOffsetValue to set the value offsets at which the bar will be considered in a different state. GTK will add a few offsets by default on the level bar: #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_LOW, #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_HIGH and #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_OFFSET_FULL, with values 0.25, 0.75 and 1.0 respectively.
Note that it is your responsibility to update preexisting offsets when changing the minimum or maximum value. GTK+ will simply clamp them to the new range.
Adding a custom offset on the bar
The default interval of values is between zero and one, but it’s possible to modify the interval using gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setMinValue and gtk.level_bar.LevelBar.setMaxValue. The value will be always drawn in proportion to the admissible interval, i.e. a value of 15 with a specified interval between 10 and 20 is equivalent to a value of 0.5 with an interval between 0 and 1. When #GTK_LEVEL_BAR_MODE_DISCRETE is used, the bar level is rendered as a finite number of separated blocks instead of a single one. The number of blocks that will be rendered is equal to the number of units specified by the admissible interval.
For instance, to build a bar rendered with five blocks, it’s sufficient to set the minimum value to 0 and the maximum value to 5 after changing the indicator mode to discrete.
GtkLevelBar was introduced in GTK+ 3.6.
GtkLevelBar as GtkBuildable
The GtkLevelBar implementation of the GtkBuildable interface supports a custom <offsets> element, which can contain any number of <offset> elements, each of which must have "name" and "value" attributes.
CSS nodes
levelbar[.discrete] ╰── trough ├── block.filled.level-name ┊ ├── block.empty ┊GtkLevelBar has a main CSS node with name levelbar and one of the style classes .discrete or .continuous and a subnode with name trough. Below the trough node are a number of nodes with name block and style class .filled or .empty. In continuous mode, there is exactly one node of each, in discrete mode, the number of filled and unfilled nodes corresponds to blocks that are drawn. The block.filled nodes also get a style class .level-name corresponding to the level for the current value.
In horizontal orientation, the nodes are always arranged from left to right, regardless of text direction.