NAME

Gnome2::Canvas - (DEPRECATED) A structured graphics canvas

SYNOPSIS

use strict;
use Gtk2 -init;
use Gnome2::Canvas;
my $window = Gtk2::Window->new;
my $scroller = Gtk2::ScrolledWindow->new;
my $canvas = Gnome2::Canvas->new;
$scroller->add ($canvas);
$window->add ($scroller);
$window->set_default_size (150, 150);
$canvas->set_scroll_region (0, 0, 200, 200);
$window->show_all;

my $root = $canvas->root;
Gnome2::Canvas::Item->new ($root, 'Gnome2::Canvas::Text',
                           x => 20,
                           y => 15,
                           fill_color => 'black',
                           font => 'Sans 14',
                           anchor => 'GTK_ANCHOR_NW',
                           text => 'Hello, World!');
my $box = Gnome2::Canvas::Item->new ($root, 'Gnome2::Canvas::Rect',
                                     x1 => 10, y1 => 5,
                                     x2 => 150, y2 => 135,
                                     fill_color => 'red',
                                     outline_color => 'black');
$box->lower_to_bottom;
$box->signal_connect (event => sub {
        my ($item, $event) = @_;
        warn "event ".$event->type."\n";
});

Gtk2->main;

ABSTRACT

(DEPRECATED) A structured graphics canvas

DESCRIPTION

NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE

This module has been deprecated by the Gtk-Perl project. This means that the module will no longer be updated with security patches, bug fixes, or when changes are made in the Perl ABI. The Git repo for this module has been archived (made read-only), it will no longer possible to submit new commits to it. You are more than welcome to ask about this module on the Gtk-Perl mailing list, but our priorities going forward will be maintaining Gtk-Perl modules that are supported and maintained upstream; this module is neither.

Since this module is licensed under the LGPL v2.1, you may also fork this module, if you wish, but you will need to use a different name for it on CPAN, and the Gtk-Perl team requests that you use your own resources (mailing list, Git repos, bug trackers, etc.) to maintain your fork going forward.

  • Perl URL: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/perl-gnome2-canvas

  • Upstream URL: https://gitlab.gnome.org/Archive/libgnomecanvas

  • Last upstream version: 2.30.3

  • Last upstream release date: 2011-01-31

  • Migration path for this module: No upstream replacement

NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE

The Gnome Canvas is an engine for structured graphics that offers a rich imaging model, high-performance rendering, and a powerful, high level API. It offers a choice of two rendering back-ends, one based on GDK for extremely fast display, and another based on Libart, a sophisticated, antialiased, alpha-compositing engine. This widget can be used for flexible display of graphics and for creating interactive user interface elements.

To create a new Gnome2::Canvas widget call Gnome2::Canvas->new or Gnome2::Canvas->new_aa for an anti-aliased mode canvas.

A Gnome2::Canvas contains one or more Gnome2::CanvasItem objects. Items consist of graphing elements like lines, ellipses, polygons, images, text, and curves. These items are organized using Gnome2::CanvasGroup objects, which are themselves derived from Gnome2::CanvasItem. Since a group is an item it can be contained within other groups, forming a tree of canvas items. Certain operations, like translating and scaling, can be performed on all items in a group.

There is a special root group created by a Gnome2::Canvas. This is the top level group under which all items in a canvas are contained. The root group is available as $canvas->root.

There are several different coordinate systems used by Gnome2::Canvas widgets. The primary system is a logical, abstract coordinate space called world coordinates. World coordinates are expressed as unbounded double floating point numbers. When it comes to rendering to a screen the canvas pixel coordinate system (also referred to as just canvas coordinates) is used. This system uses integers to specify screen pixel positions. A user defined scaling factor and offset are used to convert between world coordinates and canvas coordinates. Each item in a canvas has its own coordinate system called item coordinates. This system is specified in world coordinates but they are relative to an item (0.0, 0.0 would be the top left corner of the item). The final coordinate system of interest is window coordinates. These are like canvas coordinates but are offsets from within a window a canvas is displayed in. This last system is rarely used, but is useful when manually handling GDK events (such as drag and drop) which are specified in window coordinates (the events processed by the canvas are already converted for you).

Along with different coordinate systems come methods to convert between them. $canvas->w2c converts world to canvas pixel coordinates and canvas->c2w converts from canvas to world. To get the affine transform matrix for converting from world coordinates to canvas coordinates call $canvas->w2c_affine. $canvas->window_to_world converts from window to world coordinates and $canvas->world_to_window converts in the other direction. There are no methods for converting between canvas and window coordinates, since this is just a matter of subtracting the canvas scrolling offset. To convert to/from item coordinates use the methods defined for Gnome2::CanvasItem objects.

To set the canvas zoom factor (canvas pixels per world unit, the scaling factor) call $canvas->set_pixels_per_unit; setting this to 1.0 will cause the two coordinate systems to correspond (e.g., [5, 6] in pixel units would be [5.0, 6.0] in world units).

Defining the scrollable area of a canvas widget is done by calling $canvas->set_scroll_region and to get the current region $canvas->get_scroll_region can be used. If the window is larger than the canvas scrolling region it can optionally be centered in the window. Use $canvas->set_center_scroll_region to enable or disable this behavior. To scroll to a particular canvas pixel coordinate use $canvas->scroll_to (typically not used since scrollbars are usually set up to handle the scrolling), and to get the current canvas pixel scroll offset call $canvas->get_scroll_offsets.

SEE ALSO

Gnome2::Canvas::index(3pm) lists the generated Perl API reference PODs.

Gnome2::Canvas::main(3pm), in particular, lists the API in the Gnome2::Canvas package.

Frederico Mena Quintero's whitepaper on the GNOME Canvas: http://developer.gnome.org/doc/whitepapers/canvas/canvas.html

The real GnomeCanvas is implemented in a C library; the Gnome2::Canvas module allows a Perl developer to use the canvas like a normal gtk2-perl object. Like the Gtk2 module on which it depends, Gnome2::Canvas follows the C API of libgnomecanvas-2.0 as closely as possible while still being perlish. Thus, the C API reference remains the canonical documentation; the Perl reference documentation lists call signatures and argument types, and is meant to be used in conjunction with the C API reference.

GNOME Canvas Library Reference Manual http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/libgnomecanvas/index.html

perl(1), Glib(3pm), Gtk2(3pm).

To discuss gtk2-perl, ask questions and flame/praise the authors, join gtk-perl-list@gnome.org at lists.gnome.org.

AUTHOR

muppet <scott at asofyet dot org>, with patches from Torsten Schoenfeld <kaffetisch at web dot de>.

The DESCRIPTION section of this page is adapted from the documentation of libgnomecanvas.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2003-2004 by the gtk2-perl team.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with this library; if not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses>.