- NAME
- canvas — Create and manipulate 'canvas' hypergraphics drawing
surface widgets
- SYNOPSIS
- STANDARD
OPTIONS
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -cursor, cursor,
Cursor
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -insertbackground,
insertBackground, Foreground
- -insertborderwidth,
insertBorderWidth, BorderWidth
- -insertofftime,
insertOffTime, OffTime
- -insertontime,
insertOnTime, OnTime
- -insertwidth, insertWidth,
InsertWidth
- -relief, relief,
Relief
- -selectbackground,
selectBackground, Foreground
- -selectborderwidth,
selectBorderWidth, BorderWidth
- -selectforeground,
selectForeground, Background
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -xscrollcommand,
xScrollCommand, ScrollCommand
- -yscrollcommand,
yScrollCommand, ScrollCommand
- WIDGET-SPECIFIC
OPTIONS
- -closeenough,
closeEnough, CloseEnough
- -confine,
confine, Confine
- -height, height,
Height
- -scrollregion,
scrollRegion, ScrollRegion
- -state, state,
State
- -width, width,
width
- -xscrollincrement, xScrollIncrement,
ScrollIncrement
- -yscrollincrement, yScrollIncrement,
ScrollIncrement
- INTRODUCTION
- DISPLAY
LIST
- ITEM IDS AND
TAGS
- COORDINATES
- TRANSFORMATIONS
- INDICES
- number
- end
- insert
- sel.first
- sel.last
- @x,y
- DASH
PATTERNS
- WIDGET
COMMAND
- pathName
addtag tag searchSpec ?arg ...?
- above
tagOrId
- all
- below
tagOrId
- closest
x y ?halo? ?start?
- enclosed
x1 y1 x2 y2
- overlapping x1 y1 x2 y2
- withtag
tagOrId
- pathName
bbox tagOrId ?tagOrId tagOrId ...?
- pathName
bind tagOrId ?sequence?
?command?
- pathName
canvasx screenx ?gridspacing?
- pathName
canvasy screeny ?gridspacing?
- pathName
cget option
- pathName
configure ?option? ?value? ?option value
...?
- pathName
coords tagOrId ?x0 y0 ...?
- pathName
coords tagOrId ?coordList?
- pathName
create type x y ?x y ...? ?option value
...?
- pathName
create type coordList ?option value
...?
- pathName
dchars tagOrId first ?last?
- pathName
delete ?tagOrId tagOrId ...?
- pathName
dtag tagOrId ?tagToDelete?
- pathName
find searchCommand ?arg ...?
- pathName
focus ?tagOrId?
- pathName
gettags tagOrId
- pathName
icursor tagOrId index
- pathName
image imagename ?subsample?
?zoom?
- pathName
imove tagOrId index x y
- pathName
index tagOrId index
- pathName
insert tagOrId beforeThis string
- pathName
itemcget tagOrId option
- pathName
itemconfigure tagOrId ?option? ?value?
?option value ...?
- pathName
lower tagOrId ?belowThis?
- pathName
move tagOrId xAmount yAmount
- pathName
moveto tagOrId xPos yPos
- pathName
postscript ?option value option value ...?
- -channel
channelName
- -colormap varName
- -colormode mode
- -file
fileName
- -fontmap
varName
- -height
size
- -pageanchor anchor
- -pageheight size
- -pagewidth size
- -pagex
position
- -pagey
position
- -rotate
boolean
- -width
size
- -x
position
- -y
position
- pathName
raise tagOrId ?aboveThis?
- pathName
rchars tagOrId first last string
- pathName
rotate tagOrId xOrigin yOrigin angle
- pathName
scale tagOrId xOrigin yOrigin xScale yScale
- pathName
scan option args
- pathName
scan mark x y
- pathName
scan dragto x y ?gain?
- pathName
select option ?tagOrId arg?
- pathName
select adjust tagOrId index
- pathName
select clear
- pathName
select from tagOrId index
- pathName
select item
- pathName
select to tagOrId index
- pathName
type tagOrId
- pathName
xview ?args?
- pathName
xview
- pathName
xview moveto fraction
- pathName
xview scroll number what
- pathName
yview ?args?
- pathName
yview
- pathName
yview moveto fraction
- pathName
yview scroll number what
- OVERVIEW OF
ITEM TYPES
- COMMON ITEM
OPTIONS
- -anchor
anchorPos
- -dash
pattern
- -activedash pattern
- -disableddash pattern
- -dashoffset offset
- -fill
color
- -activefill color
- -disabledfill color
- -outline color
- -activeoutline color
- -disabledoutline color
- -offset
offset
- -outlinestipple bitmap
- -activeoutlinestipple bitmap
- -disabledoutlinestipple bitmap
- -outlineoffset offset
- -stipple bitmap
- -activestipple bitmap
- -disabledstipple bitmap
- -state
state
- -tags
tagList
- -width
outlineWidth
- -activewidth outlineWidth
- -disabledwidth outlineWidth
- STANDARD ITEM
TYPES
- ARC ITEMS
- -extent
degrees
- -start
degrees
- -height
distance
- -style
type
- BITMAP
ITEMS
- -background color
- -activebackground color
- -disabledbackground color
- -bitmap
bitmap
- -activebitmap bitmap
- -disabledbitmap bitmap
- -foreground color
- -activeforeground color
- -disabledforeground color
- IMAGE
ITEMS
- -image
name
- -activeimage name
- -disabledimage name
- LINE ITEMS
- -arrow
where
- -arrowshape shape
- -capstyle style
- -joinstyle style
- -smooth
smoothMethod
- -splinesteps number
- OVAL
ITEMS
- POLYGON
ITEMS
- -joinstyle style
- -smooth
boolean
- -splinesteps number
- RECTANGLE
ITEMS
- TEXT ITEMS
- -angle
rotationDegrees
- -font
fontName
- -justify how
- -text
string
- -underline number
- -width
lineLength
- WINDOW
ITEMS
- -height
pixels
- -width
pixels
- -window
pathName
- APPLICATION-DEFINED ITEM TYPES
- BINDINGS
- CREDITS
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
canvas — Create and manipulate 'canvas' hypergraphics drawing
surface widgets
canvas pathName ?options?
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -cursor, cursor,
Cursor
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -insertbackground,
insertBackground, Foreground
- -insertborderwidth,
insertBorderWidth, BorderWidth
- -insertofftime,
insertOffTime, OffTime
- -insertontime,
insertOnTime, OnTime
- -insertwidth,
insertWidth, InsertWidth
- -relief, relief,
Relief
- -selectbackground,
selectBackground, Foreground
- -selectborderwidth,
selectBorderWidth, BorderWidth
- -selectforeground,
selectForeground, Background
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -xscrollcommand,
xScrollCommand, ScrollCommand
- -yscrollcommand,
yScrollCommand, ScrollCommand
- Command-Line Name: -closeenough
- Database Name: closeEnough
- Database Class: CloseEnough
- Specifies a floating-point value indicating how close the mouse
cursor must be to an item before it is considered to be “inside”
the item. Defaults to 1.0.
- Command-Line Name: -confine
- Database Name: confine
- Database Class: Confine
- Specifies a boolean value that indicates whether or not it
should be allowable to set the canvas's view outside the region
defined by the scrollRegion argument. Defaults to true,
which means that the view will be constrained within the scroll
region.
- Command-Line Name: -height
- Database Name: height
- Database Class: Height
- Specifies a desired window height that the canvas widget should
request from its geometry manager. The value may be specified in
any of the forms described in the COORDINATES section below.
- Command-Line Name: -scrollregion
- Database Name: scrollRegion
- Database Class: ScrollRegion
- Specifies a list with four coordinates describing the left,
top, right, and bottom coordinates of a rectangular region. This
region is used for scrolling purposes and is considered to be the
boundary of the information in the canvas. Each of the coordinates
may be specified in any of the forms given in the COORDINATES section below.
- Command-Line Name: -state
- Database Name: state
- Database Class: State
- Modifies the default state of the canvas where state may
be set to one of: normal, disabled, or hidden.
Individual canvas objects all have their own state option which may
override the default state. Many options can take separate
specifications such that the appearance of the item can be
different in different situations. The options that start with
active control the appearance when the mouse pointer is over
it, while the option starting with disabled controls the
appearance when the state is disabled. Canvas items which are
disabled will not react to canvas bindings.
