59 KiB
Title: Migrating from GTK 3.x to GTK 4 Slug: gtk-migrating-3-to-4
GTK 4 is a major new version of GTK that breaks both API and ABI compared to GTK 3.x. Thankfully, most of the changes are not hard to adapt to and there are a number of steps that you can take to prepare your GTK 3.x application for the switch to GTK 4. After that, there's a number of adjustments that you may have to do when you actually switch your application to build against GTK 4.
Preparation in GTK 3.x
The steps outlined in the following sections assume that your application is working with GTK 3.24, which is the final stable release of GTK 3.x. It includes all the necessary APIs and tools to help you port your application to GTK 4. If you are using an older version of GTK 3.x, you should first get your application to build and work with the latest minor release in the 3.24 series.
Do not use deprecated symbols
Over the years, a number of functions, and in some cases, entire widgets have been deprecated. These deprecations are clearly spelled out in the API reference, with hints about the recommended replacements. The API reference for GTK 3 also includes an index of all deprecated symbols.
To verify that your program does not use any deprecated symbols, you can use defines to remove deprecated symbols from the header files, as follows:
make CFLAGS+="-DGDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED -DGTK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED"
Note that some parts of our API, such as enumeration values, are not well covered by the deprecation warnings. In most cases, using them will require you to also use deprecated functions, which will trigger warnings.
Enable diagnostic warnings
Deprecations of properties and signals cannot be caught at compile
time, as both properties and signals are installed and used after
types have been instantiated. In order to catch deprecations and
changes in the run time components, you should use the
G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC
environment variable when running your
application, e.g.:
G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC=1 ./your-app
Do not use GTK-specific command line arguments
GTK 4 does not parse command line arguments any more. If you are using
command line arguments like --gtk-debug
you should use the GTK_DEBUG
environment variable instead. If you are using --g-fatal-warnings
for
debugging purposes, you should use the G_DEBUG
environment variable, as
specified by the
GLib documentation.
Do not use widget style properties
Style properties do not exist in GTK 4. You should stop using them in your custom CSS and in your code.
Review your window creation flags
GTK 4 removes the GDK_WA_CURSOR
flag. Instead, just use
gdk_window_set_cursor()
to set a cursor on the window after
creating it. GTK 4 also removes the GDK_WA_VISUAL
flag, and
always uses an RGBA visual for windows. To prepare your code for
this, use gdk_window_set_visual (gdk_screen_get_rgba_visual ())
after creating your window. GTK 4 also removes the GDK_WA_WMCLASS
flag. If you need this X11-specific functionality, use XSetClassHint()
directly.
Stop using direct access to GdkEvent structs
In GTK 4, event structs are opaque and immutable. Many fields already have accessors in GTK 3, and you should use those to reduce the amount of porting work you have to do at the time of the switch.
Stop using gdk_pointer_warp()
Warping the pointer is disorienting and unfriendly to users.
GTK 4 does not support it. In special circumstances (such as when
implementing remote connection UIs) it can be necessary to
warp the pointer; in this case, use platform APIs such as
XWarpPointer()
directly.
Stop using non-RGBA visuals
GTK 4 always uses RGBA visuals for its windows; you should make
sure that your code works with such visuals. At the same time,
you should stop using GdkVisual
APIs, since this object not longer
exists in GTK 4. Most of its APIs are deprecated already and not
useful when dealing with RGBA visuals.
Stop using gtk_widget_set_app_paintable
This is gone in GTK4 with no direct replacement. But for some usecases there
are alternatives. If you want to make the background transparent, you can set
the background color to, for example, rgba(255, 255, 255, 0)
using CSS instead.
Stop using GtkBox
padding, fill and expand child properties
GTK 4 removes these [class@Gtk.Box] child properties, so you should stop using
them. You can replace GtkBox:padding
using GtkWidget
's margin-*
properties
on your child widgets.
The fill child property can be replaced by setting appropriate values for
the [property@Gtk.Widget:halign] and [property@Gtk.Widget:valign] properties
of the child widgets. If you previously set the fill
child property to
TRUE
, you can achieve the same effect by setting the halign
or valign
properties to GTK_ALIGN_FILL
, depending on the parent box -- halign
for a
horizontal box, valign
for a vertical one.
[class@Gtk.Box] also uses the expand child property. It can be replaced by
setting [property@Gtk.Widget:hexpand] or [property@Gtk.Widget:vexpand] on
the child widgets. To match the old behavior of the GtkBox
's expand child
property, you need to set hexpand
on the child widgets of a horizontal
GtkBox
and vexpand
on the child widgets of a vertical GtkBox
.
Note that there's a subtle but important difference between GtkBox
's
expand
and fill
child properties and the ones in GtkWidget
: setting
[property@Gtk.Widget:hexpand] or [property@Gtk.Widget:vexpand] to TRUE
will propagate up the widget hierarchy, so a pixel-perfect port might
require you to reset the expansion flags to FALSE
in a parent widget higher
up the hierarchy.
Stop using the state argument of GtkStyleContext
getters
The getters in the [class@Gtk.StyleContext] API, such as
gtk_style_context_get_property()
, gtk_style_context_get()
,
or gtk_style_context_get_color()
only accept the context's current
state for their state argument. You should update all callers to pass
the current state.
Stop using gdk_pixbuf_get_from_window()
and gdk_cairo_set_source_window()
These functions are not supported in GTK 4. Instead, either use backend-specific APIs, or render your widgets using [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.snapshot], once you are using GTK 4.
Stop using GtkButton
's image-related API
The functions and properties related to automatically add a
[class@Gtk.Image] to a [class@Gtk.Button], and using a GtkSetting
to
control its visibility, are not supported in GTK 4. Instead, you can just
pack a GtkImage inside a GtkButton, and control its visibility like you
would for any other widget. If you only want to add a named icon to a
GtkButton, you can use [ctor@Gtk.Button.new_from_icon_name].
Stop using GtkWidget
event signals
Event controllers and gestures replace event signals in GTK 4.
Most of them have been backported to GTK 3.x so you can prepare for this change.
