Provided by: tktreectrl_2.4.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       treectrl - Create and manipulate hierarchical multicolumn widgets

SYNOPSIS

       package require treectrl  2.4.1

       treectrl pathName ?options?

       pathName activate itemDesc

       pathName bbox ?area?

       pathName canvasx windowx

       pathName canvasy windowy

       pathName cget option

       pathName collapse ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?

       pathName column option column ?arg ...?

       pathName column bbox columnDesc

       pathName column cget columnDesc option

       pathName column configure columnDesc ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName column compare column1 op column2

       pathName column count ?columnDesc?

       pathName column create ?option value ...?

       pathName column delete first ?last?

       pathName column dragcget option

       pathName column dragconfigure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName column index columnDesc

       pathName column id columnDesc

       pathName column list ?-visible?

       pathName column move columnDesc beforeDesc

       pathName column neededwidth columnDesc

       pathName column order columnDesc ?-visible?

       pathName column tag option ?arg arg ...?

       pathName column tag add columnDesc tagList

       pathName column tag expr columnDesc tagExpr

       pathName column tag names columnDesc

       pathName column tag remove columnDesc tagList

       pathName column width columnDesc

       pathName compare itemDesc1 op itemDesc2

       pathName configure ?option? ?value option value ...?

       pathName contentbox

       pathName debug option ?arg arg ...?

       pathName debug alloc

       pathName debug cget option

       pathName debug configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName debug dinfo option

       pathName debug expose x1 y1 x2 y2

       pathName depth ?itemDesc?

       pathName dragimage option ?arg ...?

       pathName dragimage add itemDesc ?column? ?element?

       pathName dragimage cget option

       pathName dragimage clear

       pathName dragimage configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName dragimage offset ?x y?

       pathName element option ?element? ?arg arg ...?

       pathName element cget element option

       pathName element configure element ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName element create name type ?option value ...?

       pathName element delete ?element ...?

       pathName element names

       pathName element perstate element option stateList

       pathName element type element

       pathName expand ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?

       pathName gradient option ?arg ...?

       pathName gradient cget gradient option

       pathName gradient configure gradient ?option value ...?

       pathName gradient create name ?option value ...?

       pathName gradient delete ?name ...?

       pathName gradient names

       pathName gradient native ?preference?

       pathName header option ?arg ...?

       pathName header bbox headerDesc ?column? ?element?

       pathName header compare headerDesc1 op headerDesc2

       pathName header configure headerDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName header count ?headerDesc?

       pathName header create ?option value?

       pathName header delete headerDesc

       pathName header dragcget ?arg ...?

       pathName header dragconfigure ?arg ...?

       pathName header element ?arg ...?

       pathName header id headerDesc

       pathName header image headerDesc ?column? ?image? ?column image ...?

       pathName header span headerDesc ?column? ?numColumns? ?column numColumns ...?

       pathName header state command headerDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName header style command headerDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName header text headerDesc ?column? ?text? ?column text ...?

       pathName header tag command headerDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName identify ?-array varName? x y

       pathName index itemDesc

       pathName item option ?arg ...?

       pathName item ancestors itemDesc

       pathName item bbox itemDesc ?column? ?element?

       pathName item buttonstate itemDesc ?state?

       pathName item cget itemDesc option

       pathName item children itemDesc

       pathName item collapse itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?

       pathName item compare itemDesc1 op itemDesc2

       pathName item complex itemDesc ?list...?

       pathName item configure itemDesc ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName item count ?itemDesc?

       pathName item create ?option value ...?

       pathName item delete first ?last?

       pathName item descendants itemDesc

       pathName item dump itemDesc

       pathName item element command itemDesc column element ?arg ...?

       pathName item element actual itemDesc column element option

       pathName item element cget itemDesc column element option

       pathName  item  element  configure  itemDesc column element ?option? ?value? ?option value
       ...?

       pathName item element perstate itemDesc column element option ?stateList?

       pathName item enabled itemDesc ?boolean?

       pathName item expand itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?

       pathName item firstchild parent ?child?

       pathName item id itemDesc

       pathName item image itemDesc ?column? ?image? ?column image ...?

       pathName item isancestor itemDesc descendant

       pathName item isopen itemDesc

       pathName item lastchild parent ?child?

       pathName item nextsibling sibling ?next?

       pathName item numchildren itemDesc

       pathName item order itemDesc ?-visible?

       pathName item parent itemDesc

       pathName item prevsibling sibling ?prev?

       pathName item range first last

       pathName item remove itemDesc

       pathName item rnc itemDesc

       pathName item sort itemDesc ?option ...?

       pathName item span itemDesc ?column? ?numColumns? ?column numColumns ...?

       pathName item state command itemDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName item state define stateName

       pathName item state forcolumn itemDesc column ?stateDescList?

       pathName item state get itemDesc ?stateName?

       pathName item state linkage stateName

       pathName item state names

       pathName item state set itemDesc ?lastItem? stateDescList

       pathName item state undefine ?stateName ...?

       pathName item style command itemDesc ?arg ...?

       pathName item style elements itemDesc column

       pathName item style map itemDesc column style map

       pathName item style set itemDesc ?column? ?style? ?column style ...?

       pathName item tag option ?arg arg ...?

       pathName item tag add itemDesc tagList

       pathName item tag expr itemDesc tagExpr

       pathName item tag names itemDesc

       pathName item tag remove itemDesc tagList

       pathName item text itemDesc ?column? ?text? ?column text ...?

       pathName item toggle itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?

       pathName marquee option ?arg ...?

       pathName marquee anchor ?x y?

       pathName marquee cget option

       pathName marquee configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName marquee coords ?x1 y1 x2 y2?

       pathName marquee corner ?x y?

       pathName marquee identify

       pathName notify option ?arg ...?

       pathName notify bind ?object? ?pattern? ?+??script?

       pathName notify configure object pattern ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName notify detailnames eventName

       pathName notify eventnames

       pathName notify generate pattern ?charMap? ?percentsCommand?

       pathName notify install pattern ?percentsCommand?

       pathName notify install detail eventName detail ?percentsCommand?

       pathName notify install event eventName ?percentsCommand?

       pathName notify linkage pattern

       pathName notify linkage eventName ?detail?

       pathName notify unbind object ?pattern?

       pathName notify uninstall pattern

       pathName notify uninstall detail eventName detail

       pathName notify uninstall event eventName

       pathName numcolumns

       pathName numitems

       pathName orphans

       pathName range first last

       pathName scan option args

       pathName scan mark x y

       pathName scan dragto x y ?gain?

       pathName see itemDesc ?columnDesc? ?option value ...?

       pathName selection option args

       pathName selection add first ?last?

       pathName selection anchor ?itemDesc?

       pathName selection clear ?first? ?last?

       pathName selection count

       pathName selection get ?first? ?last?

       pathName selection includes itemDesc

       pathName selection modify select deselect

       pathName state option args

       pathName state define stateName

       pathName state linkage stateName

       pathName state names

       pathName state undefine ?stateName ...?

       pathName style option ?element? ?arg arg ...?

       pathName style cget style option

       pathName style configure style ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName style create name ?option value ...?

       pathName style delete ?style ...?

       pathName style elements style ?elementList?

       pathName style layout style element ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?

       pathName style names

       pathName theme option ?arg ...?

       pathName theme platform

       pathName theme setwindowtheme appname

       pathName toggle ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?

       pathName xview ?args?

       pathName xview

       pathName xview moveto fraction

       pathName xview scroll number what

       pathName yview ?args?

       pathName yview

       pathName yview moveto fraction

       pathName yview scroll number what

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       treectrl pathName ?options?

       The treectrl command creates a new window (given by the pathName argument)  and  makes  it
       into  a  treectrl  widget.   Additional  options, described above, may be specified on the
       command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the treectrl  such  as  its
       background  color  and  relief.   The  treectrl  command  returns the path name of the new
       window.  At the time this command  is  invoked,  there  must  not  exist  a  window  named
       pathName, but pathName's parent must exist.

       A  treectrl  is  a  listbox  widget  which  displays  items  in  a one- or two-dimensional
       arrangement.  Items have a parent-child relationship  with  other  items.   Items  may  be
       arranged  from top-to-bottom or from left-to-right.  Items may be spread about one or more
       columns.  Each item-column may be configured to span one or  more  adjacent  item-columns.
       The visibility of items can be set individually.

       Items  have  a  set  of  states, which are boolean properties.  For each column of an item
       there is a style associated, which determines how to display the item's column taking into
       account  the  item's  current state set.  New states may be defined to further control the
       appearance of items; these custom states may be turned on or off in individual columns  of
       items.

