bionic (3) tixDisplayStyle.3.gz

Provided by: tix-dev_8.4.3-10_amd64 bug

NAME

       tixDisplayStyle - Create style object for Tix display items.

SYNOPSIS

       tixDisplayStyle itemType ?-stylename name? ?-refwindow pathName? ?options value ...?

DESCRIPTION

       The  Tix  Display  Items mechanism is devised to solve a general problem: many Tix widgets (both existing
       and planned ones) display many items of many types simutaneously.

       For example, a hierarchical listbox widget (HList) can display items of images, plain text and subwindows
       in  the  form  of a hierarchy. Another widget, the tabular listbox, (TList, currently planned and will be
       released in Tix 4.1) also display items of the same types, although it arranges the items  in  a  tabular
       form.  Yet  another widget, the spreadsheet widget, also displays similar types items, but in yet another
       format.

       In these examples, the display items in different widgets are only different in how they are arranged  by
       the host widget. In Tix, display items are clearly separated from the host widgets. The advantage is two-
       fold: first, the creation and configuration  of  display  items  become  uniform  across  different  host
       widgets.  Second,  new  display  item  types  can  be  added without the need to modify the existing host
       widgets.

       In a way, Tix display items are similar to the items inside Tk the canvas widget. However, unlike the Tix
       display items, the canvas items are not independent of the canvas widget; this makes it impossible to use
       the canvas items inside other types of TK widgets.

       The appearance of a display item is controlled by a set of attributes.  It  is  observed  that  each  the
       attributes  usually  fall into one of two categroies: "individual" or "collective". For example, the text
       items inside a HList widget may all display a different text string; however, in  most  cases,  the  text
       items  share  the  same  color,  font  and  spacing.  Instead of keeping a duplicated version of the same
       attributes inside each display item, it will be advantageous  to  put  the  collective  attributes  in  a
       special  object  called  a  display style. First, there is the space concern: a host widget may have many
       thousands of items; keeping dupilcated  attributes  will  be  very  wasteful.  Second,  when  it  becomes
       necessary to change a collective attribute, such as changing all the text items' foreground color to red,
       it will be more efficient to change only the display style object than to modify all the text  items  one
       by one.

       The attributes of the a display item are thus stored in two places: it has a set of item options to store
       its individual attributes. Each display item is also associated with a display style, which specifies the
       collective attributes of all items associated with itself.

       The division between the individual and collective attributes are fixed and cannot be changed. Thus, when
       it becomes necessary for some items to differ in their collective attributes, two or more display  styles
       can  be  used. For example, suppose you want to display two columns of text items inside an HList widget,
       one column in red and the other in blue. You can create a TextStyle object called "red", which defines  a
       red  foreground,  and  another called "blue", which defines a blue foreground. You can then associate all
       text items of the first column to "red" and the second column to "blue".

DISPLAY ITEM TYPES AND OPTIONS

       Currently there are four types of display items: text,  image,  imagetext  and  window.  (TODO:  need  to
       document the "image" item)

IMAGETEXT ITEMS

       Display  items  of the type imagetext are used to display an image together with a text string. Imagetext
       items support the following options:

       ITEM OPTIONS

              [-bitmap bitmap] Specifies the bitmap to display in the item.  [-image image] Specifies the  image
              to  display  in  the  item. When both the -bitmap and -image options are specified, only the image
              will be displayed.  [-style imageTextStyle] Specifies the display style to use for this item. Must
              be  the  name  of  a imagetext display style that has already be created by the tixDisplayStyle(n)
              command.  [-showimage showImage] A Boolean value that specifies whether the image/bitmap should be
              displayed.   [-showtext showText] A Boolean value that specifies whether the text string should be
              displayed.  [-text text] Specifies the text string to display in the item.  [-underline underline]
              Specifies  the  integer  index  of  a  character  to  underline in the text string in the item.  0
              corresponds to the first character of the text displayed in the widget, 1 to the  next  character,
              and so on.

       STYLE OPTIONS

       The style information of imagetext items are stored in the imagetext display style. The following options
       are supported:

              STANDARD OPTIONS

              activeBackground        activeForeground
              anchor                  background
              disabledBackground      disabledForeground
              foreground              font
              justify                 padX
              padY                    selectBackground
              selectForeground        wrapLength

              See the options(n) manual entry for details on the standard options.

              STYLE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS

              Name:           gap
              Class:          Gap
              Switch:         -gap

                     Specifies the distance between the bitmap/image and the text string, in number of pixels.