Signal | Event controller |
---|---|
::event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerLegacy] |
::event-after | [class@Gtk.EventControllerLegacy] |
::button-press-event | [class@Gtk.GestureClick] |
::button-release-event | [class@Gtk.GestureClick] |
::touch-event | various touch gestures |
::scroll-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerScroll] |
::motion-notify-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerMotion] |
::delete-event | - |
::key-press-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerKey] |
::key-release-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerKey] |
::enter-notify-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerMotion] |
::leave-notify-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerMotion] |
::configure-event | - |
::focus-in-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerFocus] |
::focus-out-event | [class@Gtk.EventControllerFocus] |
::map-event | - |
::unmap-event | - |
::property-notify-event | replaced by [class@Gdk.Clipboard] |
::selection-clear-event | replaced by [class@Gdk.Clipboard] |
::selection-request-event | replaced by [class@Gdk.Clipboard] |
::selection-notify-event | replaced by [class@Gdk.Clipboard] |
Drag-and-Drop signals | [class@Gtk.DragSource], [class@Gtk.DropTarget] |
::proximity-in-event | [class@Gtk.GestureStylus] |
::proximity-out-event | [class@Gtk.GestureStylus] |
::visibility-notify-event | - |
::window-state-event | - |
::damage-event | - |
::grab-broken-event | - |
Event signals which are not directly related to input have to be dealt with on a one-by-one basis:
- If you were using
::configure-event
and::window-state-event
to save window state, you should use property notification for corresponding [class@Gtk.Window] properties, such as [property@Gtk.Window:default-width], [property@Gtk.Window:default-height], [property@Gtk.Window:maximized] or [property@Gtk.Window:fullscreened]. - If you were using
::delete-event
to present a confirmation when using the close button of a window, you should use the [signal@Gtk.Window::close-request] signal. - If you were using
::map-event
and::unmap-event
to track a window being mapped, you should use property notification for the [property@Gdk.Surface:mapped] property instead. - The
::damage-event
signal has no replacement, as the only consumer of damage events were the offscreen GDK surfaces, which have no replacement in GTK 4.x.
Set a proper application ID
In GTK 4 we want the application's GApplication
'application-id' (and
therefore the D-Bus name), the desktop file basename and Wayland's xdg-shell
app_id
to match. In order to achieve this with GTK 3.x call
g_set_prgname()
with the same application ID you passed to
[class@Gtk.Application]. Rename your desktop files to match the application
ID if needed.
The call to g_set_prgname()
can be removed once you fully migrated to GTK 4.
You should be aware that changing the application ID makes your application appear as a new, different app to application installers. You should consult the appstream documentation for best practices around renaming applications.
Stop using gtk_main()
and related APIs
GTK 4 removes the gtk_main_*
family of APIs. The recommended replacement
is [class@Gtk.Application], but you can also iterate the GLib main loop directly,
using GMainContext
APIs. The replacement for gtk_events_pending()
is
g_main_context_pending()
, the replacement for gtk_main_iteration()
is
g_main_context_iteration()
.
In GTK 4, you can use this replacement that will iterate the default main loop until all windows have been closed:
while (g_list_model_get_n_items (gtk_window_get_toplevels ()) > 0)
g_main_context_iteration (NULL, TRUE);
Reduce the use of gtk_widget_destroy()
GTK 4 introduces a [method@Gtk.Window.destroy] api. While that is not available
in GTK 3, you can prepare for the switch by using gtk_widget_destroy()
only on toplevel windows, and replace all other uses with
gtk_container_remove()
or g_object_unref()
.
Stop using the GtkWidget.destroy vfunc
Instead of implementing GtkWidget.destroy, you can implement GObject.dispose.
Reduce the use of generic container APIs
GTK 4 removes gtk_container_add()
and gtk_container_remove()
. While there
is not always a replacement for gtk_container_remove()
in GTK 3, you can
replace many uses of gtk_container_add()
with equivalent container-specific
APIs such as gtk_grid_attach()
, and thereby reduce
the amount of work you have to do at the time of the switch.
Review your use of icon resources
When using icons as resources, the behavior of GTK 4 is different in one
respect: Icons that are directly in $APP_ID/icons/
are treated as unthemed
icons, which also means that symbolic icons are not recolored. If you want
your icon resources to have icon theme semantics, they need to be placed
into theme subdirectories such as $APP_ID/icons/16x16/actions
or
$APP_ID/icons/scalable/status
.
This location works fine in GTK 3 too, so you can prepare for this change before switching to GTK 4.
Changes that need to be done at the time of the switch
This section outlines porting tasks that you need to tackle when you get to the point that you actually build your application against GTK 4. Making it possible to prepare for these in GTK 3 would have been either impossible or impractical.
Larger changes
Some of the larger themes of GTK 4 development are hard to cover in the form of checklist items, so we mention them separately up-front.
Subclassing
Compared to previous versions, GTK 4 emphasizes composition and delegation over subclassing. As a consequence, many widgets can no longer be subclassed. In most cases, you should look deriving your widget directly from GtkWidget and use complex widgets as child widgets instead of deriving from them.
Life-cycle handling
Widgets in GTK 4 are treated like any other objects - their parent widget holds a reference on them, and GTK holds a reference on toplevel windows. [method@Gtk.Window.destroy] will drop the reference on the toplevel window, and cause the whole widget hierarchy to be finalized unless there are other references that keep widgets alive.
The [signal@Gtk.Widget::destroy] signal is emitted when a widget is disposed, and therefore can no longer be used to break reference cycles. A typical sign of a reference cycle involving a toplevel window is when closing the window does not make the application quit.
Stop using GdkScreen
The GdkScreen
object has been removed in GTK 4. Most of its APIs already
had replacements in GTK 3 and were deprecated, a few remaining replacements
have been added to GdkDisplay
.
Stop using the root window
The root window is an X11-centric concept that is no longer exposed in the
backend-neutral GDK API. If you need to interact with the X11 root window,
you can use [method@GdkX11.Display.get_xrootwindow
] to get its XID.
Stop using GdkVisual
This object is not useful with current GTK drawing APIs and has been removed without replacement.
Stop using GdkDeviceManager
The GdkDeviceManager
object has been removed in GTK 4. Most of its APIs already
had replacements in GTK 3 and were deprecated in favor of GdkSeat
.
Adapt to GdkWindow
API changes
GdkWindow
has been renamed to GdkSurface
.
In GTK 4, the two roles of a standalone toplevel window and of a popup that
is placed relative to a parent window have been separated out into two
interfaces, [iface@Gdk.Toplevel] and [iface@Gdk.Popup]. Surfaces
implementing these interfaces are created with [ctor@Gdk.Surface.new_toplevel
]
and [ctor@Gdk.Surface.new_popup
], respectively, and they are presented on
screen using [method@Gdk.Toplevel.present] and [method@Gdk.Popup.present].
The present()
functions take parameters in the form of an auxiliary layout
struct, [struct@Gdk.PopupLayout] or [struct@Gdk.ToplevelLayout].
If your code is dealing directly with surfaces, you may have to change it to call the API in these interfaces, depending on whether the surface you are dealing with is a toplevel or a popup.
As part of this reorganization, X11-only concepts such as sticky, keep-below, urgency, skip-taskbar or window groups have either been removed or moved to X11 backend api. If you need to use them on your X11 windows, you will have to use those backend apis or set the corresponding X11 properties (as specified in the EWMH) yourself.
Subsurfaces are not currently supported. Native and foreign subwindows are no longer supported. These concepts were complicating the code and could not be supported across backends.
A number of GdkWindow APIs are no longer available. This includes
gdk_window_reparent()
, gdk_window_set_geometry_hints()
, gdk_window_raise()
,
gdk_window_restack()
, gdk_window_move()
, gdk_window_resize()
. If
you need to manually control the position or stacking of your X11
windows, you you will have to use Xlib apis.
A number of minor API cleanups have happened in GdkSurface
as well. For example, gdk_surface_input_shape_combine_region()
has been renamed to [method@Gdk.Surface.set_input_region
], and
gdk_surface_begin_resize_drag()
has been renamed to
[method@Gdk.Toplevel.begin_resize
].
