The #GtkApplication associated with the window.
The application will be kept alive for at least as long as it has any windows associated with it (see g_application_hold() for a way to keep it alive without windows).
Normally, the connection between the application and the window will remain until the window is destroyed, but you can explicitly remove it by setting the :application property to %NULL.
The widget to which this window is attached. See gtk_window_set_attached_to().
Examples of places where specifying this relation is useful are for instance a #GtkMenu created by a #GtkComboBox, a completion popup window created by #GtkEntry or a typeahead search entry created by #GtkTreeView.
Whether the window should be decorated by the window manager.
Whether the window frame should have a close button.
Whether the widget is double buffered.
Whether to expand in both directions. Setting this sets both #GtkWidget:hexpand and #GtkWidget:vexpand
Whether the widget should grab focus when it is clicked with the mouse.
This property is only relevant for widgets that can take focus.
Before 3.20, several widgets (GtkButton, GtkFileChooserButton, GtkComboBox) implemented this property individually.
Whether the window should receive the input focus when mapped.
Whether 'focus rectangles' are currently visible in this window.
This property is maintained by GTK+ based on user input and should not be set by applications.
The window gravity of the window. See gtk_window_move() and #GdkGravity for more details about window gravity.
How to distribute horizontal space if widget gets extra space, see #GtkAlign
Whether the window has a corner resize grip.
Note that the resize grip is only shown if the window is actually resizable and not maximized. Use #GtkWindow:resize-grip-visible to find out if the resize grip is currently shown.
Enables or disables the emission of #GtkWidget::query-tooltip on widget
.
A value of %TRUE indicates that widget
can have a tooltip, in this case
the widget will be queried using #GtkWidget::query-tooltip to determine
whether it will provide a tooltip or not.
Note that setting this property to %TRUE for the first time will change the event masks of the GdkWindows of this widget to include leave-notify and motion-notify events. This cannot and will not be undone when the property is set to %FALSE again.
Whether to expand horizontally. See gtk_widget_set_hexpand().
Whether to use the #GtkWidget:hexpand property. See gtk_widget_get_hexpand_set().
Whether the titlebar should be hidden during maximization.
The :icon-name property specifies the name of the themed icon to use as the window icon. See #GtkIconTheme for more details.
Sets all four sides' margin at once. If read, returns max margin on any side.
Margin on bottom side of widget.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Margin on end of widget, horizontally. This property supports left-to-right and right-to-left text directions.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Margin on left side of widget.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Margin on right side of widget.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Margin on start of widget, horizontally. This property supports left-to-right and right-to-left text directions.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Margin on top side of widget.
This property adds margin outside of the widget's normal size request, the margin will be added in addition to the size from gtk_widget_set_size_request() for example.
Whether mnemonics are currently visible in this window.
This property is maintained by GTK+ based on user input, and should not be set by applications.
The requested opacity of the widget. See gtk_widget_set_opacity() for more details about window opacity.
Before 3.8 this was only available in GtkWindow
The :startup-id is a write-only property for setting window's startup notification identifier. See gtk_window_set_startup_id() for more details.
The style of the widget, which contains information about how it will look (colors, etc).
Sets the text of tooltip to be the given string, which is marked up with the [Pango text markup language][PangoMarkupFormat]. Also see gtk_tooltip_set_markup().
This is a convenience property which will take care of getting the tooltip shown if the given string is not %NULL: #GtkWidget:has-tooltip will automatically be set to %TRUE and there will be taken care of #GtkWidget::query-tooltip in the default signal handler.
Note that if both #GtkWidget:tooltip-text and #GtkWidget:tooltip-markup are set, the last one wins.
Sets the text of tooltip to be the given string.
Also see gtk_tooltip_set_text().
This is a convenience property which will take care of getting the tooltip shown if the given string is not %NULL: #GtkWidget:has-tooltip will automatically be set to %TRUE and there will be taken care of #GtkWidget::query-tooltip in the default signal handler.
Note that if both #GtkWidget:tooltip-text and #GtkWidget:tooltip-markup are set, the last one wins.
The transient parent of the window. See gtk_window_set_transient_for() for more details about transient windows.
How to distribute vertical space if widget gets extra space, see #GtkAlign
Whether to expand vertically. See gtk_widget_set_vexpand().
Whether to use the #GtkWidget:vexpand property. See gtk_widget_get_vexpand_set().
Whether the window should receive the input focus.