       Multiple  rows  of  column  headers  are  supported.   Column headers have platform-native
       appearance on Windows, Mac OS X, and Gtk+.   The  appearance  of  column  headers  may  be
       customized using styles.

       Columns may be rearranged by the user using drag-and-drop.  One column can be specified to
       display the data in a hierarchical structure.   The  visibility  of  columns  can  be  set
       individually.

       A  treectrl  can  display a user-resizable selection rectangle called the marquee. Another
       feature, the drag image, may be used to provide feedback during drag-and-drop  operations.
       Both of these are features commonly found in file browsers.

       A  treectrl  can  generate  events  when  various  things  happen,  such as changes to the
       selection, or a parent item being toggled open or closed.  Scripts may be bound  to  these
       events.  New events can be defined.

       A  treectrl  can display a background image.  The background image can be configured to be
       scrolled and tiled on each axis individually.

STANDARD OPTIONS

       -background

       -borderwidth

       -cursor

       -font

       -highlightbackground

       -highlightcolor

       -highlightthickness

       -orient

       -relief

       -takefocus

       -xscrollcommand

       -yscrollcommand

       -foreground

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

WIDGET SPECIFIC OPTIONS

       Command-Line Switch:    -backgroundimage
       Database Name:          backgroundImage
       Database Class:         BackgroundImage

              Specifies the name of an image to draw as  the  list  background.    Other  options
              control  whether  the image is tiled and whether the image scrolls. If the image is
              transparent it is drawn on top of any column -itembackground colors.

       Command-Line Switch:    -backgroundmode
       Database Name:          backgroundMode
       Database Class:         BackgroundMode

              Specifies how the background color of items is chosen in each  column.   The  value
              should  be  one  of  row, column, order, or ordervisible. The default is row.  This
              option has only an effect for columns which have -itembackground defined as list of
              two  or  more colors (see section COLUMNS below for more on this). If row or column
              is specified, the background color is chosen based on the location of the  item  in
              the  1-  or  2-dimensional grid of items as layed out on the screen; this layout of
              items is affected by the -orient and -wrap options  as  well  as  item  visibility.
              When  order  or  ordervisible is specified, the background color is chosen based on
              the result of the item order command, regardless of the layout of items.

       Command-Line Switch:    -bgimage
       Database Name:          bgImage
       Database Class:         BgImage

              Synonym for -backgroundimage.

       Command-Line Switch:    -bgimageanchor
       Database Name:          bgImageAnchor
       Database Class:         BgImageAnchor

              Specifies how the background image should be aligned in any of the forms acceptable
              to  Tk_GetAnchor.  Must be one of the values n, ne, e, se, s, sw, w, nw, or center.
              The default is nw.  When the background  image  scrolls,  the  anchor  position  is
              relative to the canvas, otherwise it is relative to the contentbox.

       Command-Line Switch:    -bgimageopaque
       Database Name:          bgImageOpaque
       Database Class:         BgImageOpaque

              Specifies a boolean indicating whether or not the background image is fully opaque.
              This is needed because there is no way in Tk to determine whether an image contains
              transparency  or  not.   The  default  value  is  true, so if you use a transparent
              -backgroundimage you must set this to false.

       Command-Line Switch:    -bgimagescroll
       Database Name:          bgImageScroll
       Database Class:         BgImageScroll

              Specifies whether the background image scrolls along with the items or  whether  it
              remains  locked  in place relative to the edges of the window.  The value must be a
              string that contains zero or more of the characters x or y.  The default is xy.

       Command-Line Switch:    -bgimagetile
       Database Name:          bgImageTile
       Database Class:         BgImageTile

              Specifies whether the background image is tiled along the x  and/or  y  axes.   The
              value  must  be  a string that contains zero or more of the characters x or y.  The
              default is xy.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttonbitmap
       Database Name:          buttonBitmap
       Database Class:         ButtonBitmap

              Specifies the name of a bitmap be used to display the expand/collapse button of  an
              item.   This  is  a  per-state option.  If a bitmap is specified for a certain item
              state, it overrides the effects of -usetheme.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttoncolor
       Database Name:          buttonColor
       Database Class:         ButtonColor

              Specifies the foreground color which should be used for drawing the outline and the
              plus or minus sign of an item's expand/collapse button.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttonimage
       Database Name:          buttonImage
       Database Class:         ButtonImage

              Specifies  the name of an image to be used to display the expand/collapse button of
              an item.  This is a per-state option.  If an image is specified for a certain  item
              state, it overrides the effects of -buttonbitmap and -usetheme.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttonsize
       Database Name:          buttonSize
       Database Class:         ButtonSize

              Specifies  the  width and height of the expand/collapse button of an item in any of
              the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttonthickness
       Database Name:          buttonThickness
       Database Class:         ButtonThickness

              Specifies  the  width  of  the  outline  and  the  plus  or  minus  sign   of   the
              expand/collapse button of an item in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.

       Command-Line Switch:    -buttonttracking
       Database Name:          buttonTracking
       Database Class:         ButtonTracking

              Specifies a boolean that determines if the expand/collapse buttons are tracked like
              pushbuttons when clicking them.  When true,  buttons  are  not  toggled  until  the
              <ButtonRelease> event occurs over them.  When false, buttons are toggled as soon as
              the <ButtonPress> event occurs over them.  This option defaults to true on Mac OS X
              and Gtk+, false on Win32 and X11.

       Command-Line Switch:    -canvaspadx
       Database Name:          canvasPadX
       Database Class:         CanvasPadX

              Specifies  the  width of extra whitespace on the left and right edges of the canvas
              in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  The option value may be a list  of
              one  or  two screen distances to specify padding for the two edges separately.  The
              default is 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -canvaspady
       Database Name:          canvasPadY
       Database Class:         CanvasPadY

              Specifies the height of extra whitespace on the top and bottom edges of the  canvas
              in  any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  The option value may be a list of
              one or two screen distances to specify padding for the two edges  separately.   The
              default is 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -columnprefix
       Database Name:          columnPrefix
       Database Class:         ColumnPrefix

              Specifies  an  ascii  string  that  changes  the  way  column  ids are reported and
              processed. If this option is a non-empty string,  the  usual  integer  value  of  a
              column  id  is  prefixed  with  the  given string. This can aid debugging but it is
              important your code doesn't assume column ids are integers if you use it.

       Command-Line Switch:    -columnproxy
       Database Name:          columnProxy
       Database Class:         ColumnProxy

              If this option specifies a non empty value, it should be a screen distance  in  any
              of  the  forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  Then a 1 pixel thick vertical line will
              be drawn at the specified screen distance  from  the  left  edge  of  the  treectrl
              widget,  which  reaches  from  top  to  bottom  of  the treectrl widget and uses an
              inverting color (i.e black on lighter  background,  white  on  darker  background).
              This line can be used to give the user a visual feedback during column resizing.

       Command-Line Switch:    -columnresizemode
       Database Name:          columnResizeMode
       Database Class:         ColumnResizeMode

              Specifies  the  visual feedback used when resizing columns. The value should be one
              of  proxy  or  realtime.  For  proxy,  a  1-pixel  thick  vertical  line  is  drawn
              representing  where  the  right  edge  of  the  column  will be after resizing. For
              realtime, the column's size is changed while the user is dragging the right edge of
              the column.  The default is realtime.

       Command-Line Switch:    -columntagexpr
       Database Name:          columnTagExpr
       Database Class:         ColumnTagExpr

              Specifies   a   boolean   that  enables  or  disables  tag  expressions  in  column
              descriptions. See ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS.

       Command-Line Switch:    -defaultstyle
       Database Name:          defaultStyle
       Database Class:         DefaultStyle

              This option is deprecated; use the column option -itemstyle instead.   Specifies  a
              list  of  styles,  one per column, to apply to each item created by the item create
              command. The number of styles in the list can be different from the number of  tree
              columns.   Each  list  element  should  be a valid style name or an empty string to
              indicate no style should be applied to a specific column. The  list  of  styles  is
              updated if a style is deleted or if a column is moved.

       Command-Line Switch:    -doublebuffer
       Database Name:          doubleBuffer
       Database Class:         DoubleBuffer

              This  option  no longer has any effect, but was left in for compatibility.  It used
              to control the amount of double-buffering that was used when displaying a treectrl.

       Command-Line Switch:    -headerfont
       Database Name:          headerFont
       Database Class:         Font

              Specifies the font to draw text in column  headers  with.   The  default  value  is
              TkHeadingFont  where  available  (on  Tk  8.5+).   This option can be overridden by
              setting the -font option for individual column headers.