The "iconified" window state has been renamed to "minimized"
The GDK_TOPLEVEL_STATE_ICONIFIED
value of the GdkSurfaceState
enumeration
is now GDK_TOPLEVEL_STATE_MINIMIZED
in the GdkToplevelState
enumeration.
The GdkWindow
functions gdk_window_iconify()
and
gdk_window_deiconify()
have been renamed to [method@Gdk.Toplevel.minimize]
and [method@Gdk.Toplevel.present], respectively.
The behavior of the minimization and unminimization operations have not been changed, and they still require support from the underlying windowing system.
Adapt to GdkEvent
API changes
Direct access to [class@Gdk.Event] structs is no longer possible in GTK 4.
GdkEvent
is now a strictly read-only type, and you can no longer
change any of its fields, or construct new events. All event fields
have accessors that you will have to use.
Event compression is always enabled in GTK 4, for both motion and
scroll events. If you need to see the uncoalesced motion or scroll
history, use [method@Gdk.Event.get_history
] on the latest event.
Stop using grabs
GTK 4 no longer provides the gdk_device_grab()
or gdk_seat_grab()
apis. If you need to dismiss a popup when the user clicks outside
(the most common use for grabs), you can use the GdkPopup
[property@Gdk.Popup:autohide] property instead. [class@Gtk.Popover]
also has a [property@Gtk.Popover:autohide] property for this. If you
need to prevent the user from interacting with a window while a dialog
is open, use the [property@Gtk.Window:modal] property of the dialog.
Adapt to coordinate API changes
A number of coordinate APIs in GTK 3 had variants taking int
arguments:
gdk_device_get_surface_at_position()
, gdk_surface_get_device_position()
.
These have been changed to use double
arguments, and the int
variants
have been removed. Update your code accordingly.
Any APIs that deal with global (or root) coordinates have been
removed in GTK 4, since not all backends support them. You should
replace your use of such APIs with surface-relative equivalents.
Examples of such removed APIs are gdk_window_get_origin()
,
gdk_window_move()
or gdk_event_get_root_coords()
.
Adapt to GdkKeymap
API changes
GdkKeymap
no longer exists as an independent object.
If you need access to keymap state, it is now exposed as properties
on the GdkDevice
representing the keyboard:
[property@Gdk.Device:direction],
[property@Gdk.Device:has-bidi-layouts],
[property@Gdk.Device:caps-lock-state],
[property@Gdk.Device:num-lock-state],
[property@Gdk.Device:scroll-lock-state] and
[property@Gdk.Device:modifier-state]. To obtain the keyboard device,
you can use
gdk_seat_get_keyboard (gdk_display_get_default_seat (display)
If you need access to translated keys for event handling, GdkEvent
now includes all of the translated key state, including consumed
modifiers, group and shift level, so there should be no need to
manually call gdk_keymap_translate_keyboard_state()
(which has
been removed).
If you need to do forward or backward mapping between key codes
and key values, use [method@Gdk.Display.map_keycode] and
[method@Gdk.Display.map_keyval], which are the replacements for
gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keycode()
and
gdk_keymap_get_entries_for_keyval()
.
Adapt to changes in keyboard modifier handling
GTK 3 has the idea that use of modifiers may differ between different
platforms, and has a GdkModifierIntent
api to let platforms provide
hint about how modifiers are expected to be used. It also promoted
the use of <Primary>
instead of <Control>
to specify accelerators that
adapt to platform conventions.
In GTK 4, the meaning of modifiers has been fixed, and backends are expected to map the platform conventions to the existing modifiers. The expected use of modifiers in GTK 4 is:
GDK_CONTROL_MASK
: Primary accelerators
GDK_ALT_MASK
: Mnemonics
GDK_SHIFT_MASK
: Extending selections
GDK_CONTROL_MASK
: Modifying selections
GDK_CONTROL_MASK|GDK_ALT_MASK
: Prevent text input
Consequently, GdkModifierIntent
and related APIs have been removed,
and <Control>
is preferred over <Primary>
in accelerators.
A related change is that GTK 4 no longer supports the use of archaic
X11 'real' modifiers with the names Mod1,..., Mod5, and GDK_MOD1_MASK
has been renamed to GDK_ALT_MASK
.
Replace GtkClipboard
with GdkClipboard
The GtkClipboard
API has been removed, and replaced by GdkClipboard
.
There is not direct 1:1 mapping between the old an the new API, so it cannot
be a mechanical replacement; the new API is based on object types and GValue
like object properties, instead of opaque identifiers, so it should be easier
to use.
For instance, the example below copies the contents of an entry into the clipboard:
static void
copy_text (GtkWidget *widget)
{
GtkEditable *editable = GTK_EDITABLE (widget);
// Initialize a GValue with the contents of the widget
GValue value = G_VALUE_INIT;
g_value_init (&value, G_TYPE_STRING);
g_value_set_string (&value, gtk_editable_get_text (editable));
// Store the value in the clipboard object
GdkClipboard *clipboard = gtk_widget_get_clipboard (widget);
gdk_clipboard_set_value (clipboard, &value);
g_value_unset (&value);
}
whereas the example below pastes the contents into the entry:
static void
paste_text (GtkWidget *widget)
{
GtkEditable *editable = GTK_EDITABLE (widget);
// Initialize a GValue to receive text
GValue value = G_VALUE_INIT;
g_value_init (&value, G_TYPE_STRING);
// Get the content provider for the clipboard, and ask it for text
GdkClipboard *clipboard = gtk_widget_get_clipboard (widget);
GdkContentProvider *provider = gdk_clipboard_get_content (clipboard);
// If the content provider does not contain text, we are not interested
if (!gdk_content_provider_get_value (provider, &value, NULL))
return;
const char *str = g_value_get_string (&value);
gtk_editable_set_text (editable, str);
g_value_unset (&value);
}
The convenience API for specific target types in GtkClipboard
has been
replaced by their corresponding GType:
GtkClipboard | GType |
---|---|
gtk_clipboard_request_text() |
G_TYPE_STRING |
gtk_clipboard_request_rich_text() |
GTK_TYPE_TEXT_BUFFER |
gtk_clipboard_request_image() |
GDK_TYPE_PIXBUF |
gtk_clipboard_request_uris() |
GDK_TYPE_FILE_LIST |
Note: Support for rich text serialization across different processes
for GtkTextBuffer
is not available any more.
If you are copying the contents of an image, it is recommended to use
GDK_TYPE_PAINTABLE
instead of GDK_TYPE_PIXBUF
, to minimize the amount of
potential copies.
Stop using gtk_get_current_...
APIs
The function gtk_get_current_event()
and its variants have been
replaced by equivalent event controller APIs:
[method@Gtk.EventController.get_current_event], etc.
Convert your UI files
A number of the changes outlined below affect .ui
files. The
gtk4-builder-tool simplify
command can perform many of the
necessary changes automatically, when called with the --3to4
option. You should always review the resulting changes.
