glade是一款所见即所得的 gui 界面设计工具,glade文件实质上是一个xml文件。而perl中Gtk2::GladeXML模块,可把glade文件导入到perl中运行。
安装该模块可使用以下命令:yum install -y  perl-Gtk2-GladeXML  。
下面这个perl脚本把/usr/share/doc/perl-Gtk2-GladeXML-1.007/examples/hello-world.glade这个示例glade文件导入perl中:
[user@localhost perl]$ cat myglade.pl
use Gtk2 -init;
use Gtk2::GladeXML;
$gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new('/usr/share/doc/perl-Gtk2-GladeXML-1.007/examples/hello-world.glade');
$gladexml->signal_autoconnect_from_package('main');
$quitbtn = $gladexml->get_widget('Quit');
Gtk2->main;

然后运行myglade.pl:
perl myglade.pl
运行结果如下截图:
perl-Gtk2编程-第四步 界面设计工具glade和perl转换模块 Gtk2::GladeXML-LMLPHP

但这个myglade.pl程序有个缺点,即窗口关闭后,命令行命令仍在运行,无法正常退出,原因是在该perl中没有处理对应事件的处理程序,现在myglade.pl文件末尾加上事件处理程序后的完整代码如下:
[user@localhost perl]$ cat myglade.pl
use Gtk2 -init;
use Gtk2::GladeXML;
$gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new('/usr/share/doc/perl-Gtk2-GladeXML-1.007/examples/hello-world.glade');
$gladexml->signal_autoconnect_from_package('main');
$quitbtn = $gladexml->get_widget('Quit');
Gtk2->main;
exit 0;

#---------事件处理程序-------------------------------------------------------------
# Signal handlers, connected to signals we defined using glade-2

# Handles window-manager-quit: shuts down gtk2 lib
sub on_main_delete_event {Gtk2->main_quit;}

# Handles close-button quit
sub on_close_button_clicked {Gtk2->main_quit;}

重新运行perl mygloade.pl后程序可以正常退出。
有关Gtk2::GladeXML模块的帮助信息,可通过命令man Gtk2::GladeXML进行查看,明细如下:
GladeXML(3)                      User Contributed Perl Documentation                     GladeXML(3)



NAME
       Gtk2::GladeXML - Create user interfaces directly from Glade XML files.

SYNOPSIS
         # for a pure gtk+ glade project
         use Gtk2 -init;
         use Gtk2::GladeXML;
         $gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new('example.glade');
         $gladexml->signal_autoconnect_from_package('main');
         $quitbtn = $gladexml->get_widget('Quit');
         Gtk2->main;

         # for glade files using gnome widgets, you must initialize Gnome2
         # before loading the glade file.
         use Gnome2;
         use Gtk2::GladeXML;
         # this call also initializes gtk+ for us
         Gnome2::Program->init ($appname, $version);
         $gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new('gnomeapp.glade');
         Gtk2->main;

ABSTRACT
       Gtk2::GladeXML allows Perl programmers to use libglade, a C library which generates graphical
       user interfaces directly from the XML output of the Glade user interface designer.

DESCRIPTION
       Glade is a free user interface builder for GTK+ and GNOME.  After designing a user interface
       with glade-2 the layout and configuration are saved in an XML file.  libglade is a library
       which knows how to build and hook up the user interface described in the Glade XML file at
       application run time.

       This extension module binds libglade to Perl so you can create and manipulate user interfaces
       in Perl code in conjunction with Gtk2 and even Gnome2.  Better yet you can load a file's
       contents into a PERL scalar do a few magical regular expressions to customize things and the
       load up the app. It doesn't get any easier.

FUNCTIONS
       $gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new(GLADE_FILE, [ROOT, DOMAIN])
           Create a new GladeXML object by loading the data in GLADE_FILE.  ROOT is an optional
           parameter that specifies a point (widget node) from which to start building.  DOMAIN is
           an optional parameter that specifies the translation domain for the xml file.

       $gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new_from_buffer(BUFFER, [ROOT, DOMAIN])
           Create a new GladeXML object from the scalar string contained in BUFFER.  ROOT is an
           optional parameter that specifies a point (widget node) from which to start building.
           DOMAIN is an optional parameter that specifies the translation domain for the xml file.