       Command-Line Switch:    -headerfg
       Database Name:          headerForeground
       Database Class:         Foreground

              Synonym for -headerforeground.

       Command-Line Switch:    -headerforeground
       Database Name:          headerForeground
       Database Class:         Foreground

              Specifies the color to draw text in column headers with.  The default value is  the
              Tk button foreground color (usually black).  On Gtk+, the system theme may override
              this color.  This option (and the Gtk+ system theme color)  can  be  overridden  by
              setting the -textcolor option for individual column headers.

       Command-Line Switch:    -height
       Database Name:          height
       Database Class:         Height

              Specifies  the  desired  height  for  the  window in any of the forms acceptable to
              Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 200 pixels.  If this option is less than or equal  to
              zero then the window will not request any size at all.

       Command-Line Switch:    -indent
       Database Name:          indent
       Database Class:         Indent

              Specifies  the  screen  distance an item is indented relative to its parent item in
              any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 19 pixels.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemgapx
       Database Name:          itemGapX
       Database Class:         ItemGapX

              Specifies the horizontal spacing  between  adjacent  items  in  any  of  the  forms
              acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemgapy
       Database Name:          itemGapY
       Database Class:         ItemGapY

              Specifies  the  vertical  spacing  between  adjacent  items  in  any  of  the forms
              acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemheight
       Database Name:          itemHeight
       Database Class:         ItemHeight

              Specifies a fixed height  for  every  item  in  any  of  the  forms  acceptable  to
              Tk_GetPixels.  If  non-zero,  this option overrides the requested height of an item
              and the -minitemheight option.  If an item's own -height option is  specified  then
              that is the height used for the item. In any case, items are never shorter than the
              maximum height of a button if they display one.  The default is 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemprefix
       Database Name:          itemPrefix
       Database Class:         ItemPrefix

              Specifies an ascii string that changes the way item ids are reported and processed.
              If  this  option  is  a  non-empty string, the usual integer value of an item id is
              prefixed with the given string. This can aid debugging but  it  is  important  your
              code doesn't assume item ids are integers if you use it.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemtagexpr
       Database Name:          itemTagExpr
       Database Class:         ItemTagExpr

              Specifies  a boolean that enables or disables tag expressions in item descriptions.
              See ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemwidth
       Database Name:          itemWidth
       Database Class:         ItemWidth

              Specifies a fixed  width  for  every  item  in  any  of  the  forms  acceptable  to
              Tk_GetPixels.   If more than one column is visible, then this option has no effect.
              If the -orient option is vertical, and the -wrap option is unspecified,  then  this
              option has no effect (in that case all items are as wide as the column).

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemwidthequal
       Database Name:          itemWidthEqual
       Database Class:         ItemWidthEqual

              Specifies  a  boolean  that  says whether all items should have the same width.  If
              more than one column is visible, then this option has no effect.   If  the  -orient
              option  is  vertical,  and the -wrap option is unspecified, then this option has no
              effect (in that case all items are as wide  as  the  column).   If  the  -itemwidth
              option is specified, then this option has no effect.

       Command-Line Switch:    -itemwidthmultiple
       Database Name:          itemWidthMultiple
       Database Class:         ItemWidthMultiple

              Specifies  a screen distance that every item's width will be evenly divisible by in
              any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  If more than one column  is  visible,
              then  this  option has no effect.  If the -orient option is vertical, and the -wrap
              option is unspecified, then this option has no effect (in that case all  items  are
              as  wide  as  the column).  If the -itemwidth option is specified, then this option
              has no effect.

       Command-Line Switch:    -linecolor
       Database Name:          lineColor
       Database Class:         LineColor

              Specifies the color which should be used for drawing the connecting  lines  between
              related items.

       Command-Line Switch:    -linestyle
       Database Name:          lineStyle
       Database Class:         LineStyle

              Specifies  the appearance of the connecting lines between related items.  The value
              should be dot, which is the default, or solid.

       Command-Line Switch:    -linethickness
       Database Name:          lineThickness
       Database Class:         LineThickness

              Specifies the thickness of the connecting lines between related items in any of the
              forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.

       Command-Line Switch:    -minitemheight
       Database Name:          minItemHeight
       Database Class:         MinItemHeight

              Specifies  a  minimum  height  for  every  item  in  any of the forms acceptable to
              Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 0,  which  means  that  every  item  has  the  height
              requested by the arrangement of elements in each column.  This option has no effect
              if either the -itemheight widget option or -height item option  is  specified.   In
              any  case,  items  are  never shorter than the maximum height of an expand/collapse
              button.

       Command-Line Switch:    -rowproxy
       Database Name:          rowProxy
       Database Class:         RowProxy

              If this option specifies a non empty value, it should be a screen distance  in  any
              of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  Then a 1 pixel thick horizontal line will
              be drawn at the specified screen distance from the top edge of the treectrl widget,
              which reaches from left to right of the treectrl widget and uses an inverting color
              (i.e black on lighter background, white on darker background).  This  line  can  be
              used to give the user a visual feedback during row resizing.

       Command-Line Switch:    -scrollmargin
       Database Name:          scrollMargin
       Database Class:         ScrollMargin

              Specifies   a   positive  screen  distance  in  any  of  the  forms  acceptable  to
              Tk_GetPixels.  This option is used by the default bindings to determine  how  close
              to  the  edges of the contentbox the mouse pointer must be before scrolling occurs.
              Specifying a positive value is useful when items may be drag-and-dropped.  Defaults
              to 0.

       Command-Line Switch:    -selectmode
       Database Name:          selectMode
       Database Class:         SelectMode

              Specifies  one  of several styles for manipulating the selection.  The value of the
              option may be arbitrary, but the default bindings expect it to  be  either  single,
              browse, multiple, or extended;  the default value is browse.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showbuttons
       Database Name:          showButtons
       Database Class:         ShowButtons

              Specifies  a  boolean  value that determines whether this widget leaves indentation
              space to display the expand/collapse buttons next to items.  The default  value  is
              true.   The  item option -button determines whether an item has a button.  See also
              the widget options -showrootbutton and -showrootchildbuttons.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showheader
       Database Name:          showHeader
       Database Class:         ShowHeader

              Specifies a boolean value that determines whether this widget  should  display  the
              header  line  with the column names at the top of the widget.  The default value is
              true.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showlines
       Database Name:          showLines
       Database Class:         ShowLines

              Specifies a boolean value that determines  whether  this  widget  should  draw  the
              connecting  lines  between  related  items.  The default value is true on Win32 and
              X11, false on Mac OS X and Gtk+.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showroot
       Database Name:          showRoot
       Database Class:         ShowRoot

              Specifies a boolean value that determines whether this widget should draw the  root
              item.   By  suppressing  the  drawing of the root item the widget can have multiple
              items that appear as toplevel items.  The default value is true.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showrootbutton
       Database Name:          showRootButton
       Database Class:         ShowRootButton

              Specifies a boolean value that determines whether this  widget  leaves  indentation
              space  to  display  the  expand/collapse  button next to the root item. The default
              value is false.  The item option -button determines whether the  root  item  has  a
              button.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showrootchildbuttons
       Database Name:          showRootChildButtons
       Database Class:         ShowRootChildButtons

              Specifies  a  boolean  value  that  determines  whether this widget should draw the
              expand/collapse buttons next to children of the root item.  The  default  value  is
              true.

       Command-Line Switch:    -showrootlines
       Database Name:          showRootLines
       Database Class:         ShowRootLines

              Specifies  a  boolean  value  that  determines  whether this widget should draw the
              connecting lines between children of the root item.  The default value is true.

       Command-Line Switch:    -treecolumn
       Database Name:          treeColumn
       Database Class:         TreeColumn

              Specifies  a  column  description  that  determines  which  column   displays   the
              expand/collapse  buttons  and  connecting  lines  between  items.   The  default is
              unspecified.

       Command-Line Switch:    -usetheme
       Database Name:          useTheme
       Database Class:         UseTheme

              Specifies a boolean value that determines whether this widget should draw parts  of
              itself using a platform-specific theme manager.  The default is true.

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

              Specifies  the  desired  width  for  the  window  in any of the forms acceptable to
              Tk_GetPixels.  The default is 200 pixel.  If this option is less than or  equal  to
              zero then the window will not request any size at all.

       Command-Line Switch:    -wrap
       Database Name:          wrap
       Database Class:         Wrap

              Specifies whether items are arranged in a 1- or 2-dimensional layout.