The <requires>
tag now supports for the lib
attribute the
gtk
value only, instead of the gtk+
one previously.
Adapt to GtkBuilder API changes
gtk_builder_connect_signals()
no longer exists. Instead, signals are
always connected automatically. If you need to add user data to your
signals, [method@Gtk.Builder.set_current_object] must be called. An important
caveat is that you have to do this before loading any XML. This means if
you need to use [method@Gtk.Builder.set_current_object], you can no longer use
[ctor@Gtk.Builder.new_from_file], [ctor@Gtk.Builder.new_from_resource], or
[ctor@Gtk.Builder.new_from_string]. Instead, you must use vanilla [ctor@Gtk.Builder.new],
then call [method@Gtk.Builder.set_current_object], then load the XML using
[method@Gtk.Builder.add_from_file], [method@Gtk.Builder.add_from_resource], or
[method@Gtk.Builder.add_from_string]. You must check the return value for
failure and manually abort with g_error()
if something went wrong.
You only have to worry about this if you were previously using
gtk_builder_connect_signals()
. If you are using templates, then
gtk_widget_init_template()
will call gtk_builder_set_current_object()
for you, so templates work like before.
Adapt to event controller API changes
A few changes to the event controller and [class@Gtk.Gesture] APIs
did not make it back to GTK 3, and have to be taken into account
when moving to GTK 4. One is that the [signal@Gtk.EventControllerMotion::enter]
and [signal@Gtk.EventControllerMotion::leave] signals have gained new arguments.
Another is that GtkGestureMultiPress
has been renamed to [class@Gtk.GestureClick],
and has lost its area property. A [class@Gtk.EventControllerFocus] has been
split off from [class@Gtk.EventControllerKey].
In GTK 3, GtkEventController:widget
was a construct-only property, so a
GtkWidget
was provided whenever constructing a GtkEventController
. In
GTK 4, [property@Gtk.EventController:widget] is now read-only. Use
[method@Gtk.Widget.add_controller] to add an event controller to a widget.
In GTK 3, widgets did not own their event controllers, and event controllers did not own their widgets, so developers were responsible for manually keeping event controllers alive for the lifetime of their associated widgets. In GTK 4, widgets own their event controllers. [method@Gtk.Widget.add_controller] takes ownership of the event controller, so there is no longer any need to store a reference to the event controller after it has been added to a widget.
Although not normally needed, an event controller could be removed from
a widget in GTK 3 by destroying the event controller with g_object_unref()
.
In GTK 4, you must use [method@Gtk.Widget.remove_controller].
Focus handling changes
The semantics of the [property@Gtk.Widget:can-focus] property have changed.
In GTK 3, this property only meant that the widget itself would not
accept keyboard input, but its children still might (in the case of
containers). In GTK 4, if :can-focus
is FALSE
, the focus cannot enter
the widget or any of its descendents, and the default value has changed
from FALSE
to TRUE
. In addition, there is a [property@Gtk.Widget:focusable]
property, which controls whether an individual widget can receive
the input focus.
The gtk4-builder-tool
utility, when called with the --3to4
option of the
simplify
command, will replace :can-focus
by :focusable
.
The feature to automatically keep the focus widget scrolled into view with
gtk_container_set_focus_vadjustment()
has been removed together with
GtkContainer
, and is provided by scrollable widgets instead. In the common
case that the scrollable is a [class@Gtk.Viewport], use
[property@Gtk.Viewport:scroll-to-focus].
Use the new apis for keyboard shortcuts
The APIs for keyboard shortcuts and accelerators have changed in GTK 4.
Instead of GtkAccelGroup
, you now use a [class@Gtk.ShortcutController] with global
scope, and instead of GtkBindingSet
, you now use [method@Gtk.WidgetClass.add_shortcut],
[method@Gtk.WidgetClass.add_binding] and its variants. In both cases, you probably
want to add actions that can be triggered by your shortcuts.
There is no direct replacement for loading and saving accelerators with
GtkAccelMap
. But since GtkShortcutController
implements GListModel
and
both [class@Gtk.ShortcutTrigger] and [class@Gtk.ShortcutAction] can be
serialized to strings, it is relatively easy to implement saving and loading
yourself.
Stop using GtkEventBox
GtkEventBox
is no longer needed and has been removed.
All widgets receive all events.
Stop using GtkButtonBox
GtkButtonBox
has been removed. Use a [class@Gtk.Box] instead.
Adapt to GtkBox
API changes
The GtkBox pack_start()
and pack_end()
methods have been replaced by
[method@Gtk.Box.prepend] and [method@Gtk.Box.append]. You can also reorder
box children as necessary.
Adapt to GtkWindow
API changes
Following the GdkSurface
changes, a number of GtkWindow
APIs that were
X11-specific have been removed. This includes gtk_window_set_position()
,
gtk_window_set_geometry_hints()
, gtk_window_set_gravity()
,
gtk_window_move()
, gtk_window_parse_geometry()
,
gtk_window_set_keep_above()
, gtk_window_set_keep_below()
,
gtk_window_begin_resize_drag()
, gtk_window_begin_move_drag()
.
Most likely, you should just stop using them. In some cases, you can
fall back to using the underlying GdkToplevel
APIs (for example,
[method@Gdk.Toplevel.begin_resize
]); alternatively, you will need to get
the native windowing system surface from the GtkWindow
and call platform
specific API.
The APIs for controlling GtkWindow
size have changed to be better aligned
with the way size changes are integrated in the frame cycle. gtk_window_resize()
and gtk_window_get_size()
have been removed. Instead, use
[method@Gtk.Window.set_default_size
] and [method@Gtk.Window.get_default_size
].
Adapt to GtkHeaderBar
and GtkActionBar
API changes
The gtk_header_bar_set_show_close_button()
function has been renamed to
the more accurate name [method@Gtk.HeaderBar.set_show_title_buttons]. The
corresponding getter and the property itself have also been renamed.
The default value of the property is now TRUE
instead of FALSE
.
The gtk_header_bar_set_custom_title()
function has been renamed to
the more accurate name [method@Gtk.HeaderBar.set_title_widget]. The
corresponding getter and the property itself have also been renamed.
The gtk_header_bar_set_title()
function has been removed along with its
corresponding getter and the property. By default [class@Gtk.HeaderBar]
shows the title of the window, so if you were setting the title of the
header bar, consider setting the window title instead. If you need to show a
title that's different from the window title, use the
[property@Gtk.HeaderBar:title-widget] property to add a [class@Gtk.Label] as
shown in the example in the [class@Gtk.HeaderBar] documentation.
The gtk_header_bar_set_subtitle()
function has been removed along with
its corresponding getter and the property. The old "subtitle" behavior
can be replicated by setting the [property@Gtk.HeaderBar:title-widget] property to
a [class@Gtk.Box] with two labels inside, with the title label matching the
example in GtkHeaderBar
documentation, and the subtitle label being
similar, but with "subtitle"
style class instead of "title"
.
