.\" $Xorg: CH06,v 1.3 2000/08/17 19:42:45 cpqbld Exp $ .\" Copyright \(co 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1994 .\" X Consortium .\" .\" Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining .\" a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the .\" "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including .\" without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, .\" distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to .\" permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to .\" the following conditions: .\" .\" The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included .\" in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. .\" .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS .\" OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF .\" MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. .\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE X CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR .\" OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, .\" ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR .\" OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. .\" .\" Except as contained in this notice, the name of the X Consortium shall .\" not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or .\" other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization .\" from the X Consortium. .\" .\" Copyright \(co 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1994 .\" Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts. .\" .\" Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute this documentation for any .\" purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright .\" notice appears in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this .\" permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of .\" Digital not be used in in advertising or publicity pertaining .\" to distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission. .\" Digital makes no representations about the suitability of the .\" software described herein for any purpose. .\" It is provided ``as is'' without express or implied warranty. .\" \& .sp 1 .ce 3 \s+1\fBChapter 6\fP\s-1 \s+1\fBGeometry Management\fP\s-1 .sp 2 .nr H1 6 .nr H2 0 .nr H3 0 .nr H4 0 .nr H5 0 .LP .XS Chapter 6 \(em Geometry Management .XE .LP .IN "geometry_manager procedure" .IN "Geometry Management" .IN "Configure Window" A widget does not directly control its size and location; rather, its parent is responsible for controlling them. Although the position of children is usually left up to their parent, the widgets themselves often have the best idea of their optimal sizes and, possibly, preferred locations. .LP To resolve physical layout conflicts between sibling widgets and between a widget and its parent, the \*(xI provide the geometry management mechanism. Almost all composite widgets have a geometry manager specified in the \fIgeometry_manager\fP field in the widget class record that is responsible for the size, position, and stacking order of the widget's children. The only exception is fixed boxes, which create their children themselves and can ensure that their children will never make a geometry request. .NH 2 Initiating Geometry Changes .LP .XS \*(SN Initiating Geometry Changes .XE Parents, children, and clients each initiate geometry changes differently. Because a parent has absolute control of its children's geometry, it changes the geometry directly by calling .PN XtMove\%Widget , .PN XtResizeWidget , or .PN XtConfigureWidget . A child must ask its parent for a geometry change by calling .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest or .PN XtMakeResizeRequest . An application or other client code initiates a geometry change by calling .PN XtSetValues on the appropriate geometry fields, thereby giving the widget the opportunity to modify or reject the client request before it gets propagated to the parent and the opportunity to respond appropriately to the parent's reply. .LP When a widget that needs to change its size, position, border width, or stacking depth asks its parent's geometry manager to make the desired changes, the geometry manager can allow the request, disallow the request, or suggest a compromise. .LP When the geometry manager is asked to change the geometry of a child, the geometry manager may also rearrange and resize any or all of the other children that it controls. The geometry manager can move children around freely using .PN XtMoveWidget . When it resizes a child (that is, changes the width, height, or border width) other than the one making the request, it should do so by calling .PN XtResizeWidget . The requesting child may be given special treatment; see Section 6.5. It can simultaneously move and resize a child with a single call to .PN XtConfigureWidget . .LP Often, geometry managers find that they can satisfy a request only if they can reconfigure a widget that they are not in control of; in particular, the composite widget may want to change its own size. In this case, the geometry manager makes a request to its parent's geometry manager. Geometry requests can cascade this way to arbitrary depth. .LP Because such cascaded arbitration of widget geometry can involve extended negotiation, windows are not actually allocated to widgets at application startup until all widgets are satisfied with their geometry; see Sections 2.5 and 2.6. .NT Notes .IP 1. 