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NAME

       grid - Geometry manager that arranges widgets in a grid

SYNOPSIS

       grid option arg ?arg ...?
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DESCRIPTION

       The  grid  command  is  used  to  communicate with the grid geometry manager that arranges
       widgets in rows and columns inside of another window, called the  geometry  container  (or
       container  window).   The  grid  command  can  have any of several forms, depending on the
       option argument:

       grid window ?window ...? ?options?
              If the first argument to grid is suitable as the  first  window  argument  to  grid
              configure,  either  a  window  name  (any  value  starting  with  .)  or one of the
              characters x or ^ (see the RELATIVE PLACEMENT section below), then the  command  is
              processed in the same way as grid configure.

       grid anchor window ?anchor?
              The anchor value controls how to place the grid within the container window when no
              row/column has any weight.  See THE GRID ALGORITHM below for further details.   The
              default anchor is nw.

       grid bbox window ?column row? ?column2 row2?
              With  no  arguments,  the  bounding  box  (in pixels) of the grid is returned.  The
              return value consists of 4 integers.  The first two are the pixel offset  from  the
              container  window (x then y) of the top-left corner of the grid, and the second two
              integers are the width and height of the grid, also in pixels.  If a single  column
              and  row  is  specified on the command line, then the bounding box for that cell is
              returned, where the top left cell is numbered from zero.  If both  column  and  row
              arguments  are  specified,  then  the  bounding  box  spanning the rows and columns
              indicated is returned.

       grid columnconfigure window index ?-option value...?
              Query or set the column properties of the index column of the  geometry  container,
              window.   The  valid  options  are -minsize, -weight, -uniform and -pad.  If one or
              more options are provided, then index may be given as a list of column  indices  to
              which  the  configuration options will operate on.  Indices may be integers, window
              names or the keyword all. For all  the  options  apply  to  all  columns  currently
              occupied  be  content  windows. For a window name, that window must be a content of
              this container and the options apply to  all  columns  currently  occupied  be  the
              content.   The -minsize option sets the minimum size, in screen units, that will be
              permitted for this column.  The -weight option (an integer value) sets the relative
              weight  for  apportioning  any  extra  spaces  among columns.  A weight of zero (0)
              indicates the column will not deviate from its  requested  size.   A  column  whose
              weight  is  two  will  grow  at twice the rate as a column of weight one when extra
              space is allocated to the layout.  The -uniform option, when a non-empty  value  is
              supplied,  places  the  column  in a uniform group with other columns that have the
              same value for -uniform.  The space for columns belonging to  a  uniform  group  is
              allocated  so  that  their  sizes  are always in strict proportion to their -weight
              values.  See THE GRID  ALGORITHM  below  for  further  details.   The  -pad  option
              specifies  the  number  of  screen  units  that will be added to the largest window
              contained completely in that column when the grid geometry manager requests a  size
              from  the  containing  window.   If only an option is specified, with no value, the
              current value of that option is returned.  If only the container window  and  index
              is  specified,  all  the current settings are returned in a list of “-option value”
              pairs.

       grid configure window ?window ...? ?options?
              The arguments consist of the names of one or more content windows followed by pairs
              of  arguments  that specify how to manage the content.  The characters -,  x and ^,
              can be specified instead of a window name  to  alter  the  default  location  of  a
              window,  as  described  in  the  RELATIVE  PLACEMENT section, below.  The following
              options are supported:

              -column n
                     Insert the window so that it occupies the nth column in  the  grid.   Column
                     numbers  start  with  0.  If this option is not supplied, then the window is
                     arranged just to the right of previous window  specified  on  this  call  to
                     grid,  or column “0” if it is the first window.  For each x that immediately
                     precedes the window, the column position is incremented by one.  Thus the  x
                     represents a blank column for this row in the grid.

              -columnspan n
                     Insert the window so that it occupies n columns in the grid.  The default is
                     one column, unless the window name is followed by a -,  in  which  case  the
                     columnspan is incremented once for each immediately following -.