The gtk_header_bar_set_has_subtitle()
function has been removed along with
its corresponding getter and the property. Its behavior can be replicated by
setting the [property@Gtk.HeaderBar:title-widget] property to a
[class@Gtk.Stack] with [property@Gtk.Stack:vhomogeneous] property set to
TRUE
and two pages, each with a [class@Gtk.Box] with title and subtitle as
described above.
Some of the internal structure of GtkHeaderBar
has been made available as
public API: [class@Gtk.WindowHandle] and [class@Gtk.WindowControls]. If you
have unusual needs for custom headerbars, these might be useful to you.
The :pack-type
child properties of GtkHeaderBar
and GtkActionBar
have
been removed. If you need to programmatically place children, use the
[method@Gtk.HeaderBar.pack_start] and [method@Gtk.HeaderBar.pack_end] methods.
In UI files, use the type
attribute on the child
element.
The gtk4-builder-tool
utility can help with this conversion, with the
--3to4
option of the simplify
command.
Adapt to GtkStack, GtkAssistant and GtkNotebook API changes
The child properties of GtkStack
, GtkAssistant
and GtkNotebook
have been
converted into child meta objects.
Instead of gtk_container_child_set (stack, child, …)
, you can now use
g_object_set (gtk_stack_get_page (stack, child), …)
. In .ui files, the
GtkStackPage
objects must be created explicitly, and take the child widget
as property. The changes to GtkNotebook
and GtkAssistant
are similar.
gtk4-builder-tool
can help with this conversion, with the --3to4
option
of the simplify
command.
Adapt to button class hierarchy changes
GtkCheckButton
is no longer derived from GtkToggleButton
. Call
[method@Gtk.CheckButton.set_active] instead of [method@Gtk.ToggleButton.set_active].
GtkRadioButton
has been removed, and its grouping functionality has
been added to GtkCheckButton
and GtkToggleButton
. Use grouped
check buttons for traditional radio groups, and used grouped toggle
buttons for view switchers. The new API to set up groups of buttons
is [method@Gtk.CheckButton.set_group] and [method@Gtk.ToggleButton.set_group].
gtk4-builder-tool
can help with this conversion, with the --3to4
option
of the simplify
command.
Adapt to GtkScrolledWindow API changes
The constructor for GtkScrolledWindow
no longer takes the adjustments
as arguments - these were almost always NULL
.
Adapt to GtkBin removal
The abstract base class GtkBin
for single-child containers has been
removed. The former subclasses are now derived directly from GtkWidget
,
and have a "child" property for their child widget. To add a child, use
the setter for the "child" property (e.g. [method@Gtk.Frame.set_child]) instead
of gtk_container_add()
. Adding a child in a ui file with <child>
still works.
The affected classes are:
- [class@Gtk.AspectFrame]
- [class@Gtk.Button] (and subclasses)
- [class@Gtk.ComboBox]
- [class@Gtk.FlowBoxChild]
- [class@Gtk.Frame]
- [class@Gtk.ListBoxRow]
- [class@Gtk.Overlay]
- [class@Gtk.Popover]
- [class@Gtk.Revealer]
- [class@Gtk.ScrolledWindow]
- [class@Gtk.SearchBar]
- [class@Gtk.Viewport]
- [class@Gtk.Window] (and subclasses)
If you have custom widgets that were derived from GtkBin
, you should
port them to derive from GtkWidget
. Notable vfuncs that you will have
to implement include the GObject
dispose vfunc (to unparent your child),
[vfunc@Gtk.Widget.compute_expand] (if you want your container to propagate
expand flags) and [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.get_request_mode] (if you want your
container to support height-for-width).
You may also want to implement the [iface@Gtk.Buildable] interface, to support
adding children with <child>
in ui files.
Adapt to GtkContainer removal
The abstract base class GtkContainer
for general containers has been
removed. The former subclasses are now derived directly from GtkWidget
,
and have class-specific add() and remove() functions.
The most noticeable change is the use of [method@Gtk.Box.append] or [method@Gtk.Box.prepend]
instead of gtk_container_add()
for adding children to GtkBox
, and the change
to use container-specific remove functions, such as [method@Gtk.Stack.remove] instead
of gtk_container_remove()
. Adding a child in a ui file with <child>
still works.
The affected classes are:
- [class@Gtk.ActionBar]
- [class@Gtk.Box] (and subclasses)
- [class@Gtk.Expander]
- [class@Gtk.Fixed]
- [class@Gtk.FlowBox]
- [class@Gtk.Grid]
- [class@Gtk.HeaderBar]
- [class@Gtk.IconView]
- [class@Gtk.InfoBar]
- [class@Gtk.ListBox]
- [class@Gtk.Notebook]
- [class@Gtk.Paned]
- [class@Gtk.Stack]
- [class@Gtk.TextView]
- [class@Gtk.TreeView]
Without GtkContainer
, there are no longer facilities for defining and
using child properties. If you have custom widgets using child properties,
they will have to be converted either to layout properties provided
by a layout manager (if they are layout-related), or handled in some
other way. One possibility is to use child meta objects, as seen with
[class@Gtk.AssistantPage], [class@Gtk.StackPage] and the like.
If you used to define child properties with <packing>
in ui files, you have
to switch to using <layout>
for the corresponding layout properties.
gtk4-builder-tool
can help with this conversion, with the --3to4
option
of the simplify
command.
The replacements for gtk_container_add() are:
Widget | Replacement |
---|---|
GtkActionBar |
[method@Gtk.ActionBar.pack_start], [method@Gtk.ActionBar.pack_end] |
GtkBox |
[method@Gtk.Box.prepend], [method@Gtk.Box.append] |
GtkExpander |
[method@Gtk.Expander.set_child] |
GtkFixed |
[method@Gtk.Fixed.put] |
GtkFlowBox |
[method@Gtk.FlowBox.insert] |
GtkGrid |
[method@Gtk.Grid.attach] |
GtkHeaderBar |
[method@Gtk.HeaderBar.pack_start], [method@Gtk.HeaderBar.pack_end] |
GtkIconView |
- |
GtkInfoBar |
[method@Gtk.InfoBar.add_child] |
GtkListBox |
[method@Gtk.ListBox.insert] |
GtkNotebook |
[method@Gtk.Notebook.append_page] |
GtkPaned |
[method@Gtk.Paned.set_start_child], [method@Gtk.Paned.set_end_child] |
GtkStack |
[method@Gtk.Stack.add_child] |
GtkTextView |
[method@Gtk.TextView.add_child_at_anchor], [method@Gtk.TextView.add_overlay] |
GtkTreeView |
- |
Stop using GtkContainer::border-width
GTK 4 has removed the GtkContainer::border-width
property (together
with the rest of GtkContainer
). Use other means to influence the spacing
of your containers, such as the CSS margin and padding properties on child
widgets, or the CSS border-spacing property on containers.
Adapt to gtk_widget_destroy() removal
The function gtk_widget_destroy()
has been removed. To explicitly destroy
a toplevel window, use [method@Gtk.Window.destroy]. To destroy a widget that is
part of a hierarchy, remove it from its parent using a container-specific
remove API, such as [method@Gtk.Box.remove] or [method@Gtk.Stack.remove]. To
destroy a freestanding non-toplevel widget, use g_object_unref()
to drop your
reference.
