bionic (3) entry.3tk.gz

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NAME

       entry - Create and manipulate 'entry' one-line text entry widgets

SYNOPSIS

       entry pathName ?options?

STANDARD OPTIONS

       -background           -highlightthickness  -selectbackground
       -borderwidth          -insertbackground    -selectborderwidth
       -cursor               -insertborderwidth   -selectforeground
       -exportselection      -insertofftime       -takefocus
       -font                 -insertontime        -textvariable
       -foreground           -insertwidth         -xscrollcommand
       -highlightbackground  -justify
       -highlightcolor       -relief

       See the options manual entry for details on the standard options.

WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS

       Command-Line Name:-disabledbackground
       Database Name:  disabledBackground
       Database Class: DisabledBackground

              Specifies  the  background  color  to use when the entry is disabled.  If this option is the empty
              string, the normal background color is used.

       Command-Line Name:-disabledforeground
       Database Name:  disabledForeground
       Database Class: DisabledForeground

              Specifies the foreground color to use when the entry is disabled.  If this  option  is  the  empty
              string, the normal foreground color is used.

       Command-Line Name:-invalidcommand or -invcmd
       Database Name:  invalidCommand
       Database Class: InvalidCommand

              Specifies  a  script  to  eval  when  -validatecommand  returns 0.  Setting it to {} disables this
              feature (the default).  The best use of this option is to set it to bell.   See  VALIDATION  below
              for more information.

       Command-Line Name:-readonlybackground
       Database Name:  readonlyBackground
       Database Class: ReadonlyBackground

              Specifies  the  background  color  to use when the entry is readonly.  If this option is the empty
              string, the normal background color is used.

       Command-Line Name:-show
       Database Name:  show
       Database Class: Show

              If this option is specified, then the true contents of the entry are not displayed in the  window.
              Instead, each character in the entry's value will be displayed as the first character in the value
              of this option, such as “*”.  This is useful, for example, if the entry is to be used to  enter  a
              password.   If  characters  in the entry are selected and copied elsewhere, the information copied
              will be what is displayed, not the true contents of the entry.

       Command-Line Name:-state
       Database Name:  state
       Database Class: State

              Specifies one of three states for the entry:  normal, disabled, or  readonly.   If  the  entry  is
              readonly,  then the value may not be changed using widget commands and no insertion cursor will be
              displayed, even if the input focus is in the widget; the contents  of  the  widget  may  still  be
              selected.   If  the  entry  is disabled, the value may not be changed, no insertion cursor will be
              displayed, the contents will not be selectable, and the entry may  be  displayed  in  a  different
              color, depending on the values of the -disabledforeground and -disabledbackground options.

       Command-Line Name:-validate
       Database Name:  validate
       Database Class: Validate

              Specifies  the  mode  in  which validation should operate: none, focus, focusin, focusout, key, or
              all.  It defaults to none.  When you want validation, you must explicitly  state  which  mode  you
              wish to use.  See VALIDATION below for more.

       Command-Line Name:-validatecommand or -vcmd
       Database Name:  validateCommand
       Database Class: ValidateCommand

              Specifies  a script to eval when you want to validate the input into the entry widget.  Setting it
              to {} disables this feature (the default).  This command must return a valid  Tcl  boolean  value.
              If it returns 0 (or the valid Tcl boolean equivalent) then it means you reject the new edition and
              it will not occur and the -invalidcommand will be evaluated if it is set. If it  returns  1,  then
              the new edition occurs.  See VALIDATION below for more information.

       Command-Line Name:-width
       Database Name:  width
       Database Class: Width

              Specifies  an  integer  value  indicating  the  desired width of the entry window, in average-size
              characters of the widget's font.  If the value is less than or equal to zero, the widget  picks  a
              size just large enough to hold its current text.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  entry  command  creates  a  new  window  (given by the pathName argument) and makes it into an entry
       widget.  Additional options, described above, may be specified on the  command  line  or  in  the  option
       database  to  configure  aspects  of  the  entry such as its colors, font, and relief.  The entry 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.

       An  entry  is  a  widget  that  displays a one-line text string and allows that string to be edited using
       widget commands described below, which are typically bound to keystrokes and mouse actions.   When  first
       created,  an  entry's string is empty.  A portion of the entry may be selected as described below.  If an
       entry is exporting its selection (see the -exportselection option), then it will observe the standard X11
       protocols  for  handling  the  selection;   entry  selections are available as type STRING.  Entries also
       observe the standard Tk rules for dealing with the input focus.  When an entry has  the  input  focus  it
       displays an insertion cursor to indicate where new characters will be inserted.

