Tk::Widget - Base class of all widgets
package Tk::Whatever;
require Tk::Widget;
@ISA = qw(Tk::Widget);
Construct Tk::Widget 'Whatever';
sub Tk_cmd { \&Tk::whatever }
$widget->method(?arg,
arg, ...?)
The Tk::Widget is an abstract base class for all Tk
widgets.
Generic methods available to all widgets include the methods based
on core "winfo" mechanism and are used to
retrieve information about windows managed by Tk. They can take any of a
number of different forms, depending on the method. The legal forms
are:
- $widget->appname?(newName)?
- If newName isn't specified, this method 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 method'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 re-enable
them and recreate the send command.
- $widget->atom(name)
- Returns a decimal string giving the integer identifier for the atom whose
name is name. If no atom exists with the name name then a
new one is created.
- $widget->atomname(id)
- Returns the textual name for the atom whose integer identifier is
id. This command is the inverse of the
$widget->atom
command. It generates an error if no such atom exists.
- $widget->bell(
?-nice? );
- This command rings the bell on the display for
$widget and returns an empty
string. The command uses the current bell-related settings for the
display, which may be modified with programs such as xset.
If -nice is not specified, this command also resets the
screen saver for the screen. Some screen savers will ignore this, but
others will reset so that the screen becomes visible again.
- $widget->bindDump
- This command returns a list of strings suitable for printing detailing
binding information for a widget. It prints a widget's bindtags. For each
binding tag it prints all the bindings, comprised of the event descriptor
and the callback. Callback arguments are printed, and Tk::Ev
objects are expanded.
- $widget->Busy?(?-recurse
=> 1?,-option => value?)?
- This method configures a -cursor option for
$widget and (if -recurse
= 1> is specified) all its descendants. The cursor to be set may be
passed as -cursor = cursor> or defaults to
'watch'. Additional configure options are applied to
$widget only. It also adds a
special tag 'Busy' to the bindtags of the widgets so
configured so that KeyPress, KeyRelease, ButtonPress
and ButtonRelease events are ignored (with press events generating
a call to bell). It then acquires a local grab for
$widget. The state of the
widgets and the grab is restored by a call to
$widget->Unbusy.
- $widget->caret( ?-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.
- $widget->cells
- Returns a decimal string giving the number of cells in the color map for
$widget.
- $widget->children
- $widget->children
Returns a list containing all the children of
$widget. The list is in stacking order, with the
lowest window first. Top-level windows are returned as children of their
logical parents.
- $widget->class
- Returns the class name for
$widget.
- $widget->colormapfull
- Returns 1 if the colormap for
$widget is known to be full,
0 otherwise. The colormap for a window is ``known'' to be full if the last
attempt to allocate a new color on that window failed and this application
hasn't freed any colors in the colormap since the failed allocation.
- $widget->ConfigSpecs
- Used to perform delegated option configuration for a mega-widget. Returns,
in Tk::Derived::ConfigSpecs notation (see Tk::ConfigSpecs), all possible
options for a widget. For example,
$s = $self->Scale;
$self->ConfigSpecs(
$s->ConfigSpecs,
.... more ConfigSpecs specifications
);
returns a hash of all Tk::Scale options, delegated to
$s - e.g. some representative examples:
-bigincrement => [$s, bigIncrement, BigIncrement, 0, 0]
-digits => [$s, digits, Digits, 0, 0]
-sliderlength => [$s, sliderLength, SliderLength, 10m, 30]
-troughcolor => [$s, troughColor, Background, #c3c3c3, #c3c3c3]
This provides an easy means of populating a mega-widget's
ConfigSpecs with initializers.
- $widget->containing(rootX,rootY)
- Returns the window containing the point given by rootX and
rootY. RootX and rootY are specified in screen units
(i.e. any form acceptable to Tk_GetPixels) in the coordinate system
of the root window (if a virtual-root window manager is in use then the
coordinate system of the virtual root window is used). If no window in
this application contains the point then an empty string is returned. In
selecting the containing window, children are given higher priority than
parents and among siblings the highest one in the stacking order is
chosen.
- $widget->depth
- Returns a decimal string giving the depth of
$widget (number of bits per
pixel).
- $widget->destroy
- This command deletes the window related to
$widget, plus all its
descendants. If all the MainWindows are deleted then the entire
application will be destroyed.
The perl object
$widget continues to exist
while references to it still exist, e.g. until variable goes out of
scope. However any attempt to use Tk methods on the object will fail.
Exists($widget) will
return false on such objects.
