X Version 11 (Release 6.1)

XSetTextProperty(X3xlib)


XSetTextProperty -- set and read text properties

Synopsis

   void XSetTextProperty(display, w, text_prop, property)
         Display *display;
         Window w;
         XTextProperty *text_prop;
         Atom property;
   

Status XGetTextProperty(display, w, text_prop_return, property) Display *display; Window w; XTextProperty *text_prop_return; Atom property;

Arguments


display
Specifies the connection to the X server.

property
Specifies the property name.

text_prop
Specifies the XTextProperty structure to be used.

text_prop_return
Returns the XTextProperty structure.

Description

The XSetTextProperty function replaces the existing specified property for the named window with the data, type, format, and number of items determined by the value field, the encoding field, the format field, and the nitems field, respectively, of the specified XTextProperty structure. If the property does not already exist, XSetTextProperty sets it for the specified window.

XSetTextProperty can generate ``BadAlloc'', ``BadAtom'', ``BadValue'', and ``BadWindow'' errors.

The XGetTextProperty function reads the specified property from the window and stores the data in the returned XTextProperty structure. It stores the data in the value field, the type of the data in the encoding field, the format of the data in the format field, and the number of items of data in the nitems field. An extra byte containing null (which is not included in the nitems member) is stored at the end of the value field of text_prop_return. The particular interpretation of the property's encoding and data as text is left to the calling application. If the specified property does not exist on the window, XGetTextProperty sets the value field to NULL, the encoding field to None, the format field to zero, and the nitems field to zero.

If it was able to read and store the data in the XTextProperty structure, XGetTextProperty returns a nonzero status; otherwise, it returns a zero status.

XGetTextProperty can generate ``BadAtom'' and ``BadWindow'' errors.

Properties


WM_CLIENT_MACHINE
The string name of the machine on which the client application is running.

WM_COMMAND
The command and arguments, null-separated, used to invoke the application.

WM_ICON_NAME
The name to be used in an icon.

WM_NAME
The name of the application.

Diagnostics


``BadAlloc''
The server failed to allocate the requested resource or server memory.

``BadAtom''
A value for an Atom argument does not name a defined Atom.

``BadValue''
Some numeric value falls outside the range of values accepted by the request. Unless a specific range is specified for an argument, the full range defined by the argument's type is accepted. Any argument defined as a set of alternatives can generate this error.

``BadWindow''
A value for a Window argument does not name a defined Window.

References

XAllocClassHint(X3xlib), XAllocIconSize(X3xlib), XAllocSizeHints(X3xlib), XAllocWMHints(X3xlib), XSetCommand(X3xlib), XSetTransientForHint(X3xlib), XSetWMClientMachine(X3xlib), XSetWMColormapWindows(X3xlib), XSetWMIconName(X3xlib), XSetWMName(X3xlib), XSetWMProperties(X3xlib), XSetWMProtocols(X3xlib), XStringListToTextProperty(X3xlib)

Xlib - C Language X Interface


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UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004