You may be wondering how you make GTK do useful work when in gtk_main. Well, you have several options. Using the following functions you can create a timeout function that will be called every "interval" milliseconds.
gint gtk_timeout_add (guint32 interval,
GtkFunction function,
gpointer data);
The first argument is the number of milliseconds between calls to your function. The second argument is the function you wish to have called, and the third, the data passed to this callback function. The return value is an integer "tag" which may be used to stop the timeout by calling:
void gtk_timeout_remove (gint tag);
You may also stop the timeout function by returning zero or FALSE from your callback function. Obviously this means if you want your function to continue to be called, it should return a non-zero value, ie TRUE.
The declaration of your callback should look something like this:
gint timeout_callback (gpointer data);
Another nifty feature of GTK, is the ability to have it check for data on a file descriptor for you (as returned by open(2) or socket(2)). This is especially useful for networking applications. The function:
gint gdk_input_add (gint source,
GdkInputCondition condition,
GdkInputFunction function,
gpointer data);
Where the first argument is the file descriptor you wish to have watched, and the second specifies what you want GDK to look for. This may be one of:
GDK_INPUT_READ - Call your function when there is data ready for reading on your file descriptor.
GDK_INPUT_WRITE - Call your function when the file descriptor is ready for writing.
As I'm sure you've figured out already, the third argument is the function you wish to have called when the above conditions are satisfied, and the fourth is the data to pass to this function.
The return value is a tag that may be used to stop GDK from monitoring this file descriptor using the following function.
void gdk_input_remove (gint tag);
As with the gtk_timeout_add function above, a FALSE return from your callback function will also cause GTK to stop monitoring the file descriptor. (will have to verify this.)
What about if you have a function you want called when nothing else is happening ?
gint gtk_idle_add (GtkFunction function,
gpointer data);
This causes GTK to call the specified function whenever nothing else is happening.
void gtk_idle_remove (gint tag);
I won't explain the meaning of the arguments as they follow very much like the ones above. The function pointed to by the first argument to gtk_idle_add will be called whenever the opportunity arises. As with the others, returning FALSE will stop the idle function from being called.