              If  the value is an empty string (the default), then items are arranged from top to
              bottom  (-orient=vertical)  or  from  left  to  right  (-orient=horizontal)  in   a
              1-dimensional layout.

              If  the  value  is  "N  items", then no more than N items will appear in a vertical
              group (-orient=vertical) or horizontal group (-orient=horizontal).

              If the value is "N pixels", then no vertical group of items will be taller  than  N
              pixels  (-orient=vertical)  or  no  horizontal  group of items will be wider than N
              pixels (-orient=horizontal).

              If the value is window, then a no vertical group of items will be taller  than  the
              window  (-orient=vertical)  or  no horizontal group of items will be wider than the
              window (-orient=horizontal).

              It is also possible to cause wrapping to occur on a per-item  basis  by  using  the
              item option -wrap.  See the item create command for that option.

       Command-Line Switch:    -xscrolldelay
       Database Name:          xScrollDelay
       Database Class:         ScrollDelay

              This  option  controls  how  quickly horizontal scrolling occurs while dragging the
              mouse with button 1 pressed.  The value should  be  a  list  of  1  or  2  integers
              interpreted  as  milliseconds.   If  2  values  are specified, then the first value
              determines the intial delay after the first scroll, and the second value determines
              the  delay  for  all  scrolling after the first. If only 1 value is specified, each
              scroll takes place after that delay.

       Command-Line Switch:    -xscrollincrement
       Database Name:          xScrollIncrement
       Database Class:         ScrollIncrement

              Specifies an increment  for  horizontal  scrolling,  in  any  of  the  usual  forms
              permitted  for screen distances.  If the value of this option is greater than zero,
              the horizontal view in the  window  will  be  constrained  so  that  the  canvas  x
              coordinate  at  the  left  edge  of  the  window  is  always  an  even  multiple of
              -xscrollincrement;  furthermore, the units for scrolling (e.g., the change in  view
              when  the  left  and  right  arrows  of  a  scrollbar  are  selected)  will also be
              -xscrollincrement.  If the value of this option is less than or equal to zero, then
              horizontal  scrolling snaps to the left of an item, or part of an item if items are
              wider than the contentbox.

       Command-Line Switch:    -xscrollsmoothing
       Database Name:          xScrollSmoothing
       Database Class:         ScrollSmoothing

              Specifies whether scrolling should  be  done  as  if  -xscrollincrement=1  whenever
              scrolling  is performed by non-unit amounts.  When the value of this option is true
              and the xview command is called to scroll by "units", scrolling occurs according to
              the   -xscrollincrement  option,  and  all  other  scrolling  is  done  as  if  the
              -xscrollincrement option was set to 1.   The  effect  is  that  when  dragging  the
              scrollbar  thumb  scrolling is very smooth, but when clicking the scrollbar buttons
              scrolling is done in coarser increments.  The default value is false.

       Command-Line Switch:    -yscrolldelay
       Database Name:          yScrollDelay
       Database Class:         ScrollDelay

              This option controls how quickly vertical scrolling occurs while dragging the mouse
              with  button  1 pressed.  The value should be a list of 1 or 2 integers interpreted
              as milliseconds.  If 2 values are specified, then the first  value  determines  the
              intial  delay after the first scroll, and the second value determines the delay for
              all scrolling after the first. If only 1 value  is  specified,  each  scroll  takes
              place after that delay.

       Command-Line Switch:    -yscrollincrement
       Database Name:          yScrollIncrement
       Database Class:         ScrollIncrement

              Specifies  an increment for vertical scrolling, in any of the usual forms permitted
              for screen distances.  If the value of  this  option  is  greater  than  zero,  the
              vertical  view in the window will be constrained so that the canvas y coordinate at
              the top edge of the  window  is  always  an  even  multiple  of  -yscrollincrement;
              furthermore,  the  units  for  scrolling (e.g., the change in view when the top and
              bottom arrows of a scrollbar are selected) will also be -yscrollincrement.  If  the
              value  of  this option is less than or equal to zero, then vertical scrolling snaps
              to the top of an item, or part of an item if items are taller than the contentbox.

       Command-Line Switch:    -yscrollsmoothing
       Database Name:          yScrollSmoothing
       Database Class:         ScrollSmoothing

              Specifies whether scrolling should  be  done  as  if  -yscrollincrement=1  whenever
              scrolling  is performed by non-unit amounts.  When the value of this option is true
              and the yview command is called to scroll by "units", scrolling occurs according to
              the   -yscrollincrement  option,  and  all  other  scrolling  is  done  as  if  the
              -yscrollincrement option was set to 1.   The  effect  is  that  when  dragging  the
              scrollbar  thumb  scrolling is very smooth, but when clicking the scrollbar buttons
              scrolling is done in coarser increments.  The default value is false.

THE CANVAS

       Throughout this manual page the term canvas is sometimes used.  The canvas can be  thought
       of  as  the  virtual  sheet of paper upon which all visible items are drawn.  The treectrl
       window displays different areas of the canvas within its borders as the list is scrolled.

ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS

       Columns and items may have any number of tags associated with  them.   A  tag  is  just  a
       string of characters, and it may take any form, including that of an integer, although the
       characters '(', ')', '&', '|', '^' and '!' should be avoided.

       The same tag may be associated with many columns or items. This is commonly done to  group
       items in various interesting ways; for example, in a file browser all directories might be
       given the tag "directory".

       Tag expressions are used in column descriptions and item  descriptions  to  specify  which
       columns  and  items to operate on.  A tag expression can be a single tag name or a logical
       expression  of  tags  using  operators  '&&',  '||',  '^'  and  '!',   and   parenthesized
       subexpressions.  For example:

       .t item id "tag {(a && !b) || (!a && b)}"

       or equivalently:

       .t item id "tag {a ^ b}"

       will return the unique ids of any items with either "a" or "b" tags, but not both.

       Within  a  tag  expression  a  tag  name may be enclosed in double quotes to avoid special
       processing of the operator characters. For example:

       .t item id {tag {"a&&b"||c}}

       will return the unique ids of any items with either "a&&b" or "c" tags;  in  this  example
       the  &&  is  not treated as an operator. A double-quote may be escaped within a quoted tag
       name using a backslash '\'.

       Tag operators may be bypassed completely by setting the  -columntagexpr  and  -itemtagexpr
       options.  This  can  be  useful  if  your  application  has column or item tags containing
       arbitrary text.

       .t configure -itemtagexpr false
       .t item delete "tag a&&b"

WIDGET COMMAND

       The treectrl command creates a new Tcl command whose name is the same as the path name  of
       the  treectrl's  window.   This  command  may  be used to invoke various operations on the
       widget.  It has the following general form:

       pathName option ?arg arg ...?

       PathName is the name of the command, which is the same as the treectrl widget's path name.
       Option  and  the args determine the exact behavior of the command.  The following commands
       are possible for treectrl widgets:

       pathName activate itemDesc
              Sets the active item to the one described by itemDesc, and switches  on  the  state
              active  for  that item.  The active item can be referred to by the item description
              active.  If this command changes which item is  active  an  <ActiveItem>  event  is
              generated.   If  the  active  item  is deleted the root item becomes the new active
              item.

       pathName bbox ?area?
              Returns a list with four elements giving the bounding box  (left,  top,  right  and
              bottom)  of an area of the window. If area is not specified, then the result is the
              bounding box of the entire window.  If area is content, then the result is the part
              of  the  window  not  including  borders,  headers,  or locked columns.  If area is
              header, then the result is the part of  the  window  not  including  borders  where
              column  titles  are displayed.  If area is left, then the result is the part of the
              window not including borders or headers where left-locked  columns  are  displayed.
              If  area  is right, then the result is the part of the window not including borders
              or headers where right-locked columns are displayed.

              If area is one of header.left, header.none or header.right then  the  area  of  the
              column  headers  occupied  by columns with -lock=left, -lock=none or -lock=right is
              returned.

              An empty string is returned if the display area has no height or width,  which  can
              be  true  for various reasons such as the window is too small, or the header is not
              displayed, or there aren't any locked columns.

       pathName canvasx windowx
              Translates the  given  window  x-coordinate  windowx  in  the  treectrl  to  canvas
              coordinate space.  The marquee command expects canvas coordinates.

       pathName canvasy windowy
              Translates  the  given  window  y-coordinate  windowy  in  the  treectrl  to canvas
              coordinate space.  The marquee command expects canvas coordinates.