       Entries  are  capable of displaying strings that are too long to fit entirely within the widget's window.
       In this case, only a portion of the string will be displayed;  commands described below may  be  used  to
       change  the  view in the window.  Entries use the standard -xscrollcommand mechanism for interacting with
       scrollbars (see the description of the -xscrollcommand option for details).  They also support  scanning,
       as described below.

VALIDATION

       Validation  works  by  setting  the  -validatecommand  option to a script (validateCommand) which will be
       evaluated according to the -validate option as follows:

       none      Default.  This means no validation will occur.

       focus     validateCommand will be called when the entry receives or loses focus.

       focusin   validateCommand will be called when the entry receives focus.

       focusout  validateCommand will be called when the entry loses focus.

       key       validateCommand will be called when the entry is edited.

       all       validateCommand will be called for all above conditions.

       It is possible to perform percent substitutions on the value of the -validatecommand and  -invalidcommand
       options, just as you would in a bind script.  The following substitutions are recognized:

       %d   Type of action: 1 for insert, 0 for delete, or -1 for focus, forced or textvariable validation.

       %i   Index of char string to be inserted/deleted, if any, otherwise -1.

       %P   The  value  of  the entry if the edit is allowed.  If you are configuring the entry widget to have a
            new textvariable, this will be the value of that textvariable.

       %s   The current value of entry prior to editing.

       %S   The text string being inserted/deleted, if any, {} otherwise.

       %v   The type of validation currently set.

       %V   The type of validation that triggered the callback (key, focusin, focusout, forced).

       %W   The name of the entry widget.

       In general, the -textvariable and -validatecommand options can be dangerous to mix.   Any  problems  have
       been  overcome so that using the -validatecommand will not interfere with the traditional behavior of the
       entry widget.  Using the -textvariable for read-only purposes will  never  cause  problems.   The  danger
       comes  when  you try set the -textvariable to something that the -validatecommand would not accept, which
       causes -validate to become none (the -invalidcommand will not be triggered).  The same  happens  when  an
       error occurs evaluating the -validatecommand.

       Primarily,  an  error  will occur when the -validatecommand or -invalidcommand encounters an error in its
       script while evaluating or -validatecommand does not return a valid Tcl  boolean  value.   The  -validate
       option  will  also  set  itself  to  none  when  you  edit  the  entry  widget  from  within  either  the
       -validatecommand or the -invalidcommand.  Such editions will override the one that was  being  validated.
       If  you  wish  to  edit  the entry widget (for example set it to {}) during validation and still have the
       -validate option set, you should include the command
              after idle {%W config -validate %v}
       in the -validatecommand or -invalidcommand (whichever one you were editing the entry widget from).  It is
       also  recommended  to  not set an associated -textvariable during validation, as that can cause the entry
       widget to become out of sync with the -textvariable.

WIDGET COMMAND

       The entry 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 subcommand ?arg arg ...?
       Subcommand and the args determine the exact behavior of the command.

   INDICES
       Many  of  the  widget  commands  for entries take one or more indices as arguments.  An index specifies a
       particular character in the entry's string, in any of the following ways:

       number      Specifies the character as a numerical index, where 0 corresponds to the first  character  in
                   the string.

       anchor      Indicates  the  anchor  point for the selection, which is set with the select from and select
                   adjust widget commands.

       end         Indicates the character just after the last one in the entry's string.  This is equivalent to
                   specifying a numerical index equal to the length of the entry's string.

       insert      Indicates the character adjacent to and immediately following the insertion cursor.

       sel.first   Indicates  the  first  character  in  the  selection.  It is an error to use this form if the
                   selection is not in the entry window.

       sel.last    Indicates the character just after the last one in the selection.  It is an error to use this
                   form if the selection is not in the entry window.

       @number     In  this  form,  number  is  treated as an x-coordinate in the entry's window;  the character
                   spanning that x-coordinate is used.  For example, “@0” indicates the left-most  character  in
                   the window.

       Abbreviations  may  be  used  for any of the forms above, e.g.  “e” or “sel.f”.  In general, out-of-range
       indices are automatically rounded to the nearest legal value.