       $widget = $gladexml->get_widget(NAME)
           Return the widget created by the XML file with NAME or undef if no such name exists.

       $gladexml->signal_autoconnect($callback[, $userdata])
           Iterates over all signals and calls the given callback:

              sub example_cb {
                 my ($name, $widget, $signal, $signal_data, $connect, $after, $userdata) = @_;
              }

           The following two convenience methods use this to provide a more convenient interface.

       $gladexml->signal_autoconnect_from_package([PACKAGE or OBJECT])
           Sets up the signal handling callbacks as specified in the glade XML data.

           The argument to this method can be a Perl package name or an object.  If a package name
           is used, each handler named in the Glade XML data will be called as a subroutine in the
           named package.  If an object is supplied each handler will be called as a method of the
           object.  If no argument is supplied, the name of the calling package will be used.  A
           user data argument cannot be supplied however this is seldom necessary when an object is
           used.

           The names of the subroutines or methods must exactly match the handler name in the XML
           data.  It is worth noting that callbacks you get for free in c such as gtk_main_quit will
           not exist in perl and must always be defined, for example:

             sub gtk_main_quit
             {
                   Gtk2->main_quit;
             }

           Otherwise behavior should be exactly as expected with the use of libglade from a C
           application.

       $gladexml->signal_autoconnect_all (name => handler, ...)
           Iterates over all named signals and tries to connect them to the handlers specified as
           arguments (handlers not given as argument are being ignored). This is very handy when
           implementing your own widgets, where you can't use global callbacks.

       $widget = Gtk2::Glade->set_custom_handler ($callback[, $userdata])
           This method tells Gtk2::GladeXML how to create handlers for custom widgets.

           You can specify a "custom" widget in a glade file, which allows you to include in your
           interface widgets that Glade itself doesn't know how to create.  To tell libglade how to
           instantiate such widgets, you specify a "custom widget handler", a function which returns
           a Gtk2:Widget object for that custom widget.  This handler needs to be installed sometime
           before the instantiation of your Gtk2::GladeXML object, by calling "set_custom_handler".

               my $widget = Gtk2::Glade->set_custom_handler( \&my_handler );
               my $gladexml = Gtk2::GladeXML->new( 'MyApp.glade' );

           The prototype for the custom handler is:

               sub my_handler {
                   my ($xml,       # The Gtk2::GladeXML object
                       # the remaining arguments are as specified in the glade file:
                       $func_name, # The function name
                       $name,      # the name of the widget to be created
                       $str1,      # the string1 property
                       $str2,      # the string2 property
                       $int1,      # the int1 property
                       $int2,      # the int2 property
                       $userdata   # the data passed to set_custom_handler
                      ) = @_;
                   ...
                   return $widget; # a new Gtk2::Widget; you must call ->show on it.
               }

FAQ
       Where is the option to generate Perl source in Glade?
           Glade itself only creates the XML description, and relies on extra converter programs to
           write source code; only a few converters are widely popular.

           In general, however, you don't want to generate source code for a variety of reasons,
           mostly to do with maintainability.  This message on the glade-devel list explains it
           best:

           http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/glade-devel/2003-February/000015.html

       Why does my program crash on startup?
           Does your glade file use Gnome widgets?  If so, you must initialize Gnome manually;
           libglade can knows how to create gnome widgets, but can't know how you want to initialize
           the app.  This is usually sufficient:

             use Gnome2;
             Gnome2::Program->init ($app_name, $version_string);

           Libglade's API reference mentions this:
           http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/libglade/libglade-modules.html

SEE ALSO
       perl(1), Glib(3pm), Gtk2(3pm)

       The Libglade Reference Manual at

       An introductory article that originally appeared in The Perl Review:
      

AUTHOR
       Ross McFarland , Marc Lehmann , muppet       asofyet dot org>.  Bruce Alderson provided several examples.  Grant McClean       dot net dot nz> and Marco Antonio Manzo contributed
       documentation.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
       Copyright 2003-2006 by the gtk2-perl team.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
       version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
       without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the GNU Library General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with this
       library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
       Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA.



perl v5.16.2                                 2008-09-07                                  GladeXML(3)






12-20 07:04