Adapt to coordinate API changes
A number of APIs that are accepting or returning coordinates have
been changed from int
s to double
s: gtk_widget_translate_coordinates()
,
gtk_fixed_put()
, gtk_fixed_move()
. This change is mostly transparent,
except for cases where out parameters are involved: you need to
pass double*
now, instead of int*
.
Adapt to GtkStyleContext API changes
The getters in the GtkStyleContext API, such as [method@Gtk.StyleContext.get_color], [method@Gtk.StyleContext.get_border], or [method@Gtk.StyleContext.get_margin] have lost their state argument, and always use the context's current state. Update all callers to omit the state argument.
The most commonly used GtkStyleContext API, gtk_style_context_add_class()
,
has been moved to GtkWidget as [method@Gtk.Widget.add_css_class], as have the
corresponding gtk_style_context_remove_class()
and
gtk_style_context_has_class()
APIs.
Adapt to GtkCssProvider API changes
In GTK 4, the various GtkCssProvider
load functions have lost their
GError
argument. If you want to handle CSS loading errors, use the
[signal@Gtk.CssProvider::parsing-error] signal instead. gtk_css_provider_get_named()
has been replaced by [method@Gtk.CssProvider.load_named].
Stop using GtkShadowType and GtkRelief properties
The shadow-type properties in GtkScrolledWindow
, GtkViewport
,
and GtkFrame
, as well as the relief properties in GtkButton
and its subclasses have been removed. GtkScrolledWindow
, GtkButton
and GtkMenuButton
have instead gained a boolean has-frame property.
Adapt to GtkWidget's size request changes
GTK 3 used five different virtual functions in GtkWidget to
implement size requisition, namely the gtk_widget_get_preferred_width()
family of functions. To simplify widget implementations, GTK 4 uses
only one virtual function, [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.measure], that widgets
have to implement. [method@Gtk.Widget.measure] replaces the various
gtk_widget_get_preferred_
functions for querying sizes.
Adapt to GtkWidget's size allocation changes
The [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.size_allocate] vfunc takes the baseline as an argument
now, so you no longer need to call gtk_widget_get_allocated_baseline()
to get it.
The ::size-allocate signal has been removed, since it is easy to misuse. If you need to learn about sizing changes of custom drawing widgets, use the [signal@Gtk.DrawingArea::resize] or [signal@Gtk.GLArea::resize] signals. If you want to track the size of toplevel windows, use property notification for [property@Gtk.Window:default-width] and [property@Gtk.Window:default-height].
Switch to GtkWidget's children APIs
In GTK 4, any widget can have children (and GtkContainer
is gone).
There is new API to navigate the widget tree, for use in widget
implementations:
[method@Gtk.Widget.get_first_child],
[method@Gtk.Widget.get_last_child],
[method@Gtk.Widget.get_next_sibling],
[method@Gtk.Widget.get_prev_sibling].
Don't use -gtk-gradient in your CSS
GTK now supports standard CSS syntax for both linear and radial gradients, just use those.
Don't use -gtk-icon-effect in your CSS
GTK now supports a more versatile -gtk-icon-filter instead.
Replace
Old | Replacement |
---|---|
-gtk-icon-effect: dim | -gtk-icon-filter: opacity(0.5) |
-gtk-icon-effect: highlight | -gtk-icon-filter: brightness(1.2) |
Don't use -gtk-icon-theme in your CSS
GTK 4 always uses the current icon theme, with no way to change this.
Don't use -gtk-outline-...-radius in your CSS
These non-standard properties have been removed from GTK CSS. Just use regular border radius.
Adapt to drawing model changes
This area has seen the most radical changes in the transition from GTK 3
to GTK 4. Widgets no longer use a draw() function to render their contents
to a cairo surface. Instead, they have a [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.snapshot] function
that creates one or more GskRenderNodes to represent their content. Third-party
widgets that use a draw() function or a GtkWidget::draw
signal handler for
custom drawing will need to be converted to use [method@Gtk.Snapshot.append_cairo].
The auxiliary [class@Gtk.Snapshot] object has APIs to help with creating render nodes.
If you are using a GtkDrawingArea
for custom drawing, you need to switch
to using [method@Gtk.DrawingArea.set_draw_func] to set a draw function instead
of connecting a handler to the GtkWidget::draw
signal.
Stop using APIs to query GdkSurfaces
A number of APIs for querying special-purpose windows have been removed,
since these windows no longer exist:
gtk_tree_view_get_bin_window()
, gtk_viewport_get_bin_window()
,
gtk_viewport_get_view_window()
.
Widgets are now visible by default
The default value of [property@Gtk.Widget:visible] in GTK 4 is %TRUE, so you no longer need to explicitly show all your widgets. On the flip side, you need to hide widgets that are not meant to be visible from the start. The only widgets that still need to be explicitly shown are toplevel windows, dialogs and popovers.
A convenient way to remove unnecessary property assignments like this
from ui files it run the command gtk4-builder-tool simplify --replace
on them.
The function gtk_widget_show_all()
, the GtkWidget:no-show-all
property
and its getter and setter have been removed in GTK 4, so you should stop
using them.
Adapt to changes in animated hiding and showing of widgets
Widgets that appear and disappear with an animation, such as
GtkInfoBar
, GtkRevealer
no longer use gtk_widget_show()
and
gtk_widget_hide()
for this, but have gained dedicated APIs for this
purpose that you should use instead, such as [method@Gtk.InfoBar.set_revealed].
Stop passing commandline arguments to gtk_init
The [func@Gtk.init] and [func@Gtk.init_check] functions no longer accept
commandline arguments. Just call them without arguments. Other initialization
functions that were purely related to commandline argument handling, such as
gtk_parse_args()
and gtk_get_option_group()
, are gone.
The APIs to initialize GDK separately are also gone, but it is very unlikely that you are affected by that.
GdkPixbuf is deemphasized
A number of GdkPixbuf
-based APIs have been removed. The available replacements
are either using GIcon
, or the newly introduced [class@Gdk.Texture] or
[iface@Gdk.Paintable] classes instead. If you are dealing with pixbufs, you can use
[ctor@Gdk.Texture.new_for_pixbuf] to convert them to texture objects where needed.
GtkWidget event signals are removed
Event controllers and GtkGestures have already been introduced in GTK 3 to handle
input for many cases. In GTK 4, the traditional widget signals for handling input,
such as GtkWidget::motion-event
or GtkWidget::event
have been removed. All event
handling is done via event controllers now.
Invalidation handling has changed
Only [method@Gtk.Widget.queue_draw] is left to mark a widget as needing redraw.
Variations like gtk_widget_queue_draw_rectangle()
or gtk_widget_queue_draw_region()
are no longer available.
Stop using GtkWidget::draw
The GtkWidget::draw
signal has been removed. Widgets need to implement the
[vfunc@Gtk.Widget.snapshot] function now. Connecting draw signal handlers is
no longer possible. If you want to keep using cairo for drawing, use
[method@Gtk.Snapshot.append_cairo].