   SUBCOMMANDS
       The following commands are possible for entry widgets:

       pathName bbox index
              Returns a list of four numbers describing the bounding box of the character given by  index.   The
              first two elements of the list give the x and y coordinates of the upper-left corner of the screen
              area covered by the character (in pixels relative to the widget) and the last  two  elements  give
              the  width and height of the character, in pixels.  The bounding box may refer to a region outside
              the visible area of the window.

       pathName cget option
              Returns the current value of the configuration option given by option.  Option may have any of the
              values accepted by the entry 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 entry command.

       pathName delete first ?last?
              Delete  one  or  more elements of the entry.  First is the index of the first character to delete,
              and last is the index of the character just after  the  last  one  to  delete.   If  last  is  not
              specified  it  defaults  to  first+1, i.e. a single character is deleted.  This command returns an
              empty string.

       pathName get
              Returns the entry's string.

       pathName icursor index
              Arrange for the insertion cursor to be  displayed  just  before  the  character  given  by  index.
              Returns an empty string.

       pathName index index
              Returns the numerical index corresponding to index.

       pathName insert index string
              Insert  the  characters  of string just before the character indicated by index.  Returns an empty
              string.

       pathName scan option args
              This command is used to implement scanning on entries.  It has two forms, depending on option:

              pathName scan mark x
                     Records x and the current view in the entry window;  used in conjunction  with  later  scan
                     dragto  commands.   Typically  this  command is associated with a mouse button press in the
                     widget.  It returns an empty string.

              pathName scan dragto x
                     This command computes the difference between its x argument and the x argument to the  last
                     scan  mark  command for the widget.  It then adjusts the view left or right by 10 times the
                     difference in x-coordinates.  This command is typically associated with mouse motion events
                     in  the  widget,  to  produce  the  effect  of dragging the entry at high speed through the
                     window.  The return value is an empty string.

       pathName selection option arg
              This command is used to adjust the selection within an entry.  It has several forms, depending  on
              option:

              pathName selection adjust index
                     Locate  the  end  of the selection 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 the entry, then a new selection is  created  to  include  the
                     characters between index and the most recent selection anchor point, inclusive.  Returns an
                     empty string.

              pathName selection clear
                     Clear the selection if it is currently in this widget.  If the selection  is  not  in  this
                     widget then the command has no effect.  Returns an empty string.

              pathName selection from index
                     Set  the  selection  anchor  point  to  just before the character given by index.  Does not
                     change the selection.  Returns an empty string.

              pathName selection present
                     Returns 1 if there is are characters selected in the entry, 0 if nothing is selected.

              pathName selection range start end
                     Sets the selection to include the characters starting with the one  indexed  by  start  and
                     ending  with  the  one just before end.  If end refers to the same character as start or an
                     earlier one, then the entry's selection is cleared.

              pathName selection to index
                     If index is before the anchor point, set the selection to the characters from index  up  to
                     but  not including the anchor point.  If index is the same as the anchor point, do nothing.
                     If index is after the anchor point, set the selection to the  characters  from  the  anchor
                     point  up  to  but  not including index.  The anchor point is determined by the most recent
                     select from or select adjust command in this widget.  If  the  selection  is  not  in  this
                     widget then a new selection is created using the most recent anchor point specified for the
                     widget.  Returns an empty string.

       pathName validate
              This command is used to force an evaluation of the -validatecommand independent of the  conditions
              specified  by  the  -validate option.  This is done by temporarily setting the -validate option to
              all.  It returns 0 or 1.

       pathName xview args
              This command is used to query and change the horizontal position  of  the  text  in  the  widget'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 entry's text is off-screen
                     to the left, the middle 40% is visible in the window, and 40% of the text is off-screen  to
                     the right.  These are the same values passed to scrollbars via the -xscrollcommand option.

              pathName xview index
                     Adjusts  the  view  in  the window so that the character given by index is displayed at the
                     left edge of the window.

              pathName xview moveto fraction
                     Adjusts the view in the window so that the character fraction of the way through  the  text
                     appears at the left edge of the window.  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.  What must be either units or pages or an abbreviation of one of
                     these.  If what is units, the view adjusts left or right by number average-width characters
                     on the display;  if it is pages then the view adjusts by number screenfuls.  If  number  is
                     negative  then  characters  farther  to  the  left  become visible;  if it is positive then
                     characters farther to the right become visible.

DEFAULT BINDINGS

       Tk automatically creates class bindings for entries that give them the following default behavior. In the
       descriptions  below,  “word”  refers  to a contiguous group of letters, digits, or “_” characters, or any
       single character other than these.

