3

I have a gtk.Window. How do I set it to be the active window? I can call is_active() to see whether it already is, but I don't see where to make it active.

Bonus points: given a gtk.Widget, how do I make the window it is a part of the active window?

4 Answers 4

11

Ah thanks to this thread, the answer is to call gtk.Window.present().

3

Here's what worked for me (thanks Dan D for pointing out wnck)

def activate(window):
    screen = wnck.screen_get_default()
    screen.force_update()
    wnckwin = [win for win in screen.get_windows() if win.get_xid() == window.window.xid][0]
    wnckwin.activate(gtk.gdk.x11_get_server_time(window.window))
1

if W is a gtk.Window:

import wnck
wnck.window_get(W.window.xid).activate()
2
  • I get "xid attribute not supported"; i'm on Windows, btw, so if i can get the hwnd then i can figure it out.
    – Claudiu
    Mar 22, 2011 at 15:55
  • oh, yes, libwnck doesn't exist for MS Windows as X11 WMs don't exist there either
    – Dan D.
    Mar 22, 2011 at 16:09
-1

You can also use gtk.Dialog.run (if it's a Dialog) aditional to gtk.Window.present

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