Note however that while a window exists for
$widget the perl object is
maintained (due to "references" in perl/Tk internals) even
though original variables may have gone out of scope. (Normally this is
intuitive.)
- Exists($widget)
- Returns 1 if there exists a window for
$widget, 0 if no such window
exists.
- $widget->font(option?,
arg, arg, ...?)
- Create and inspect fonts. See Tk::Font for further details.
- $widget->fpixels(number)
- Returns a floating-point value giving the number of pixels in
$widget corresponding to the
distance given by number. Number may be specified in any of
the forms acceptable to Tk_GetScreenMM, such as ``2.0c'' or ``1i''.
The return value may be fractional; for an integer value, use
$widget->pixels.
- $widget->Getimage(name)
- Given name, look for an image file with that base name and return a
Tk::Image. File extensions are tried in this order: xpm,
gif, ppm, xbm until a valid iamge is found. If no
image is found, try a builtin image with that name.
- $widget->geometry
- Returns the geometry for
$widget, in the form
widthxheight+x+y. All
dimensions are in pixels.
- $widget->height
- Returns a decimal string giving
$widget's height in pixels.
When a window is first created its height will be 1 pixel; the height will
eventually be changed by a geometry manager to fulfill the window's needs.
If you need the true height immediately after creating a widget, invoke
update to force the geometry manager to arrange it, or use
$widget->reqheight
to get the window's requested height instead of its actual height.
- $widget->id
- Returns a hexadecimal string giving a low-level platform-specific
identifier for $widget. On Unix platforms, this is
the X window identifier. Under Windows, this is the Windows HWND. On the
Macintosh the value has no meaning outside Tk.
- $widget->idletasks
- One of two methods which are used to bring the application ``up to date''
by entering the event loop repeated until all pending events (including
idle callbacks) have been processed.
If the idletasks method is specified, then no new
events or errors are processed; only idle callbacks are invoked. This
causes operations that are normally deferred, such as display updates
and window layout calculations, to be performed immediately.
The idletasks command is useful in scripts where
changes have been made to the application's state and you want those
changes to appear on the display immediately, rather than waiting for
the script to complete. Most display updates are performed as idle
callbacks, so idletasks will cause them to run. However, there
are some kinds of updates that only happen in response to events, such
as those triggered by window size changes; these updates will not occur
in idletasks.
- $widget->interps
- Returns a list whose members are the names of all Tcl interpreters (e.g.
all Tk-based applications) currently registered for a particular display.
The return value refers to the display of
$widget.
- $widget->ismapped
- Returns 1 if $widget
is currently mapped, 0 otherwise.
- $widget->lower(?belowThis?)
- If the belowThis argument is omitted then the command lowers
$widget so that it is below all of its siblings in
the stacking order (it will be obscured by any siblings that overlap it
and will not obscure any siblings). If belowThis is specified then
it must be the path name of a window that is either a sibling of
$widget or the descendant of a sibling of
$widget. In this case the lower command
will insert $widget into the stacking order just
below belowThis (or the ancestor of belowThis that is a
sibling of $widget); this could end up either
raising or lowering $widget.
- $widget->MapWindow
- Cause $widget to be
"mapped" i.e. made visible on the display. May confuse the
geometry manager (pack, grid, place, ...) that thinks it is managing the
widget.
- $widget->manager
- Returns the name of the geometry manager currently responsible for
$widget, or an empty string
if $widget isn't managed by
any geometry manager. The name is usually the name of the method for the
geometry manager, such as pack or place. If the geometry
manager is a widget, such as canvases or text, the name is the widget's
class command, such as canvas.
- $widget->name
- Returns $widget's name (i.e.
its name within its parent, as opposed to its full path name). The command
$mainwin->name will
return the name of the application.
- $widget->OnDestroy(callback);
- OnDestroy accepts a standard perl/Tk callback. When the window
associated with $widget is
destroyed then the callback is invoked. Unlike
$widget->bind('<Destroy>',...)
the widgets methods are still available when callback is executed,
so (for example) a Text widget can save its contents to a file.
OnDestroy was required for new after mechanism.
- $widget->parent
- Returns $widget's parent, or
an empty string if $widget is
the main window of the application.
- $widget->PathName
- Returns the Tk path name of
$widget. This is the inverse
of the "Widget" method. (This is an import from the C
interface.)