              -in container
                     Insert  the  window(s)  in  the  container  window  given by container.  The
                     default is the first window's parent window.

              -ipadx amount
                     The amount specifies how much horizontal internal padding to leave  on  each
                     side of the content.  This is space is added inside the content border.  The
                     amount must be a valid screen distance, such as 2 or .5c.  It defaults to 0.

              -ipady amount
                     The amount specifies how much vertical internal padding to leave on the  top
                     and  bottom  of the content.  This space is added inside the content border.
                     The amount  defaults to 0.

              -padx amount
                     The amount specifies how much horizontal external padding to leave  on  each
                     side of the content, in screen units.  Amount may be a list of two values to
                     specify padding for left and right separately.  The amount  defaults  to  0.
                     This space is added outside the content border.

              -pady amount
                     The  amount specifies how much vertical external padding to leave on the top
                     and bottom of the content, in screen units.  Amount may be  a  list  of  two
                     values  to  specify  padding  for  top  and  bottom  separately.  The amount
                     defaults to 0.  This space is added outside the content border.

              -row n Insert the content so that it occupies the nth row in the grid.  Row numbers
                     start  with 0.  If this option is not supplied, then the content is arranged
                     on the same row as the previous content specified on this call to  grid,  or
                     the next row after the highest occupied row if this is the first content.

              -rowspan n
                     Insert  the  content so that it occupies n rows in the grid.  The default is
                     one row.  If the next grid command contains ^ characters instead of  content
                     that  line  up  with  the  columns of this content, then the rowspan of this
                     content is extended by one.

              -sticky style
                     If a content's cell is larger than its requested dimensions, this option may
                     be  used  to position (or stretch) the content within its cell.  Style  is a
                     string that contains zero or more of the characters  n,  s,  e  or  w.   The
                     string can optionally contains spaces or commas, but they are ignored.  Each
                     letter refers to a side (north, south, east, or west) that the content  will
                     “stick” to.  If both n and s (or e and w) are specified, the content will be
                     stretched to fill the entire height (or width) of its cavity.   The  -sticky
                     option  subsumes  the combination of -anchor and -fill that is used by pack.
                     The default is “”, which causes the content to be centered in its cavity, at
                     its requested size.

              If  any  of  the  content  is  already  managed  by  the  geometry manager then any
              unspecified options for them retain their previous  values  rather  than  receiving
              default values.

       grid forget window ?window ...?
              Removes  each  of the windows from grid for its container and unmaps their windows.
              The content  will  no  longer  be  managed  by  the  grid  geometry  manager.   The
              configuration  options  for  that  window  are  forgotten, so that if the window is
              managed once more by the grid geometry manager, the initial  default  settings  are
              used.

       grid info window
              Returns  a  list  whose elements are the current configuration state of the content
              given by window in the same option-value form  that  might  be  specified  to  grid
              configure.   The first two elements of the list are “-in container” where container
              is the windows's container window.

       grid location window x y
              Given  x and y values in screen units relative to the container window, the  column
              and  row number at that x and y location is returned.  For locations that are above
              or to the left of the grid, -1 is returned.

       grid propagate window ?boolean?
              If boolean has a true boolean value such as 1 or on then propagation is enabled for
              window,  which  must be a window name (see GEOMETRY PROPAGATION below).  If boolean
              has a false boolean value then propagation is disabled for window.   In  either  of
              these  cases  an  empty string is returned.  If boolean is omitted then the command
              returns 0 or 1 to indicate whether propagation is  currently  enabled  for  window.
              Propagation is enabled by default.

