#if wxUSE_STATTEXT
#include "wx/stattext.h"
+
+#include <gtk/gtk.h>
#include "wx/gtk/private.h"
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
gtk_label_set_justify(GTK_LABEL(m_widget), justify);
#ifdef __WXGTK26__
+#ifndef __WXGTK3__
if (!gtk_check_version(2,6,0))
+#endif
{
// set ellipsize mode
PangoEllipsizeMode ellipsizeMode = PANGO_ELLIPSIZE_NONE;
InvalidateBestSize();
+#ifndef __WXGTK3__
if (gtk_check_version(2,6,0) && IsEllipsized())
{
// GTK+ < 2.6 does not support ellipsization so we need to do it
GTKSetLabelForLabel(GTK_LABEL(m_widget), GetEllipsizedLabel());
}
else // Ellipsization not needed or supported by GTK+.
+#endif
{
(this->*setter)(GTK_LABEL(m_widget), label);
}
{
wxStaticTextBase::DoSetSize(x, y, width, height, sizeFlags);
+#ifndef __WXGTK3__
if (gtk_check_version(2,6,0))
{
// GTK+ < 2.6 does not support ellipsization - we need to run our
// generic code (actually it will be run only if IsEllipsized() == true)
UpdateLabel();
}
+#endif
}
wxSize wxStaticText::DoGetBestSize() const
// gtk_label_set_line_wrap() from here is a bad idea as it queues another
// size request by calling gtk_widget_queue_resize() and we end up in
// infinite loop sometimes (notably when the control is in a toolbar)
+ // With GTK3 however, there is no simple alternative, and the sizing loop
+ // no longer seems to occur.
+#ifdef __WXGTK3__
+ gtk_label_set_line_wrap(GTK_LABEL(m_widget), false);
+#else
GTK_LABEL(m_widget)->wrap = FALSE;
-
+#endif
wxSize size = wxStaticTextBase::DoGetBestSize();
-
+#ifdef __WXGTK3__
+ gtk_label_set_line_wrap(GTK_LABEL(m_widget), true);
+#else
GTK_LABEL(m_widget)->wrap = TRUE; // restore old value
+#endif
// Adding 1 to width to workaround GTK sometimes wrapping the text needlessly
size.x++;