5 The \*(xI treatment of stacking requests is deficient in several areas. Stacking requests for unrealized widgets are granted but will have no effect. In addition, there is no way to do an .PN XtSetValues that will generate a stacking geometry request. .IP 2. 5 After a successful geometry request (one that returned .PN XtGeometryYes ), a widget does not know whether its resize procedure has been called. Widgets should have resize procedures that can be called more than once without ill effects. .NE .NH 2 General Geometry Manager Requests .XS \*(SN General Geometry Manager Requests .XE .LP When making a geometry request, the child specifies an .PN XtWidgetGeometry structure. .LP .IN "XtGeometryMask" .KS .sM .Ds 0 .TA .5i 3i .ta .5i 3i typedef unsigned long XtGeometryMask; typedef struct { XtGeometryMask request_mode; Position x, y; Dimension width, height; Dimension border_width; Widget sibling; int stack_mode; } XtWidgetGeometry; .De .eM .KE .LP To make a general geometry manager request from a widget, use .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest . .LP .IN "XtMakeGeometryRequest" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 XtGeometryResult XtMakeGeometryRequest(\fIw\fP, \fIrequest\fP, \ \fIreply_return\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIrequest\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIreply_return\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget making the request. \*(rI .IP \fIrequest\fP 1i Specifies the desired widget geometry (size, position, border width, and stacking order). .IP \fIreply_return\fP 1i Returns the allowed widget size, or may be NULL if the requesting widget is not interested in handling .PN XtGeometryAlmost . .LP .eM Depending on the condition, .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest performs the following: .IP \(bu 5 If the widget is unmanaged or the widget's parent is not realized, it makes the changes and returns .PN XtGeometryYes . .IP \(bu 5 If the parent's class is not a subclass of .PN compositeWidgetClass or the parent's \fIgeometry_manager\fP field is NULL, it issues an error. .IP \(bu 5 If the widget's \fIbeing_destroyed\fP field is .PN True , it returns .PN XtGeometryNo . .IP \(bu 5 If the widget \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, and \fIborder_width\fP fields are all equal to the requested values, it returns .PN XtGeometryYes ; otherwise, it calls the parent's geometry_manager procedure with the given parameters. .IP \(bu 5 If the parent's geometry manager returns .PN XtGeometryYes and if .PN XtCWQueryOnly is not set in \fIrequest->request_mode\fP and if the widget is realized, .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest calls the .PN XConfigureWindow Xlib function to reconfigure the widget's window (set its size, location, and stacking order as appropriate). .IP \(bu 5 If the geometry manager returns .PN XtGeometryDone , the change has been approved and actually has been done. In this case, .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest does no configuring and returns .PN XtGeometryYes . .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest never returns .PN XtGeometryDone . .IP \(bu 5 Otherwise, .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest just returns the resulting value from the parent's geometry manager. .LP Children of primitive widgets are always unmanaged; therefore, .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest always returns .PN XtGeometryYes when called by a child of a primitive widget. .LP The return codes from geometry managers are .IN "XtGeometryResult" .LP .KS .sM .Ds 0 .TA .5i 1.75i .ta .5i 1.75i typedef enum { XtGeometryYes, XtGeometryNo, XtGeometryAlmost, XtGeometryDone } XtGeometryResult; .De .eM .KE .LP The \fIrequest_mode\fP definitions are from .Pn < X11/X.h >. .LP .sM .TS lw(.5i) lw(2.5i) lw(.75i). T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWX T} T{ (1<<0) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWY T} T{ (1<<1) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWWidth T} T{ (1<<2) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWHeight T} T{ (1<<3) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWBorderWidth T} T{ (1<<4) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWSibling T} T{ (1<<5) T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN CWStackMode T} T{ (1<<6) T} .TE .LP .eM The \*(xI also support the following value. .LP .sM .TS lw(.5i) lw(2.5i) lw(.75i). T{ #define T} T{ .PN XtCWQueryOnly T} T{ (1<<7) T} .TE .LP .eM .PN XtCWQueryOnly indicates that the corresponding geometry request is only a query as to what would happen if this geometry request were made and that no widgets should actually be changed. .LP .