       grid rowconfigure window index ?-option value...?
              Query  or  set  the row properties of the index row of the geometry window, window.
              The valid options are -minsize, -weight, -uniform and -pad.  If one or more options
              are  provided,  then  index  may  be  given  as  a list of row indices to which the
              configuration options will operate on.  Indices may be integers,  window  names  or
              the  keyword  all.  For  all  the  options  apply to all rows currently occupied by
              content windows. For a window name, that window must be a content  window  of  this
              container  and  the  options  apply to all rows currently occupied by the container
              window.  The -minsize option sets the minimum size, in screen units, that  will  be
              permitted  for  this  row.  The -weight option (an integer value) sets the relative
              weight for apportioning any  extra  spaces  among  rows.   A  weight  of  zero  (0)
              indicates  the row will not deviate from its requested size.  A row whose weight is
              two will grow at twice the rate as  a  row  of  weight  one  when  extra  space  is
              allocated  to the layout.  The -uniform option, when a non-empty value is supplied,
              places the row in a uniform group with other rows that  have  the  same  value  for
              -uniform.   The  space  for  rows belonging to a uniform group is allocated so that
              their sizes are always in strict proportion to their -weight values.  See THE  GRID
              ALGORITHM  below  for  further  details.   The  -pad option specifies the number of
              screen units that will be added to the largest window contained completely in  that
              row  when the grid geometry manager requests a size from the containing window.  If
              only an option is specified, with no value, the current value  of  that  option  is
              returned.   If  only  the  container window and index is specified, all the current
              settings are returned in a list of “-option value” pairs.

       grid remove window ?window ...?
              Removes each of the windows from grid for its container and unmaps  their  windows.
              The  content  will no longer be managed by the grid geometry manager.  However, the
              configuration options for that window are remembered, so that if the content window
              is  managed  once  more  by  the  grid  geometry  manager,  the previous values are
              retained.

       grid size container
              Returns the size of the grid (in columns then rows) for  container.   The  size  is
              determined  either  by  the  content  occupying  the  largest row or column, or the
              largest column or row with a -minsize, -weight, or -pad that is non-zero.

       grid slaves window ?-option value?
              If no options are supplied, a list of all of the content in  window  are  returned,
              most  recently  managed  first.   Option can be either -row or -column which causes
              only the content in the row (or column) specified by value to be returned.          │

       grid content window ?-option value?                                                        │
              Synonym for grid slaves window ?-option value?.

RELATIVE PLACEMENT

       The grid command contains a limited set of capabilities that permit layouts to be  created
       without  specifying the row and column information for each content.  This permits content
       to be rearranged, added, or removed without the need to explicitly specify row and  column
       information.  When no column or row information is specified for a content, default values
       are chosen for -column, -row, -columnspan and -rowspan at the time the content is managed.
       The  values  are  chosen  based  upon  the current layout of the grid, the position of the
       content relative to other contents in the same grid  command,  and  the  presence  of  the
       characters -, x, and ^ in grid command where content names are normally expected.

              -      This increases the -columnspan of the content to the left.  Several -'s in a
                     row will successively increase the number of columns spanned. A  -  may  not
                     follow  a  ^  or  a  x,  nor  may  it  be the first content argument to grid
                     configure.

              x      This leaves an empty column between the content on the left and the  content
                     on the right.

              ^      This  extends  the  -rowspan  of the content above the ^'s in the grid.  The
                     number of ^'s in a row must match the  number  of  columns  spanned  by  the
                     content above it.

THE GRID ALGORITHM

       The  grid  geometry  manager  lays out its content in three steps.  In the first step, the
       minimum size needed to fit all of the content is computed, then (if propagation is  turned
       on),  a  request is made of the container window to become that size.  In the second step,
       the requested size is compared against the actual size of the container.  If the sizes are
       different, then spaces is added to or taken away from the layout as needed.  For the final
       step, each content is positioned in its row(s) and column(s) based on the setting  of  its
       sticky flag.

       To  compute  the  minimum  size  of a layout, the grid geometry manager first looks at all
       content whose -columnspan and -rowspan values are one, and computes the  nominal  size  of
       each  row  or  column  to  be either the minsize for that row or column, or the sum of the
       padding plus the size of the largest content, whichever is greater.  After that  the  rows
       or columns in each uniform group adapt to each other.  Then the content whose row-spans or
       column-spans are greater than one are examined.  If a group of rows or columns need to  be
       increased in size in order to accommodate these content, then extra space is added to each
       row or column in the group according to its weight.  For each group whose weights are  all
       zero, the additional space is apportioned equally.

