1Glib(3)               User Contributed Perl Documentation              Glib(3)
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NAME

6       Glib - Perl wrappers for the GLib utility and Object libraries
7

SYNOPSIS

9         use Glib;
10

ABSTRACT

12       This module provides perl access to GLib and GLib's GObject libraries.
13       GLib is a portability and utility library; GObject provides a generic
14       type system with inheritance and a powerful signal system.  Together
15       these libraries are used as the foundation for many of the libraries
16       that make up the Gnome environment, and are used in many unrelated
17       projects.
18

DESCRIPTION

20       This wrapper attempts to provide a perlish interface while remaining as
21       true as possible to the underlying C API, so that any reference materi‐
22       als you can find on using GLib may still apply to using the libraries
23       from perl.  This module also provides facilities for creating wrappers
24       for other GObject-based libraries.  The "SEE ALSO" section contains
25       pointers to all sorts of good information.
26

PERL VERSUS C

28       GLib provides to C programs many of the same facilities Perl offers
29       natively.  Where GLib's functionality overlaps Perl's, Perl's is
30       favored.  Some concepts have been eliminated entirely, as Perl is a
31       higher-level language than C.  In other instances we've had to add or
32       change APIs to make sense in Perl.  Here's a quick run-down:
33
34       Perl Already Does That
35
36       The GLib types GList (a doubly-linked list), GSList (singly-linked
37       list), GHashTable, GArray, etc have all been replaced by native Perl
38       datatypes.  In fact, many functions which take GLists or arrays simply
39       accept lists on the Perl stack.  For the most part, GIOChannels are no
40       more functional than Perl file handles, so you won't see any GIOChan‐
41       nels.  GClosures are not visible at the Perl level, because Perl code
42       references do the same thing.  Just about any function taking either a
43       C function pointer or a GClosure will accept a code reference in Perl.
44       (In fact, you can probably get away with just a subroutine name in many
45       spots, provided you aren't using strict subs.)
46
47       Don't Worry About That
48
49       Some concepts have been eliminated; you need never worry about refer‐
50       ence-counting on GObjects or having to free GBoxed structures.  Perl is
51       a garbage-collected language, and we've put a lot of work into making
52       the bindings take care of memory for you in a way that feels natural to
53       a Perl developer.  You won't see GValues in Perl (that's just a C
54       structure with Perl scalar envy, anyway).
55
56       This Is Now That
57
58       Other GLib concepts have been converted to an analogous Perl concept.
59
60       The GType id will never be seen in Perl, as the package name serves
61       that purpose.  Several packages corresponding to the GTypes of the fun‐
62       damental types have been registered for you:
63
64        G_TYPE_STRING     Glib::String
65        G_TYPE_INT        Glib::Int
66        G_TYPE_UINT       Glib::UInt
67        G_TYPE_DOUBLE     Glib::Double
68        G_TYPE_BOOLEAN    Glib::Boolean
69
70       The remaining fundamentals (char/uchar, short, float, etc) are also
71       registered so that we can properly interact with properties of C
72       objects, but perl really only uses ints, uints, and doubles.  Oh, and
73       we created a GBoxed type for Perl scalars so you can use scalars where
74       any boxed type would be allowed (e.g.  GtkTreeModel columns):
75
76        Glib::Scalar
77
78       Functions that can return false and set a GError in C raise an excep‐
79       tion in Perl, using an exception object based on the GError for $@; see
80       Glib::Error.  Trapping exceptions in signals is a sticky issue, so they
81       get their own section; see EXCEPTIONS.
82
83       Enumerations and flags are treated as strings and arrays of strings,
84       respectively.  GLib provides a way to register nicknames for enumera‐
85       tion values, and the Perl bindings use these nicknames for the real
86       values, so that we never have to deal with numbers in Perl. This can
87       get a little cumbersome for bitfields, but it's very nice when you for‐
88       get a flag value, as the bindings will tell you what values are
89       accepted when you pass something invalid. Also, the bindings consider
90       the - and _ characters to be equivalent, so that signal and property
91       names can be properly stringified by the => operator.  For example, the
92       following are equivalent:
93
94         # property foo-matic of type FooType, using the
95         # value FOO_SOMETHING_COOL.  its nickname would be
96         # 'something-cool'.  you may use either the full
97         # name or the nickname when supplying values to perl.
98         $object->set ('foo-matic', 'FOO_SOMETHING_COOL');
99         $object->set ('foo_matic', 'something_cool');
100         $object->set (foo_matic => 'something-cool');
101
102       Beware that Perl will always return to you the nickname form, with the
103       dash.
104
105       Flags have some additional magic abilities in the form of overloaded
106       operators:
107
108         + or ⎪   union of two flagsets ("add")
109         -        difference of two flagsets ("sub", "remove")
110         * or &   intersection of two bitsets ("and")
111         / or ^   symmetric difference ("xor", you will rarely need this)
112         >=       contains-operator ("is the left set a superset of the right set?")
113         ==       equality
114
115       In addition, flags in boolean context indicate whether they are empty
116       or not, which allows you to write common operations naturally:
117
118         $widget->set_events ($widget->get_events - "motion_notify_mask");
119         $widget->set_events ($widget->get_events - ["motion_notify_mask",
120                                                     "button_press_mask"]);
121
122         # shift pressed (both work, it's a matter of taste)
123         if ($event->state >= "shift-mask") { ...
124         if ($event->state * "shift-mask") { ...
125
126         # either shift OR control pressed?
127         if ($event->state * ["shift-mask", "control-mask"]) { ...
128
129         # both shift AND control pressed?
130         if ($event->state >= ["shift-mask", "control-mask"]) { ...
131
132       In general, "+" and "-" work as expected to add or remove flags. To
133       test whether any bits are set in a mask, you use "$mask * ...", and to
134       test whether all bits are set in a mask, you use "$mask >= ...".
135
136       When dereferenced as an array @$flags or "$flags->[...]", you can
137       access the flag values directly as strings (but you are not allowed to
138       modify the array), and when stringified "$flags" a flags value will
139       output a human-readable version of its contents.
140
141       It's All the Same
142
143       For the most part, the remaining bits of GLib are unchanged.  GMainLoop
144       is now Glib::MainLoop, GObject is now Glib::Object, GBoxed is now
145       Glib::Boxed, etc.
146