- Command-Line Name: -width
- Database Name: width
- Database Class: width
- Specifies a desired window width that the canvas widget should
request from its geometry manager. The value may be specified in
any of the forms described in the COORDINATES section below.
- Command-Line Name: -xscrollincrement
- Database Name: xScrollIncrement
- Database Class: ScrollIncrement
- Specifies an increment for horizontal scrolling, in any of the
usual forms permitted for screen distances. If the value of this
option is greater than zero, the horizontal view in the window will
be constrained so that the canvas x coordinate at the left edge of
the window is always an even multiple of xScrollIncrement;
furthermore, the units for scrolling (e.g., the change in view when
the left and right arrows of a scrollbar are selected) will also be
xScrollIncrement. If the value of this option is negative or
zero, then horizontal scrolling is unconstrained.
- Command-Line Name: -yscrollincrement
- Database Name: yScrollIncrement
- Database Class: ScrollIncrement
- Specifies an increment for vertical scrolling, in any of the
usual forms permitted for screen distances. If the value of this
option is greater than zero, the vertical view in the window will
be constrained so that the canvas y coordinate at the top edge of
the window is always an even multiple of yScrollIncrement;
furthermore, the units for scrolling (e.g., the change in view when
the top and bottom arrows of a scrollbar are selected) will also be
yScrollIncrement. If the value of this option is negative or
zero, then vertical scrolling is unconstrained.
The canvas command creates a new window (given by the
pathName argument) and makes it into a canvas widget.
Additional options, described above, may be specified on the
command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
canvas such as its colors and 3-D relief. The canvas command
returns its pathName argument. At the time this command is
invoked, there must not exist a window named pathName, but
pathName's parent must exist.
Canvas widgets implement structured graphics. A canvas displays
any number of items, which may be things like rectangles,
circles, lines, and text. Items may be manipulated (e.g. moved or
re-colored) and commands may be associated with items in much the
same way that the bind
command allows commands to be bound to widgets. For example, a
particular command may be associated with the <Button-1>
event so that the command is invoked whenever button 1 is pressed
with the mouse cursor over an item. This means that items in a
canvas can have behaviors defined by the Tcl scripts bound to
them.
The items in a canvas are ordered for purposes of display, with the
first item in the display list being displayed first, followed by
the next item in the list, and so on. Items later in the display
list obscure those that are earlier in the display list and are
sometimes referred to as being “on top” of earlier items. When a
new item is created it is placed at the end of the display list, on
top of everything else. Widget commands may be used to re-arrange
the order of the display list.
Window items are an exception to the above rules. The underlying
window systems require them always to be drawn on top of other
items. In addition, the stacking order of window items is not
affected by any of the canvas widget commands; you must use the Tk
raise command and
lower command instead.
Items in a canvas widget may be named in either of two ways: by id
or by tag. Each item has a unique identifying number, which is
assigned to that item when it is created. The id of an item never
changes and id numbers are never re-used within the lifetime of a
canvas widget.
Each item may also have any number of tags associated
with it. A tag is just a string of characters, and it may take any
form except that of an integer. For example, “x123” is OK but “123”
is not. The same tag may be associated with many different items.
This is commonly done to group items in various interesting ways;
for example, all selected items might be given the tag
“selected”.
The tag all is implicitly associated with every item in
the canvas; it may be used to invoke operations on all the items in
the canvas.
The tag current is managed automatically by Tk; it
applies to the current item, which is the topmost item whose
drawn area covers the position of the mouse cursor (different item
types interpret this in varying ways; see the individual item type
documentation for details). If the mouse is not in the canvas
widget or is not over an item, then no item has the current
tag.
When specifying items in canvas widget commands, if the
specifier is an integer then it is assumed to refer to the single
item with that id. If the specifier is not an integer, then it is
assumed to refer to all of the items in the canvas that have a tag
matching the specifier. The symbol tagOrId is used below to
indicate that an argument specifies either an id that selects a
single item or a tag that selects zero or more items.
tagOrId may contain a logical expressions of tags by
using operators: “&&”, “||”, “^”,
“!”, and parenthesized subexpressions. For example:
.c find withtag {(a&&!b)||(!a&&b)}
or equivalently:
.c find withtag {a^b}
will find only those items with either “a” or “b” tags, but not
both.
Some widget commands only operate on a single item at a time; if
tagOrId is specified in a way that names multiple items,
then the normal behavior is for the command to use the first
(lowest) of these items in the display list that is suitable for
the command. Exceptions are noted in the widget command
descriptions below.
All coordinates related to canvases are stored as floating-point
numbers. Coordinates and distances are specified in screen units,
which are floating-point numbers optionally followed by one of
several letters. If no letter is supplied then the distance is in
pixels. If the letter is m then the distance is in
millimeters on the screen; if it is c then the distance is
in centimeters; i means inches, and p means printers
points (1/72 inch). Larger y-coordinates refer to points lower on
the screen; larger x-coordinates refer to points farther to the
right. Coordinates can be specified either as an even number of
parameters, or as a single list parameter containing an even number
of x and y coordinate values.
Normally the origin of the canvas coordinate system is at the
upper-left corner of the window containing the canvas. It is
possible to adjust the origin of the canvas coordinate system
relative to the origin of the window using the xview and
yview widget commands; this is typically used for scrolling.
Canvases do not support scaling or rotation of the canvas
coordinate system relative to the window coordinate system.
Individual items may be moved, scaled or rotated using widget
commands described below.
Note that the default origin of the canvas's visible area is
coincident with the origin for the whole window as that makes
bindings using the mouse position easier to work with; you only
need to use the canvasx and canvasy widget commands
if you adjust the origin of the visible area. However, this also
means that any focus ring (as controlled by the
-highlightthickness option) and window border (as controlled
by the -borderwidth option) must be taken into account
before you get to the visible area of the canvas.
Text items support the notion of an index for identifying
particular positions within the item. In a similar fashion, line
and polygon items support index for identifying, inserting
and deleting subsets of their coordinates. Indices are used for
commands such as inserting or deleting a range of characters or
coordinates, and setting the insertion cursor position. An index
may be specified in any of a number of ways, and different types of
items may support different forms for specifying indices. Text
items support the following forms for an index; if you define new
types of text-like items, it would be advisable to support as many
of these forms as practical. Note that it is possible to refer to
the character just after the last one in the text item; this is
necessary for such tasks as inserting new text at the end of the
item. Lines and Polygons do not support the insertion cursor and
the selection. Their indices are supposed to be even always,
because coordinates always appear in pairs.
- number
- A decimal number giving the position of the desired character
within the text item. 0 refers to the first character, 1 to the
next character, and so on. If indexes are odd for lines and
polygons, they will be automatically decremented by one. A negative
number is treated as if it were zero, and a number greater than the
length of the text item is treated as if it were equal to the
length of the text item. For polygons, negative numbers or numbers
greater than the length of the coordinate list will be adjusted by
adding or subtracting the length until the result is between zero
and the length, inclusive.
- end
- Refers to the character or coordinate just after the last one
in the item (same as the number of characters or coordinates in the
item).
- insert
- Refers to the character just before which the insertion cursor
is drawn in this item. Not valid for lines and polygons.
- sel.first
- Refers to the first selected character in the item. If the
selection is not in this item then this form is illegal.
- sel.last
- Refers to the last selected character in the item. If the
selection is not in this item then this form is illegal.
- @x,y
- Refers to the character or coordinate at the point given by
x and y, where x and y are specified in
the coordinate system of the canvas. If x and y lie
outside the coordinates covered by the text item, then they refer
to the first or last character in the line that is closest to the
given point.
Many items support the notion of a dash pattern for outlines.
The first possible syntax is a list of integers. Each element
represents the number of pixels of a line segment. Only the odd
segments are drawn using the “outline” color. The other segments
are drawn transparent.
