tk - Manipulate Tk internal state
The tk command provides access to miscellaneous elements of
Tk's internal state. Most of the information manipulated by this command
pertains to the application as a whole, or to a screen or display, rather
than to a particular window. The command can take any of a number of
different forms depending on the option argument. The legal forms
are:
- tk appname
?newName?
- If newName is not specified, this command returns the name of the
application (the name that may be used in send commands to
communicate with the application). If newName is specified, then
the name of the application is changed to newName. If the given
name is already in use, then a suffix of the form “
#2” or “ #3” is appended in order to make
the name unique. The command's result is the name actually chosen.
newName should not start with a capital letter. This will interfere
with option processing, since names starting with capitals are assumed to
be classes; as a result, Tk may not be able to find some options for the
application. If sends have been disabled by deleting the send
command, this command will reenable them and recreate the send
command.
- tk busy
subcommand ...
- This command controls the marking of window hierarchies as
“busy”, rendering them non-interactive while some other
operation is proceeding. For more details see the busy manual
page.
- tk caret window
?-x x? ?-y y? ?-height
height?
- Sets and queries the caret location for the display of the specified Tk
window window. The caret is the per-display cursor location used
for indicating global focus (e.g. to comply with Microsoft Accessibility
guidelines), as well as for location of the over-the-spot XIM (X Input
Methods) or Windows IME windows. If no options are specified, the last
values used for setting the caret are return in option-value pair format.
-x and -y represent window-relative coordinates, and
-height is the height of the current cursor location, or the height
of the specified window if none is given.
- tk inactive
?-displayof window? ?reset?
- Returns a positive integer, the number of milliseconds since the last time
the user interacted with the system. If the -displayof option is
given then the return value refers to the display of window;
otherwise it refers to the display of the application's main window.
tk inactive will return -1, if querying the user inactive
time is not supported by the system, and in safe interpreters.
If the literal string reset is given as an additional
argument, the timer is reset and an empty string is returned. Resetting the
inactivity time is forbidden in safe interpreters and will throw an error if
tried.
- tk fontchooser
subcommand ...
- Controls the Tk font selection dialog. For more details see the
fontchooser manual page.
- tk scaling
?-displayof window? ?number?
- Sets and queries the current scaling factor used by Tk to convert between
physical units (for example, points, inches, or millimeters) and pixels.
The number argument is a floating point number that specifies the
number of pixels per point on window's display. If the
window argument is omitted, it defaults to the main window. If the
number argument is omitted, the current value of the scaling factor
is returned.
A “point” is a unit of measurement equal to 1/72
inch. A scaling factor of 1.0 corresponds to 1 pixel per point, which is
equivalent to a standard 72 dpi monitor. A scaling factor of 1.25 would mean
1.25 pixels per point, which is the setting for a 90 dpi monitor; setting
the scaling factor to 1.25 on a 72 dpi monitor would cause everything in the
application to be displayed 1.25 times as large as normal. The initial value
for the scaling factor is set when the application starts, based on
properties of the installed monitor, but it can be changed at any time.
Measurements made after the scaling factor is changed will use the new
scaling factor, but it is undefined whether existing widgets will resize
themselves dynamically to accommodate the new scaling factor.
- tk useinputmethods
?-displayof window? ?boolean?
- Sets and queries the state of whether Tk should use XIM (X Input Methods)
for filtering events. The resulting state is returned. XIM is used in some
locales (i.e., Japanese, Korean), to handle special input devices. This
feature is only significant on X. If XIM support is not available, this
will always return 0. If the window argument is omitted, it
defaults to the main window. If the boolean argument is omitted,
the current state is returned. This is turned on by default for the main
display.
- tk
windowingsystem
- Returns the current Tk windowing system, one of x11 (X11-based),
win32 (MS Windows), or aqua (Mac OS X Aqua).