FILENAMES, URIS AND ENCODINGS

148       Perl knows two datatypes, unicode text and binary bytes. Filenames on a
149       system that doesn't use a utf-8 locale are often stored in a local
150       encoding ("binary bytes"). Gtk+ and descendants, however, internally
151       work in unicode most of the time, so when feeding a filename into a
152       GLib/Gtk+ function that expects a filename, you first need to convert
153       it from the local encoding to unicode.
154
155       This involves some elaborate guessing, which perl currently avoids, but
156       GLib and Gtk+ do. As an exception, some Gtk+ functions want a filename
157       in local encoding, but the perl interface usually works around this by
158       automatically converting it for you.
159
160       In short: Everything should be in unicode on the perl level.
161
162       The following functions expose the conversion algorithm that GLib uses.
163
164       These functions are only necessary when you want to use perl functions
165       to manage filenames returned by a GLib/Gtk+ function, or when you feed
166       filenames into GLib/Gtk+ functions that have their source outside your
167       program (e.g. commandline arguments, readdir results etc.).
168
169       These functions are available as exports by request (see "Exports"),
170       and also support method invocation syntax for pathological consistency
171       with the OO syntax of the rest of the bindings.
172
173       $filename = filename_to_unicode $filename_in_local_encoding
174       $filename = Glib->filename_to_unicode ($filename_in_local_encoding)
175           Convert a perl string that supposedly contains a filename in local
176           encoding into a filename represented as unicode, the same way that
177           GLib does it internally.
178
179           Example:
180
181              $gtkfilesel->set_filename (filename_to_unicode $ARGV[1]);
182
183           This function will croak() if the conversion cannot be made, e.g.,
184           because the utf-8 is invalid.
185
186       $filename_in_local_encoding = filename_from_unicode $filename
187       $filename_in_local_encoding = Glib->filename_from_unicode ($filename)
188           Converts a perl string containing a filename into a filename in the
189           local encoding in the same way GLib does it.
190
191           Example:
192
193              open MY, "<", filename_from_unicode $gtkfilesel->get_filename;
194
195       Other functions for converting URIs are currently missing. Also, it
196       might be useful to know that perl currently has no policy at all
197       regarding filename issues, if your scalar happens to be in utf-8 inter‐
198       nally it will use utf-8, if it happens to be stored as bytes, it will
199       use it as-is.
200
201       When dealing with filenames that you need to display, there is a much
202       easier way, as of Glib 1.120 and glib 2.6.0:
203
204       $uft8_string = filename_display_name ($filename)
205       $uft8_string = filename_display_basename ($filename)
206           Given a $filename in filename encoding, return the filename, or
207           just the file's basename, in utf-8.  Unlike the other functions
208           described above, this one is guaranteed to return valid utf-8, but
209           the conversion is not necessarily reversible.  These functions are
210           intended to be used for failsafe display of filenames, for example
211           in gtk+ labels.
212
213           Since gtk+ 2.6, Glib 1.12
214

