- NAME
- Tk_ConfigureWidget, Tk_ConfigureInfo, Tk_ConfigureValue,
Tk_FreeOptions — process configuration options for widgets
- SYNOPSIS
- #include <tk.h>
- int
- Tk_ConfigureWidget(interp, tkwin, specs, argc, argv,
widgRec, flags)
- int
- Tk_ConfigureInfo(interp, tkwin, specs, widgRec,
argvName, flags)
- int
- Tk_ConfigureValue(interp, tkwin, specs, widgRec,
argvName, flags)
- Tk_FreeOptions(specs, widgRec, display,
flags)
- ARGUMENTS
- DESCRIPTION
- TK_CONFIG_ACTIVE_CURSOR
- TK_CONFIG_ANCHOR
- TK_CONFIG_BITMAP
- TK_CONFIG_BOOLEAN
- TK_CONFIG_BORDER
- TK_CONFIG_CAP_STYLE
- TK_CONFIG_COLOR
- TK_CONFIG_CURSOR
- TK_CONFIG_CUSTOM
- TK_CONFIG_DOUBLE
- TK_CONFIG_END
- TK_CONFIG_FONT
- TK_CONFIG_INT
- TK_CONFIG_JOIN_STYLE
- TK_CONFIG_JUSTIFY
- TK_CONFIG_MM
- TK_CONFIG_PIXELS
- TK_CONFIG_RELIEF
- TK_CONFIG_STRING
- TK_CONFIG_SYNONYM
- TK_CONFIG_UID
- TK_CONFIG_WINDOW
- GROUPED
ENTRIES
- FLAGS
- TK_CONFIG_COLOR_ONLY
- TK_CONFIG_MONO_ONLY
- TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK
- TK_CONFIG_DONT_SET_DEFAULT
- TK_CONFIG_OPTION_SPECIFIED
- TK_OFFSET
- TK_CONFIGUREINFO
- TK_CONFIGUREVALUE
- TK_FREEOPTIONS
- CUSTOM OPTION
TYPES
- EXAMPLES
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
Tk_ConfigureWidget, Tk_ConfigureInfo, Tk_ConfigureValue,
Tk_FreeOptions — process configuration options for widgets
#include <tk.h>
int
Tk_ConfigureWidget(interp, tkwin, specs, argc, argv,
widgRec, flags)
int
Tk_ConfigureInfo(interp, tkwin, specs, widgRec, argvName,
flags)
int
Tk_ConfigureValue(interp, tkwin, specs, widgRec,
argvName, flags)
Tk_FreeOptions(specs, widgRec, display,
flags)
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
- Interpreter to use for returning error messages.
- Tk_Window tkwin
(in)
- Window used to represent widget (needed to set up X
resources).
- const Tk_ConfigSpec *specs (in)
- Pointer to table specifying legal configuration options for
this widget.
- int argc (in)
- Number of arguments in argv.
- const char **argv (in)
- Command-line options for configuring widget.
- char *widgRec (in/out)
- Points to widget record structure. Fields in this structure get
modified by Tk_ConfigureWidget to hold configuration
information.
- int flags (in)
- If non-zero, then it specifies an OR-ed combination of flags
that control the processing of configuration information.
TK_CONFIG_ARGV_ONLY causes the option database and defaults
to be ignored, and flag bits TK_CONFIG_USER_BIT and higher
are used to selectively disable entries in specs.
- type name type (in)
- The name of the type of a widget record.
- field name field (in)
- The name of a field in records of type type.
- const char *argvName (in)
- The name used on Tcl command lines to refer to a particular
option (e.g. when creating a widget or invoking the
configure widget command). If non-NULL, then information is
returned only for this option. If NULL, then information is
returned for all available options.
- Display *display (in)
- Display containing widget whose record is being freed; needed
in order to free up resources.
Note: Tk_ConfigureWidget should be replaced with the new
Tcl_Obj based API Tk_SetOptions. The old interface
is retained for backward compatibility.
