Message(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Message(3pm) |
Tk::Message - Create and manipulate Message widgets
use Tk::Message; ... my $message = $parent->Message( -text => 'somewhat long message text', -aspect => 100, -justify => 'left', )->pack();
-anchor -font -highlightthickness -takefocus -background -foreground -padx -text -borderwidth -highlightbackground -pady -textvariable -cursor -highlightcolor -relief -width
See Tk::options for details of the standard options.
The Message method creates a new window (given by the $widget argument) and makes it into a message widget. Additional options, described above, may be specified on the command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the message such as its colors, font, text, and initial relief. The message command returns its $widget argument. At the time this command is invoked, there must not exist a window named $widget, but $widget's parent must exist.
A message is a widget that displays a textual string. A message widget has three special features. First, it breaks up its string into lines in order to produce a given aspect ratio for the window. The line breaks are chosen at word boundaries wherever possible (if not even a single word would fit on a line, then the word will be split across lines). Newline characters in the string will force line breaks; they can be used, for example, to leave blank lines in the display.
The second feature of a message widget is justification. The text may be displayed left-justified (each line starts at the left side of the window), centered on a line-by-line basis, or right-justified (each line ends at the right side of the window).
The third feature of a message widget is that it handles control characters and non-printing characters specially. Tab characters are replaced with enough blank space to line up on the next 8-character boundary. Newlines cause line breaks. Other control characters (ASCII code less than 0x20) and characters not defined in the font are displayed as a four-character sequence \xhh where hh is the two-digit hexadecimal number corresponding to the character. In the unusual case where the font doesn't contain all of the characters in ``0123456789abcdef\x'' then control characters and undefined characters are not displayed at all.
The Message method creates a widget object. This object supports the configure and cget methods described in Tk::options which can be used to enquire and modify the options described above. The widget also inherits all the methods provided by the generic Tk::Widget class.
When a new message is created, it has no default event bindings: messages are intended for output purposes only.
Tabs don't work very well with text that is centered or right-justified. The most common result is that the line is justified wrong.
message, widget
2023-03-23 | perl v5.36.0 |