The second possible syntax is a character list containing only 5
possible characters “.,-_ ”. The space can be used to
enlarge the space between other line elements, and cannot occur as
the first position in the string. Some examples:
-dash . → -dash {2 4}
-dash - → -dash {6 4}
-dash -. → -dash {6 4 2 4}
-dash -.. → -dash {6 4 2 4 2 4}
-dash {. } → -dash {2 8}
-dash , → -dash {4 4}
The main difference of this syntax with the previous is that it
is shape-conserving. This means that all values in the dash list
will be multiplied by the line width before display. This assures
that “.” will always be displayed as a dot and “-” always as a dash
regardless of the line width.
On systems which support only a limited set of dash patterns,
the dash pattern will be displayed as the closest dash pattern that
is available. For example, on Windows only the first 4 of the above
examples are available. The last 2 examples will be displayed
identically to the first one.
The canvas command creates a new Tcl command whose name is
pathName. This command may be used to invoke various
operations on the widget. It has the following general form:
pathName option ?arg ...?
Option and the args determine the exact behavior of
the command. The following widget commands are possible for canvas
widgets:
- pathName addtag tag
searchSpec ?arg ...?
- For each item that meets the constraints specified by
searchSpec and the args, add tag to the list
of tags associated with the item if it is not already present on
that list. It is possible that no items will satisfy the
constraints given by searchSpec and args, in which
case the command has no effect. This command returns an empty
string as result. SearchSpec and arg's may take any
of the following forms:
- above tagOrId
- Selects the item just after (above) the one given by
tagOrId in the display list. If tagOrId denotes more
than one item, then the last (topmost) of these items in the
display list is used.
- all
- Selects all the items in the canvas.
- below tagOrId
- Selects the item just before (below) the one given by
tagOrId in the display list. If tagOrId denotes more
than one item, then the first (lowest) of these items in the
display list is used.
- closest x y ?halo?
?start?
- Selects the item closest to the point given by x and
y. If more than one item is at the same closest distance
(e.g. two items overlap the point), then the top-most of these
items (the last one in the display list) is used. If halo is
specified, then it must be a non-negative value. Any item closer
than halo to the point is considered to overlap it. The
start argument may be used to step circularly through all
the closest items. If start is specified, it names an item
using a tag or id (if by tag, it selects the first item in the
display list with the given tag). Instead of selecting the topmost
closest item, this form will select the topmost closest item that
is below start in the display list; if no such item exists,
then the selection behaves as if the start argument had not
been specified.
- enclosed x1 y1 x2
y2
- Selects all the items completely enclosed within the
rectangular region given by x1, y1, x2, and
y2. X1 must be no greater than x2 and
y1 must be no greater than y2.
- overlapping x1 y1 x2
y2
- Selects all the items that overlap or are enclosed within the
rectangular region given by x1, y1, x2, and
y2. X1 must be no greater than x2 and
y1 must be no greater than y2.
- withtag tagOrId
- Selects all the items given by tagOrId.
- pathName bbox
tagOrId ?tagOrId tagOrId ...?
- Returns a list with four elements giving an approximate
bounding box for all the items named by the tagOrId
arguments. The list has the form “x1 y1 x2 y2” such that the
drawn areas of all the named elements are within the region bounded
by x1 on the left, x2 on the right, y1 on the
top, and y2 on the bottom. The return value may overestimate
the actual bounding box by a few pixels. If no items match any of
the tagOrId arguments or if the matching items have empty
bounding boxes (i.e. they have nothing to display) then an empty
string is returned.
- pathName bind
tagOrId ?sequence? ?command?
- This command associates command with all the items given
by tagOrId such that whenever the event sequence given by
sequence occurs for one of the items the command will be
invoked. This widget command is similar to the bind command except that it operates
on items in a canvas rather than entire widgets. See the
bind manual entry for
complete details on the syntax of sequence and the
substitutions performed on command before invoking it. If
all arguments are specified then a new binding is created,
replacing any existing binding for the same sequence and
tagOrId (if the first character of command is “+”
then command augments an existing binding rather than
replacing it). In this case the return value is an empty string. If
command is omitted then the command returns the
command associated with tagOrId and sequence
(an error occurs if there is no such binding). If both
command and sequence are omitted then the command
returns a list of all the sequences for which bindings have been
defined for tagOrId.
The only events for which bindings may be specified are those
related to the mouse and keyboard (such as Enter,
Leave, Button,
Motion, and Key) or virtual events. The handling of
events in canvases uses the current item defined in ITEM IDS AND TAGS above. Enter and
Leave events trigger for an item when it becomes the current
item or ceases to be the current item; note that these events are
different than Enter and Leave events for windows.
Mouse-related events are directed to the current item, if any.
Keyboard-related events are directed to the focus item, if any (see
the focus widget command below for more on this). If a
virtual event is used in a binding, that binding can trigger only
if the virtual event is defined by an underlying mouse-related or
keyboard-related event.
It is possible for multiple bindings to match a particular
event. This could occur, for example, if one binding is associated
with the item's id and another is associated with one of the item's
tags. When this occurs, all of the matching bindings are invoked. A
binding associated with the all tag is invoked first,
followed by one binding for each of the item's tags (in order),
followed by a binding associated with the item's id. If there are
multiple matching bindings for a single tag, then only the most
specific binding is invoked. A continue command in a binding
script terminates that script, and a break command
terminates that script and skips any remaining scripts for the
event, just as for the bind
command.
If bindings have been created for a canvas window using the
bind command, then they are
invoked in addition to bindings created for the canvas's items
using the bind widget command. The bindings for items will
be invoked before any of the bindings for the window as a
whole.
- pathName canvasx
screenx ?gridspacing?
- Given a window x-coordinate in the canvas screenx, this
command returns the canvas x-coordinate that is displayed at that
location. If gridspacing is specified, then the canvas
coordinate is rounded to the nearest multiple of gridspacing
units.
- pathName canvasy
screeny ?gridspacing?
- Given a window y-coordinate in the canvas screeny this
command returns the canvas y-coordinate that is displayed at that
location. If gridspacing is specified, then the canvas
coordinate is rounded to the nearest multiple of gridspacing
units.
- pathName cget
option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option. Option may have any of the values accepted by
the canvas command.
- pathName configure
?option? ?value? ?option value
...?
- Query or modify the configuration options of the widget. If no
option is specified, returns a list describing all of the
available options for pathName (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information
on the format of this list). If option is specified with no
value, then the command returns a list describing the one
named option (this list will be identical to the corresponding
sublist of the value returned if no option is specified). If
one or more option-value pairs are specified, then the
command modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s); in this case the command returns an empty string.
Option may have any of the values accepted by the
canvas command.
- pathName coords
tagOrId ?x0 y0 ...?
- pathName coords
tagOrId ?coordList?
- Query or modify the coordinates that define an item. If no
coordinates are specified, this command returns a list whose
elements are the coordinates of the item named by tagOrId.
If coordinates are specified, then they replace the current
coordinates for the named item. If tagOrId refers to
multiple items, then the first one in the display list is used.
Note that for rectangles, ovals and arcs the returned list of
coordinates has a fixed order, namely the left, top, right and
bottom coordinates, which may not be the order originally given.
Also the coordinates are always returned in screen units with no
units (that is, in pixels). So if the original coordinates were
specified for instance in centimeters or inches, the returned
values will nevertheless be in pixels.
- pathName create type x
y ?x y ...? ?option value ...?
- pathName create type
coordList ?option value ...?
- Create a new item in pathName of type type. The
exact format of the arguments after type depends on
type, but usually they consist of the coordinates for one or
more points, followed by specifications for zero or more item
options. See the subsections on individual item types below for
more on the syntax of this command. This command returns the id for
the new item.
- pathName dchars tagOrId
first ?last?
- For each item given by tagOrId, delete the characters,
or coordinates, in the range given by first and last,
inclusive. If some of the items given by tagOrId do not
support indexing operations then they ignore this operation. Text
items interpret first and last as indices to a
character, line and polygon items interpret them as indices to a
coordinate (an x,y pair). Indices are described in INDICES above. If last is omitted, it
defaults to first. This command returns an empty
string.
- pathName delete
?tagOrId tagOrId ...?
- Delete each of the items given by each tagOrId, and
return an empty string.
- pathName dtag
tagOrId ?tagToDelete?
- For each of the items given by tagOrId, delete the tag
given by tagToDelete from the list of those associated with
the item. If an item does not have the tag tagToDelete then
the item is unaffected by the command. If tagToDelete is
omitted then it defaults to tagOrId. This command returns an
empty string.