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

       pathName collapse ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?
              Deprecated. Use item collapse instead.

       pathName column option column ?arg ...?
              This  command is used to manipulate the columns of the treectrl widget (see section
              COLUMNS below).  The exact behavior of the command depends on the  option  argument
              that  follows  the  column  argument.   The  following  forms  of  the  command are
              supported:

              pathName column bbox columnDesc
                     Returns a list with four elements giving the bounding box of the  header  of
                     the  column  specified  by  the column description columnDesc.  The returned
                     coordinates are relative to the top-left  corner  of  the  widget.   If  the
                     column option -visible=false or if the widget option -showheader=false, then
                     an empty list is returned.

              pathName column cget columnDesc option
                     This command returns the current value of the option named  option  for  the
                     column  specified  by the column description columnDesc, ColumnDesc may also
                     be the string tail to specify the tail column.  Option may have any  of  the
                     values accepted by the column configure widget command.

              pathName column configure columnDesc ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This  command  is  similar  to  the  configure widget command except that it
                     modifies options  associated  with  the  columns  specified  by  the  column
                     description columnDesc instead of modifying options for the overall treectrl
                     widget.  ColumnDesc may be the string tail to specify the tail  column.   If
                     columnDesc  refers  to  more than one column, then at least one option-value
                     pair must be given.  If no option is specified, the command returns  a  list
                     describing all of the available options for columnDesc (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) for
                     columnDesc; in this case the command returns an empty string.

                     See COLUMNS below for details on the options available for columns.

                     For  compatibility  with  older  versions of treectrl (which did not support
                     more than one row of  column  headers)  any  of  the  configuration  options
                     mentioned  in the HEADERS section, such as -arrow, -text, etc, may be passed
                     to the top header-row through this command.

              pathName column compare column1 op column2
                     For both column descriptions column1 and column2 the index is retrieved  (as
                     returned  from  the  column  order  widget command).  Then these indexes are
                     compared using the operator op, which must be either <,  <=,  ==, >=, >,  or
                     !=.   The  return  value of this command is 1 if the comparison evaluated to
                     true, 0 otherwise.

              pathName column count ?columnDesc?
                     If no additional arguments are given, the result is a decimal string  giving
                     the  number  of  columns  created  by the column create widget command which
                     haven't been deleted by the column delete widget command; in this  case  the
                     tail  column is not counted.  If columnDesc is given, then the result is the
                     number of columns that match that column description.

              pathName column create ?option value ...?
                     This command creates a new column in the treectrl widget. The new column  is
                     placed  to  the  right  of  all  other columns (except the tail column). Any
                     option-value arguments configure the new  column  according  to  the  column
                     configure  command.  The  return  value  is the unique identifier of the new
                     column.

              pathName column delete first ?last?
                     Deletes the specified  column(s).  First  and  last  must  be  valid  column
                     descriptions. If both first and last are specified, then they may refer to a
                     single column only.  The tail column cannot be deleted and it is an error to
                     specify  it.   The  order of first and last doesn't matter, and first may be
                     equal to last.

              pathName column dragcget option
                     Deprecated. Use header dragcget instead.

              pathName column dragconfigure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     Deprecated. Use header dragconfigure instead.

              pathName column index columnDesc
                     Deprecated. Use column id instead.

              pathName column id columnDesc
                     This command resolves the column  description  columnDesc  into  a  list  of
                     unique  column  identifiers.  If the column(s) described by columnDesc don't
                     exist, this command returns an empty list.

              pathName column list ?-visible?
                     This command returns a list of identifiers  for  every  column  (except  the
                     tail)  from left to right. If -visible is given, only columns whose -visible
                     option is true are returned.

              pathName column move columnDesc beforeDesc
                     Moves the column specified by columnDesc to the left of the column specified
                     by   beforeDesc.  Both  columnDesc  and  beforeDesc  must  be  valid  column
                     descriptions.  If beforeDesc is the string tail, the column columnDesc  will
                     become the last column.

              pathName column neededwidth columnDesc
                     This  command returns a decimal string giving the needed width of the column
                     specified by the column description columnDesc.  The  needed  width  is  the
                     maximum  of the width of the column header and the width of the widest style
                     in any visible item.

                     When an item style or column header spans multiple columns, the needed width
                     of a column is affected by the widths of other columns in the span, in which
                     case the result of this command isn't particularly useful.

              pathName column order columnDesc ?-visible?
                     This command returns a decimal string giving  the  position  of  the  column
                     specified  by  the  column  description  columnDesc  in  the list of columns
                     starting from zero for the leftmost column.   If  -visible  is  given,  only
                     columns  whose -visible option is true are considered, and -1 is returned if
                     columnDesc's -visible option is false.

              pathName column tag option ?arg arg ...?
                     This command is used to manipulate tags on columns.  The exact  behavior  of
                     the  command  depends  on  the  option  argument that follows the column tag
                     argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

                     pathName column tag add columnDesc tagList
                            Adds each tag in tagList to  the  columns  specified  by  the  column
                            description columnDesc.  Duplicate tags are ignored. The list of tags
                            for a column can also be changed via a column's -tags option.

                     pathName column tag expr columnDesc tagExpr
                            Evaluates the tag expression tagExpr against every  column  specified
                            by  the  column  description  columnDesc.  The result is 1 if the tag
                            expression evaluates to true for every column, 0 otherwise.

                     pathName column tag names columnDesc
                            Returns a list of tag names assigned to the columns specified by  the
                            column  description  columnDesc.  The result is the union of any tags
                            assigned to the columns.

                     pathName column tag remove columnDesc tagList
                            Removes each tag in tagList from the columns specified by the  column
                            description  columnDesc.  It is not an error if any of the columns do
                            not use any of the tags.  The list of tags for a column can  also  be
                            changed via a column's -tags option.

              pathName column width columnDesc
                     This  command  returns  a  decimal  string giving the width in pixels of the
                     column specified by the column description columnDesc, even if the  treectrl
                     is  configured to not display the column headers by means of the -showheader
                     option.

       pathName compare itemDesc1 op itemDesc2
              Deprecated. Use the item compare command instead.

       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 treectrl command.

       pathName contentbox
              Returns a list with four elements giving the bounding box of the screen  area  used
              to  display  items.   This  is the area of the window not including borders, column
              headers, or locked columns. An empty string is returned if the display area has  no
              height  or  width, which can happen if the window is too small.  The result of this
              command is the same as that of bbox content.

       pathName debug option ?arg arg ...?
              This command is used to facilitate debugging of the  treectrl  widget.   The  exact
              behavior  of  the  command  depends  on  the option argument that follows the debug
              argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName debug alloc
                     Returns a string giving partial statistics on  memory  allocations,  if  the
                     package was built with TREECTRL_DEBUG defined.

              pathName debug cget option
                     This command returns the current value of the debugging option named option.
                     Option may have any of the values accepted by  the  debug  configure  widget
                     command.

              pathName debug configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This  command  is  similar  to  the  configure widget command except that it
                     modifies debugging options instead of  modifying  options  for  the  overall
                     treectrl  widget.   If  no  option  is specified, the command returns a list
                     describing all of the available debugging options (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 debugging option(s) to have the given
                     value(s); in this case the command returns an empty string.

                     The following debugging options are supported:

                     -displaydelay millis
                            Specifies a time duration in milliseconds,  which  should  be  waited
                            after  something  has  been drawn to the screen.  Setting this option
                            has only an effect, if the debugging options -enable and -display are
                            switched on.

                     -data boolean
                            If  this  option  is  switched on (together with the debugging option
                            -enable), at various places a consistence check on the internal  data
                            structure  is made (e.g. for every item is checked, if the registered
                            number of children is equal to the number of  child  items).   If  an
                            inconsistency was found, a Tcl background error is raised.

                     -display boolean
                            If  this  option  is  switched on (together with the debugging option
                            -enable), at varios places additional debugging output is printed  to
                            stdout.

                     -drawcolor color
                            When  specified, areas of the window are painted with this color when
                            drawing in those areas is about to occur.  Setting  this  option  has
                            only  an  effect  if  the  debugging options -enable and -display are
                            switched on.

                     -enable boolean
                            All other debugging options only take effect if this option  is  also
                            switched on.

                     -erasecolor color
                            When  specified,  areas  of  the  window  which  have  been marked as
                            "invalid" (for example, when part  of  the  window  is  exposed)  are
                            painted with this color.  If you use an unusual color for this option
                            (like pink), superflous screen redraws can be  spotted  more  easily.
                            Setting  this  option  has  only  an  effect if the debugging options
                            -enable and -display are switched on.

                     -span boolean
                            Debugging related to column spanning.