Tk_ConfigureWidget is called to configure various aspects
of a widget, such as colors, fonts, border width, etc. It is
intended as a convenience procedure to reduce the amount of code
that must be written in individual widget managers to handle
configuration information. It is typically invoked when widgets are
created, and again when the configure command is invoked for
a widget. Although intended primarily for widgets,
Tk_ConfigureWidget can be used in other situations where
argc-argv information is to be used to fill in a record
structure, such as configuring graphical elements for a canvas
widget or entries of a menu.
Tk_ConfigureWidget processes a table specifying the
configuration options that are supported (specs) and a
collection of command-line arguments (argc and argv)
to fill in fields of a record (widgRec). It uses the option
database and defaults specified in specs to fill in fields
of widgRec that are not specified in argv.
Tk_ConfigureWidget normally returns the value TCL_OK;
in this case it does not modify interp. If an error occurs
then TCL_ERROR is returned and Tk_ConfigureWidget
will leave an error message in interpreter interp's result
in the standard Tcl fashion. In the event of an error return, some
of the fields of widgRec could already have been set, if
configuration information for them was successfully processed
before the error occurred. The other fields will be set to
reasonable initial values so that Tk_FreeOptions can be
called for cleanup.
The specs array specifies the kinds of configuration
options expected by the widget. Each of its entries specifies one
configuration option and has the following structure:
typedef struct {
int type;
const char *argvName;
const char *dbName;
const char *dbClass;
const char *defValue;
int offset;
int specFlags;
const Tk_CustomOption *customPtr;
} Tk_ConfigSpec;
The type field indicates what type of configuration option
this is (e.g. TK_CONFIG_COLOR for a color value, or
TK_CONFIG_INT for an integer value). The type field
indicates how to use the value of the option (more on this below).
The argvName field is a string such as “-font” or “-bg”,
which is compared with the values in argv (if
argvName is NULL it means this is a grouped entry; see
GROUPED ENTRIES below). The dbName
and dbClass fields are used to look up a value for this
option in the option database. The defValue field specifies
a default value for this configuration option if no value is
specified in either argv or the option database.
Offset indicates where in widgRec to store
information about this option, and specFlags contains
additional information to control the processing of this
configuration option (see FLAGS below). The last field,
customPtr, is only used if type is
TK_CONFIG_CUSTOM; see CUSTOM OPTION TYPES below.
Tk_ConfigureWidget first processes argv to see
which (if any) configuration options are specified there.
Argv must contain an even number of fields; the first of
each pair of fields must match the argvName of some entry in
specs (unique abbreviations are acceptable), and the second
field of the pair contains the value for that configuration option.
If there are entries in spec for which there were no
matching entries in argv, Tk_ConfigureWidget uses the
dbName and dbClass fields of the specs entry
to probe the option database; if a value is found, then it is used
as the value for the option. Finally, if no entry is found in the
option database, the defValue field of the specs
entry is used as the value for the configuration option. If the
defValue is NULL, or if the
TK_CONFIG_DONT_SET_DEFAULT bit is set in flags, then
there is no default value and this specs entry will be
ignored if no value is specified in argv or the option
database.
Once a string value has been determined for a configuration
option, Tk_ConfigureWidget translates the string value into
a more useful form, such as a color if type is
TK_CONFIG_COLOR or an integer if type is
TK_CONFIG_INT. This value is then stored in the record
pointed to by widgRec. This record is assumed to contain
information relevant to the manager of the widget; its exact type
is unknown to Tk_ConfigureWidget. The offset field of
each specs entry indicates where in widgRec to store
the information about this configuration option. You should use the
Tk_Offset macro to
generate offset values (see below for a description of
Tk_Offset). The
location indicated by widgRec and offset will be
referred to as the “target” in the descriptions below.
The type field of each entry in specs determines
what to do with the string value of that configuration option. The
legal values for type, and the corresponding actions,
are:
- TK_CONFIG_ACTIVE_CURSOR
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a cursor in a
form suitable for passing to Tk_GetCursor. The value is
converted to a Tk_Cursor by calling Tk_GetCursor and the result is
stored in the target. In addition, the resulting cursor is made the
active cursor for tkwin by calling XDefineCursor. If
TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in specFlags then the
value may be an empty string, in which case the target and
tkwin's active cursor will be set to None. If the
previous value of the target was not None, then it is freed
by passing it to Tk_FreeCursor.