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest , like the .PN XConfigureWindow Xlib function, uses \fIrequest_mode\fP to determine which fields in the .PN XtWidgetGeometry structure the caller wants to specify. .LP The \fIstack_mode\fP definitions are from .Pn < X11/X.h >: .LP .sM .TS lw(.5i) lw(2.5i) lw(.75i). T{ #define T} T{ .PN Above T} T{ 0 T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN Below T} T{ 1 T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN TopIf T} T{ 2 T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN BottomIf T} T{ 3 T} T{ #define T} T{ .PN Opposite T} T{ 4 T} .TE .LP .eM The \*(xI also support the following value. .LP .sM .TS lw(.5i) lw(2.5i) lw(.75i). T{ #define T} T{ .PN XtSMDontChange T} T{ 5 T} .TE .LP .eM For definition and behavior of .PN Above , .PN Below , .PN TopIf , .PN BottomIf , and .PN Opposite , see Section 3.7 in \fI\*(xL\fP. .PN XtSMDontChange indicates that the widget wants its current stacking order preserved. .NH 2 Resize Requests .XS \*(SN Resize Requests .XE .LP To make a simple resize request from a widget, you can use .PN XtMakeResizeRequest as an alternative to .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest . .LP .IN "XtMakeResizeRequest" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 XtGeometryResult XtMakeResizeRequest(\fIw\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, \ \fIwidth_return\fP, \fIheight_return\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br Dimension \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP; .br Dimension *\fIwidth_return\fP, *\fIheight_return\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget making the request. \*(rI .IP \fIwidth\fP 1i Specify the desired widget width and height. .br .ns .IP \fIheight\fP 1i .IP \fIwidth_return\fP 1i Return the allowed widget width and height. .br .ns .IP \fIheight_return\fP 1i .LP .eM The .PN XtMakeResizeRequest function, a simple interface to .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest , creates an .PN XtWidgetGeometry structure and specifies that width and height should change by setting \fIrequest_mode\fP to .PN CWWidth \fB|\fP .PN CWHeight . The geometry manager is free to modify any of the other window attributes (position or stacking order) to satisfy the resize request. If the return value is .PN XtGeometryAlmost , \fIwidth_return\fP and \fIheight_return\fP contain a compromise width and height. If these are acceptable, the widget should immediately call .PN XtMakeResizeRequest again and request that the compromise width and height be applied. If the widget is not interested in .PN XtGeometryAlmost replies, it can pass NULL for \fIwidth_return\fP and \fIheight_return\fP. .NH 2 Potential Geometry Changes .XS \*(SN Potential Geometry Changes .XE .LP Sometimes a geometry manager cannot respond to a geometry request from a child without first making a geometry request to the widget's own parent (the original requestor's grandparent). If the request to the grandparent would allow the parent to satisfy the original request, the geometry manager can make the intermediate geometry request as if it were the originator. On the other hand, if the geometry manager already has determined that the original request cannot be completely satisfied (for example, if it always denies position changes), it needs to tell the grandparent to respond to the intermediate request without actually changing the geometry because it does not know if the child will accept the compromise. To accomplish this, the geometry manager uses .PN XtCWQueryOnly in the intermediate request. .LP When .PN XtCWQueryOnly is used, the geometry manager needs to cache enough information to exactly reconstruct the intermediate request. If the grandparent's response to the intermediate query was .PN XtGeometryAlmost , the geometry manager needs to cache the entire reply geometry in the event the child accepts the parent's compromise. .LP If the grandparent's response was .PN XtGeometryAlmost , it may also be necessary to cache the entire reply geometry from the grandparent when .PN XtCWQueryOnly is not used. If the geometry manager is still able to satisfy the original request, it may immediately accept the grandparent's compromise and then act on the child's request. If the grandparent's compromise geometry is insufficient to allow the child's request and if the geometry manager is willing to offer a different compromise to the child, the grandparent's compromise should not be accepted until the child has accepted the new compromise. .LP Note that a compromise geometry returned with .PN XtGeometryAlmost is guaranteed only for the next call to the same widget; therefore, a cache of size 1 is sufficient. .NH 2 Child Geometry Management: The geometry_manager Procedure .XS \*(SN Child Geometry Management: The geometry_manager Procedure .XE .LP The geometry_manager procedure pointer in a composite widget class is of type .PN XtGeometryHandler . .LP .IN "XtGeometryHandler" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 typedef XtGeometryResult (*XtGeometryHandler)(Widget, XtWidgetGeometry*, \ XtWidgetGeometry*); .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIrequest\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIgeometry_return\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1.2i Passes the widget making the request. .IP \fIrequest\fP 1.2i Passes the new geometry the child desires. .IP \fIgeometry_return\fP 1.2i Passes a geometry structure in which the geometry manager may store a compromise. .LP .eM A class can inherit its superclass's geometry manager during class initialization. .LP A bit set to zero in the request's \fIrequest_mode\fP field means that the child widget does not care about the value of the corresponding field, so the geometry manager can change this field as it wishes. A bit set to 1 means that the child wants that geometry element set to the value in the corresponding field. .LP If the geometry manager can satisfy all changes requested and if .PN XtCWQueryOnly is not specified, it updates the widget's \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, and \fIborder_width\fP fields appropriately. Then, it returns .PN XtGeometryYes , and the values pointed to by the \fIgeometry_return\fP argument are undefined. The widget's window is moved and resized automatically by .