EXCEPTIONS

216       The C language doesn't support exceptions; GLib is a C library, and of
217       course doesn't support exceptions either.  In Perl, we use die and eval
218       to raise and trap exceptions as a rather common practice.  So, the
219       bindings have to work a little black magic behind the scenes to keep
220       GLib from exploding when the Perl program uses exceptions.  Unfortu‐
221       nately, a little of this magic has to leak out to where you can see it
222       at the Perl level.
223
224       Signal and event handlers are run in an eval context; if an exception
225       occurs in such a handler and you don't catch it, Perl will report that
226       an error occurred, and then go on about its business like nothing hap‐
227       pened.
228
229       You may register subroutines as exception handlers, to be called when
230       such an exception is trapped.  Another function removes them for you.
231
232         $tag = Glib->install_exception_handler (\&my_handler);
233         Glib->remove_exception_handler ($tag);
234
235       The exception handler will get a fresh copy of the $@ of the offending
236       exception on the argument stack, and is expected to return non-zero if
237       the handler is to remain installed.  If it returns false, the handler
238       will be removed.
239
240         sub my_handler {
241             if ($_[0] =~ m/ftang quisinart/) {
242                  clean_up_after_ftang ();
243             }
244             1; # live to fight another day
245         }
246
247       You can register as many handlers as you like; they will all run inde‐
248       pendently.
249
250       An important thing to remember is that exceptions do not cross main
251       loops.  In fact, exceptions are completely distinct from main loops.
252       If you need to quit a main loop when an exception occurs, install a
253       handler that quits the main loop, but also ask yourself if you are
254       using exceptions for flow control or exception handling.
255

LOG MESSAGES

257       GLib's g_log function provides a flexible mechanism for reporting mes‐
258       sages, and most GLib-based C libraries use this mechanism for warnings,
259       assertions, critical messages, etc.  The Perl bindings offer a mecha‐
260       nism for routing these messages through Perl's native system, warn()
261       and die().  Extensions should register the log domains they wrap for
262       this to happen fluidly.  [FIXME say more here]
263

