Table of Contents
XFillRectangle, XFillRectangles,
XFillPolygon, XFillArc, XFillArcs - fill rectangles, polygons, or arcs
- int
XFillRectangle(Display *display, Drawable d, GC
- gc, int x, int y, unsigned
int width, unsigned int height);
- int XFillRectangles(Display *display,
Drawable d, GC
- gc, XRectangle *rectangles, int nrectangles);
- int XFillPolygon(Display
*display, Drawable d, GC
- gc, XPoint *points, int npoints, int shape, int
mode);
- int XFillArc(Display *display, Drawable d, GC gc,
- int x, int y,
unsigned int width, unsigned int height, int angle1, int angle2);
- int
XFillArcs(Display *display, Drawable d, GC gc,
- XArc *arcs, int narcs);
- angle1
- Specifies the start of the arc relative to the three-o'clock
position from the center, in units of degrees * 64.
- angle2
- Specifies the
path and extent of the arc relative to the start of the arc, in units of
degrees * 64.
- arcs
- Specifies an array of arcs.
- d
- Specifies the drawable.
- display
- Specifies
the connection to the X server.
- gc
- Specifies the GC.
- mode
- Specifies the coordinate
mode. You can pass CoordModeOrigin or CoordModePrevious.
- narcs
- Specifies
the number of arcs in the array.
- npoints
- Specifies the number of points in
the array.
- nrectangles
- Specifies the number of rectangles in the array.
- points
- Specifies
an array of points.
- rectangles
- Specifies an array of rectangles.
- shape
- Specifies
a shape that helps the server to improve performance. You can pass Complex,
Convex, or Nonconvex.
- width
- height
- Specify the width and height, which are the dimensions of the rectangle
to be filled or the major and minor axes of the arc.
- x
- y
- Specify the x and y coordinates, which are relative to the origin of
the drawable and specify the upper-left corner of the rectangle.
The
XFillRectangle and XFillRectangles functions fill the specified rectangle
or rectangles as if a four-point FillPolygon protocol request were specified
for each rectangle:
0
0>=40 .vs 0u
0<=39 .vs 0p
[x,y] [x+width,y] [x+width,y+height] [x,y+height]
Each function uses the x and y coordinates, width and height dimensions,
and GC you specify.
XFillRectangles fills the rectangles in the order
listed in the array. For any given rectangle, XFillRectangle and XFillRectangles
do not draw a pixel more than once. If rectangles intersect, the intersecting
pixels are drawn multiple times.
Both functions use these GC components:
function, plane-mask, fill-style, subwindow-mode, clip-x-origin, clip-y-origin,
and clip-mask. They also use these GC mode-dependent components: foreground,
background, tile, stipple, tile-stipple-x-origin, and tile-stipple-y-origin.
XFillRectangle and XFillRectangles can generate BadDrawable, BadGC,
and BadMatch errors.
XFillPolygon fills the region closed by the specified
path. The path is closed automatically if the last point in the list does
not coincide with the first point. XFillPolygon does not draw a pixel
of the region more than once. CoordModeOrigin treats all coordinates as
relative to the origin, and CoordModePrevious treats all coordinates
after the first as relative to the previous point.
Depending on the specified
shape, the following occurs:
- If shape is Complex, the path may self-intersect.
Note that contiguous coincident points in the path are not treated as
self-intersection.
- If shape is Convex, for every pair of points inside
the polygon, the line segment connecting them does not intersect the path.
If known by the client, specifying Convex can improve performance.
If you specify Convex for a path that is not convex, the graphics results
are undefined.
- If shape is Nonconvex, the path does not self-intersect,
but the shape is not wholly convex. If known by the client, specifying
Nonconvex instead of Complex may improve performance. If you specify
Nonconvex for a self-intersecting path, the graphics results are undefined.
The fill-rule of the GC controls the filling behavior of self-intersecting
polygons.
This function uses these GC components: function, plane-mask,
fill-style, fill-rule, subwindow-mode, clip-x-origin, clip-y-origin, and clip-mask.
It also uses these GC mode-dependent components: foreground, background,
tile, stipple, tile-stipple-x-origin, and tile-stipple-y-origin.
XFillPolygon
can generate BadDrawable, BadGC, BadMatch, and BadValue errors.
For each arc, XFillArc or XFillArcs fills the region closed by the
infinitely thin path described by the specified arc and, depending on the
arc-mode specified in the GC, one or two line segments. For ArcChord,
the single line segment joining the endpoints of the arc is used. For
ArcPieSlice, the two line segments joining the endpoints of the arc
with the center point are used. XFillArcs fills the arcs in the order
listed in the array. For any given arc, XFillArc and XFillArcs do
not draw a pixel more than once. If regions intersect, the intersecting
pixels are drawn multiple times.
Both functions use these GC components:
function, plane-mask, fill-style, arc-mode, subwindow-mode, clip-x-origin,
clip-y-origin, and clip-mask. They also use these GC mode-dependent components:
foreground, background, tile, stipple, tile-stipple-x-origin, and tile-stipple-y-origin.
XFillArc and XFillArcs can generate BadDrawable, BadGC, and BadMatch
errors.
- BadDrawable
- A value for a Drawable argument does
not name a defined Window or Pixmap.
- BadGC
- A value for a GContext argument
does not name a defined GContext.
- BadMatch
- An InputOnly window is used
as a Drawable.
- BadMatch
- Some argument or pair of arguments has the correct
type and range but fails to match in some other way required by the request.
- 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.
XDrawArc(3X11)
,
XDrawPoint(3X11)
, XDrawRectangle(3X11)
Xlib - C Language X Interface
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