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest . .LP Homogeneous composite widgets often find it convenient to treat the widget making the request the same as any other widget, including reconfiguring it using .PN XtConfigureWidget or .PN XtResizeWidget as part of its layout process, unless .PN XtCWQueryOnly is specified. If it does this, it should return .PN XtGeometryDone to inform .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest that it does not need to do the configuration itself. .NT To remain compatible with layout techniques used in older widgets (before .PN XtGeometryDone was added to the \*(xI), a geometry manager should avoid using .PN XtResizeWidget or .PN XtConfigureWidget on the child making the request because the layout process of the child may be in an intermediate state in which it is not prepared to handle a call to its resize procedure. A self-contained widget set may choose this alternative geometry management scheme, however, provided that it clearly warns widget developers of the compatibility consequences. .NE .LP Although .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest resizes the widget's window (if the geometry manager returns .PN XtGeometryYes ), it does not call the widget class's resize procedure. The requesting widget must perform whatever resizing calculations are needed explicitly. .LP If the geometry manager disallows the request, the widget cannot change its geometry. The values pointed to by \fIgeometry_return\fP are undefined, and the geometry manager returns .PN XtGeometryNo . .LP Sometimes the geometry manager cannot satisfy the request exactly but may be able to satisfy a similar request. That is, it could satisfy only a subset of the requests (for example, size but not position) or a lesser request (for example, it cannot make the child as big as the request but it can make the child bigger than its current size). In such cases, the geometry manager fills in the structure pointed to by \fIgeometry_return\fP with the actual changes it is willing to make, including an appropriate \fIrequest_mode\fP mask, and returns .PN XtGeometryAlmost . If a bit in \fIgeometry_return->request_mode\fP is zero, the geometry manager agrees not to change the corresponding value if \fIgeometry_return\fP is used immediately in a new request. If a bit is 1, the geometry manager does change that element to the corresponding value in \fIgeometry_return\fP. More bits may be set in \fIgeometry_return->request_mode\fP than in the original request if the geometry manager intends to change other fields should the child accept the compromise. .LP When .PN XtGeometryAlmost is returned, the widget must decide if the compromise suggested in \fIgeometry_return\fP is acceptable. If it is, the widget must not change its geometry directly; rather, it must make another call to .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest . .LP If the next geometry request from this child uses the \fIgeometry_return\fP values filled in by the geometry manager with an .PN XtGeometryAlmost return and if there have been no intervening geometry requests on either its parent or any of its other children, the geometry manager must grant the request, if possible. That is, if the child asks immediately with the returned geometry, it should get an answer of .PN XtGeometryYes . However, dynamic behavior in the user's window manager may affect the final outcome. .LP To return .PN XtGeometryYes , the geometry manager frequently rearranges the position of other managed children by calling .PN XtMoveWidget . However, a few geometry managers may sometimes change the size of other managed children by calling .PN XtResizeWidget or .PN XtConfigureWidget . If .PN XtCWQueryOnly is specified, the geometry manager must return data describing how it would react to this geometry request without actually moving or resizing any widgets. .LP Geometry managers must not assume that the \fIrequest\fP and \fIgeometry_return\fP arguments point to independent storage. The caller is permitted to use the same field for both, and the geometry manager must allocate its own temporary storage, if necessary. .NH 2 Widget Placement and Sizing .XS \*(SN Widget Placement and Sizing .XE .LP To move a sibling widget of the child making the geometry request, the parent uses .PN XtMoveWidget . .LP .IN "XtMoveWidget" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 void XtMoveWidget(\fIw\fP, \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br Position \fIx\fP; .br Position \fIy\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget. \*(rI .IP \fIx\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIy\fP 1i Specify the new widget x and y coordinates. .LP .eM The .PN XtMoveWidget function returns immediately if the specified geometry fields are the same as the old values. Otherwise, .PN XtMoveWidget writes the new \fIx\fP and \fIy\fP values into the object and, if the object is a widget and is realized, issues an