64 BIT INTEGERS

265       Since perl's integer data type can only hold 32 bit values on all 32
266       bit machines and even on some 64 bit machines, Glib converts 64 bit
267       integers to and from strings if necessary.  These strings can then be
268       used to feed one of the various big integer modules.  Make sure you
269       don't let your strings get into numerical context before passing them
270       into a Glib function because in this case, perl will convert the number
271       to scientific notation which at this point is not understood by Glib's
272       converters.
273
274       Here is an overview of what big integer modules are available.  First
275       of all, there's Math::BigInt.  It has everything you will ever need,
276       but its pure-Perl implementation is also rather slow.  There are multi‐
277       ple ways around this, though.
278
279       Math::BigInt::FastCalc
280           Math::BigInt::FastCalc can help avoid the glacial speed of vanilla
281           Math::BigInt::Calc.  Recent versions of Math::BigInt will automati‐
282           cally use Math::BigInt::FastCalc in place of Math::BigInt::Calc
283           when available.  Other options include Math::BigInt::GMP or
284           Math::BigInt::Pari, which however have much larger dependencies.
285
286       Math::BigInt::Lite
287           Then there's Math::BigInt::Lite, which uses native Perl integer
288           operations as long as Perl integers have sufficient range, and
289           upgrades itself to Math::BigInt when Perl integers would overflow.
290           This must be used in place of Math::BigInt.
291
292       bigint / bignum / bigfloat
293           Finally, there's the bigint/bignum/bigfloat pragmata, which auto‐
294           matically load the corresponding Math:: modules and which will
295           autobox constants.  bignum/bigint will automatically use Math::Big‐
296           Int::Lite if it's available.
297

Exports

299       For the most part, gtk2-perl avoids exporting things.  Nothing is
300       exported by default, but some functions and constants in Glib are
301       available by request; you can also get all of them with the export tag
302       "all".
303
304       Tag: constants
305             TRUE
306             FALSE
307             G_PRIORITY_HIGH
308             G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT
309             G_PRIORITY_HIGH_IDLE
310             G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT_IDLE
311             G_PRIORITY_LOW
312             G_PARAM_READWRITE
313
314       Tag: functions
315             filename_from_unicode
316             filename_to_unicode
317             filename_from_uri
318             filename_to_uri
319             filename_display_basename
320             filename_display_name
321

SEE ALSO

323       Glib::Object::Subclass explains how to create your own gobject sub‐
324       classes in Perl.
325
326       Glib::index lists the automatically-generated API reference for the
327       various packages in Glib.
328
329       This module is the basis for the Gtk2 module, so most of the references
330       you'll be able to find about this one are tied to that one.  The perl
331       interface aims to be very simply related to the C API, so see the C API
332       reference documentation:
333
334         GLib - http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/glib/
335         GObject - http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/gobject/
336
337       This module serves as the foundation for any module which needs to bind
338       GLib-based C libraries to perl.
339
340         Glib::devel - Binding developer's overview of Glib's internals
341         Glib::xsapi - internal API reference for GPerl
342         Glib::ParseXSDoc - extract API docs from xs sources.
343         Glib::GenPod - turn the output of Glib::ParseXSDoc into POD
344         Glib::MakeHelper - Makefile.PL utilities for Glib-based extensions
345
346         Yet another document, available separately, ties it all together:
347           http://gtk2-perl.sourceforge.net/doc/binding_howto.pod.html
348
349       For gtk2-perl itself, see its website at
350
351         gtk2-perl - http://gtk2-perl.sourceforge.net/
352
353       A mailing list exists for discussion of using gtk2-perl and related
354       modules.  Archives and subscription information are available at
355       http://lists.gnome.org/.
356

AUTHORS

358       muppet, <scott at asofyet dot org>, who borrowed heavily from the work
359       of Göran Thyni, <gthyni at kirra dot net> and Guillaume Cottenceau <gc
360       at mandrakesoft dot com> on the first gtk2-perl module, and from the
361       sourcecode of the original gtk-perl and pygtk projects.  Marc Lehmann
362       <pcg at goof dot com> did lots of great work on the magic of making
363       Glib::Object wrapper and subclassing work like they should.  Ross
364       McFarland <rwmcfa1 at neces dot com> wrote quite a bit of the documen‐
365       tation generation tools.  Torsten Schoenfeld <kaffeetisch at web dot
366       de> contributed little patches and tests here and there.
367
369       Copyright 2003-2007 by muppet and the gtk2-perl team
370
371       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
372       under the terms of the Lesser General Public License (LGPL).  For more
373       information, see http://www.fsf.org/licenses/lgpl.txt
374
375
376
377perl v5.8.8                       2007-02-26                           Glib(3)
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