- TK_CONFIG_ANCHOR
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying an anchor point
in one of the ways accepted by Tk_GetAnchor. The string is
converted to a Tk_Anchor by calling Tk_GetAnchor and the result is
stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_BITMAP
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a bitmap in a
form suitable for passing to Tk_GetBitmap. The value is
converted to a Pixmap by calling Tk_GetBitmap and the result is
stored in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in
specFlags then the value may be an empty string, in which
case the target is set to None. If the previous value of the
target was not None, then it is freed by passing it to
Tk_FreeBitmap.
- TK_CONFIG_BOOLEAN
- The value must be an ASCII string specifying a boolean value.
Any of the values “true”, “yes”, “on”, or “1”, or an abbreviation
of one of these values, means true; any of the values “false”,
“no”, “off”, or “0”, or an abbreviation of one of these values,
means false. The target is expected to be an integer; for true
values it will be set to 1 and for false values it will be set to
0.
- TK_CONFIG_BORDER
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a border color in
a form suitable for passing to Tk_Get3DBorder. The value is
converted to a (Tk_3DBorder
*) by calling Tk_Get3DBorder and the result is
stored in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in
specFlags then the value may be an empty string, in which
case the target will be set to NULL. If the previous value of the
target was not NULL, then it is freed by passing it to Tk_Free3DBorder.
- TK_CONFIG_CAP_STYLE
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a cap style in
one of the ways accepted by Tk_GetCapStyle. The string is
converted to an integer value corresponding to the cap style by
calling Tk_GetCapStyle
and the result is stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_COLOR
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a color in a form
suitable for passing to Tk_GetColor. The value is converted
to an (XColor *) by calling Tk_GetColor and the result is
stored in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in
specFlags then the value may be an empty string, in which
case the target will be set to None. If the previous value
of the target was not NULL, then it is freed by passing it to
Tk_FreeColor.
- TK_CONFIG_CURSOR
- This option is identical to TK_CONFIG_ACTIVE_CURSOR
except that the new cursor is not made the active one for
tkwin.
- TK_CONFIG_CUSTOM
- This option allows applications to define new option types. The
customPtr field of the entry points to a structure defining
the new option type. See the section CUSTOM
OPTION TYPES below for details.
- TK_CONFIG_DOUBLE
- The value must be an ASCII floating-point number in the format
accepted by strtol. The string is converted to a
double value, and the value is stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_END
- Marks the end of the table. The last entry in specs must
have this type; all of its other fields are ignored and it will
never match any arguments.
- TK_CONFIG_FONT
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a font in a form
suitable for passing to Tk_GetFont. The value is converted
to a Tk_Font by calling
Tk_GetFont and the result
is stored in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified
in specFlags then the value may be an empty string, in which
case the target will be set to NULL. If the previous value of the
target was not NULL, then it is freed by passing it to Tk_FreeFont.
- TK_CONFIG_INT
- The value must be an ASCII integer string in the format
accepted by strtol (e.g. “0” and “0x” prefixes may be used
to specify octal or hexadecimal numbers, respectively). The string
is converted to an integer value and the integer is stored in the
target.
- TK_CONFIG_JOIN_STYLE
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a join style in
one of the ways accepted by Tk_GetJoinStyle. The string is
converted to an integer value corresponding to the join style by
calling Tk_GetJoinStyle and the result is
stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_JUSTIFY
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a justification
method in one of the ways accepted by Tk_GetJustify. The string is
converted to a Tk_Justify by calling Tk_GetJustify and the result is
stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_MM
- The value must specify a screen distance in one of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetScreenMM. The string is
converted to double-precision floating-point distance in
millimeters and the value is stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_PIXELS
- The value must specify screen units in one of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. The string is
converted to an integer distance in pixels and the value is stored
in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_RELIEF
- The value must be an ASCII string identifying a relief in a
form suitable for passing to Tk_GetRelief. The value is
converted to an integer relief value by calling Tk_GetRelief and the result is
stored in the target.
