Thanks. I don't solved my other problem yet. I leave the problem with
two dialog for other time. But using GtkScrolledWindow i resolved this
problem.
Why are you saying that using a scrolled window with parts invisible is
not user frindly?
Best regards,
Ruben
Às 11:16 de 13/09/2017, Stefan
I second Stefan's suggestion of encapsulating your dialog panel within a
scrolled window, and in fact I have made it a habit to implement that for
every major toplevel window in all of my GUI software. You never know when
an app that was designed for a nice fat desktop display will end up bein
On Wed, 2017-09-13 at 10:34 +, Rúben Rodrigues wrote:
> Why are you saying that using a scrolled window with parts invisible
> is
> not user frindly?
Because the user has to scroll :-)
Of course having a scrolled window with active scrollbars can be
necessary -- when there is really more con
On Wed, 2017-09-13 at 10:59 +0100, Emmanuele Bassi wrote:
> Why are you using a GtkDialog? You should be using a GtkWindow for a
> complex UI.
>
> Additionally, the size of a top-level is given by its contents,
> unless
> you specify a size yourself. If your UI is too big, you'll have to
> arrange
On 12 September 2017 at 18:06, Rúben Rodrigues wrote:
> Someone knows how to limite the maximum size of gtkdialog? My problem is
> that as the dialog does resize itself, sometimes it gets bigger that the
> screen.
Why are you using a GtkDialog? You should be using a GtkWindow for a complex UI.
Hi guys,
Someone knows how to limite the maximum size of gtkdialog? My problem is
that as the dialog does resize itself, sometimes it gets bigger that the
screen.
You can see here:
https://ibin.co/3a9dsXej5ArN.png
Best regards,
Ruben Rodrigues
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