- pathName find
searchCommand ?arg ...?
- This command returns a list consisting of all the items that
meet the constraints specified by searchCommand and
arg's. SearchCommand and args have any of the
forms accepted by the addtag command. The items are returned
in stacking order, with the lowest item first.
- pathName focus
?tagOrId?
- Set the keyboard focus for the canvas widget to the item given
by tagOrId. If tagOrId refers to several items, then
the focus is set to the first such item in the display list that
supports the insertion cursor. If tagOrId does not refer to
any items, or if none of them support the insertion cursor, then
the focus is not changed. If tagOrId is an empty string,
then the focus item is reset so that no item has the focus. If
tagOrId is not specified then the command returns the id for
the item that currently has the focus, or an empty string if no
item has the focus.
Once the focus has been set to an item, the item will display
the insertion cursor and all keyboard events will be directed to
that item. The focus item within a canvas and the focus window on
the screen (set with the focus command) are totally
independent: a given item does not actually have the input focus
unless (a) its canvas is the focus window and (b) the item is the
focus item within the canvas. In most cases it is advisable to
follow the focus widget command with the focus command to set the focus window
to the canvas (if it was not there already).
- pathName gettags
tagOrId
- Return a list whose elements are the tags associated with the
item given by tagOrId. If tagOrId refers to more than
one item, then the tags are returned from the first such item in
the display list. If tagOrId does not refer to any items, or
if the item contains no tags, then an empty string is
returned.
- pathName icursor
tagOrId index
- Set the position of the insertion cursor for the item(s) given
by tagOrId to just before the character whose position is
given by index. If some or all of the items given by
tagOrId do not support an insertion cursor then this command
has no effect on them. See INDICES above
for a description of the legal forms for index.
Note that the insertion cursor is only displayed in an item if
that item currently has the keyboard focus (see the focus
widget command, above), but the cursor position may be set even
when the item does not have the focus.
This command returns an empty string.
- pathName image
imagename ?subsample? ?zoom?
- Draw the canvas into the Tk photo image named imagename.
If a -scrollregion has been defined then this will be the
boundaries of the canvas region drawn and the final size of the
photo image. Otherwise the widget width and height with an origin
of 0,0 will be the size of the canvas region drawn and the final
size of the photo image. Optionally an integer subsample
factor may be given and the photo image will be reduced in size.
In addition to the subsample an integer zoom
factor can also be given and the photo image will be enlarged. The
image background will be filled with the canvas background colour.
The canvas widget does not need to be mapped for this widget
command to work, but at least one of it's ancestors must be
mapped.
This command returns an empty string.
- pathName imove tagOrId
index x y
- This command causes the index'th coordinate of each of
the items indicated by tagOrId to be relocated to the
location (x,y). Each item interprets index
independently according to the rules described in INDICES above. Out of the standard set of items,
only line and polygon items may have their coordinates relocated
this way.
- pathName index tagOrId
index
- This command returns a decimal string giving the numerical
index within tagOrId corresponding to index.
Index gives a textual description of the desired position as
described in INDICES above. Text items
interpret index as an index to a character, line and polygon
items interpret it as an index to a coordinate (an x,y pair). The
return value is guaranteed to lie between 0 and the number of
characters, or coordinates, within the item, inclusive. If
tagOrId refers to multiple items, then the index is
processed in the first of these items that supports indexing
operations (in display list order).
- pathName insert tagOrId
beforeThis string
- For each of the items given by tagOrId, if the item
supports text or coordinate, insertion then string is
inserted into the item's text just before the character, or
coordinate, whose index is beforeThis. Text items interpret
beforeThis as an index to a character, line and polygon
items interpret it as an index to a coordinate (an x,y pair). For
lines and polygons the string must be a valid coordinate
sequence.
See INDICES above for information
about the forms allowed for beforeThis.
This command returns an empty string.
- pathName itemcget
tagOrId option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option for the
item given by tagOrId whose name is option. This
command is similar to the cget widget command except that it
applies to a particular item rather than the widget as a whole.
Option may have any of the values accepted by the
create widget command when the item was created. If
tagOrId is a tag that refers to more than one item, the
first (lowest) such item is used.
- pathName itemconfigure
tagOrId ?option? ?value? ?option value
...?
- This command is similar to the configure widget command
except that it modifies item-specific options for the items given
by tagOrId instead of modifying options for the overall
canvas widget. If no option is specified, returns a list
describing all of the available options for the first item given by
tagOrId (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information
on the format of this list). If option is specified with no
value, then the command returns a list describing the one
named option (this list will be identical to the corresponding
sublist of the value returned if no option is specified). If
one or more option-value pairs are specified, then the
command modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s) in each of the items given by tagOrId; in this case
the command returns an empty string. The options and
values are the same as those permissible in the
create widget command when the item(s) were created; see the
sections describing individual item types below for details on the
legal options.
- pathName lower
tagOrId ?belowThis?
- Move all of the items given by tagOrId to a new position
in the display list just before the item given by belowThis.
If tagOrId refers to more than one item then all are moved
but the relative order of the moved items will not be changed.
BelowThis is a tag or id; if it refers to more than one item
then the first (lowest) of these items in the display list is used
as the destination location for the moved items. Note that this
command has no effect on window items. Window items always obscure
other item types, and the stacking order of window items is
determined by the raise
command and lower command,
not the raise widget command and lower widget command
for canvases. This command returns an empty string.
- pathName move tagOrId
xAmount yAmount
- Move each of the items given by tagOrId in the canvas
coordinate space by adding xAmount to the x-coordinate of
each point associated with the item and yAmount to the
y-coordinate of each point associated with the item. This command
returns an empty string.
- pathName moveto tagOrId
xPos yPos
- Move the items given by tagOrId in the canvas coordinate
space so that the first coordinate pair (the upper-left corner of
the bounding box) of the first item (the lowest in the display
list) with tag tagOrId is located at position
(xPos,yPos). xPos and yPos may be the
empty string, in which case the corresponding coordinate will be
unchanged. All items matching tagOrId remain in the same
positions relative to each other. This command returns an empty
string.
- pathName postscript
?option value option value ...?
- Generate a Postscript representation for part or all of the
canvas. If the -file option is specified then the Postscript
is written to a file and an empty string is returned; otherwise the
Postscript is returned as the result of the command. If the
interpreter that owns the canvas is marked as safe, the operation
will fail because safe interpreters are not allowed to write files.
If the -channel option is specified, the argument denotes
the name of a channel already opened for writing. The Postscript is
written to that channel, and the channel is left open for further
writing at the end of the operation. The Postscript is created in
Encapsulated Postscript form using version 3.0 of the Document
Structuring Conventions. Note: by default Postscript is only
generated for information that appears in the canvas's window on
the screen. If the canvas is freshly created it may still have its
initial size of 1x1 pixel so nothing will appear in the Postscript.
To get around this problem either invoke the update command
to wait for the canvas window to reach its final size, or else use
the -width and -height options to specify the area of
the canvas to print. The option-value argument pairs
provide additional information to control the generation of
Postscript. The following options are supported:
- -channel
channelName
- Specifies the name of the channel to which to write the
Postscript. If this option and the -file option are not
specified then the Postscript is returned as the result of the
command.
- -colormap varName
- VarName must be the name of an array variable that
specifies a color mapping to use in the Postscript. Each element of
varName must consist of Postscript code to set a particular
color value (e.g. “1.0 1.0 0.0 setrgbcolor”). When
outputting color information in the Postscript, Tk checks to see if
there is an element of varName with the same name as the
color. If so, Tk uses the value of the element as the Postscript
command to set the color.
If this option has not been specified, or if there is no entry
in varName for a given color, then Tk uses the red, green,
and blue intensities from the X color.
- -colormode mode
- Specifies how to output color information. Mode must be
either color (for full color output), gray (convert
all colors to their gray-scale equivalents) or mono (convert
all colors to black or white).
- -file fileName
- Specifies the name of the file in which to write the
Postscript. If this option and the -channel option are not
specified then the Postscript is returned as the result of the
command.
- -fontmap varName
- VarName must be the name of an array variable that
specifies a font mapping to use in the Postscript. Each element of
varName must consist of a Tcl list with two elements, which
are the name and point size of a Postscript font. When outputting
Postscript commands for a particular font, Tk checks to see if
varName contains an element with the same name as the font.
