tktray - System Tray Icon Support for Tk on X11
package require Tcl 8.4
package require tktray ?1.0?
tktray::icon pathName ?options?
pathName balloon message
?msec_timeout?
pathName cancel message_handle
pathName bbox
pathName cget option
pathName configure ?options?
pathName docked
pathName orientation
Tktray is an extension that is able to create system tray icons.
It follows http://www.freedesktop.org specifications when looking up
the system tray manager. This protocol is supported by modern versions of
KDE and Gnome panels, and by some other panel-like application.
- tktray::icon
pathName ?options?
- Create a new icon for the system tray. The application managing the system
tray is notified about the new icon. It normally results in the icon being
added to the tray. If there is no system tray at the icon creation time,
the icon will be invisible. When a new system tray appears, the icon will
be added to it. Since tktray 1.3, if the tray crashes and destroys your
icon, it will be recreated on a new system tray when it's available.
- -class
- WM_CLASS attribute for icon window. Tray manager may use class name to
remember icon position or other attributes. This name may be used for
event binding as well. For now, real icon window is distinct from the
user-specified widget: it may be recreated and destroyed several times
during icon lifetime, when a system tray crashes, terminates, disappears
or appears. However, tktray tries to forward click and motion events from
this inner window to user widget, so event bindings on widget name should
work as they used to. This option applies to a real icon window, not to a
user-visible widget, so don't rely on it to set widget defaults from an
option database: the standard "TrayIcon" class name is used for
it.
- -docked
- boolean indicating whether the real icon window should be embedded into a
tray when it exists. Think of it as a heavier version of -visible option:
there is a guarantee that no place for icon will be reserved on any
tray.
- -image
- image to show in the system tray. Since tktray 1.3, image type
"photo" is not mandatory anymore. Icon will be automatically
redrawn on any image modifications. For Tk, deleting an image and creating
an image with the same name later is a kind of image modification, and
tktray follows this convention. Photo image operations that modify
existing image content are another example of events triggering redisplay.
Requested size for icon is set according to the image's width and height,
but obeying (or disobeying) this request is left for the tray.
- -shape
- used to put a nonrectangular shape on an icon window. Ignored for
compatibility.
- -visible
- boolean value indicating whether the icon must be visible. The system tray
manager continues to manage the icon whether it is visible or not. Thus
when invisible icon becomes visible, its position on the system tray is
likely to remain the same. Tktray currently tries to find a tray and embed
into it as soon as possible, whether -visible is true or not. _XEMBED_INFO
property is set for embedded window: a tray should show or hide an icon
depending on this property. There may be, and indeed are, incomplete tray
implementations ignoring _XEMBED_INFO (ex. docker). Gnome-panel
"unmaps" an icon by making it one pixel wide, that might to be
what you expect. For those implementations, the place for an icon will be
reserved but no image will be displayed: tktray takes care of it. Tktray
also blocks mouse event forwarding for invisible icons, so you may be
confident that no <Button> bindings will be invoked at this
time.
- pathName
balloon message ?msec_timeout?
- Post a message that any decent tray implementation would show alongside
the icon (or a place allocated for it). The message will disappear
automatically after $msec_timeout milliseconds. Unfortunately, there is
absolutely no way to know if the tray supports this feature, so don't rely
on it for any critical information to be delivered. When no timeout or
zero timeout is given, the message should not be hidden without user
action (usually a mouse click). The return value is an integer, a message
handle that may be used for cancelling the message before timeout
expiration, or zero if there is currently no system tray to handle the
request.
- pathName
cancel message_handle
- Cancel an earlier-posted balloon message. Zero message_handle is silently
ignored. If there is no message with this handle, or its timeout has
expired, or it was posted to another system tray and is unknow to the
current one, nothing bad should happen (but it depends on the tray
implementation).
- pathName
bbox
- Get the list of left, top, right and bottom coordinates of the icon
relative to the root window of the icon's screen. This command should be
used in preference to winfo rootx and winfo rooty to get
icon location, though the latter may seem to work on your system. Bounding
box information is updated asynchronously. Don't rely on its correctness
on script startup, just after icon creation. This command is for event
handlers: on <ButtonPress-3> you'd like to have a popup menu, but
where it should be posted? Use %W bbox to determine it right at the moment
when a click happened.
- pathName
cget option
- Retrieve current option value as set by the caller.
- pathName
configure ?options?
- Modify icon's options after it was created.
- pathName
docked
- Query icon if it's currently embedded into some system tray. Invisible
icons may be docked too (and tktray strives for it). If this method
returns false, the icon is not visible to anyone, and no chance to get
balloon messages displayed.
- pathName
orientation
- Query orientation of a system tray that is currently embedding the
icon.
Current implementation of tktray is designed to present an
interface of a usual toplevel window, but there are some important
differences (some of them may come up later). System Tray specification is
based on XEMBED protocol, and the later has a problem: when the embedder
crashes, nothing can prevent embedded windows from destruction. Since tktray
1.3, no explicit icon recreation code is required on Tcl level. The widget
was split in two: one represented by a caller-specified name, and another
(currently $path.inner) that exists only when a tray is available (and dies
and comes back and so on). This solution has some disadvantages as well.
User-created widget is not mapped at all, thus it can't be used any more as
a parent for other widgets, showing them instead of an image. A temporal
inner window, however, may contain widgets.
This version introduces three virtual events:
<<IconCreate>> <<IconConfigure>> and
<<IconDestroy>>. <<IconCreate>> is generated when
docking is requesting for an icon. <<IconConfigure>> is
generated when an icon window is resized or changed in some other way.
<<IconDestroy>> is generated when an icon is destroyed due to
panel crash or undocked with unsetting -docked option.
Anton Kovalenko See http://www.sw4me.com/wiki/Tktray.
icons, system tray, taskbar
Copyright (c) 2005, Anton Kovalenko