# Copyright (c) 2003-2005 Ruby-GNOME2 Project Team # This program is licenced under the same licence as Ruby-GNOME2. # # $Id: hypertext.rb,v 1.2 2005/12/01 09:27:01 ktou Exp $ =begin = Text Widget/Hypertext Usually, tags modify the appearance of text in the view, e.g. making it bold or colored or underlined. But tags are not restricted to appearance. They can also affect the behavior of mouse and key presses, as this demo shows. =end require 'common' module Demo class Hypertext < BasicWindow def initialize super('Hypertext') @hand_cursor = Gdk::Cursor.new(Gdk::Cursor::HAND2) @regular_cursor = Gdk::Cursor.new(Gdk::Cursor::XTERM) @hovering = false set_default_size(450, 450) self.border_width = 0 view = Gtk::TextView.new view.wrap_mode = Gtk::TextTag::WRAP_WORD view.signal_connect('key-press-event') do |*args| key_press_event(*args) end view.signal_connect('event-after') do |*args| event_after(*args) end view.signal_connect('motion-notify-event') do |*args| motion_notify_event(*args) end view.signal_connect('visibility-notify-event') do |*args| visibility_notify_event(*args) end buffer = view.buffer sw = Gtk::ScrolledWindow.new sw.set_policy(Gtk::POLICY_AUTOMATIC, Gtk::POLICY_AUTOMATIC) add(sw) sw.add(view) show_page(buffer, 1) end # Inserts a piece of text into the buffer, giving it the usual # appearance of a hyperlink in a web browser: blue and underlined. # Additionally, attaches some data on the tag, to make it recognizable # as a link. def insert_link(buffer, iter, text, page) tag = buffer.create_tag(nil, { 'foreground' => 'blue', 'underline' => Pango::AttrUnderline::SINGLE, }) tag.page = page buffer.insert(iter, text, tag) print("Insert #{tag}:#{page}\n") end # Fills the buffer with text and interspersed links. In any real # hypertext app, this method would parse a file to identify the links. def show_page(buffer, page) puts buffer.text = '' iter = buffer.get_iter_at_offset(0) case page when 1 buffer.insert(iter, 'Some text ot show that simple ') insert_link(buffer, iter, 'hypertext', 3) buffer.insert(iter, ' can easily be realized with ') insert_link(buffer, iter, 'tags', 2) buffer.insert(iter, '.') when 2 buffer.insert(iter, %Q[A tag is an attribute that can be applied to some range of text. For example, a tag might be called "bold" and make the text insid the tag bold. However, the tag concept is more general than that; tags don't have to affect appearance. They can instead affect the behavior of mouse and key presses, "lock" a range of text so the user can't edit it, or countless other things.]) buffer.insert(iter, "\n") insert_link(buffer, iter, 'Go back', 1) when 3 tag = buffer.create_tag(nil, { 'weight' => Pango::FontDescription::WEIGHT_BOLD }) buffer.insert(iter, "hypertext:\n", tag); buffer.insert(iter, %Q[machine-readable text that is not sequential but is organized so that related items of information are connected.\n]) insert_link(buffer, iter, 'Go back', 1) end end # Looks at all tags covering the position of iter in the text view, # and if one of them is a link, follow it by showing the page identified # by the data attached to it. def follow_if_link(text_view, iter) tags = iter.tags tags.each do |tag| print("Follow #{tag}:#{tag.page}\n") if tag.page show_page(text_view.buffer, tag.page) break end end end # Links can be activated by pressing Enter. def key_press_event(text_view, event) case event.keyval when Gdk::Keyval::GDK_Return, Gdk::Keyval::GDK_KP_Enter buffer = text_view.buffer iter = buffer.get_iter_at_mark(buffer.get_mark("insert")) follow_if_link(text_view, iter) end false end # Links can also be activated by clicking. def event_after(text_view, event) unless event.kind_of?(Gdk::EventButton) and event.button == 1 return false end buffer = text_view.buffer # we shouldn't follow a link if the user has selected something range = buffer.selection_bounds if range and range[0].offset != range[1].offset return false end x, y = text_view.window_to_buffer_coords(Gtk::TextView::WINDOW_WIDGET, event.x, event.y) iter = text_view.get_iter_at_location(x, y) follow_if_link(text_view, iter) end # Looks at all tags covering the position (x, y) in the text view, # and if one of them is a link, change the cursor to the "hands" cursor # typically used by web browsers. def set_cursor_if_appropriate(text_view, x, y) buffer = text_view.buffer iter = text_view.get_iter_at_location(x, y) hovering = false tags = iter.tags tags.each do |t| if t.page hovering = true break end end if hovering != @hovering @hovering = hovering window = text_view.get_window(Gtk::TextView::WINDOW_TEXT) window.cursor = if @hovering @hand_cursor else @regular_cursor end end end # Update the cursor image if the pointer moved. def motion_notify_event(text_view, event) x, y = text_view.window_to_buffer_coords(Gtk::TextView::WINDOW_WIDGET, event.x, event.y) set_cursor_if_appropriate(text_view, x, y) text_view.window.pointer false end # Also update the cursor image if the window becomes visible # (e.g. when a window covering it got iconified). def visibility_notify_event (text_view, event) window, wx, wy = text_view.window.pointer bx, by = text_view.window_to_buffer_coords(Gtk::TextView::WINDOW_WIDGET, wx, wy) set_cursor_if_appropriate(text_view, bx, by) false end end end module Gtk class TextTag attr_accessor :page end end