Xlib .PN XMoveWindow call on the widget's window. .sp .LP To resize a sibling widget of the child making the geometry request, the parent uses .PN XtResizeWidget . .LP .IN "XtResizeWidget" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 void XtResizeWidget(\fIw\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, \fIborder_width\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br Dimension \fIwidth\fP; .br Dimension \fIheight\fP; .br Dimension \fIborder_width\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget. \*(rI .IP \fIwidth\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIheight\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIborder_width\fP 1i Specify the new widget size. .LP .eM The .PN XtResizeWidget function returns immediately if the specified geometry fields are the same as the old values. Otherwise, .PN XtResizeWidget writes the new \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, and \fIborder_width\fP values into the object and, if the object is a widget and is realized, issues an .PN XConfigureWindow call on the widget's window. .LP If the new width or height is different from the old values, .PN XtResizeWidget calls the object's resize procedure to notify it of the size change. .sp .LP To move and resize the sibling widget of the child making the geometry request, the parent uses .PN XtConfigureWidget . .LP .IN "XtConfigureWidget" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 void XtConfigureWidget(\fIw\fP, \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, \ \fIborder_width\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br Position \fIx\fP; .br Position \fIy\fP; .br Dimension \fIwidth\fP; .br Dimension \fIheight\fP; .br Dimension \fIborder_width\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget. \*(rI .IP \fIx\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIy\fP 1i Specify the new widget x and y coordinates. .IP \fIwidth\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIheight\fP 1i .br .ns .IP \fIborder_width\fP 1i Specify the new widget size. .LP .eM The .PN XtConfigureWidget function returns immediately if the specified new geometry fields are all equal to the current values. Otherwise, .PN XtConfigureWidget writes the new \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, and \fIborder_width\fP values into the object and, if the object is a widget and is realized, makes an Xlib .PN XConfigureWindow call on the widget's window. .LP If the new width or height is different from its old value, .PN XtConfigureWidget calls the object's resize procedure to notify it of the size change; otherwise, it simply returns. .sp .LP To resize a child widget that already has the new values of its width, height, and border width, the parent uses .PN XtResizeWindow . .LP .IN "XtResizeWindow" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 void XtResizeWindow(\fIw\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1i Specifies the widget. \*(cI .LP .eM The .PN XtResizeWindow function calls the .PN XConfigureWindow Xlib function to make the window of the specified widget match its width, height, and border width. This request is done unconditionally because there is no inexpensive way to tell if these values match the current values. Note that the widget's resize procedure is not called. .LP There are very few times to use .PN XtResizeWindow ; instead, the parent should use .PN XtResizeWidget . .NH 2 Preferred Geometry .XS \*(SN Preferred Geometry .XE .LP Some parents may be willing to adjust their layouts to accommodate the preferred geometries of their children. They can use .PN XtQueryGeometry to obtain the preferred geometry and, as they see fit, can use or ignore any portion of the response. .sp .LP To query a child widget's preferred geometry, use .PN XtQueryGeometry . .LP .IN "XtQueryGeometry" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 XtGeometryResult XtQueryGeometry(\fIw\fP, \fIintended\fP, \ \fIpreferred_return\fP) .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIintended\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIpreferred_return\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1.1i Specifies the widget. \*(rI .IP \fIintended\fP 1.1i Specifies the new geometry the parent plans to give to the child, or NULL. .IP \fIpreferred_return\fP 1.1i Returns the child widget's preferred geometry. .LP .eM To discover a child's preferred geometry, the child's parent stores the new geometry in the corresponding fields of the intended structure, sets the corresponding bits in \fIintended.request_mode\fP, and calls .PN XtQueryGeometry . The parent should set only those fields that are important to it so that the child can determine whether it may be able to attempt changes to other fields. .LP .PN XtQueryGeometry clears all bits in the \fIpreferred_return->request_mode\fP field and checks the \fIquery_geometry\fP field of the specified widget's class record. If \fIquery_geometry\fP is not NULL, .PN XtQueryGeometry calls the query_geometry procedure and passes as arguments the specified widget, \fIintended\fP, and \fIpreferred_return\fP structures. If the \fIintended\fP argument is NULL, .PN XtQueryGeometry replaces it with a pointer to an .PN XtWidgetGeometry structure with \fIrequest_mode\fP equal to zero before calling the query_geometry procedure. .NT If .PN XtQueryGeometry is called from within a geometry_manager procedure for the widget that issued .