If there is such an element, then the font information contained in
that element is used in the Postscript. Otherwise Tk attempts to
guess what Postscript font to use. Tk's guesses generally only work
for well-known fonts such as Times and Helvetica and Courier, and
only if the X font name does not omit any dashes up through the
point size.
For example, -*-Courier-Bold-R-Normal--*-120-* will work
but *Courier-Bold-R-Normal*120* will not; Tk needs the
dashes to parse the font name).
- -height size
- Specifies the height of the area of the canvas to print.
Defaults to the height of the canvas window.
- -pageanchor
anchor
- Specifies which point of the printed area of the canvas should
appear over the positioning point on the page (which is given by
the -pagex and -pagey options).
For example, -pageanchor n means that the top center of
the area of the canvas being printed (as it appears in the canvas
window) should be over the positioning point. Defaults to
center.
- -pageheight size
- Specifies that the Postscript should be scaled in both x and y
so that the printed area is size high on the Postscript
page. Size consists of a floating-point number followed by
c for centimeters, i for inches, m for
millimeters, or p or nothing for printer's points (1/72
inch). Defaults to the height of the printed area on the screen. If
both -pageheight and -pagewidth are specified then
the scale factor from -pagewidth is used (non-uniform
scaling is not implemented).
- -pagewidth size
- Specifies that the Postscript should be scaled in both x and y
so that the printed area is size wide on the Postscript
page. Size has the same form as for -pageheight.
Defaults to the width of the printed area on the screen. If both
-pageheight and -pagewidth are specified then the
scale factor from -pagewidth is used (non-uniform scaling is
not implemented).
- -pagex position
- Position gives the x-coordinate of the positioning point
on the Postscript page, using any of the forms allowed for
-pageheight. Used in conjunction with the -pagey and
-pageanchor options to determine where the printed area
appears on the Postscript page. Defaults to the center of the
page.
- -pagey position
- Position gives the y-coordinate of the positioning point
on the Postscript page, using any of the forms allowed for
-pageheight. Used in conjunction with the -pagex and
-pageanchor options to determine where the printed area
appears on the Postscript page. Defaults to the center of the
page.
- -rotate boolean
- Boolean specifies whether the printed area is to be
rotated 90 degrees. In non-rotated output the x-axis of the printed
area runs along the short dimension of the page (“portrait”
orientation); in rotated output the x-axis runs along the long
dimension of the page (“landscape” orientation). Defaults to
non-rotated.
- -width size
- Specifies the width of the area of the canvas to print.
Defaults to the width of the canvas window.
- -x position
- Specifies the x-coordinate of the left edge of the area of the
canvas that is to be printed, in canvas coordinates, not window
coordinates. Defaults to the coordinate of the left edge of the
window.
- -y position
- Specifies the y-coordinate of the top edge of the area of the
canvas that is to be printed, in canvas coordinates, not window
coordinates. Defaults to the coordinate of the top edge of the
window.
- pathName raise
tagOrId ?aboveThis?
- Move all of the items given by tagOrId to a new position
in the display list just after the item given by aboveThis.
If tagOrId refers to more than one item then all are moved
but the relative order of the moved items will not be changed.
AboveThis is a tag or id; if it refers to more than one item
then the last (topmost) of these items in the display list is used
as the destination location for the moved items. This command
returns an empty string.
Note this this command has no effect on window items. Window
items always obscure other item types, and the stacking order of
window items is determined by the raise command and lower command, not the raise
widget command and lower widget command for canvases.
- pathName rchars tagOrId
first last string
- This command causes the text or coordinates between
first and last for each of the items indicated by
tagOrId to be replaced by string. Each item
interprets first and last independently according to
the rules described in INDICES above. Out
of the standard set of items, text items support this operation by
altering their text as directed, and line and polygon items support
this operation by altering their coordinate list (in which case
string should be a list of coordinates to use as a
replacement). The other items ignore this operation.
- pathName rotate tagOrId
xOrigin yOrigin angle
- Rotate the coordinates of all of the items given by
tagOrId in canvas coordinate space. XOrigin and
yOrigin identify the origin for the rotation operation and
angle identifies the amount to rotate the coordinates
anticlockwise, in degrees. (Negative values rotate clockwise.) This
command returns an empty string.
Implementation note: not all item types work the same with
rotations. In particular, bitmap, image, text
and window items only rotate their anchor points and do not
rotate the items themselves about those points, and the arc,
oval and rectangle types rotate about a computed
center point instead of moving the bounding box coordinates
directly.
Some items (currently arc and text) have angles in
their options; this command does not affect those
options.
- pathName scale tagOrId
xOrigin yOrigin xScale yScale
- Rescale the coordinates of all of the items given by
tagOrId in canvas coordinate space. XOrigin and
yOrigin identify the origin for the scaling operation and
xScale and yScale identify the scale factors for x-
and y-coordinates, respectively (a scale factor of 1.0 implies no
change to that coordinate). For each of the points defining each
item, the x-coordinate is adjusted to change the distance from
xOrigin by a factor of xScale. Similarly, each
y-coordinate is adjusted to change the distance from yOrigin
by a factor of yScale. This command returns an empty string.
Note that some items have only a single pair of coordinates
(e.g., text, images and windows) and so scaling of them by this
command can only move them around.
- pathName scan option
args
- This command is used to implement scanning on canvases. It has
two forms, depending on option:
- pathName scan mark x
y
- Records x and y and the canvas's current view;
used in conjunction with later scan dragto commands.
Typically this command is associated with a mouse button press in
the widget and x and y are the coordinates of the
mouse. It returns an empty string.
- pathName scan dragto x
y ?gain?
- This command computes the difference between its x and
y arguments (which are typically mouse coordinates) and the
x and y arguments to the last scan mark
command for the widget. It then adjusts the view by gain
times the difference in coordinates, where gain defaults to
10. This command is typically associated with mouse motion events
in the widget, to produce the effect of dragging the canvas at high
speed through its window. The return value is an empty string.
- pathName select
option ?tagOrId arg?
- Manipulates the selection in one of several ways, depending on
option. The command may take any of the forms described
below. In all of the descriptions below, tagOrId must refer
to an item that supports indexing and selection; if it refers to
multiple items then the first of these that supports indexing and
the selection is used. Index gives a textual description of
a position within tagOrId, as described in INDICES above.
- pathName select adjust
tagOrId index
- Locate the end of the selection in tagOrId nearest to
the character given by index, and adjust that end of the
selection to be at index (i.e. including but not going
beyond index). The other end of the selection is made the
anchor point for future select to commands. If the selection
is not currently in tagOrId then this command behaves the
same as the select to widget command. Returns an empty
string.
- pathName select
clear
- Clear the selection if it is in this widget. If the selection
is not in this widget then the command has no effect. Returns an
empty string.
- pathName select from
tagOrId index
- Set the selection anchor point for the widget to be just before
the character given by index in the item given by
tagOrId. This command does not change the selection; it just
sets the fixed end of the selection for future select to
commands. Returns an empty string.
- pathName select
item
- Returns the id of the selected item, if the selection is in an
item in this canvas. If the selection is not in this canvas then an
empty string is returned.
- pathName select to
tagOrId index
- Set the selection to consist of those characters of
tagOrId between the selection anchor point and index.
The new selection will include the character given by index;
it will include the character given by the anchor point only if
index is greater than or equal to the anchor point. The
anchor point is determined by the most recent select adjust
or select from command for this widget. If the selection
anchor point for the widget is not currently in tagOrId,
then it is set to the same character given by index. Returns
an empty string.
- pathName type
tagOrId
- Returns the type of the item given by tagOrId, such as
rectangle or text. If tagOrId refers to more
than one item, then the type of the first item in the display list
is returned. If tagOrId does not refer to any items at all
then an empty string is returned.
- pathName xview
?args?
- This command is used to query and change the horizontal
position of the information displayed in the canvas's window. It
can take any of the following forms:
- pathName xview
- Returns a list containing two elements. Each element is a real
fraction between 0 and 1; together they describe the horizontal
span that is visible in the window. For example, if the first
element is .2 and the second element is .6, 20% of the canvas's
area (as defined by the -scrollregion option) is off-screen
to the left, the middle 40% is visible in the window, and 40% of
the canvas is off-screen to the right. These are the same values
passed to scrollbars via the -xscrollcommand option.