TEXT ITEMS

       Display items of the type text are used to display a text string in a  widget.  Text  items  support  the
       following options:

       ITEM OPTIONS

              [-style textStyle]  Specifies  the  display style to use for this text item. Must be the name of a
              text display style that has already be created by the  tixDisplayStyle(n)  command.   [-text text]
              Specifies  the  text  string to display in the item.  [-underline underline] Specifies the integer
              index of a character to underline in the item.  0 corresponds to the first character of  the  text
              displayed in the widget, 1 to the next character, and so on.
       STYLE OPTIONS

              STANDARD OPTIONS

              activeBackground        activeForeground
              anchor                  background
              disabledBackground      disabledForeground
              foreground              font
              justify                 padX
              padY                    selectBackground
              selectForeground        wrapLength

              See the options(n) manual entry for details on the standard options.

WINDOW ITEMS

       Display  items  of the type window are used to display a sub-window in a widget. Window items support the
       following options:

       ITEM OPTIONS

              [-style windowStyle] Specifies the display style to use for this window item. Must be the name  of
              a window display style that has already be created by the tixDisplayStyle(n) command.

              Name:           window
              Class:          Window
              Switch:         -window
              Alias:          -widget

                     Specifies the sub-window to display in the item.
       STYLE OPTIONS

              STANDARD OPTIONS

              anchor
              padX                    padY

              See the options(n) manual entry for details on the standard options.

CREATING DISPLAY ITEMS

       Display  items  do  not  exist on their and thus they cannot be created independently of the widgets they
       reside in. As a rule, display items are created by special widget commands of their "host"  widgets.  For
       example,  the  HList  widgets  has  a  command  item  which  can be used to create new display items. The
       following code creates a new imagetext item at the third column of the entry foo inside an HList widget:

        tixHList .h -columns 3
        .h add foo
        .h item create foo 2 -itemtype imagetext -text Hello -image image1

       The item create command of the HList widget accepts a variable number of arguments. The special  argument
       -itemtype specifies which type of display item to create. Options that are valid for this type of display
       items can then be specified by one or more option-value pairs.

       After the display item is created, they can then be configured or destroyed using the  commands  provided
       by  the  host  widget.  For  example, the HList widget has the command item configure, item cget and item
       delete for accessing the display items.

CREATING AND MANIPULATING DISPLAY STYLES

       Display styles are created by the command tixDisplayStyle:

       itemType must be one of the existing display items types such as text, imagetext, window or any new types
       added by the user. Additional arguments can be given in one or more option-value pairs. option can be any
       of the valid option for this display style or any of the following:

              -stylename name
                     Specifies a name for this style. If unspecified, then a default name  will  be  chosen  for
                     this style.

              -refwindow pathName
                     Specifies  a  window  to  use  for  determine  the  default  values of the display type. If
                     unspecified, the main window will be used. Default values for the display types can be  set
                     via   the   options  database.  The  following  example  sets  the  -disablebackground  and
                     -disabledforeground options of a text display style via the  option  database:  option  add
                     *table.list*disabledForeground  blue  option  add  *table.list*disabledBackground  darkgray
                     tixDisplayStyle text -refwindow .table.list -fg red

              By using the option database to set the options of the display styles, we can  advoid  hard-coding
              the  option  values  and  give  the  user  more  flexibility in customization. See option(n) for a
              detailed description of the option database.

STYLE COMMAND

       The tixDisplayStyle command creates a new Tcl command whose name is the same as the  name  of  the  newly
       created  display  style.  This command may be used to invoke various operations on the display style.  It
       has the following general form:
              styleName option ?arg arg ...?
       styleName is the name of the command. Option and the args determine the exact behavior  of  the  command.
       The following commands are possible:

       styleName cget option
              Returns  the current value of the configuration option given by option. Option may have any of the
              valid options of this display style.

       styleName configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
              Query or modify the configuration options of the  display  style.   If  no  option  is  specified,
              returns  a  list  describing  all of the available options for styleName (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 option(s) to have the given value(s); in this case
              the command returns an empty string. Option may have any of the  valid  options  of  this  display
              style.

       styleName delete
              Destroy this display style object.

EXAMPLE

       The  following  example creates two columns of data in a HList widget. The first column is in red and the
       second column in blue. The colors of the columns are controlled by two different text styles.  Also,  the
       anchor and font of the second column is chosen so that the income data is aligned properly.

       set  courier  {courier  14}  set  h  [tixHList .h -columns 2]; pack $h set red  [tixDisplayStyle text -fg
       #800000] set blue [tixDisplayStyle text -fg #000080 \
                 -anchor e -font $courier]

       foreach n {{Joe $10,000} {Peter $20,000} {Raj $90,000}} {
           set entry [$h addchild {}]
           $h item create $entry 0 -itemtype text \                 -text [lindex $n 0] -style $red
           $h item create $entry 1 -itemtype text \                 -text [lindex $n 1] -style $blue }

KEYWORDS

       display item, display style, imagetext