                     -textlayout boolean
                            Debugging related to text-element layout.

              pathName debug dinfo option
                     Returns a string describing display-related stuff. Option  must  be  one  of
                     alloc, ditem, onscreen or range.

              pathName debug expose x1 y1 x2 y2
                     Causes  the  area  of  the  window  bounded by the given window-coords to be
                     marked as invalid. This simulates uncovering part of the window.

       pathName depth ?itemDesc?
              If the additional argument itemDesc is given, then the result is a  decimal  string
              giving  the  depth of the item described by itemDesc.  If no itemDesc is specified,
              then the maximum depth of all items in the treectrl  widget  is  returned  instead.
              Depth is defined as the number of ancestors an item has.

       pathName dragimage option ?arg ...?
              This  command  is  used  to  manipulate  the  drag  image, which is used to provide
              feedback when items are drag-and-dropped within the  window.   The  drag  image  is
              displayed  as  the  dotted  outlines of one or more items, columns and/or elements.
              The exact behavior of the command depends on the option argument that  follows  the
              dragimage argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName dragimage add itemDesc ?column? ?element?
                     Adds  the  shapes  of  the  item  described by itemDesc to the shapes of the
                     dragimage.  Specifying additional arguments reduces the number of rectangles
                     that  are  added to the dragimage.  If no additional arguments is specified,
                     for every element of the item in every column a dotted rectangles is  added.
                     If  column is specified, all elements in other columns are ignored.  If also
                     element is specified, only a rectangle for this one element of the specified
                     item in the given column is added.

              pathName dragimage cget option
                     This command returns the current value of the dragimage option named option.
                     Option may have any of the values accepted by the dragimage configure widget
                     command.

              pathName dragimage clear
                     Removes all shapes (if there are any) from the dragimage.  This command does
                     not modify the dragimage offset.

              pathName dragimage configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This command is similar to the  configure  widget  command  except  that  it
                     modifies  the dragimage options instead of modifying options for the overall
                     treectrl widget.  If no option is specified,  the  command  returns  a  list
                     describing  all of the available dragimage options (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 dragimage
                     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 dragimage option(s)
                     to  have  the  given  value(s);  in  this  case the command returns an empty
                     string.

                     The following dragimage options are supported:

                     -visible boolean
                            Specifies a boolean value  which  determines  whether  the  dragimage
                            should currently be visible.

              pathName dragimage offset ?x y?
                     Returns  a  list  containing  the  x  and  y offsets of the dragimage, if no
                     additional arguments are specified.  The  dragimage  offset  is  the  screen
                     distance  the  image  is  displayed  at relative to the item(s) its shape is
                     derived from.  If two coordinates are specified, sets the  dragimage  offset
                     to the given coordinates x and y.

       pathName element option ?element? ?arg arg ...?
              This  command  is used to manipulate elements (see ELEMENTS AND STYLES below).  The
              exact behavior of the command depends on  the  option  argument  that  follows  the
              element argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName element cget element option
                     This command returns the current value of the option named option associated
                     with the element given by element.   Option  may  have  any  of  the  values
                     accepted by the element configure widget command.

                     This command also accepts the -statedomain option.

              pathName element configure element ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This  command  is  similar  to  the  configure widget command except that it
                     modifies options associated with the element given  by  element  instead  of
                     modifying  options  for  the  overall  treectrl  widget.   If  no  option is
                     specified, the command returns  a  list  describing  all  of  the  available
                     options  for  element (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  element;  in  this  case  the
                     command  returns an empty string.  See ELEMENTS AND STYLES below for details
                     on the options available for elements.

              pathName element create name type ?option value ...?
                     Creates a new master element of type type with the unique user-defined  name
                     name  and  configures  it  with  zero  or  more option/value pairs.  See the
                     subsections on individual element types  in  ELEMENTS  AND  STYLES  for  the
                     options  that  are valid for each type of element.  This command returns the
                     name of the new element (the same as the name argument).

                     This command also accepts the -statedomain option with  a  value  of  either
                     header or item to specify where this element will be displayed.

              pathName element delete ?element ...?
                     Deletes  each  of  the  named  elements  and returns an empty string.  If an
                     element is deleted while it is still configured as an element of one or more
                     styles  by  means  of  the style elements widget command, it is also removed
                     from the element lists of these styles.

              pathName element names
                     Returns a list containing the names of all existing elements.

              pathName element perstate element option stateList
                     This command returns the value of the  per-state  option  named  option  for
                     element for a certain state.  StateList is a list of state names (static and
                     dynamic, see STATES) which specifies the state to use.

              pathName element type element
                     Returns the type of the element given by element, such as rect or text.

       pathName expand ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?
              Deprecated.  Use item expand instead.

       pathName gradient option ?arg ...?
              This command is used  to  manipulate  color  gradients.   See  GRADIENTS  for  more
              information  about  using  gradients.  The exact behavior of the command depends on
              the option argument that follows the gradient argument.  The following forms of the
              command are supported:

              pathName gradient cget gradient option
                     Returns  the  current  value  of  the  configuration option for the gradient
                     specified by gradient whose name is option.  Option  may  have  any  of  the
                     values accepted by the gradient configure command.

              pathName gradient configure gradient ?option value ...?
                     If  no option is specified, the command returns a list describing all of the
                     available gradient options (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 gradient 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  gradient  option(s)  to  have  the given
                     value(s); in this case the command returns an empty string.

                     The following options are supported (see gradient create for the meaning  of
                     each option):

                     -bottom coordSpec

                     -left coordSpec

                     -orient direction

                     -right coordSpec

                     -steps stepCount

                     -stops stopsList

                     -top coordSpec

              pathName gradient create name ?option value ...?
                     Creates  a  new gradient with the name name, which must be a unique name not
                     used by another gradient created by this treectrl widget.

                     The following options are supported:

                     -bottom coordSpec

                     -left coordSpec

                     -right coordSpec

                     -top coordSpec
                            Each of these options specifies one edge of the gradient  brush.   If
                            the  option  is  specified  as  an  empty  string  (the default), the
                            gradient brush's edge is the same as that of  whatever  rectangle  is
                            being  painted  using  the  gradient.   See  GRADIENT COORDINATES for
                            details on gradient brush coordinates.

                            The format of each of these options is a list of  2  or  more  values
                            {value  coordType  ?arg ...?}, where value is a floating point number
                            (usually from 0.0 to 1.0) and  coordType  is  one  of  area,  canvas,
                            column or item.  The area keyword must be followed by one of the same
                            area names that the bbox command accepts.  The column keyword may  be
                            followed  by a column description specifying exactly one column.  The
                            item keyword may  be  followed  by  an  item  description  specifying
                            exactly one item.

                     -orient direction
                            This  option  specifies the direction a linear gradient changes color
                            in.  Must be either  horizontal  (the  default)  or  vertical  or  an
                            abbreviation of one of these.

                     -steps stepCount
                            Specifies  the  number  of  bands  of color drawn for each color stop
                            described by the -stops option.  The default value is 1, the  maximum
                            is  25.   This  option  has  no  effect  if gradients are drawn using
                            something better than Tk API calls.  See GRADIENTS for more on this.

                     -stops stopsList
                            Specifies the color stops along this gradient. The argument stopsList
                            has the following form:

                            {{offset color ?opacity?} {offset color ?opacity?} ...}

                            Each offset is a floating point number from 0.0 to 1.0 specifying the
                            distance from the start of the gradient where the color begins.  Each
                            color  is a Tk color name or description.  Each optional opacity is a
                            floating point number from 0.0 to 1.0 specifying how transparent  the
                            gradient is.

