Related Tools Several useful developer tools have been build around GObject technology. The next sections briefly introduce them and link to the respective project pages. For example, writing GObjects is often seen as a tedious task. It requires a lot of typing and just doing a copy/paste requires a great deal of care. A lot of projects and scripts have been written to generate GObject skeleton form boilerplate code, or even translating higher-level language into plain C. Vala From the Vala homepage itself: Vala is a new programming language that aims to bring modern programming language features to GNOME developers without imposing any additional runtime requirements and without using a different ABI compared to applications and libraries written in C. The syntax of Vala is similar to C#. The available compiler translates Vala into GObject C code. It can also compile non-GObject C, using plain C API. GObject builder In order to help a GObject class developer, one obvious idea is to use some sort of templates for the skeletons and then run them through a special tool to generate the real C files. GOB (or GOB2) is such a tool. It is a preprocessor which can be used to build GObjects with inline C code so that there is no need to edit the generated C code. The syntax is inspired by Java and Yacc or Lex. The implementation is intentionally kept simple: the inline C code provided by the user is not parsed. Graphical inspection of GObjects Yet another tool that you may find helpful when working with GObjects is G-Inspector. It is able to display GLib/GTK objects and their properties. Debugging reference count problems The reference counting scheme used by GObject does solve quite a few memory management problems but also introduces new sources of bugs. In large applications, finding the exact spot where the reference count of an Object is not properly handled can be very difficult. A useful tool in debugging reference counting problems is to set breakpoints in gdb on g_object_ref() and g_object_unref(). Once you know the address of the object you are interested in, you can make the breakpoints conditional: break g_object_ref if _object == 0xcafebabe break g_object_unref if _object == 0xcafebabe Writing API docs The API documentation for most of the GLib, GObject, GTK and GNOME libraries is built with a combination of complex tools. Typically, the part of the documentation which describes the behavior of each function is extracted from the specially-formatted source code comments by a tool named gtk-doc which generates DocBook XML and merges this DocBook XML with a set of template XML DocBook files. These XML DocBook files are finally processed with xsltproc (a small program part of the libxslt library) to generate the final HTML output. Other tools can be used to generate PDF output from the source XML. The following code excerpt shows what these comments look like. /** * gtk_widget_freeze_child_notify: * @widget: a #GtkWidget * * Stops emission of "child-notify" signals on @widget. The signals are * queued until gtk_widget_thaw_child_notify() is called on @widget. * * This is the analogue of g_object_freeze_notify() for child properties. **/ void gtk_widget_freeze_child_notify (GtkWidget *widget) { ... Thorough documentation on how to set up and use gtk-doc in your project is provided on the GNOME developer website.