- TK_CONFIG_STRING
- A copy of the value is made by allocating memory space with
Tcl_Alloc and copying the value into the
dynamically-allocated space. A pointer to the new string is stored
in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in
specFlags then the value may be an empty string, in which
case the target will be set to NULL. If the previous value of the
target was not NULL, then it is freed by passing it to
Tcl_Free.
- TK_CONFIG_SYNONYM
- This type value identifies special entries in
specs that are synonyms for other entries. If an argv
value matches the argvName of a TK_CONFIG_SYNONYM
entry, the entry is not used directly. Instead,
Tk_ConfigureWidget searches specs for another entry
whose argvName is the same as the dbName field in the
TK_CONFIG_SYNONYM entry; this new entry is used just as if
its argvName had matched the argv value. The synonym
mechanism allows multiple argv values to be used for a
single configuration option, such as “-background” and “-bg”.
- TK_CONFIG_UID
- The value is translated to a Tk_Uid (by passing it to Tk_GetUid). The resulting value is
stored in the target. If TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK is specified in
specFlags and the value is an empty string then the target
will be set to NULL.
- TK_CONFIG_WINDOW
- The value must be a window path name. It is translated to a
Tk_Window token and the
token is stored in the target.
In some cases it is useful to generate multiple resources from a
single configuration value. For example, a color name might be used
both to generate the background color for a widget (using
TK_CONFIG_COLOR) and to generate a 3-D border to draw around
the widget (using TK_CONFIG_BORDER). In cases like this it
is possible to specify that several consecutive entries in
specs are to be treated as a group. The first entry is used
to determine a value (using its argvName, dbName,
dbClass, and defValue fields). The value will be
processed several times (one for each entry in the group),
generating multiple different resources and modifying multiple
targets within widgRec. Each of the entries after the first
must have a NULL value in its argvName field; this indicates
that the entry is to be grouped with the entry that precedes it.
Only the type and offset fields are used from these
follow-on entries.
The flags argument passed to Tk_ConfigureWidget is
used in conjunction with the specFlags fields in the entries
of specs to provide additional control over the processing
of configuration options. These values are used in three different
ways as described below.
First, if the flags argument to Tk_ConfigureWidget
has the TK_CONFIG_ARGV_ONLY bit set (i.e., flags |
TK_CONFIG_ARGV_ONLY != 0), then the option database and
defValue fields are not used. In this case, if an entry in
specs does not match a field in argv then nothing
happens: the corresponding target is not modified. This feature is
useful when the goal is to modify certain configuration options
while leaving others in their current state, such as when a
configure widget command is being processed.
Second, the specFlags field of an entry in specs
may be used to control the processing of that entry. Each
specFlags field may consists of an OR-ed combination of the
following values:
- TK_CONFIG_COLOR_ONLY
- If this bit is set then the entry will only be considered if
the display for tkwin has more than one bit plane. If the
display is monochromatic then this specs entry will be
ignored.
- TK_CONFIG_MONO_ONLY
- If this bit is set then the entry will only be considered if
the display for tkwin has exactly one bit plane. If the
display is not monochromatic then this specs entry will be
ignored.
- TK_CONFIG_NULL_OK
- This bit is only relevant for some types of entries (see the
descriptions of the various entry types above). If this bit is set,
it indicates that an empty string value for the field is acceptable
and if it occurs then the target should be set to NULL or
None, depending on the type of the target. This flag is
typically used to allow a feature to be turned off entirely, e.g.
set a cursor value to None so that a window simply inherits
its parent's cursor. If this bit is not set then empty strings are
processed as strings, which generally results in an error.
