On Sun, 2006-09-03 at 02:54 +0200, Maik Beckmann wrote: > Hello Rui, > > I am no gtkmm developer, but I guess the the activate signal was not > implemented so far. When you look > at gtk/src/statusicon.hg you will see > > _IGNORE_SIGNAL(activate);
More precisely, you'll see _IGNORE_SIGNAL(activate) //Keybinding signal. Which indicates that this is a keybinding (or "action") signal that is not meant to be used by most application developers. It's useful for widget implementation, particularly for accessibility issues. Rui, if you can say what you are trying to do, or if you can show us the GTK+ C code that seems to use this signal, then we might be able to say what you should do with gtkmm. > Change this to > > _WRAP_SIGNAL(void activate(), activate); > > and use gmmproc as described at > http://www.gtkmm.org/docs/gtkmm-2.4/docs/tutorial/html/aphs03.html > > After a short re-make you should be able to use signal_activate() as > intended - For me it worked. > I hope you can use this information > > Maik Beckmann > http://eigenco.de > > Rui Tiago Cação Matos wrote: > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > I'm trying to use the new Gtk::StatusIcon in gtkmm 2.10.1 but I can't > > > find the activate signal either in the documentation or the header file. > > > > > > Note: I'm learning gtk+ and gtkmm at the same time so I might be missing > > > some really simple thing. One thing I noticed until now is that the gtk+ > > > documentation seems to be much more comprehensive and easier to > > > navigate/find what you need. -- Murray Cumming [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.murrayc.com www.openismus.com _______________________________________________ gtkmm-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtkmm-list