                            If stopsList is non-empty there must be at least two stops specified,
                            and the first offset must be 0.0 and the last  offset  must  be  1.0.
                            Any   other   stop  offsets  must  be  listed  in  increasing  order.
                            Specifying opacity has no effect if gradients are drawn using Tk  API
                            calls.  See GRADIENTS for more on this.

              pathName gradient delete ?name ...?
                     Deletes  each  gradient  specified  by name.  If the gradient is still being
                     used then it is not actually  deleted  until  all  elements  etc  using  the
                     gradient  have  stopped  using  it.   A  deleted-but-in-use  gradient is not
                     recognized by the various gradient commands.  Creating a new  gradient  with
                     the  same  name  as  a  deleted-but-in-use  gradient  resurrects the deleted
                     gradient.

              pathName gradient names
                     Returns a list of names of all the gradients that have been created by  this
                     treectrl widget.

              pathName gradient native ?preference?
                     Without  any arguments, this command returns a boolean indicating whether or
                     not the platform supports  native  transparent  gradients.   The  preference
                     argument  is  a  boolean  that  indicates whether native gradients should be
                     used; this can be used to test the appearance of the application.

       pathName header option ?arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate column  headers.   The  exact  behavior  of  the
              command  depends  on  the  option  argument  that follows the header argument.  The
              following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName header bbox headerDesc ?column? ?element?
                     See the item bbox command.

              pathName header compare headerDesc1 op headerDesc2
                     See the item compare command.

              pathName header configure headerDesc ?arg ...?
                     There are two forms of this command distinguished by whether or not a column
                     description  appears  after  the headerDesc argument.  If the first argument
                     after headerDesc begins with a '-' character it is assumed to be  an  option
                     name,  not  a  column  description, in which case the command applies to the
                     header-row.  If the first argument after headerDesc does not  being  with  a
                     '-'  it  is  assumed  to  be a column description, in which case the command
                     applies to a header-column.

                     pathName header configure headerDesc ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                            If no option is specified, returns  a  list  describing  all  of  the
                            available   options   for   the   header  given  by  headerDesc  (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. This  is  the  only  case  where
                            headerDesc may refer to multiple header-rows.

                            The  following  options  are  supported  by  this command (see header
                            create for the meaning of each option):

                            -height height

                            -tags tagList

                            -visible boolean

                     pathName header configure headerDesc column ?option? ?value?  ?option  value
                     ...?
                            If  no  option  is  specified,  returns  a list describing all of the
                            available options for the single  column  column  of  the  header-row
                            given  by  headerDesc  (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. This is the only case where both
                            headerDesc may refer to multiple header-rows and column may refer  to
                            multiple header-columns.

                            The following options are supported by this command (see HEADERS) for
                            the meaning of each option):

                            -arrow direction

                            -arrowbitmap bitmap

                            -arrowgravity direction

                            -arrowimage image

                            -arrowpadx amount

                            -arrowpady amount

                            -arrowside side

                            -background color

                            -bitmap bitmap

                            -borderwidth size

                            -button boolean

                            -font fontName

                            -image image

                            -imagepadx amount

                            -imagepady amount

                            -justify justification

                            -state state

                            -text text

                            -textcolor color

                            -textlines count

                            -textpadx amount

                            -textpady amount

              pathName header count ?headerDesc?
                     If no additional arguments are given, the result is a decimal string  giving
                     the  number of header-rows created by the header create widget command which
                     haven't been deleted by the header delete widget command,  plus  1  for  the
                     ever-present  top header-row created along with the widget.  If the optional
                     argument headerDesc is given, then the result is the number  of  header-rows
                     that match that header description.

              pathName header create ?option value?
                     Creates  a  new header-row and returns its unique identifier.  The following
                     configuration options are supported:

                     -height height
                            Specifies a fixed height for the  header-row  in  any  of  the  forms
                            acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. Must be >= 0.  If height is zero then the
                            header-row's height is the  maximum  height  of  all  of  its  column
                            headers.  Defaults to 0.

                     -tags tagList
                            TagList  is  a  list  of tag names to be added to the new header-row.
                            The header tag command can also be used to manipulate  this  list  of
                            tags.

                     -visible boolean
                            Boolean  must  have  one  of the forms accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean. It
                            indicates whether or not the header-row should be displayed.  If  the
                            widget  option  -showheader  is false then the header-row will not be
                            displayed regardless of the value of this option.

              pathName header delete headerDesc
                     Deletes  the  header-rows  given  by  the  header  description   headerDesc.
                     Attempts  to  delete  the  ever-present  top  header-row are ignored without
                     raising an error.

              pathName header dragcget ?arg ...?
                     There are two forms of this command distinguished by whether or not a header
                     description  appears  as  the  first argument.  If the first argument begins
                     with a '-' character it is assumed to  be  an  option  name,  not  a  header
                     description,  in  which case the command applies to the header-drag-and-drop
                     options for the widget.  If the first argument does not being with a '-'  it
                     is  assumed to be a header description, in which case the command applies to
                     a header-row.

                     pathName header dragcget option
                            This command returns the current value  of  the  header-drag-and-drop
                            option  named  option  for  the  widget.  The following configuration
                            options are supported (see header dragconfigure for  the  meaning  of
                            each option):

                            -enable boolean

                            -imagealpha alpha

                            -imagecolor background

                            -imagecolumn column

                            -imageoffset offset

                            -imagespan count

                            -indicatorcolor color

                            -indicatorcolumn column

                            -indicatorside side

                            -indicatorspan count

                     pathName header dragcget headerDesc option
                            This  command  returns  the current value of the header-drag-and-drop
                            option named option for a header-row.   The  following  configuration
                            options  are  supported  (see header dragconfigure for the meaning of
                            each option):

                            -draw boolean

                            -enable boolean

              pathName header dragconfigure ?arg ...?
                     There are two forms of this command distinguished by whether or not a header
                     description  appears  as  the  first argument.  If the first argument begins
                     with a '-' character it is assumed to  be  an  option  name,  not  a  header
                     description,  in  which case the command applies to the header-drag-and-drop
                     options for the widget.  If the first argument does not being with a '-'  it
                     is  assumed to be a header description, in which case the command applies to
                     a header-row.

                     pathName header dragconfigure  ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                            This command queries and sets header-drag-and-drop  options  for  the
                            widget,  not for individual header-rows.  The following configuration
                            options are supported:

                            -enable boolean
                                   Controls whether the user is allowed to rearrange  columns  by
                                   drag-and-drop.   The  default  is false.  Each header-row also
                                   has an -enable dragconfigure option.

                            -imagealpha alpha
                                   Alpha is  an  integer  from  0  (invisible)  to  255  (opaque)
                                   controlling  the  transparency  of  the  drag image. Any value
                                   outside this range is clipped.  The default is 200.

                            -imagecolor background
                                   Unused.

                            -imagecolumn column
                                   Column specifies the column to create the drag image from.

                            -imageoffset offset
                                   Offset is the horizontal screen distance  the  drag  image  is
                                   offset from its starting position.

                            -imagespan count
                                   Count  is  the  number of columns, starting with -imagecolumn,
                                   that will be dragged as a group.

                            -indicatorcolor color
                                   Unused.

                            -indicatorcolumn column
                                   The 2-pixel-thick line will be drawn over the  left  or  right
                                   edge of column.

                            -indicatorside side
                                   Unused.

                            -indicatorspan count
                                   Count    is    the    number   of   columns,   starting   with
                                   -indicatorcolumn, that will be displaced as  a  group  by  the
                                   dragged column(s)

                     pathName header dragconfigure header  ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                            This  command  queries  and  sets  header-drag-and-drop  options  for
                            header-rows,  not  for  the  widget  as  a  whole.    The   following
                            configuration options are supported:

                            -draw boolean
                                   Controls  whether  a  header-row  displays any feedback during
                                   header drag-and-drop.  The default is true.

                            -enable boolean
                                   Controls whether clicking  and  dragging  in  this  header-row
                                   initiates drag-and-drop.  The default is true.  If the -enable
                                   option for the widget is false (see above)  then  this  option
                                   has no effect.

              pathName header element ?arg ...?
                     See the item element command.

              pathName header id headerDesc
                     This  command  resolves  the  header  description  headerDesc into a list of
                     unique header-row identifiers. If headerDesc doesn't refer to  any  existing
                     header-rows, then this command returns an empty list.

              pathName header image headerDesc ?column? ?image? ?column image ...?
                     The  behavior  of this command depends on whether or not a column header was
                     assigned a style containing an image element.  If a  column  header  has  no
                     style  or  no  style with an image element then this command operates on the
                     same -image option as header configure.  Otherwise this command operates  on
                     the  -image  option  of  the first image element in a column header's style.
                     See the item image command.

              pathName header span headerDesc ?column? ?numColumns? ?column numColumns ...?
                     See the item span command.

              pathName header state command headerDesc ?arg ...?
                     See the item state command.

              pathName header style command headerDesc ?arg ...?
                     See the item style command.

              pathName header text headerDesc ?column? ?text? ?column text ...?
                     The behavior of this command depends on whether or not a column  header  was
                     assigned a style containing a text element.  If a column header has no style
                     or no style with a text element then this command operates on the same -text
                     option  as  header  configure.  Otherwise this command operates on the -text
                     option of the first text element in a column header's style.  See item text.

              pathName header tag command headerDesc ?arg ...?
                     See the item tag command.

       pathName identify ?-array varName? x y
              This command returns information about the what is displayed at  the  given  window
              coordinates  x  and  y.   When  the -array option is used to specify the name of an
              array variable, elements of the array variable are set as follows:

