- NAME
- message — Create and manipulate 'message' non-interactive text
widgets
- SYNOPSIS
- STANDARD
OPTIONS
- -anchor, anchor,
Anchor
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -cursor, cursor,
Cursor
- -font, font, Font
- -foreground or -fg,
foreground, Foreground
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -padx, padX, Pad
- -pady, padY, Pad
- -relief, relief,
Relief
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -text, text, Text
- -textvariable,
textVariable, Variable
- WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
- -aspect,
aspect, Aspect
- -justify,
justify, Justify
- -width,
width, Width
- DESCRIPTION
- WIDGET
COMMAND
- pathName cget option
- pathName configure ?option? ?value
option value ...?
- DEFAULT
BINDINGS
- BUGS
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
message — Create and manipulate 'message' non-interactive text
widgets
message pathName ?options?
- -anchor, anchor,
Anchor
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -cursor, cursor,
Cursor
- -font, font, Font
- -foreground or -fg,
foreground, Foreground
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -padx, padX, Pad
- -pady, padY, Pad
- -relief, relief,
Relief
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -text, text, Text
- -textvariable,
textVariable, Variable
- Command-Line Name: -aspect
- Database Name: aspect
- Database Class: Aspect
- Specifies a non-negative integer value indicating desired
aspect ratio for the text. The aspect ratio is specified as
100*width/height. 100 means the text should be as wide as it is
tall, 200 means the text should be twice as wide as it is tall, 50
means the text should be twice as tall as it is wide, and so on.
Used to choose line length for text if -width option is not
specified. Defaults to 150.
- Command-Line Name: -justify
- Database Name: justify
- Database Class: Justify
- Specifies how to justify lines of text. Must be one of
left, center, or right. Defaults to
left. This option works together with the -anchor,
-aspect, -padx, -pady, and -width
options to provide a variety of arrangements of the text within the
window. The -aspect and -width options determine the
amount of screen space needed to display the text. The
-anchor, -padx, and -pady options determine
where this rectangular area is displayed within the widget's
window, and the -justify option determines how each line is
displayed within that rectangular region. For example, suppose
-anchor is e and -justify is left, and
that the message window is much larger than needed for the text.
The text will be displayed so that the left edges of all the lines
line up and the right edge of the longest line is -padx from
the right side of the window; the entire text block will be
centered in the vertical span of the window.
- Command-Line Name: -width
- Database Name: width
- Database Class: Width
- Specifies the length of lines in the window. The value may have
any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. If this option has
a value greater than zero then the -aspect option is ignored
and the -width option determines the line length. If this
option value is negative or zero, then the -aspect option
determines the line length.
The message command creates a new window (given by the
pathName argument) and makes it into a message widget.
Additional options, described above, may be specified on the
command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
message such as its colors, font, text, and initial relief. The
message command returns its pathName argument. At the
time this command is invoked, there must not exist a window named
pathName, but pathName's parent must exist.
A message is a widget that displays a textual string. A message
widget has three special features that differentiate it from a
label widget. First, it
breaks up its string into lines in order to produce a given aspect
ratio for the window. The line breaks are chosen at word boundaries
wherever possible (if not even a single word would fit on a line,
then the word will be split across lines). Newline characters in
the string will force line breaks; they can be used, for example,
to leave blank lines in the display.
The second feature of a message widget is justification. The
text may be displayed left-justified (each line starts at the left
side of the window), centered on a line-by-line basis, or
right-justified (each line ends at the right side of the
window).
The third feature of a message widget is that it handles control
characters and non-printing characters specially. Tab characters
are replaced with enough blank space to line up on the next
8-character boundary. Newlines cause line breaks. Other control
characters (ASCII code less than 0x20) and characters not defined
in the font are displayed as a four-character sequence
\xhh where hh is the two-digit hexadecimal
number corresponding to the character. In the unusual case where
the font does not contain all of the characters in
“0123456789abcdef\x” then control characters and undefined
characters are not displayed at all.
The message 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 commands are possible for message
widgets:
- pathName cget
option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option. Option may have any of the values accepted by
the message 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
message command.
When a new message is created, it has no default event bindings:
messages are intended for output purposes only.
Tabs do not work very well with text that is centered or
right-justified. The most common result is that the line is
justified wrong.
label
message, widget
Copyright © 1990-1994 The Regents of the
University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.