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest or .PN XtMakeResizeRequest , the results are not guaranteed to be consistent with the requested changes. The change request passed to the geometry manager takes precedence over the preferred geometry. .NE .sp .LP The query_geometry procedure pointer is of type .PN XtGeometryHandler . .LP .IN "query_geometry procedure" "" "@DEF@" .sM .FD 0 typedef XtGeometryResult (*XtGeometryHandler)(Widget, XtWidgetGeometry*, \ XtWidgetGeometry*); .br Widget \fIw\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIrequest\fP; .br XtWidgetGeometry *\fIpreferred_return\fP; .FN .IP \fIw\fP 1.2i Passes the child widget whose preferred geometry is required. .IP \fIrequest\fP 1.2i Passes the geometry changes that the parent plans to make. .IP \fIpreferred_return\fP 1.2i Passes a structure in which the child returns its preferred geometry. .LP .eM .IN "query_geometry procedure" The query_geometry procedure is expected to examine the bits set in \fIrequest->request_mode\fP, evaluate the preferred geometry of the widget, and store the result in \fIpreferred_return\fP (setting the bits in \fIpreferred_return->request_mode\fP corresponding to those geometry fields that it cares about). If the proposed geometry change is acceptable without modification, the query_geometry procedure should return .PN XtGeometryYes . If at least one field in \fIpreferred_return\fP with a bit set in \fIpreferred_return->request_mode\fP is different from the corresponding field in \fIrequest\fP or if a bit was set in \fIpreferred_return->request_mode\fP that was not set in the request, the query_geometry procedure should return .PN XtGeometryAlmost . If the preferred geometry is identical to the current geometry, the query_geometry procedure should return .PN XtGeometryNo . .NT The query_geometry procedure may assume that no .PN XtMakeResizeRequest or .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest is in progress for the specified widget; that is, it is not required to construct a reply consistent with the requested geometry if such a request were actually outstanding. .NE .LP After calling the query_geometry procedure or if the \fIquery_geometry\fP field is NULL, .PN XtQueryGeometry examines all the unset bits in \fIpreferred_return->request_mode\fP and sets the corresponding fields in \fIpreferred_return\fP to the current values from the widget instance. If .PN CWStackMode is not set, the \fIstack_mode\fP field is set to .PN XtSMDontChange . .PN XtQueryGeometry returns the value returned by the query_geometry procedure or .PN XtGeometryYes if the \fIquery_geometry\fP field is NULL. .LP Therefore, the caller can interpret a return of .PN XtGeometryYes as not needing to evaluate the contents of the reply and, more important, not needing to modify its layout plans. A return of .PN XtGeometryAlmost means either that both the parent and the child expressed interest in at least one common field and the child's preference does not match the parent's intentions or that the child expressed interest in a field that the parent might need to consider. A return value of .PN XtGeometryNo means that both the parent and the child expressed interest in a field and that the child suggests that the field's current value in the widget instance is its preferred value. In addition, whether or not the caller ignores the return value or the reply mask, it is guaranteed that the \fIpreferred_return\fP structure contains complete geometry information for the child. .LP Parents are expected to call .PN XtQueryGeometry in their layout routine and wherever else the information is significant after change_managed has been called. The first time it is invoked, the changed_managed procedure may assume that the child's current geometry is its preferred geometry. Thus, the child is still responsible for storing values into its own geometry during its initialize procedure. .NH 2 Size Change Management: The resize Procedure .XS \*(SN Size Change Management: The resize Procedure .XE .LP A child can be resized by its parent at any time. Widgets usually need to know when they have changed size so that they can lay out their displayed data again to match the new size. When a parent resizes a child, it calls .PN XtResizeWidget , which updates the geometry fields in the widget, configures the window if the widget is realized, and calls the child's resize procedure to notify the child. The resize procedure pointer is of type .PN XtWidgetProc . .IN "resize procedure" "" "@DEF@" .LP If a class need not recalculate anything when a widget is resized, it can specify NULL for the \fIresize\fP field in its class record. This is an unusual case and should occur only for widgets with very trivial display semantics. The resize procedure takes a widget as its only argument. The \fIx\fP, \fIy\fP, \fIwidth\fP, \fIheight\fP, and \fIborder_width\fP fields of the widget contain the new values. The resize procedure should recalculate the layout of internal data as needed. (For example, a centered Label in a window that changes size should recalculate the starting position of the text.) The widget must obey resize as a command and must not treat it as a request. A widget must not issue an .PN XtMakeGeometryRequest or .PN XtMakeResizeRequest call from its resize procedure. .bp