[gtk+] Reword explanation of delete-event and destroy
- From: Christian Dywan <cdywan src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [gtk+] Reword explanation of delete-event and destroy
- Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 20:05:57 +0000 (UTC)
commit 072673c61214c935cc90450bacbca183d5936fad
Author: Christian Dywan <christian twotoasts de>
Date: Fri Mar 12 21:03:35 2010 +0100
Reword explanation of delete-event and destroy
docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml | 8 ++++----
1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml b/docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml
index 72b5c02..8353c31 100755
--- a/docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml
+++ b/docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml
@@ -822,11 +822,11 @@ until we call gtk_widget_show(window) near the end of our program.</para>
</programlisting>
<para>Here are two examples of connecting a signal handler to an object, in
-this case, the window. Here, the "delete_event" and "destroy" signals
+this case, the window. Here, the "delete-event" and "destroy" signals
are caught. The first is emitted when we use the window manager to
-kill the window, or when we use the gtk_widget_destroy() call passing
-in the window widget as the object to destroy. The second is emitted
-when, in the "delete_event" handler, we return FALSE.
+kill the window. The second is emitted when we use the gtk_widget_destroy() call
+passing in the window widget as the object to destroy, or when, in the
+"delete-event" handler, we return FALSE.
The <literal>G_CALLBACK</literal> is a macro
that performs type casting and checking for us, as well as aid the readability of
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