On Mon, Mar 13, 2000 at 09:10:06AM +0100, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
% python a.py
GnomeUI-Message: The antialiased canvas is buggy. Please do not use it unless you
know what you are doing.
I know what I'm doing. ;)
It's not bad in simple cases. You have to get very complex before you
see major
I have just put out pygtk-0.6.5 and gnome-python-1.0.52. Here is a list
of some of the changes:
pygtk:
- more reference leaks fixed.
- crashes when changing window properties with 16 or 32 bit data
formats fixed.
- some libglade wrapper fixes.
- various other fixes.
That would be a good idea.
Done.
On another topic, I think having a version number available as a (eventually
set of) python variable would be a nice thing: I would enjoy being able to
test it during the configuration of my own packages, so that I can issue
explicit error messages (like the
James Henstridge [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
What version of gnome-python do you have installed on your system?
1.0.50-3 (Debian).
To unsubscribe: echo "unsubscribe" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Matt Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED] écrit:
The code below shows the case of a line needing anti-aliasing.
Would someone knowledgeable tell me if/how I can, within `pygtk',
produce an anti-aliased line, or else (:-), how I could handle an
alpha channel for later display?
The easiest way to do
François Pinard [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Matt Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED] écrit:
The easiest way to do this by far is to use the canvas. [...] The canvas
does all this for you.
Thanks for the example, Matt, but this is not pure `pygtk' (or GDK) anymore,
if it needs `gnome.ui' and
Bernhard Herzog [EMAIL PROTECTED] écrit:
François Pinard [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Matt Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED] écrit:
The easiest way to do this by far is to use the canvas. [...]
The canvas does all this for you.
Thanks for the example, Matt, but this is not pure `pygtk' (or GDK)
That is the only way to explicitely set the program name and version. In
a future version, it will probably require doing something like:
import gnome.ui, gnome.whatever # import all gnome components used ...
gnome.init('program-name', 'version')
It is necessary to import gnome.ui before