- pathName xview moveto
fraction
- Adjusts the view in the window so that fraction of the
total width of the canvas is off-screen to the left.
Fraction must be a fraction between 0 and 1.
- pathName xview scroll
number what
- This command shifts the view in the window left or right
according to number and what. Number must be
an integer or a float, but if it is a float then it is converted to
an integer, rounded away from 0. What must be either
pages or units or an abbreviation of one of these. If
what is pages then the view adjusts in units of
nine-tenths the window's width. If number is negative then
information farther to the left becomes visible; if it is positive
then information farther to the right becomes visible. If
what is units, the view adjusts left or right in
units of the xScrollIncrement option, if it is greater than
zero, or in units of one-tenth the window's width otherwise.
- pathName yview
?args?
- This command is used to query and change the vertical position
of the information displayed in the canvas's window. It can take
any of the following forms:
- pathName yview
- Returns a list containing two elements. Each element is a real
fraction between 0 and 1; together they describe the vertical span
that is visible in the window. For example, if the first element is
.6 and the second element is 1.0, the lowest 40% of the canvas's
area (as defined by the -scrollregion option) is visible in
the window. These are the same values passed to scrollbars via the
-yscrollcommand option.
- pathName yview moveto
fraction
- Adjusts the view in the window so that fraction of the
canvas's area is off-screen to the top. Fraction is a
fraction between 0 and 1.
- pathName yview scroll
number what
- This command adjusts the view in the window up or down
according to number and what. Number must be
an integer or a float, but if it is a float then it is converted to
an integer, rounded away from 0. What must be either
pages or units. If what is pages then
the view adjusts in units of nine-tenths the window's height. If
number is negative then higher information becomes visible;
if it is positive then lower information becomes visible. If
what is units, the view adjusts up or down in units
of the yScrollIncrement option, if it is greater than zero,
or in units of one-tenth the window's height otherwise.
The sections below describe the various types of items supported by
canvas widgets. Each item type is characterized by two things:
first, the form of the create command used to create
instances of the type; and second, a set of configuration options
for items of that type, which may be used in the create and
itemconfigure widget commands. Most items do not support
indexing or selection or the commands related to them, such as
index and insert. Where items do support these
facilities, it is noted explicitly in the descriptions below. At
present, text, line and polygon items provide this support. For
lines and polygons the indexing facility is used to manipulate the
coordinates of the item.
Many items share a common set of options. These options are
explained here, and then referred to be each widget type for
brevity.
- -anchor
anchorPos
- AnchorPos tells how to position the item relative to the
positioning point for the item; it may have any of the forms
accepted by Tk_GetAnchor. For example, if
anchorPos is center then the item is centered on the
point; if anchorPos is n then the item will be drawn
so that its top center point is at the positioning point. This
option defaults to center.
- -dash pattern
- -activedash
pattern
- -disableddash
pattern
- These options specify dash patterns for the normal, active
state, and disabled state of an item. pattern may have any
of the forms accepted by Tk_GetDash. If the dash options are
omitted then the default is a solid outline. See DASH PATTERNS for more information.
- -dashoffset
offset
- The starting offset in pixels into the pattern provided
by the -dash option. -dashoffset is ignored if there
is no -dash pattern. The offset may have any of the
forms described in the COORDINATES
section above.
- -fill color
- -activefill
color
- -disabledfill
color
- These options specify the color to be used to fill item's area.
in its normal, active, and disabled states. The even-odd fill rule
is used. Color may have any of the forms accepted by
Tk_GetColor. For the
line item, it specifies the color of the line drawn. For the text
item, it specifies the foreground color of the text. If
color is an empty string (the default for all canvas items
except line and text), then the item will not be filled.
- -outline color
- -activeoutline
color
- -disabledoutline
color
- These options specify the color that should be used to draw the
outline of the item in its normal, active and disabled states.
Color may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor. If color is
specified as an empty string then no outline is drawn for the
item.
- -offset offset
- Specifies the offset of stipples. The offset value can be of
the form x,y or side, where side can be n,
ne, e, se, s, sw, w,
nw, or center. In the first case the origin is the
origin of the toplevel of the current window. For the canvas itself
and canvas objects the origin is the canvas origin, but putting
# in front of the coordinate pair indicates using the
toplevel origin instead. For canvas objects, the -offset
option is used for stippling as well. For the line and polygon
canvas items you can also specify an index as argument, which
connects the stipple origin to one of the coordinate points of the
line/polygon. Note that stipple offsets are only supported on
X11; they are silently ignored on other platforms.
- -outlinestipple
bitmap
- -activeoutlinestipple
bitmap
- -disabledoutlinestipple
bitmap
- These options specify stipple patterns that should be used to
draw the outline of the item in its normal, active and disabled
states. Indicates that the outline for the item should be drawn
with a stipple pattern; bitmap specifies the stipple pattern
to use, in any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If the
-outline option has not been specified then this option has
no effect. If bitmap is an empty string (the default), then
the outline is drawn in a solid fashion. Note that stipples are
not well supported on platforms that do not use X11 as their
drawing API.
- -outlineoffset
offset
- Specifies the offset of the stipple pattern used for outlines,
in the same way that the -outline option controls fill
stipples. (See the -outline option for a description of the
syntax of offset.)
- -stipple bitmap
- -activestipple
bitmap
- -disabledstipple
bitmap
- These options specify stipple patterns that should be used to
fill the item in its normal, active and disabled states.
bitmap specifies the stipple pattern to use, in any of the
forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If the -fill
option has not been specified then this option has no effect. If
bitmap is an empty string (the default), then filling is
done in a solid fashion. For the text item, it affects the actual
text. Note that stipples are not well supported on platforms
that do not use X11 as their drawing API.
- -state state
- This allows an item to override the canvas widget's global
state option. It takes the same values: normal,
disabled or hidden.
- -tags tagList
- Specifies a set of tags to apply to the item. TagList
consists of a list of tag names, which replace any existing tags
for the item. TagList may be an empty list.
- -width
outlineWidth
- -activewidth
outlineWidth
- -disabledwidth
outlineWidth
- These options specify the width of the outline to be drawn
around the item's region, in its normal, active and disabled
states. outlineWidth may be in any of the forms described in
the COORDINATES section above. If the
-outline option has been specified as an empty string then
this option has no effect. This option defaults to 1.0. For arcs,
wide outlines will be drawn centered on the edges of the arc's
region.
Items of type arc appear on the display as arc-shaped
regions. An arc is a section of an oval delimited by two angles
(specified by either the -start and -extent options
or the -height option) and displayed in one of several ways
(specified by the -style option). Arcs are created with
widget commands of the following form:
pathName create arc x1 y1 x2 y2 ?option value ...?
pathName create arc coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x1, y1, x2, and y2 or
coordList give the coordinates of two diagonally opposite
corners of a rectangular region enclosing the oval that defines the
arc (except when -height is specified - see below). After
the coordinates there may be any number of
option-value pairs, each of which sets one of the
configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. An arc item becomes the current item when the mouse
pointer is over any part that is painted or (when fully
transparent) that would be painted if both the -fill and
-outline options were non-empty.
The following standard options are supported by arcs:
-
-dash
|
-activedash
|
-disableddash
|
-dashoffset
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-offset
|
-outline
|
-activeoutline
|
-disabledoutline
|
-outlineoffset
|
-outlinestipple
|
-activeoutlinestipple
|
-disabledoutlinestipple
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
-width
|
-activewidth
|
-disabledwidth
|
The following extra options are supported for arcs:
- -extent degrees
- Specifies the size of the angular range occupied by the arc.
The arc's range extends for degrees degrees
counter-clockwise from the starting angle given by the
-start option. Degrees may be negative. If it is
greater than 360 or less than -360, then degrees modulo 360
is used as the extent.
- -start degrees
- Specifies the beginning of the angular range occupied by the
arc. Degrees is given in units of degrees measured
counter-clockwise from the 3-o'clock position; it may be either
positive or negative.