- TK_CONFIG_DONT_SET_DEFAULT
- If this bit is one, it means that the defValue field of
the entry should only be used for returning the default value in
Tk_ConfigureInfo. In calls to Tk_ConfigureWidget no
default will be supplied for entries with this flag set; it is
assumed that the caller has already supplied a default value in the
target location. This flag provides a performance optimization
where it is expensive to process the default string: the client can
compute the default once, save the value, and provide it before
calling Tk_ConfigureWidget.
- TK_CONFIG_OPTION_SPECIFIED
- This bit is deprecated. It used to be set and cleared by
Tk_ConfigureWidget so that callers could detect what entries
were specified in argv, but it was removed because it was
inherently thread-unsafe. Code that wishes to detect what options
were specified should use Tk_SetOptions instead.
The TK_CONFIG_MONO_ONLY and TK_CONFIG_COLOR_ONLY
flags are typically used to specify different default values for
monochrome and color displays. This is done by creating two entries
in specs that are identical except for their defValue
and specFlags fields. One entry should have the value
TK_CONFIG_MONO_ONLY in its specFlags and the default
value for monochrome displays in its defValue; the other
entry should have the value TK_CONFIG_COLOR_ONLY in its
specFlags and the appropriate defValue for color
displays.
Third, it is possible to use flags and specFlags
together to selectively disable some entries. This feature is not
needed very often. It is useful in cases where several similar
kinds of widgets are implemented in one place. It allows a single
specs table to be created with all the configuration options
for all the widget types. When processing a particular widget type,
only entries relevant to that type will be used. This effect is
achieved by setting the high-order bits (those in positions equal
to or greater than TK_CONFIG_USER_BIT) in specFlags
values or in flags. In order for a particular entry in
specs to be used, its high-order bits must match exactly the
high-order bits of the flags value passed to
Tk_ConfigureWidget. If a specs table is being used
for N different widget types, then N of the high-order bits will be
used. Each specs entry will have one of more of those bits
set in its specFlags field to indicate the widget types for
which this entry is valid. When calling Tk_ConfigureWidget,
flags will have a single one of these bits set to select the
entries for the desired widget type. For a working example of this
feature, see the code in tkButton.c.
The Tk_Offset macro is
provided as a safe way of generating the offset values for
entries in Tk_ConfigSpec structures. It takes two arguments: the
name of a type of record, and the name of a field in that record.
It returns the byte offset of the named field in records of the
given type.
The Tk_ConfigureInfo procedure may be used to obtain
information about one or all of the options for a given widget.
Given a token for a window (tkwin), a table describing the
configuration options for a class of widgets (specs), a
pointer to a widget record containing the current information for a
widget (widgRec), and a NULL argvName argument,
Tk_ConfigureInfo generates a string describing all of the
configuration options for the window. The string is placed in
interpreter interp's result. Under normal circumstances it
returns TCL_OK; if an error occurs then it returns
TCL_ERROR and the interpreter's result will contain an error
message.
If argvName is NULL, then the value left in the
interpreter's result by Tk_ConfigureInfo consists of a list
of one or more entries, each of which describes one configuration
option (i.e. one entry in specs). Each entry in the list
will contain either two or five values. If the corresponding entry
in specs has type TK_CONFIG_SYNONYM, then the list
will contain two values: the argvName for the entry and the
dbName (synonym name). Otherwise the list will contain five
values: argvName, dbName, dbClass,
defValue, and current value. The current value is computed
from the appropriate field of widgRec by calling procedures
like Tk_NameOfColor.
If the argvName argument to Tk_ConfigureInfo is
non-NULL, then it indicates a single option, and information is
returned only for that option. The string placed in the
interpreter's result will be a list containing two or five values
as described above; this will be identical to the corresponding
sublist that would have been returned if argvName had been
NULL.
The flags argument to Tk_ConfigureInfo is used to
restrict the specs entries to consider, just as for
Tk_ConfigureWidget.
Tk_ConfigureValue takes arguments similar to
Tk_ConfigureInfo; instead of returning a list of values, it
just returns the current value of the option given by
argvName (argvName must not be NULL). The value is
returned in interpreter interp's result and TCL_OK is
normally returned as the procedure's result. If an error occurs in
Tk_ConfigureValue (e.g., argvName is not a valid
option name), TCL_ERROR is returned and an error message is
left in the interpreter's result. This procedure is typically
called to implement cget widget commands.