       [1]    Clicking mouse button 1 positions the insertion cursor just before the  character  underneath  the
              mouse  cursor,  sets  the  input  focus  to  this  widget, and clears any selection in the widget.
              Dragging with mouse button 1 strokes  out  a  selection  between  the  insertion  cursor  and  the
              character under the mouse.

       [2]    Double-clicking  with  mouse button 1 selects the word under the mouse and positions the insertion
              cursor at the end of the word.  Dragging  after  a  double  click  will  stroke  out  a  selection
              consisting of whole words.

       [3]    Triple-clicking  with  mouse  button  1  selects  all  of  the text in the entry and positions the
              insertion cursor at the end of the line.

       [4]    The ends of the selection can be adjusted by dragging with mouse button 1 while the Shift  key  is
              down;   this will adjust the end of the selection that was nearest to the mouse cursor when button
              1 was pressed.  If the button is  double-clicked  before  dragging  then  the  selection  will  be
              adjusted in units of whole words.

       [5]    Clicking  mouse button 1 with the Control key down will position the insertion cursor in the entry
              without affecting the selection.

       [6]    If any normal printing characters are typed in an entry, they are inserted at  the  point  of  the
              insertion cursor.

       [7]    The  view  in  the  entry  can  be adjusted by dragging with mouse button 2.  If mouse button 2 is
              clicked without moving the mouse, the selection is copied into the entry at the  position  of  the
              mouse cursor.

       [8]    If the mouse is dragged out of the entry on the left or right sides while button 1 is pressed, the
              entry will automatically scroll to make more text visible (if there is more text off-screen on the
              side where the mouse left the window).

       [9]    The  Left  and Right keys move the insertion cursor one character to the left or right;  they also
              clear any selection in the entry and set the selection anchor.  If Left or Right is typed with the
              Shift  key  down, then the insertion cursor moves and the selection is extended to include the new
              character.  Control-Left and Control-Right move the insertion cursor by words, and  Control-Shift-
              Left  and  Control-Shift-Right  move  the insertion cursor by words and also extend the selection.
              Control-b and Control-f behave the same as Left and Right, respectively.  Meta-b and Meta-f behave
              the same as Control-Left and Control-Right, respectively.

       [10]   The Home key, or Control-a, will move the insertion cursor to the beginning of the entry and clear
              any selection in the entry.  Shift-Home moves the insertion cursor to the beginning of  the  entry
              and also extends the selection to that point.

       [11]   The  End  key,  or Control-e, will move the insertion cursor to the end of the entry and clear any
              selection in the entry.  Shift-End moves the cursor to the end and extends the selection  to  that
              point.

       [12]   The Select key and Control-Space set the selection anchor to the position of the insertion cursor.
              They do not affect  the  current  selection.   Shift-Select  and  Control-Shift-Space  adjust  the
              selection  to  the  current  position  of  the  insertion cursor, selecting from the anchor to the
              insertion cursor if there was not any selection previously.

       [13]   Control-/ selects all the text in the entry.

       [14]   Control-\ clears any selection in the entry.

       [15]   The F16 key (labelled Copy on many Sun workstations) or Meta-w copies the selection in the  widget
              to the clipboard, if there is a selection.

       [16]   The  F20  key  (labelled  Cut  on  many Sun workstations) or Control-w copies the selection in the
              widget to the clipboard and deletes the selection.  If there is no selection in  the  widget  then
              these keys have no effect.

       [17]   The  F18  key  (labelled  Paste on many Sun workstations) or Control-y inserts the contents of the
              clipboard at the position of the insertion cursor.

       [18]   The Delete key deletes the selection, if there is one in the entry.  If there is no selection,  it
              deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [19]   The  BackSpace  key and Control-h delete the selection, if there is one in the entry.  If there is
              no selection, it deletes the character to the left of the insertion cursor.

       [20]   Control-d deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [21]   Meta-d deletes the word to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [22]   Control-k deletes all the characters to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [23]   Control-t reverses the order of the two characters to the right of the insertion cursor.

       If the entry is disabled using the -state option, then the entry's view can still be adjusted and text in
       the entry can still be selected, but no insertion cursor will be displayed and no text modifications will
       take place except if the entry is linked to a variable using the -textvariable option, in which case  any
       changes to the variable are reflected by the entry whatever the value of its -state option.

       The  behavior  of entries can be changed by defining new bindings for individual widgets or by redefining
       the class bindings.

SEE ALSO

       ttk::entry(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       entry, widget