===== Organization: Thought Unlimited. Public service Unix since 1986. Of_Interest: With 28 years of service to the Unix community.
On Sat, Sep 06, 2014 at 08:08:34AM +0200, Gergely Polonkai wrote: > On 6 Sep 2014 03:12, "Gary Kline" <kl...@thought.org> wrote: > > > > ===== > > Organization: Thought Unlimited. Public service Unix since 1986. > > Of_Interest: With 28 years of service to the Unix community. > > > > things that I *thought* might work by using > > > > s = gtk_label_get_text(GTK_LABEL((GtkWidget)buf)); > > > > fails. (with contains the String "label1") I have a index, > > "n" that can range from 1 to 99--whatever GtkWidget *label I > > need. the next thing that occured was some kind of > > > > typedef struct > > { > > > > GtkWidget *label1, > > *label2, > > *label3, > > ... > > *label999; > > } Labels; > > > > can abybody clue on how to use my n index counter to stick > > one of the "labels" so they show up on my arrow window? > > > > thanks much. > > > > -- > > Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service > Unix > > Twenty-eight years of service to the Unix community. > > > > This definitely calls for an array: > > GtkWidget *label[1000]; > > as you cannot reference to a variable with a constructed name (like $$a in > PHP). If your struct holds only pointers, though, you can also cast it to > an array: > > ((GtkWidget **)label_list)[99] > > but I haven't tested it, and highly discourage it. I will heed your advise! a workaround may be in three *.c files. but first:: sleep. -- Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix Twenty-eight years of service to the Unix community. _______________________________________________ gtk-app-devel-list mailing list gtk-app-devel-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-app-devel-list