The project website is here.
Rust bindings of GTK 4, part of gtk4-rs.
This library contains safe Rust bindings for GTK 4, a multi-platform GUI toolkit. It is a part of gtk-rs.
Most of this documentation is generated from the C API. Until all parts of the documentation have been reviewed there will be incongruities with the actual Rust API.
For a gentle introduction to gtk-rs we recommend the online book GUI development with Rust and GTK 4.
See also:
- gtk-rs project overview
- General
GLib
family types and object system overview - GTK documentation
- GTK Visual Index
Currently, the minimum supported Rust version is 1.70
.
GTK needs to be initialized before use by calling [init
][fn@init
]. Creating an
[Application
][struct@Application
] will call [init
][fn@init
] for you.
The gtk4
crate is usually renamed to gtk
. You can find an example in
the features section for how to do this globally in your Cargo.toml
.
use gtk4 as gtk;
use gtk::prelude::*;
use gtk::{glib, Application, ApplicationWindow};
fn main() -> glib::ExitCode {
let app = Application::builder()
.application_id("org.example.HelloWorld")
.build();
app.connect_activate(|app| {
// We create the main window.
let window = ApplicationWindow::builder()
.application(app)
.default_width(320)
.default_height(200)
.title("Hello, World!")
.build();
// Show the window.
window.present();
});
app.run()
}
In a typical GTK application you set up the UI, assign signal handlers and run the main event loop.
use gtk4 as gtk;
use gtk::prelude::*;
use gtk::{glib, Application, ApplicationWindow, Button};
fn main() -> glib::ExitCode {
let application = Application::builder()
.application_id("com.example.FirstGtkApp")
.build();
application.connect_activate(|app| {
let window = ApplicationWindow::builder()
.application(app)
.title("First GTK Program")
.default_width(350)
.default_height(70)
.build();
let button = Button::with_label("Click me!");
button.connect_clicked(|_| {
eprintln!("Clicked!");
});
window.set_child(Some(&button));
window.present();
});
application.run()
}
GTK is not thread-safe. Accordingly, none of this crate's structs implement
[Send
] or [Sync
].
The thread where [init
][fn@init
] was called is considered the main thread. OS X has
its own notion of the main thread and [init
][fn@init
] must be called on that thread.
After successful initialization, calling any gtk
or [gdk
][mod@gdk
]
functions (including [init
][fn@init
]) from other threads will panic
.
Any thread can schedule a closure to be run by the main loop on the main
thread via [glib::idle_add
][fn@glib::idle_add
] or
[glib::timeout_add
][fn@glib::timeout_add
]. While
working with GTK you might need the [glib::idle_add_local
][fn@glib::idle_add_local
]
or [glib::timeout_add_local
][fn@glib::timeout_add_local
] version without the
[Send
] bound. Those may only be called from the main thread.
The gtk
and [gdk
][mod@gdk
] crates have some run-time safety and contract
checks.
-
Any constructor or free function will panic if called before [
init
][fn@init
] or on a non-main thread. -
Any [
&str
] or&Path
parameter with an interior null (\0
) character will cause a panic. -
Some functions will panic if supplied out-of-range integer parameters. All such cases will be documented individually but they are not yet.
-
A panic in a closure that handles signals or in any other closure passed to a
gtk
function will abort the process.
By default this crate provides only GTK 4.0 APIs. You can access additional
functionality by selecting one of the v4_2
, v4_4
, etc. features.
Cargo.toml
example:
[dependencies.gtk]
package = "gtk4"
version = "0.x.y"
features = ["v4_2"]
Take care when choosing the version to target: some of your users might not have easy access to the latest ones. The higher the version, the fewer users will have it installed.
- The Rust API Stable/Development
- Book Stable/Development
- Examples
- The C API
- GTK Installation Instructions
We recommend using crates from crates.io, as demonstrated here.
If you want to track the bleeding edge, use the git dependency instead:
[dependencies]
gtk = { git = "https://github.com/gtk-rs/gtk4-rs.git", package = "gtk4" }
Avoid mixing versioned and git crates like this:
# This will not compile
[dependencies]
gdk = {version = "0.1", package = "gdk4"}
gtk = { git = "https://github.com/gtk-rs/gtk4-rs.git", package = "gtk4" }
Feature | Description |
---|---|
v4_14 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.14 |
v4_12 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.12 |
v4_10 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.10 |
v4_8 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.8 |
v4_6 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.6 |
v4_4 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.4 |
v4_2 |
Enable the new APIs part of GTK 4.2 |
gnome_45 |
Enable all version feature flags of this crate and its dependencies to match the GNOME 45 SDK |
gnome_44 |
Enable all version feature flags of this crate and its dependencies to match the GNOME 44 SDK |
gnome_43 |
Enable all version feature flags of this crate and its dependencies to match the GNOME 43 SDK |
gnome_42 |
Enable all version feature flags of this crate and its dependencies to match the GNOME 42 SDK |
unsafe-assume-initialized |
Disable checks that gtk is initialized, for use in C ABI libraries |
xml_validation |
Enable xml_validation feature of gtk4-macros |
blueprint |
Enable blueprint feature of gtk4-macros |
The Rust bindings of gtk4 are available under the MIT License, please refer to it.