- $widget->pathname(id)
- Returns an object whose X identifier is id. The identifier is
looked up on the display of
$widget. Id must be a
decimal, hexadecimal, or octal integer and must correspond to a window in
the invoking application, or an error occurs which can be trapped with
"eval { }" or
"Tk::catch { }". If the window belongs
to the application, but is not an object (for example wrapper windows,
HList header, etc.) then "undef" is
returned.
- $widget->pixels(number)
- Returns the number of pixels in
$widget corresponding to the
distance given by number. Number may be specified in any of
the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels, such as ``2.0c'' or ``1i''.
The result is rounded to the nearest integer value; for a fractional
result, use
$widget->fpixels.
- $widget->pointerx
- If the mouse pointer is on the same screen as
$widget, returns the
pointer's x coordinate, measured in pixels in the screen's root window. If
a virtual root window is in use on the screen, the position is measured in
the virtual root. If the mouse pointer isn't on the same screen as
$widget then -1 is
returned.
- $widget->pointerxy
- If the mouse pointer is on the same screen as
$widget, returns a list with
two elements, which are the pointer's x and y coordinates measured in
pixels in the screen's root window. If a virtual root window is in use on
the screen, the position is computed in the virtual root. If the mouse
pointer isn't on the same screen as
$widget then both of the
returned coordinates are -1.
- $widget->pointery
- If the mouse pointer is on the same screen as
$widget, returns the
pointer's y coordinate, measured in pixels in the screen's root window. If
a virtual root window is in use on the screen, the position is computed in
the virtual root. If the mouse pointer isn't on the same screen as
$widget then -1 is
returned.
- $widget->raise(?aboveThis?)
- If the aboveThis argument is omitted then the command raises
$widget so that it is above all of its siblings in
the stacking order (it will not be obscured by any siblings and will
obscure any siblings that overlap it). If aboveThis is specified
then it must be the path name of a window that is either a sibling of
$widget or the descendant of a sibling of
$widget. In this case the raise command
will insert $widget into the stacking order just
above aboveThis (or the ancestor of aboveThis that is a
sibling of $widget); this could end up either
raising or lowering $widget.
- $widget->reqheight
- Returns a decimal string giving
$widget's requested height,
in pixels. This is the value used by
$widget's geometry manager to
compute its geometry.
- $widget->reqwidth
- Returns a decimal string giving
$widget's requested width, in
pixels. This is the value used by
$widget's geometry manager to
compute its geometry.
- $widget->rgb(color)
- Returns a list containing three decimal values, which are the red, green,
and blue intensities that correspond to color in the window given
by $widget. Color may
be specified in any of the forms acceptable for a color option.
- $widget->rootx
- Returns a decimal string giving the x-coordinate, in the root window of
the screen, of the upper-left corner of
$widget's border (or
$widget if it has no
border).
- $widget->rooty
- Returns a decimal string giving the y-coordinate, in the root window of
the screen, of the upper-left corner of
$widget's border (or
$widget if it has no
border).
- $widget->scaling?(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 $widget's display.
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 (as
reported via the window system), 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.
- $widget->screen
- Returns the name of the screen associated with
$widget, in the form
displayName.screenIndex.
- $widget->screencells
- Returns a decimal string giving the number of cells in the default color
map for $widget's
screen.
- $widget->screendepth
- Returns a decimal string giving the depth of the root window of
$widget's screen (number of
bits per pixel).
- $widget->screenheight
- Returns a decimal string giving the height of
$widget's screen, in
pixels.
- $widget->screenmmheight
- Returns a decimal string giving the height of
$widget's screen, in
millimeters.
- $widget->screenmmwidth
- Returns a decimal string giving the width of
$widget's screen, in
millimeters.
- $widget->screenvisual
- Returns one of the following strings to indicate the default visual class
for $widget's screen:
directcolor, grayscale, pseudocolor,
staticcolor, staticgray, or truecolor.
- $widget->screenwidth
- Returns a decimal string giving the width of
$widget's screen, in
pixels.
- $widget->server
- Returns a string containing information about the server for
$widget's display. The exact
format of this string may vary from platform to platform. For X servers
the string has the form ``XmajorRminor vendor
vendorVersion'' where major and minor are the version
and revision numbers provided by the server (e.g., X11R5),
vendor is the name of the vendor for the server, and
vendorRelease is an integer release number provided by the
server.
- $widget->toplevel
- Returns the reference of the top-level window containing
$widget.
- $widget->Unbusy
- Restores widget state after a call to
$widget->Busy.
- $widget->UnmapWindow
- Cause $widget to be
"unmapped" i.e. removed from the display. This does for any
widget what
$widget->withdraw does for
toplevel widgets. May confuse the geometry manager (pack, grid, place,
...) that thinks it is managing the widget.