Window content observation has changed
Observing widget contents and widget size is now done by using the [class@Gtk.WidgetPaintable] object instead of connecting to widget signals.
Monitor handling has changed
Instead of a monitor number, [class@Gdk.Monitor] is now used throughout. [method@Gdk.Display.get_monitors] returns the list of monitors that can be queried or observed for monitors to pass to APIs like [method@Gtk.Window.fullscreen_on_monitor].
Adapt to monitor API changes
The gdk_monitor_get_workarea()
API is gone. Individual backends can still
provide this information, for example with [method@GdkX11.Monitor.get_workarea].
If you use this information, your code should check which backend is in use and then call the appropriate backend API.
Adapt to cursor API changes
Use the new [method@Gtk.Widget.set_cursor] function to set cursors, instead of setting the cursor on the underlying window directly. This is necessary because most widgets don't have their own window anymore, turning any such calls into global cursor changes.
For creating standard cursors, gdk_cursor_new_for_display()
has been removed,
you have to use cursor names instead of GdkCursorType
. For creating custom cursors,
use [ctor@Gdk.Cursor.new_from_texture]. The ability to get cursor images has been removed.
Adapt to icon size API changes
Instead of the existing extensible set of symbolic icon sizes, GTK now only supports normal and large icons with the [enum@Gtk.IconSize] enumeration. The actual sizes can be defined by themes via the CSS property -gtk-icon-size.
GtkImage setters like [method@Gtk.Image.set_from_icon_name] no longer take a GtkIconSize
argument. You can use the separate [method@Gtk.Image.set_icon_size] setter if you need
to override the icon size.
The :stock-size property of GtkCellRendererPixbuf has been renamed to [property@Gtk.CellRendererPixbuf:icon-size].
Adapt to changes in the GtkAssistant API
The :has-padding property is gone, and GtkAssistant
no longer adds padding
to pages. You can easily do that yourself.
Adapt to changes in the API of GtkEntry, GtkSearchEntry and GtkSpinButton
The [iface@Gtk.Editable] interface has been made more useful, and the core functionality of
GtkEntry
has been broken out as a [class@Gtk.Text] widget.
[class@Gtk.Entry],
[class@Gtk.SearchEntry],
[class@Gtk.SpinButton] and the new
[class@Gtk.PasswordEntry] now use a [class@Gtk.Text] widget internally
and implement [iface@Gtk.Editable]. In particular, this means that it is no longer
possible to use GtkEntry
API such as gtk_entry_grab_focus_without_selecting()
on a search entry.
Use GtkEditable
API for editable functionality, and widget-specific APIs for
things that go beyond the common interface. For password entries, use
[class@Gtk.PasswordEntry]. As an example, gtk_spin_button_set_max_width_chars()
has been removed in favor of [method@Gtk.Editable.set_max_width_chars].
Adapt to changes in GtkOverlay API
The GtkOverlay :pass-through child property has been replaced by the [property@Gtk.Widget:can-target] property. Note that they have the opposite sense: pass-through == !can-target.
Use GtkFixed instead of GtkLayout
Since GtkScrolledWindow
can deal with widgets that do not implement
the GtkScrollable
interface by automatically wrapping them into a
GtkViewport
, GtkLayout
is redundant, and has been removed in favor
of the existing [class@Gtk.Fixed] widget.
Adapt to search entry changes
The way search entries are connected to global events has changed;
gtk_search_entry_handle_event()
has been dropped and replaced by
[method@Gtk.SearchEntry.set_key_capture_widget] and
[method@Gtk.EventControllerKey.forward].
Adapt to GtkScale changes
The default value of GtkScale:draw-value
has been changed to %FALSE.
If you want your scales to draw values, you will have to set this
property explicitly now.
gtk4-builder-tool
can help with this conversion, with the --3to4
option
of the simplify
command.
Stop using gtk_window_activate_default()
The handling of default widgets has been changed, and activating the default now works by calling [method@Gtk.Widget.activate_default] on the widget that caused the activation. If you have a custom widget that wants to override the default handling, you can provide an implementation of the "default.activate" action in your widgets' action groups.
Stop using gtk_widget_grab_default()
The function gtk_widget_grab_default()
has been removed. If you need
to mark a widget as default, use [method@Gtk.Window.set_default_widget]
directly.
Stop setting ::has-default and ::has-focus in .ui files
The special handling for the :has-default and :has-focus properties has been removed. If you want to define the initial focus or the the default widget in a .ui file, set the [property@Gtk.Window:default-widget] or [property@Gtk.Window:focus-widget] properties of the toplevel window.
Stop using the GtkWidget::display-changed signal
To track the current display, use the [property@Gtk.Widget:root] property instead.
GtkPopover::modal has been renamed to autohide
The modal property has been renamed to [property@Gtk.Popover:autohide].
gtk-builder-tool
can assist with the rename in ui files.
gtk_widget_get_surface has been removed
gtk_widget_get_surface()
has been removed.
Use [method@Gtk.Native.get_surface] in combination with
[method@Gtk.Widget.get_native] instead.
gtk_widget_is_toplevel has been removed
gtk_widget_is_toplevel()
has been removed.
Use GTK_IS_ROOT
, GTK_IS_NATIVE
or GTK_IS_WINDOW
instead, as appropriate.
gtk_widget_get_toplevel has been removed
gtk_widget_get_toplevel()
has been removed.
Use [method@Gtk.Widget.get_root] or [method@Gtk.Widget.get_native]
instead, as appropriate.
GtkEntryBuffer ::deleted-text has changed
To allow signal handlers to access the deleted text before it has been deleted, the [signal@Gtk.EntryBuffer::deleted-text] signal has changed from %G_SIGNAL_RUN_FIRST to %G_SIGNAL_RUN_LAST. The default handler removes the text from the [class@Gtk.EntryBuffer].
To adapt existing code, use g_signal_connect_after()
or
%G_CONNECT_AFTER when using g_signal_connect_data()
or
g_signal_connect_object()
.
GtkMenu, GtkMenuBar and GtkMenuItem are gone
These widgets were heavily relying on X11-centric concepts such as override-redirect windows and grabs, and were hard to adjust to other windowing systems.
Menus can already be replaced using GtkPopoverMenu in GTK 3. Additionally, GTK 4 introduces GtkPopoverMenuBar to replace menubars. These new widgets can only be constructed from menu models, so the porting effort involves switching to menu models and actions.
Tabular menus were rarely used and complicated the menu code, so they have not been brought over to [class@Gtk.PopoverMenu]. If you need complex layout in menu-like popups, consider directly using a [class@Gtk.Popover] instead.
Since menus are gone, GtkMenuButton
also lost its ability to show menus,
and needs to be used with popovers in GTK 4.
GtkToolbar has been removed
Toolbars were using outdated concepts such as requiring special toolitem
widgets. Toolbars should be replaced by using a GtkBox
with regular widgets
instead and the "toolbar" style class.
