GtkTreeModelSort A GtkTreeModel which makes an underlying tree model sortable The #GtkTreeModelSort is a model which implements the #GtkTreeSortable interface. It does not hold any data itself, but rather is created with a child model and proxies its data. It has identical column types to this child model, and the changes in the child are propagated. The primary purpose of this model is to provide a way to sort a different model without modifying it. The use of this is best demonstrated through an example. In the following sample code we create two #GtkTreeView widgets each with a view of the same data. As the model is wrapped here by a #GtkTreeModelSort, the two #GtkTreeViews can each sort their view of the data without affecting the other. By contrast, if we simply put the same model in each widget, then sorting the first would sort the second. Using a <structname>GtkTreeModelSort</structname> { GtkTreeView *tree_view1; GtkTreeView *tree_view2; GtkTreeModel *sort_model1; GtkTreeModel *sort_model2; GtkTreeModel *child_model; /* get the child model */ child_model = get_my_model (); /* Create the first tree */ sort_model1 = gtk_tree_model_sort_new_with_model (child_model); tree_view1 = gtk_tree_view_new_with_model (sort_model1); /* Create the second tree */ sort_model2 = gtk_tree_model_sort_new_with_model (child_model); tree_view2 = gtk_tree_view_new_with_model (sort_model2); /* Now we can sort the two models independently */ gtk_tree_sortable_set_sort_column_id (GTK_TREE_SORTABLE (sort_model1), COLUMN_1, GTK_SORT_ASCENDING); gtk_tree_sortable_set_sort_column_id (GTK_TREE_SORTABLE (sort_model2), COLUMN_1, GTK_SORT_DESCENDING); } To demonstrate how to access the underlying child model from the sort model, the next example will be a callback for the #GtkTreeSelection "changed" signal. In this callback, we get a string from COLUMN_1 of the model. We then modify the string, find the same selected row on the child model, and change the row there. Accessing the child model of in a selection changed callback void selection_changed (GtkTreeSelection *selection, gpointer data) { GtkTreeModel *sort_model = NULL; GtkTreeModel *child_model; GtkTreeIter sort_iter; GtkTreeIter child_iter; char *some_data = NULL; char *modified_data; /* Get the current selected row and the model. */ if (! gtk_tree_selection_get_selected (selection, &sort_model, &sort_iter)) return; /* Look up the current value on the selected row and get a new value * to change it to. */ gtk_tree_model_get (GTK_TREE_MODEL (sort_model), &sort_iter, COLUMN_1, &some_data, -1); modified_data = change_the_data (some_data); g_free (some_data); /* Get an iterator on the child model, instead of the sort model. */ gtk_tree_model_sort_convert_iter_to_child_iter (GTK_TREE_MODEL_SORT (sort_model), &child_iter, &sort_iter); /* Get the child model and change the value of the row. In this * example, the child model is a GtkListStore. It could be any other * type of model, though. */ child_model = gtk_tree_model_sort_get_model (GTK_TREE_MODEL_SORT (sort_model)); gtk_list_store_set (GTK_LIST_STORE (child_model), &child_iter, COLUMN_1, &modified_data, -1); g_free (modified_data); } #GtkTreeModel, #GtkListStore, #GtkTreeStore, #GtkTreeSortable, #GtkTreeModelFilter This should not be accessed directly. Use the accessor functions below. @child_model: @Returns: @func: @sort_col: @model: @tree_model: @Returns: @tree_model_sort: @child_path: @Returns: @tree_model_sort: @sort_iter: @child_iter: @tree_model_sort: @sorted_path: @Returns: @tree_model_sort: @child_iter: @sorted_iter: @tree_model_sort: @tree_model_sort: @tree_model_sort: @iter: @Returns: