Sets a widget as a potential drop destination, and adds default behaviors. The default behaviors listed in @flags have an effect similar to installing default handlers for the widget's drag-and-drop signals (GtkWidget::drag-motion, GtkWidget::drag-drop, ...). They all exist for convenience. When passing GTK_DEST_DEFAULT_ALL for instance it is sufficient to connect to the widget's GtkWidget::drag-data-received signal to get primitive, but consistent drag-and-drop support. Things become more complicated when you try to preview the dragged data, as described in the documentation for GtkWidget::drag-motion. The default behaviors described by @flags make some assumptions, that can conflict with your own signal handlers. For instance GTK_DEST_DEFAULT_DROP causes invokations of gdk_drag_status() in the context of GtkWidget::drag-motion, and invokations of gtk_drag_finish() in GtkWidget::drag-data-received. Especially the later is dramatic, when your own GtkWidget::drag-motion handler calls gtk_drag_get_data() to inspect the dragged data. There's no way to set a default action here, you can use the GtkWidget::drag-motion callback for that. Here's an example which selects the action to use depending on whether the control key is pressed or not: |[ static void drag_motion (GtkWidget *widget, GdkDragContext *context, gint x, gint y, guint time) { GdkModifierType mask; gdk_window_get_pointer (gtk_widget_get_window (widget), NULL, NULL, &mask); if (mask & GDK_CONTROL_MASK) gdk_drag_status (context, GDK_ACTION_COPY, time); else gdk_drag_status (context, GDK_ACTION_MOVE, time); } ]|