A fairly large set of key bindings are supported by default. If the
entered text is longer than the allocation of the widget, the widget
will scroll so that the cursor position is visible.
When using an entry for passwords and other sensitive information, it
can be put into “password mode” using gtk.entry.Entry.setVisibility.
In this mode, entered text is displayed using a “invisible” character.
By default, GTK picks the best invisible character that is available
in the current font, but it can be changed with
gtk.entry.Entry.setInvisibleChar.
Additionally, gtk.entry.Entry can show icons at either side of the entry.
These icons can be activatable by clicking, can be set up as drag source
and can have tooltips. To add an icon, use
gtk.entry.Entry.setIconFromGicon or one of the various other functions
that set an icon from an icon name or a paintable. To trigger an action when
the user clicks an icon, connect to the signal@Gtk.Entry::icon-press signal.
To allow DND operations from an icon, use
gtk.entry.Entry.setIconDragSource. To set a tooltip on an icon, use
gtk.entry.Entry.setIconTooltipText or the corresponding function
for markup.
Note that functionality or information that is only available by clicking
on an icon in an entry may not be accessible at all to users which are not
able to use a mouse or other pointing device. It is therefore recommended
that any such functionality should also be available by other means, e.g.
via the context menu of the entry.
gtk.entry.Entry has a main node with the name entry. Depending on the properties
of the entry, the style classes .read-only and .flat may appear. The style
classes .warning and .error may also be used with entries.
When the entry shows icons, it adds subnodes with the name image and the
style class .left or .right, depending on where the icon appears.
When the entry shows progress, it adds a subnode with the name progress.
The node has the style class .pulse when the shown progress is pulsing.
For all the subnodes added to the text node in various situations,
see gtk.text.Text.
GtkEntry as GtkBuildable
The gtk.entry.Entry implementation of the gtk.buildable.Buildable interface supports a
custom <attributes> element, which supports any number of <attribute>
elements. The <attribute> element has attributes named “name“, “value“,
“start“ and “end“ and allows you to specify pango.attribute.Attribute values for
this label.
An example of a UI definition fragment specifying Pango attributes:
The start and end attributes specify the range of characters to which the
Pango attribute applies. If start and end are not specified, the attribute
is applied to the whole text. Note that specifying ranges does not make much
sense with translatable attributes. Use markup embedded in the translatable
content instead.
gtk.entry.Entry is a single line text entry widget.
A fairly large set of key bindings are supported by default. If the entered text is longer than the allocation of the widget, the widget will scroll so that the cursor position is visible.
When using an entry for passwords and other sensitive information, it can be put into “password mode” using gtk.entry.Entry.setVisibility. In this mode, entered text is displayed using a “invisible” character. By default, GTK picks the best invisible character that is available in the current font, but it can be changed with gtk.entry.Entry.setInvisibleChar.
gtk.entry.Entry has the ability to display progress or activity information behind the text. To make an entry display such information, use gtk.entry.Entry.setProgressFraction or gtk.entry.Entry.setProgressPulseStep.
Additionally, gtk.entry.Entry can show icons at either side of the entry. These icons can be activatable by clicking, can be set up as drag source and can have tooltips. To add an icon, use gtk.entry.Entry.setIconFromGicon or one of the various other functions that set an icon from an icon name or a paintable. To trigger an action when the user clicks an icon, connect to the signal@Gtk.Entry::icon-press signal. To allow DND operations from an icon, use gtk.entry.Entry.setIconDragSource. To set a tooltip on an icon, use gtk.entry.Entry.setIconTooltipText or the corresponding function for markup.
Note that functionality or information that is only available by clicking on an icon in an entry may not be accessible at all to users which are not able to use a mouse or other pointing device. It is therefore recommended that any such functionality should also be available by other means, e.g. via the context menu of the entry.
CSS nodes
gtk.entry.Entry has a main node with the name entry. Depending on the properties of the entry, the style classes .read-only and .flat may appear. The style classes .warning and .error may also be used with entries.
When the entry shows icons, it adds subnodes with the name image and the style class .left or .right, depending on where the icon appears.
When the entry shows progress, it adds a subnode with the name progress. The node has the style class .pulse when the shown progress is pulsing.
For all the subnodes added to the text node in various situations, see gtk.text.Text.
GtkEntry as GtkBuildable
The gtk.entry.Entry implementation of the gtk.buildable.Buildable interface supports a custom <attributes> element, which supports any number of <attribute> elements. The <attribute> element has attributes named “name“, “value“, “start“ and “end“ and allows you to specify pango.attribute.Attribute values for this label.
An example of a UI definition fragment specifying Pango attributes:
The start and end attributes specify the range of characters to which the Pango attribute applies. If start and end are not specified, the attribute is applied to the whole text. Note that specifying ranges does not make much sense with translatable attributes. Use markup embedded in the translatable content instead.
Accessibility
gtk.entry.Entry uses the gtk.types.AccessibleRole.TextBox role.