- -height
distance
- Provides a shortcut for creating a circular arc segment by
defining the distance of the mid-point of the arc from its chord.
When this option is used the coordinates are interpreted as the
start and end coordinates of the chord, and the options
-start and -extent are ignored. The value of
distance has the following meaning:
- distance > 0 creates a clockwise arc
distance < 0 creates an counter-clockwise arc
distance = 0 creates an arc as if this option had not been
specified
If you want the arc to have a specific radius, r, use the
formula:
- distance = r ± sqrt(r**2 - (chordLength /
2)**2)
choosing the minus sign for the minor arc and the plus sign for
the major arc.
Note that itemcget -height always returns 0 so that
introspection code can be kept simple.
- -style type
- Specifies how to draw the arc. If type is
pieslice (the default) then the arc's region is defined by a
section of the oval's perimeter plus two line segments, one between
the center of the oval and each end of the perimeter section. If
type is chord then the arc's region is defined by a
section of the oval's perimeter plus a single line segment
connecting the two end points of the perimeter section. If
type is arc then the arc's region consists of a
section of the perimeter alone. In this last case the -fill
option is ignored.
Items of type bitmap appear on the display as images with
two colors, foreground and background. Bitmaps are created with
widget commands of the following form:
pathName create bitmap x y ?option value ...?
pathName create bitmap coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x and y or coordList (which must
have two elements) specify the coordinates of a point used to
position the bitmap on the display, as controlled by the
-anchor option. After the coordinates there may be any
number of option-value pairs, each of which sets one
of the configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. A bitmap item becomes the current item when the
mouse pointer is over any part of its bounding box.
The following standard options are supported by bitmaps:
-
The following extra options are supported for bitmaps:
- -background
color
- -activebackground
color
- -disabledbackground
color
- Specifies the color to use for each of the bitmap's “0” valued
pixels in its normal, active and disabled states. Color may
have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor. If this option is not
specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then nothing
is displayed where the bitmap pixels are 0; this produces a
transparent effect.
- -bitmap bitmap
- -activebitmap
bitmap
- -disabledbitmap
bitmap
- These options specify the bitmaps to display in the item in its
normal, active and disabled states. Bitmap may have any of
the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap.
- -foreground
color
- -activeforeground
color
- -disabledforeground
color
- These options specify the color to use for each of the bitmap's
“1” valued pixels in its normal, active and disabled states.
Color may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor.
Items of type image are used to display images on a canvas.
Images are created with widget commands of the following form:
pathName create image x y ?option value ...?
pathName create image coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x and y or coordList specify the
coordinates of a point used to position the image on the display,
as controlled by the -anchor option. After the coordinates
there may be any number of option-value pairs, each
of which sets one of the configuration options for the item. These
same option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. An image item becomes the current item when the
mouse pointer is over any part of its bounding box.
The following standard options are supported by images:
-
The following extra options are supported for images:
- -image name
- -activeimage
name
- -disabledimage
name
- Specifies the name of the images to display in the item in is
normal, active and disabled states. This image must have been
created previously with the image
create command.
Items of type line appear on the display as one or more
connected line segments or curves. Line items support coordinate
indexing operations using the dchars, index and
insert widget commands. Lines are created with widget
commands of the following form:
pathName create line x1 y1... xn yn ?option value ...?
pathName create line coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x1 through yn or coordList give
the coordinates for a series of two or more points that describe a
series of connected line segments. After the coordinates there may
be any number of option-value pairs, each of which
sets one of the configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. A line item is the current item whenever the mouse
pointer is over any segment of the line, whether drawn or not and
whether or not the line is smoothed.
The following standard options are supported by lines:
-
-dash
|
-activedash
|
-disableddash
|
-dashoffset
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
-width
|
-activewidth
|
-disabledwidth
|
The following extra options are supported for lines:
- -arrow where
- Indicates whether or not arrowheads are to be drawn at one or
both ends of the line. Where must have one of the values
none (for no arrowheads), first (for an arrowhead at
the first point of the line), last (for an arrowhead at the
last point of the line), or both (for arrowheads at both
ends). This option defaults to none. When requested to draw
an arrowhead, Tk internally adjusts the corresponding line end
point so that the rendered line ends at the neck of the arrowhead
rather than at its tip so that the line doesn't extend past the
edge of the arrowhead. This may trigger a Leave event if the
mouse is hovering this line end. Conversely, when removing an
arrowhead Tk adjusts the corresponding line point the other way
round, which may trigger an Enter event.
- -arrowshape
shape
- This option indicates how to draw arrowheads. The shape
argument must be a list with three elements, each specifying a
distance in any of the forms described in the COORDINATES section above. The first element of the
list gives the distance along the line from the neck of the
arrowhead to its tip. The second element gives the distance along
the line from the trailing points of the arrowhead to the tip, and
the third element gives the distance from the outside edge of the
line to the trailing points. If this option is not specified then
Tk picks a “reasonable” shape.
- -capstyle style
- Specifies the ways in which caps are to be drawn at the
endpoints of the line. Style may have any of the forms
accepted by Tk_GetCapStyle (butt,
projecting, or round). If this option is not
specified then it defaults to butt. Where arrowheads are
drawn the cap style is ignored.
- -joinstyle
style
- Specifies the ways in which joints are to be drawn at the
vertices of the line. Style may have any of the forms
accepted by Tk_GetJoinStyle (bevel,
miter, or round). If this option is not specified
then it defaults to round. If the line only contains two
points then this option is irrelevant.
- -smooth
smoothMethod
- smoothMethod must have one of the forms accepted by
Tcl_GetBoolean or a line smoothing method. Only true
and raw are supported in the core (with bezier being
an alias for true), but more can be added at runtime. If a
boolean false value or empty string is given, no smoothing is
applied. A boolean truth value assumes true smoothing. If
the smoothing method is true, this indicates that the line
should be drawn as a curve, rendered as a set of quadratic splines:
one spline is drawn for the first and second line segments, one for
the second and third, and so on. Straight-line segments can be
generated within a curve by duplicating the end-points of the
desired line segment. If the smoothing method is raw, this
indicates that the line should also be drawn as a curve but where
the list of coordinates is such that the first coordinate pair (and
every third coordinate pair thereafter) is a knot point on a cubic
Bezier curve, and the other coordinates are control points on the
cubic Bezier curve. Straight line segments can be generated within
a curve by making control points equal to their neighbouring knot
points. If the last point is a control point and not a knot point,
the point is repeated (one or two times) so that it also becomes a
knot point.
- -splinesteps
number
- Specifies the degree of smoothness desired for curves: each
spline will be approximated with number line segments. This
option is ignored unless the -smooth option is true or
raw.
Items of type oval appear as circular or oval regions on the
display. Each oval may have an outline, a fill, or both. Ovals are
created with widget commands of the following form:
pathName create oval x1 y1 x2 y2 ?option value ...?
pathName create oval coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x1, y1, x2, and y2 or
coordList give the coordinates of two diagonally opposite
corners of a rectangular region enclosing the oval. The oval will
include the top and left edges of the rectangle not the lower or
right edges. If the region is square then the resulting oval is
circular; otherwise it is elongated in shape. After the coordinates
there may be any number of option-value pairs, each
of which sets one of the configuration options for the item. These
same option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. An oval item becomes the current item when the mouse
pointer is over any part that is painted or (when fully
transparent) that would be painted if both the -fill and
-outline options were non-empty.
The following standard options are supported by ovals:
-
-dash
|
-activedash
|
-disableddash
|
-dashoffset
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-offset
|
-outline
|
-activeoutline
|
-disabledoutline
|
-outlineoffset
|
-outlinestipple
|
-activeoutlinestipple
|
-disabledoutlinestipple
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
-width
|
-activewidth
|
-disabledwidth
|
There are no oval-specific options.
Items of type polygon appear as polygonal or curved filled
regions on the display. Polygon items support coordinate indexing
operations using the dchars, index and insert
widget commands. Polygons are created with widget commands of the
following form:
pathName create polygon x1 y1 ... xn yn ?option value ...?
pathName create polygon coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x1 through yn or coordList
specify the coordinates for three or more points that define a
polygon. The first point should not be repeated as the last to
close the shape; Tk will automatically close the periphery between
the first and last points. After the coordinates there may be any
number of option-value pairs, each of which sets one
of the configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. A polygon item is the current item whenever the
mouse pointer is over any part of the polygon, whether drawn or not
and whether or not the outline is smoothed.
