Provided by: tk-tile_0.8.2-2.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       widget - Standard options and commands supported by Tile widgets

DESCRIPTION

       This manual describes common widget options and commands.

STANDARD OPTIONS

       The  following  options  are  supported  by all Tile widgets: [-class (N/A)] Specifies the
       window class.  The class is used when querying the option database for the window's  other
       options,  to  determine  the  default  bindtags for the window, and to select the widget's
       default layout and style.  This is a read-only option: it may only be specified  when  the
       window   is   created,  and  may  not  be  changed  with  the  configure  widget  command.
       [-cursor cursor] Specifies the mouse cursor to be used for the widget.   See  Tk_GetCursor
       and  cursors(n)  in  the  Tk  reference  manual for the legal values.  If set to the empty
       string   (the   default),   the   cursor   is   inherited   from   the   parent    widget.
       [-takefocus takeFocus]  Determines  whether  the  window accepts the focus during keyboard
       traversal.  Either 0, 1, a command prefix (to which the widget path is appended, and which
       should return 0 or 1), or the empty string.  See options(n) in the Tk reference manual for
       the full description.  [-style style] May be used to specify a custom widget style.

SCROLLABLE WIDGET OPTIONS

       The following options are supported by widgets that are controllable by a scrollbar.   See
       scrollbar(n)  for more information [-xscrollcommand xScrollCommand] A command prefix, used
       to communicate with horizontal scrollbars.
              When the view in the widget's window  changes,  the  widget  will  generate  a  Tcl
              command  by  concatenating the scroll command and two numbers.  Each of the numbers
              is a fraction between 0 and 1 indicating a position in the  document;  0  indicates
              the  beginning,  and  1  indicates the end.  The first fraction indicates the first
              information in the widget that is visible in the window, and  the  second  fraction
              indicates the information just after the last portion that is visible.

              Typically the xScrollCommand option consists of the path name of a scrollbar widget
              followed by ``set'', e.g. ``.x.scrollbar set''.  This will cause the  scrollbar  to
              be updated whenever the view in the window changes.

              If  this  option  is set to the empty string (the default), then no command will be
              executed.
       [-yscrollcommand yScrollCommand] A command  prefix,  used  to  communicate  with  vertical
       scrollbars.  See the description of -xscrollcommand above for details.

LABEL OPTIONS

       The  following  options  are  supported by labels, buttons, and other button-like widgets:
       [-text text] Specifies a text string to be displayed inside the widget (unless  overridden
       by  -textvariable).   [-textvariable textVariable]  Specifies  the  name of variable whose
       value will be used in  place  of  the  -text  resource.   [-underline underline]  If  set,
       specifies the integer index (0-based) of a character to underline in the text string.  The
       underlined character is used for  mnemonic  activation  (see  keynav(n)).   [-image image]
       Specifies  an  image to display.  This is a list of 1 or more elements.  The first element
       is the default image name.  The rest of the list is a sequence of statespec / value  pairs
       as  per  style  map, specifying different images to use when the widget is in a particular
       state or combination of states.  All images  in  the  list  should  have  the  same  size.
       [-compound compound]  Specifies how to display the image relative to the text, in the case
       both -text and -image are present.  Valid values are:

              text   Display text only.

              image  Display image only.

              center Display text centered on top of image.

              top

              bottom

              left

              right  Display image above, below, left of, or right of the text, respectively.

              none   The default; display the image if present, otherwise the text.
       [-width width] If greater than zero, specifies how much space,  in  character  widths,  to
       allocate  for  the  text label.  If less than zero, specifies a minimum width.  If zero or
       unspecified, the natural width of the text label is used.

COMPATIBILITY OPTIONS

       [-state state] May be set to normal or disabled to control the disabled state  bit.   This
       is  a write-only option: setting it changes the widget state, but the state widget command
       does not affect the -state option.

COMMANDS

       pathName cget option
              Returns the current value of the configuration option given by option.

       pathName configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
              Query or  modify  the  configuration  options  of  the  widget.   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.   If  option  is  specified  with no value, then the command returns a list
              describing the named option: the elements of the list are the option name, database
              name, database class, default value, and current value.  If no option is specified,
              returns a list describing all of the available options for pathName.

       pathName instate statespec ?script?
              Test the widget's state.  If script is not specified, returns 1 if the widget state
              matches  statespec  and  0  otherwise.   If  script  is specified, equivalent to if
              {[pathName instate stateSpec]} script

       pathName state ?stateSpec?
              Modify or inquire widget state.  If stateSpec is present, sets  the  widget  state:
              for each flag in stateSpec, sets the corresponding flag or clears it if prefixed by
              an exclamation point.
              Returns a new state spec indicating which flags were changed: set changes [pathName
              state  spec] ; pathName state $changes will restore pathName to the original state.
              If stateSpec is not specified, returns a list of the currently-enabled state flags.

WIDGET STATES

       The widget state is a bitmap of independent state flags.  Widget state flags include:

       active The mouse cursor is over the widget and pressing a mouse  button  will  cause  some
              action to occur.  (aka "prelight" (Gnome), "hot" (Windows), "hover").

       disabled
              Widget is disabled under program control (aka "unavailable", "inactive")

       focus  Widget has keyboard focus

       pressed
              Widget is being pressed (aka "armed" in Motif).

       selected
              "On", "true", or "current" for things like checkbuttons and radiobuttons.

       background
              Windows  and  the  Mac  have  a  notion  of  an "active" or foreground window.  The
              background state is set for widgets in a background window, and cleared  for  those
              in the foreground window.

       readonly
              Widget should not allow user modification.

       alternate
              A widget-specific alternate display format.  For example, used for checkbuttons and
              radiobuttons in the "tristate" or "mixed" state,  and  for  buttons  with  -default
              active.

       invalid
              The  widget's value is invalid.  (Potential uses: scale widget value out of bounds,
              entry widget value failed validation.)

       A state specification or stateSpec is a list of state names, optionally prefixed  with  an
       exclamation point (!)  indicating that the bit is off.

EXAMPLES

       set b [ttk::button .b]

       # Disable the widget: $b state disabled

       #  Invoke  the  widget  only  if  it is currently pressed and enabled: $b instate {pressed
       !disabled} { .b invoke }

       # Reenable widget: $b state !disabled

SEE ALSO

       tile-intro(n), style(n)

KEYWORDS

       state, configure, option