       When  multiple  rows  or columns belong to a uniform group, the space allocated to them is
       always in proportion to their weights. (A weight of zero is considered to be 1.)  In other
       words,  a  row  or  column configured with -weight 1 -uniform a will have exactly the same
       size as any other row or column configured with -weight 1 -uniform a.   A  row  or  column
       configured  with  -weight  2  -uniform  b  will  be  exactly twice as large as one that is
       configured with -weight 1 -uniform b.

       More technically, each row or column in the group will have a size equal to  k*weight  for
       some  constant  k.  The constant k is chosen so that no row or column becomes smaller than
       its minimum size.  For example, if all rows or columns in a group have  the  same  weight,
       then each row or column will have the same size as the largest row or column in the group.

       For  containers  whose  size  is larger than the requested layout, the additional space is
       apportioned according to the row and column weights.  If all of the weights are zero,  the
       layout is placed within its container according to the anchor value.  For containers whose
       size is smaller than the requested layout, space is  taken  away  from  columns  and  rows
       according  to  their  weights.   However, once a column or row shrinks to its minsize, its
       weight is taken to be zero.  If more space needs to be removed from a layout than would be
       permitted,  as  when  all  the  rows  or columns are at their minimum sizes, the layout is
       placed and clipped according to the anchor value.

GEOMETRY PROPAGATION

       The grid geometry manager normally computes how large a container must be to just  exactly
       meet the needs of its content, and it sets the requested width and height of the container
       to these dimensions.  This causes geometry information to propagate up  through  a  window
       hierarchy  to a top-level window so that the entire sub-tree sizes itself to fit the needs
       of the leaf windows.  However, the  grid  propagate  command  may  be  used  to  turn  off
       propagation for one or more containers.  If propagation is disabled then grid will not set
       the requested width and height of the container  window.   This  may  be  useful  if,  for
       example, you wish for a container window to have a fixed size that you specify.

RESTRICTIONS ON CONTAINER WINDOWS

       The  container  for  each  content  must either be the content's parent (the default) or a
       descendant of the content's parent.  This restriction is necessary to guarantee  that  the
       content can be placed over any part of its container that is visible without danger of the
       content being clipped by its parent.  In addition, all content in one call  to  grid  must
       have the same container.

STACKING ORDER

       If  the container for a content is not its parent then you must make sure that the content
       is higher in the stacking order than the container.  Otherwise the container will  obscure
       the  content  and  it  will  appear as if the content has not been managed correctly.  The
       easiest way to make sure the content is  higher  than  the  container  is  to  create  the
       container  window first:  the most recently created window will be highest in the stacking
       order.

CREDITS

       The grid command is based on ideas taken from the  GridBag  geometry  manager  written  by
       Doug. Stein, and the blt_table geometry manager, written by George Howlett.

EXAMPLES

       A toplevel window containing a text widget and two scrollbars:

              # Make the widgets
              toplevel .t
              text .t.txt -wrap none -xscroll {.t.h set} -yscroll {.t.v set}
              scrollbar .t.v -orient vertical   -command {.t.txt yview}
              scrollbar .t.h -orient horizontal -command {.t.txt xview}

              # Lay them out
              grid .t.txt .t.v -sticky nsew
              grid .t.h        -sticky nsew

              # Tell the text widget to take all the extra room
              grid rowconfigure    .t .t.txt -weight 1
              grid columnconfigure .t .t.txt -weight 1

       Three widgets of equal width, despite their different “natural” widths:

              button .b -text "Foo"
              entry .e -textvariable foo ; set foo "Hello World!"
              label .l -text "This is a fairly long piece of text"

              grid .b .e .l -sticky ew
              grid columnconfigure . "all" -uniform allTheSame

SEE ALSO

       pack(3tk), place(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       geometry manager, location, grid, cell, propagation, size, pack