The following standard options are supported by polygons:
-
-dash
|
-activedash
|
-disableddash
|
-dashoffset
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-offset
|
-outline
|
-activeoutline
|
-disabledoutline
|
-outlineoffset
|
-outlinestipple
|
-activeoutlinestipple
|
-disabledoutlinestipple
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
-width
|
-activewidth
|
-disabledwidth
|
The following extra options are supported for polygons:
- -joinstyle
style
- Specifies the ways in which joints are to be drawn at the
vertices of the outline. Style may have any of the forms
accepted by Tk_GetJoinStyle (bevel,
miter, or round). If this option is not specified
then it defaults to round.
- -smooth boolean
- Boolean must have one of the forms accepted by
Tcl_GetBoolean or a line smoothing method. Only true
and raw are supported in the core (with bezier being
an alias for true), but more can be added at runtime. If a
boolean false value or empty string is given, no smoothing is
applied. A boolean truth value assumes true smoothing. If
the smoothing method is true, this indicates that the
polygon should be drawn as a curve, rendered as a set of quadratic
splines: one spline is drawn for the first and second line
segments, one for the second and third, and so on. Straight-line
segments can be generated within a curve by duplicating the
end-points of the desired line segment. If the smoothing method is
raw, this indicates that the polygon should also be drawn as
a curve but where the list of coordinates is such that the first
coordinate pair (and every third coordinate pair thereafter) is a
knot point on a cubic Bezier curve, and the other coordinates are
control points on the cubic Bezier curve. Straight line segments
can be generated within a curve by making control points equal to
their neighbouring knot points. If the last point is not the second
point of a pair of control points, the point is repeated (one or
two times) so that it also becomes the second point of a pair of
control points (the associated knot point will be the first control
point).
- -splinesteps
number
- Specifies the degree of smoothness desired for curves: each
spline will be approximated with number line segments. This
option is ignored unless the -smooth option is true or
raw.
Polygon items are different from other items such as rectangles,
ovals and arcs in that interior points are considered to be
“inside” a polygon (e.g. for purposes of the find closest
and find overlapping widget commands) even if it is not
filled. For most other item types, an interior point is considered
to be inside the item only if the item is filled or if it has
neither a fill nor an outline. If you would like an unfilled
polygon whose interior points are not considered to be inside the
polygon, use a line item instead.
Items of type rectangle appear as rectangular regions on the
display. Each rectangle may have an outline, a fill, or both.
Rectangles are created with widget commands of the following form:
pathName create rectangle x1 y1 x2 y2 ?option value ...?
pathName create rectangle coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x1, y1, x2, and y2 or
coordList (which must have four elements) give the
coordinates of two diagonally opposite corners of the rectangle
(the rectangle will include its upper and left edges but not its
lower or right edges). After the coordinates there may be any
number of option-value pairs, each of which sets one
of the configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. A rectangle item becomes the current item when the
mouse pointer is over any part that is painted or (when fully
transparent) that would be painted if both the -fill and
-outline options were non-empty.
The following standard options are supported by rectangles:
-
-dash
|
-activedash
|
-disableddash
|
-dashoffset
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-offset
|
-outline
|
-activeoutline
|
-disabledoutline
|
-outlineoffset
|
-outlinestipple
|
-activeoutlinestipple
|
-disabledoutlinestipple
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
-width
|
-activewidth
|
-disabledwidth
|
There are no rectangle-specific options.
A text item displays a string of characters on the screen in one or
more lines. Text items support indexing, editing and selection
through the dchars widget command, the focus widget
command, the icursor widget command, the index widget
command, the insert widget command, and the select
widget command. Text items are created with widget commands of the
following form:
pathName create text x y ?option value ...?
pathName create text coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x and y or coordList (which must
have two elements) specify the coordinates of a point used to
position the text on the display (see the options below for more
information on how text is displayed). After the coordinates there
may be any number of option-value pairs, each of
which sets one of the configuration options for the item. These
same option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. A text item becomes the current item when the mouse
pointer is over any part of its bounding box.
The following standard options are supported by text items:
-
-anchor
|
-fill
|
-activefill
|
-disabledfill
|
-stipple
|
-activestipple
|
-disabledstipple
|
-state
|
-tags
|
The following extra options are supported for text items:
- -angle
rotationDegrees
- RotationDegrees tells how many degrees to rotate the
text anticlockwise about the positioning point for the text; it may
have any floating-point value from 0.0 to 360.0. For example, if
rotationDegrees is 90, then the text will be drawn
vertically from bottom to top. This option defaults to
0.0.
- -font fontName
- Specifies the font to use for the text item. FontName
may be any string acceptable to Tk_GetFont. If this option is not
specified, it defaults to a system-dependent font.
- -justify how
- Specifies how to justify the text within its bounding region.
How must be one of the values left, right, or
center. This option will only matter if the text is
displayed as multiple lines. If the option is omitted, it defaults
to left.
- -text string
- String specifies the characters to be displayed in the
text item. Newline characters cause line breaks. The characters in
the item may also be changed with the insert and
delete widget commands. This option defaults to an empty
string.
- -underline
number
- Specifies the integer index of a character within the text to
be underlined. 0 corresponds to the first character of the text
displayed, 1 to the next character, and so on. -1 means that no
underline should be drawn (if the whole text item is to be
underlined, the appropriate font should be used instead).
- -width
lineLength
- Specifies a maximum line length for the text, in any of the
forms described in the COORDINATES
section above. If this option is zero (the default) the text is
broken into lines only at newline characters. However, if this
option is non-zero then any line that would be longer than
lineLength is broken just before a space character to make
the line shorter than lineLength; the space character is
treated as if it were a newline character.
Items of type window cause a particular window to be
displayed at a given position on the canvas. Window items are
created with widget commands of the following form:
pathName create window x y ?option value ...?
pathName create window coordList ?option value ...?
The arguments x and y or coordList (which must
have two elements) specify the coordinates of a point used to
position the window on the display, as controlled by the
-anchor option. After the coordinates there may be any
number of option-value pairs, each of which sets one
of the configuration options for the item. These same
option-value pairs may be used in
itemconfigure widget commands to change the item's
configuration. Theoretically, a window item becomes the current
item when the mouse pointer is over any part of its bounding box,
but in practice this typically does not happen because the mouse
pointer ceases to be over the canvas at that point.
The following standard options are supported by window
items:
-
The following extra options are supported for window items:
- -height pixels
- Specifies the height to assign to the item's window.
Pixels may have any of the forms described in the
COORDINATES section above. If this option
is not specified, or if it is specified as zero, then the window is
given whatever height it requests internally.
- -width pixels
- Specifies the width to assign to the item's window.
Pixels may have any of the forms described in the
COORDINATES section above. If this option
is not specified, or if it is specified as zero, then the window is
given whatever width it requests internally.
- -window
pathName
- Specifies the window to associate with this item. The window
specified by pathName must either be a child of the canvas
widget or a child of some ancestor of the canvas widget.
PathName may not refer to a top-level window.
Note that, due to restrictions in the ways that windows are
managed, it is not possible to draw other graphical items (such as
lines and images) on top of window items. A window item always
obscures any graphics that overlap it, regardless of their order in
the display list. Also note that window items, unlike other canvas
items, are not clipped for display by their containing canvas's
border, and are instead clipped by the parent widget of the window
specified by the -window option; when the parent widget is
the canvas, this means that the window item can overlap the
canvas's border.
It is possible for individual applications to define new item types
for canvas widgets using C code. See the documentation for
Tk_CreateItemType.
In the current implementation, new canvases are not given any
default behavior: you will have to execute explicit Tcl commands to
give the canvas its behavior.
Tk's canvas widget is a blatant ripoff of ideas from Joel
Bartlett's ezd program. Ezd provides structured
graphics in a Scheme environment and preceded canvases by a year or
two. Its simple mechanisms for placing and animating graphical
objects inspired the functions of canvases.
bind, font, image, scrollbar
canvas, widget
Copyright © 1992-1994 The Regents of the
University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Copyright © 1997-1999 Scriptics Corporation.