GtkAspectFrame is no longer a frame
GtkAspectFrame
is no longer derived from GtkFrame
and does not
place a label and frame around its child anymore. It still lets
you control the aspect ratio of its child.
Stop using custom tooltip windows
Tooltips no longer use GtkWindow
s in GTK 4, and it is no longer
possible to provide a custom window for tooltips. Replacing the content
of the tooltip with a custom widget is still possible, with
[method@Gtk.Tooltip.set_custom].
Switch to the new Drag-and-Drop api
The source-side Drag-and-Drop apis in GTK 4 have been changed to use an event
controller, [class@Gtk.DragSource]. Instead of calling gtk_drag_source_set()
and connecting to GtkWidget
signals, you create a [class@Gtk.DragSource] object,
attach it to the widget with [method@Gtk.Widget.add_controller], and connect
to GtkDragSource
signals. Instead of calling gtk_drag_begin()
on a widget
to start a drag manually, call [func@Gdk.Drag.begin].
The ::drag-data-get
signal has been replaced by the [signal@Gtk.DragSource::prepare]
signal, which returns a [class@Gdk.ContentProvider] for the drag operation.
The destination-side Drag-and-Drop API in GTK 4 have also been changed
to use an event controller, [class@Gtk.DropTarget]. Instead of calling
gtk_drag_dest_set()
and connecting to GtkWidget
signals, you create
a [class@Gtk.DropTarget] object, attach it to the widget with
[method@Gtk.Widget.add_controller], and connect to GtkDropTarget
signals.
The ::drag-motion
signal has been renamed to [signal@Gtk.DropTarget::accept],
and instead of ::drag-data-received
, you need to use async read methods on the
[class@Gdk.Drop] object, such as [method@Gdk.Drop.read_async] or
[method@Gdk.Drop.read_value_async].
Adapt to GtkIconTheme API changes
gtk_icon_theme_lookup_icon()
returns a [class@Gtk.IconPaintable] object now,
instead of a GtkIconInfo
. It always returns a paintable in the requested size,
and never fails. A number of no-longer-relevant lookup flags and API variants
have been removed.
Note that while GTK 4 is moving towards [iface@Gdk.Paintable] as a primary API
for paintable content, it is meant to be a 'pure' content producer, therefore
a [class@Gtk.IconPaintable] for a symbolic icon will not get recolored depending
on the context it is rendered it. To properly render a symbolic icon that
is provided in the form of a GtkIconPaintable
(this can be checked with
[method@Gtk.IconPaintable.is_symbolic]), you have to call
[method@Gtk.IconPaintable.get_icon_name] and set the icon name on a GtkImage
.
Adapt to GtkImage changes
GtkPicture
's behaviour was "split out" of GtkImage
as the latter was covering
too many use cases; if you're loading an icon, [class@Gtk.Image] in GTK3 and GTK4 are
perfectly equivalent. If you are loading a more complex image asset, like a picture
or a thumbnail, then [class@Gtk.Picture] is the appropriate widget.
One noteworthy distinction is that while GtkImage
has its size computed by
GTK, GtkPicture
lets you decide about the size.
Update to GtkFileChooser API changes
GtkFileChooser
moved to a GFile-based API. If you need to convert a path
or a URI, use g_file_new_for_path()
, g_file_new_for_commandline_arg()
,
or g_file_new_for_uri()
; similarly, if you need to get a path, name or URI
from a GFile
, use g_file_get_path()
, g_file_get_basename()
or g_file_get_uri()
.
With the removal or path and URI-based functions, the "local-only" property
has been removed; GFile can be used to access non-local as well as local
resources.
The GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_CREATE_FOLDER
action has been removed. Use
%GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SELECT_FOLDER, instead. If a new folder is needed,
the user can create one.
The "confirm-overwrite" signal, and the "do-overwrite-confirmation"
property have been removed from GtkFileChooser
. The file chooser widgets
will automatically handle the confirmation of overwriting a file when
using GTK_FILE_CHOOSER_ACTION_SAVE
.
GtkFileChooser
does not support a custom extra widget any more. If you
need to add extra widgets, use [method@Gtk.FileChooser.add_choice] instead.
GtkFileChooser
does not support a custom preview widget any more.
Stop using blocking dialog functions
GtkDialog
, GtkNativeDialog
, and GtkPrintOperation
removed their
blocking API using nested main loops. Nested main loops present
re-entrancy issues and other hard to debug issues when coupled
with other event sources (IPC, accessibility, network operations)
that are not under the toolkit or the application developer's
control. Additionally, "stop-the-world" functions do not fit
the event-driven programming model of GTK.
You can replace calls to gtk_dialog_run()
by specifying that the
GtkDialog
must be modal using [method@Gtk.Window.set_modal] or the
%GTK_DIALOG_MODAL flag, and connecting to the [signal@Gtk.Dialog::response]
signal.
Stop using GtkBuildable API
All the GtkBuildable
API was made private, except for the
getter function to retrieve the buildable ID. If you are
using gtk_buildable_get_name()
you should replace it with
[method@Gtk.Buildable.get_buildable_id].
Adapt to GtkAboutDialog API changes
GtkAboutDialog
now directly derives from GtkWindow
, the GtkDialog
API can no longer be used on it.
Adapt to GtkTreeView and GtkIconView tooltip context changes
The getter functions for retrieving the data from GtkTreeView
and GtkIconView
inside a GtkWidget::query-tooltip
signal do not take the
pointer coordinates as inout arguments any more, but as normal in ones.
See: [method@Gtk.TreeView.get_tooltip_context], [method@Gtk.IconView.get_tooltip_context]
Adapt to GtkPopover changes
In GTK 3, a GtkPopover
could be attached to any widget, using the relative-to
property. This is no longer possible in GTK 4. The parent widget has to be aware
of its popover children, and manage their size allocation. Therefore, only widgets
with dedicated popover support can have them, such as [class@Gtk.MenuButton] or
[class@Gtk.PopoverMenuBar].
If you want to make a custom widget that has an attached popover, you need to call [method@Gtk.Popover.present] in your [vfunc@Gtk.Widget.size_allocate] vfunc, in order to update the positioning of the popover.
Stop using GtkFileChooserButton
The GtkFileChooserButton
widget was removed, due to its shortcomings in
the user interaction. You can replace it with a simple GtkButton
that
shows a [class@Gtk.FileChooserNative] dialog when clicked; once the file selection
has completed, you can update the label of the GtkButton
with the selected
file.
Adapt to changed GtkSettings properties
In GTK 3 the [property@Gtk.Settings:gtk-cursor-aspect-ratio] property of
GtkSettings
was a float
. In GTK 4 this has been changed to a double
.
Changes to consider after the switch
GTK 4 has a number of new features that you may want to take advantage of once the dust has settled over the initial migration.
Consider porting to the new list widgets
In GTK 2 and 3, GtkTreeModel
and GtkCellRenderer
and widgets using
these were the primary way of displaying data and lists. GTK 4 brings
a new family of widgets for this purpose that uses list models instead
of tree models, and widgets instead of cell renderers.
To learn more about the new list widgets, you can read the List Widget Overview.