- $widget->update
- One of two methods which are used to bring the application ``up to date''
by entering the event loop repeated until all pending events (including
idle callbacks) have been processed.
The update method is useful in scripts where you are
performing a long-running computation but you still want the application
to respond to events such as user interactions; if you occasionally call
update then user input will be processed during the next call to
update.
- $widget->useinputmethods(
?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 (ie: 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 boolean argument is omitted, the current
state is returned. This is turned on by default for the main display.
- $widget->viewable
- Returns 1 if $widget and all
of its ancestors up through the nearest toplevel window are mapped.
Returns 0 if any of these windows are not mapped.
- $widget->visual
- Returns one of the following strings to indicate the visual class for
$widget: directcolor,
grayscale, pseudocolor, staticcolor,
staticgray, or truecolor.
- $widget->visualid
- Returns the X identifier for the visual for
$widget.
- $widget->visualsavailable(?includeids?)
- Returns a list whose elements describe the visuals available for
$widget's screen. Each
element consists of a visual class followed by an integer depth. The class
has the same form as returned by
$widget->visual.
The depth gives the number of bits per pixel in the visual. In addition,
if the includeids argument is provided, then the depth is followed
by the X identifier for the visual.
- $widget->vrootheight
- Returns the height of the virtual root window associated with
$widget if there is one;
otherwise returns the height of
$widget's screen.
- $widget->vrootwidth
- Returns the width of the virtual root window associated with
$widget if there is one;
otherwise returns the width of
$widget's screen.
- $widget->vrootx
- Returns the x-offset of the virtual root window associated with
$widget, relative to the root
window of its screen. This is normally either zero or negative. Returns 0
if there is no virtual root window for
$widget.
- $widget->vrooty
- Returns the y-offset of the virtual root window associated with
$widget, relative to the root
window of its screen. This is normally either zero or negative. Returns 0
if there is no virtual root window for
$widget.
- $widget->waitVariable(\$name)
- $widget->waitVisibility
- $widget->waitWindow
- The tk wait methods wait for one of several things to happen, then
it returns without taking any other actions. The return value is always an
empty string. waitVariable expects a reference to a perl variable
and the command waits for that variable to be modified. This form is
typically used to wait for a user to finish interacting with a dialog
which sets the variable as part (possibly final) part of the interaction.
waitVisibility waits for a change in
$widget's visibility state
(as indicated by the arrival of a VisibilityNotify event). This form is
typically used to wait for a newly-created window to appear on the screen
before taking some action. waitWindow waits for
$widget to be destroyed. This
form is typically used to wait for a user to finish interacting with a
dialog box before using the result of that interaction. Note that creating
and destroying the window each time a dialog is required makes code
modular but imposes overhead which can be avoided by withdrawing
the window instead and using waitVisibility.
While the tk wait methods are waiting they processes
events in the normal fashion, so the application will continue to
respond to user interactions. If an event handler invokes tkwait
again, the nested call to tkwait must complete before the outer
call can complete.
- $widget->Walk(proc?,
arg, ...?)
- Traverse a widget hierarchy starting at
$widget while executing the
subroutine proc to every visited widget. The arguments arg,
... are supplied to the subroutine.
- $widget->Widget(pathname)
- Returns the widget reference for the given Tk path name, or
"undef" if the path name does not match
a Tk widget. This is the inverse of the "PathName" method. (This
is an import from the C interface.)
- $widget->width
- Returns a decimal string giving
$widget's width in pixels.
When a window is first created its width will be 1 pixel; the width will
eventually be changed by a geometry manager to fulfill the window's needs.
If you need the true width immediately after creating a widget, invoke
update to force the geometry manager to arrange it, or use
$widget->reqwidth
to get the window's requested width instead of its actual width.
- $widget->windowingsystem
- Returns the current Tk windowing system, one of x11 (X11-based),
win32 (MS Windows), classic (Mac OS Classic), or aqua
(Mac OS X Aqua).
- $widget->x
- Returns a decimal string giving the x-coordinate, in
$widget's parent, of the
upper-left corner of
$widget's border (or
$widget if it has no
border).
- $widget->y
- Returns a decimal string giving the y-coordinate, in
$widget's parent, of the
upper-left corner of
$widget's border (or
$widget if it has no
border).
The above documentation on generic methods is incomplete.
atom, children, class, geometry, height, identifier, information,
interpreters, mapped, parent, path name, screen, virtual root, width,
window