The Tk_FreeOptions procedure may be invoked during widget
cleanup to release all of the resources associated with
configuration options. It scans through specs and for each
entry corresponding to a resource that must be explicitly freed
(e.g. those with type TK_CONFIG_COLOR), it frees the
resource in the widget record. If the field in the widget record
does not refer to a resource (e.g. it contains a null pointer) then
no resource is freed for that entry. After freeing a resource,
Tk_FreeOptions sets the corresponding field of the widget
record to null.
Applications can extend the built-in configuration types with
additional configuration types by writing procedures to parse and
print options of the a type and creating a structure pointing to
those procedures:
typedef struct Tk_CustomOption {
Tk_OptionParseProc *parseProc;
Tk_OptionPrintProc *printProc;
ClientData clientData;
} Tk_CustomOption;
typedef int Tk_OptionParseProc(
ClientData clientData,
Tcl_Interp *interp,
Tk_Window tkwin,
char *value,
char *widgRec,
int offset);
typedef const char *Tk_OptionPrintProc(
ClientData clientData,
Tk_Window tkwin,
char *widgRec,
int offset,
Tcl_FreeProc **freeProcPtr);
The Tk_CustomOption structure contains three fields, which are
pointers to the two procedures and a clientData value to be
passed to those procedures when they are invoked. The
clientData value typically points to a structure containing
information that is needed by the procedures when they are parsing
and printing options.
The parseProc procedure is invoked by
Tk_ConfigureWidget to parse a string and store the resulting
value in the widget record. The clientData argument is a
copy of the clientData field in the Tk_CustomOption
structure. The interp argument points to a Tcl interpreter
used for error reporting. Tkwin is a copy of the
tkwin argument to Tk_ConfigureWidget. The
value argument is a string describing the value for the
option; it could have been specified explicitly in the call to
Tk_ConfigureWidget or it could come from the option database
or a default. Value will never be a null pointer but it may
point to an empty string. RecordPtr is the same as the
widgRec argument to Tk_ConfigureWidget; it points to
the start of the widget record to modify. The last argument,
offset, gives the offset in bytes from the start of the
widget record to the location where the option value is to be
placed. The procedure should translate the string to whatever form
is appropriate for the option and store the value in the widget
record. It should normally return TCL_OK, but if an error
occurs in translating the string to a value then it should return
TCL_ERROR and store an error message in interpreter
interp's result.
The printProc procedure is called by
Tk_ConfigureInfo to produce a string value describing an
existing option. Its clientData, tkwin,
widgRec, and offset arguments all have the same
meaning as for Tk_OptionParseProc procedures. The printProc
procedure should examine the option whose value is stored at
offset in widgRec, produce a string describing that
option, and return a pointer to the string. If the string is stored
in dynamically-allocated memory, then the procedure must set
*freeProcPtr to the address of a procedure to call to free
the string's memory; Tk_ConfigureInfo will call this
procedure when it is finished with the string. If the result string
is stored in static memory then printProc need not do
anything with the freeProcPtr argument.
Once parseProc and printProc have been defined and
a Tk_CustomOption structure has been created for them, options of
this new type may be manipulated with Tk_ConfigSpec entries whose
type fields are TK_CONFIG_CUSTOM and whose
customPtr fields point to the Tk_CustomOption structure.
Although the explanation of Tk_ConfigureWidget is fairly
complicated, its actual use is pretty straightforward. The easiest
way to get started is to copy the code from an existing widget. The
library implementation of frames (tkFrame.c) has a simple
configuration table, and the library implementation of buttons
(tkButton.c) has a much more complex table that uses many of the
fancy specFlags mechanisms.
Tk_SetOptions
anchor, bitmap, boolean, border, cap style, color, configuration
options, cursor,
custom, double, font, integer, join style, justify, millimeters, pixels, relief, synonym, uid
Copyright © 1990-1994 The Regents of the
University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.