- GTK - A free and open-source cross-platform widget toolkit
GTK is a free and open-source project maintained by GNOME and an active community of contributors GTK is released under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License
- Gtk – 4. 0: Getting Started with GTK
This chapter contains some tutorial information to get you started with GTK programming It assumes that you have GTK, its dependencies and a C compiler installed and ready to use If you need to build GTK itself first, refer to the Compiling the GTK libraries section in this reference Basics
- Gtk – 3. 0: Getting Started with GTK
This chapter contains some tutorial information to get you started with GTK programming It assumes that you have GTK, its dependencies and a C compiler installed and ready to use If you need to build GTK itself first, refer to the Compiling the GTK libraries section in this reference Basics
- The GTK Project - A free and open-source cross-platform widget toolkit
GTK is a free and open-source cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces
- Gtk – 3. 0
Namespace Gtk – 3 0 The GTK toolkit [−] Build [−] Dependencies [−] Additional documentation
- Gtk – 4. 0
Getting Started with GTK Building GTK Compiling GTK Applications on UNIX Running and debugging GTK Applications Common Questions Contact information and bug reports Initializing GTK Overview of actions in GTK Overview of GTK input and event handling Drag-and-Drop in GTK Overview of the drawing model Coordinate systems in GTK CSS in GTK GTK CSS
- Gtk – 4. 0: Overview
GTK has a C-based, object-oriented architecture that allows for maximum flexibility and portability; there are bindings for many other languages, including C++, Objective-C, Guile Scheme, Perl, Python, JavaScript, Rust, Go, TOM, Ada95, Free Pascal, and Eiffel
- GTK Development Blog – All things GTK
Thanks to the work of Georges Stavracas GTK now can bridge those accessibility object trees under the GTK widget’s own, allowing ATs to navigate into a web page using WebKit from the UI
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