              [1]    If the coordinates are outside the window, over the  borders,  or  over  any
                     whitespace in the window, then:

                     $varName(where) is ""

              [2]    If the coordinates are over a column header, then:

                     $varName(where) is header

                     $varName(header) is the unique id of the header-row

                     $varName(column) is the unique id of the column

                     $varName(element) is the name of an element, or ""

                     $varName(side)  is left or right if the coordinates are close to the edge of
                     the column header, otherwise ""

              [3]    If the coordinates are over an item, then:

                     $varName(where) is item

                     $varName(item) is the unique id of the item

                     $varName(column) is the unique id of the column

                     $varName(element) is the name of an element, or ""

                     $varName(button) is a boolean indicating whether or not the coordinates  are
                     over the item's expand/collapse button

                     $varName(line)  is  the  unique  id  of an ancestor of the item (but not the
                     parent of the item) if the coordinates are over a line descending from  that
                     ancestor.   If  the coordinates are not over such a line then $varName(line)
                     is "".  This is used to collapse the ancestor when the line is clicked on.
       When the -array option is not used,  this  command  returns  a  list  describing  what  is
       displayed at the given window coordinates.  The format of this list can be like one of the
       following:

              [1]    {}

                     An empty list is returned if the coordinates are outside  the  window,  over
                     the borders, or over any whitespace in the window.

              [2]    header C ?left|right?

                     header C elem E ?left|right?

                     header H column C ?left|right?

                     header H column C elem E ?left|right?

                     Only  when  there  is  more  than  one  header-row is there a unique id of a
                     header-row H followed by the keyword column.  This is for compatibility with
                     older versions when there was only one row of column headers allowed.

              [3]    item I column C

              [4]    item I column C elem E

              [5]    item I button

                     This  is the result when the coordinates are over the expand/collapse button
                     next to an item.

              [6]    item I line I2

                     This is the result when the coordinates are over a line descending  from  an
                     ancestor I2 of the item I (but not the parent of that item). This is used to
                     collapse the ancestor when the line is clicked on.

       pathName index itemDesc
              Deprecated. Use item id instead.

       pathName item option ?arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate  items.   The  exact  behavior  of  the  command
              depends on the option argument that follows the item argument.  The following forms
              of the command are supported:

              pathName item ancestors itemDesc
                     Returns a list containing  the  item  ids  of  the  ancestors  of  the  item
                     specified by itemDesc. The first list value is the parent, the second is the
                     parent's parent, an so on. The last list value will  be  the  root  item  if
                     itemDesc is a descendant of the root item.

              pathName item bbox itemDesc ?column? ?element?
                     Returns  a  list  with  four  elements  giving  the bounding box of the item
                     described by itemDesc. If no further argument is specified, the  bbox  spans
                     the  area of the item over all non-locked columns. If a column is specified,
                     only the area of the item in this column is  considered.  If  an  additional
                     element  is  specified,  the area of this element in column of the specified
                     item is returned.  The returned coordinates are  relative  to  the  top-left
                     corner of the widget.  If the item is not visible for any reason, the result
                     in an empty string.

              pathName item buttonstate itemDesc ?state?
                     If state is specified, this command sets the state  of  the  expand/collapse
                     button for the single item specified by itemDesc.  The state argument may be
                     one of active, normal or pressed.  The current (or newly-set) state  of  the
                     button  is  returned.  The button state is used by the system theme, if any,
                     to change the appearance of the button.

              pathName item cget itemDesc option
                     Returns the current value of the configuration option for the item specified
                     by itemDesc whose name is option. Option may have any of the values accepted
                     by the item configure command.

              pathName item children itemDesc
                     Returns a list containing the item ids of all children of the item specified
                     by itemDesc in the correct order from the first child to the last child.

              pathName item collapse itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?
                     Switches  off  the  open  state of the item(s) described by itemDesc.  If an
                     item has descendants, then they are no longer  displayed.   If  an  item  is
                     already  closed,  then this command has no effect on that item.  If -animate
                     is specified, then the item's button will animate as it transitions  between
                     states  if  the  theme  supports  it;  in  this  case  only  one item may be
                     specified.  If -recurse is specified, then  all  descendants  of  the  items
                     described  by itemDesc will also be collapsed.  For every item that actually
                     will be collapsed, two  events  are  generated:  a  <Collapse-before>  event
                     before  the  item  state  is changed, and a <Collapse-after> event after the
                     item state was changed.

              pathName item compare itemDesc1 op itemDesc2
                     From both items described by  the  itemDescs  the  index  is  retrieved  (as
                     returned  from  the  item  order  widget  command).   Then these indexes are
                     compared using the operator op, which must be either <,  <=,  ==, >=, >,  or
                     !=.   The  return  value of this command is 1 if the comparison evaluated to
                     true, 0 otherwise.

              pathName item complex itemDesc ?list...?
                     This horrible command is now deprecated. Use item element configure instead.
                     For every column of the treectrl there may be specified one list.  Each list
                     should look like this:

                     { {element option value ...} {element option value ...} ...}

                     Every option must be known by the element's type (see  ELEMENTS  AND  STYLES
                     below).  Each option will be set to value for the element in this one column
                     in this item.

              pathName item configure itemDesc ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     If no option is specified, returns a list describing all  of  the  available
                     options for the item given by itemDesc (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 item option(s) to have  the  given  value(s);  in  this  case  the
                     command  returns  an  empty string. This is the only case where itemDesc may
                     refer to multiple items.

                     The following options are supported by this command (see item create for the
                     meaning of each option):

                     -button boolean|auto

                     -height height

                     -tags tagList

                     -visible boolean

                     -wrap boolean

              pathName item count ?itemDesc?
                     If  no additional arguments are given, the result is a decimal string giving
                     the number of items created by the item create widget command which  haven't
                     been  deleted by the item delete widget command, plus 1 for the ever-present
                     root item.  If the optional argument itemDesc is given, then the  result  is
                     the number of items that match that item description.

              pathName item create ?option value ...?
                     Creates  some  new items and optionally returns a list of unique identifiers
                     for those items.  The new items have the states  open  and  enabled  set  by
                     default.  If the treectrl widget currently has the focus, the state focus is
                     also set.

                     The following options are supported by this command:

                     -button boolean|auto
                            The value of this option must have  one  of  the  forms  accepted  by
                            Tcl_GetBoolean  or  be  the word auto (or any abbreviation of it). It
                            indicates whether or not an expand/collapse button  should  be  drawn
                            next  to  the item, typically to indicate that the item has children.
                            If the value of this option is auto, then a button is displayed  next
                            to  the  item  whenever  the  item has any children whose item option
                            -visible is true.  The button will only be displayed if:

                            [1]    the column specified by the  treectrl  option  -treecolumn  is
                                   visible, and

                            [2]    the treectrl option -showbuttons is true, and

                            [3]    for  the  root  item,  the  treectrl option -showrootbutton is
                                   true, and

                            [4]    for immediate children of the root item, the  treectrl  option
                                   -showrootchildbuttons is true.

                     -count numItems
                            Specifies the number of items to create. Must be >= 0. Defaults to 1.

                     -enabled boolean
                            Specifies whether the items should be enabled. Default is true.

                     -height height
                            Specifies   a  fixed  height  in  any  of  the  forms  acceptable  to
                            Tk_GetPixels.  Must be >= 0. If height is zero then the item's height
                            is  unspecified.   Defaults  to  0.   See  also  the  widget  options
                            -itemheight and -minitemheight.

                     -nextsibling itemDesc
                            Specifies the item before which the new items will be  inserted.  The
                            new items will have the same parent as itemDesc.

                     -open boolean
                            Specifies  whether  the  items  should  be open or closed. Default is
                            true.

                     -parent itemDesc
                            Specifies the item which the new items will be the children  of.  The
                            new items will be appended to the list of children of itemDesc.  When
                            no parent is specified, the new  items  are  orphan  items  (see  the
                            widget command orphans) and will not be displayed in the list.

                     -prevsibling itemDesc
                            Specifies  the  item  after which the new items will be inserted. The
                            new items will have the same parent as itemDesc.

                     -returnid boolean
                            Specifies whether or not to return a list of item identifiers for the
                            newly created items. Specifying false is useful when creating a large
                            number of items in the console or to improve performance. Default  is
                            true.

                     -tags tagList
                            TagList  is  a  list  of tag names to be added to the new items.  The
                            item tag command can also be used to manipulate this list of tags.

                     -visible boolean
                            Boolean must have one of the forms  accepted  by  Tcl_GetBoolean.  It
                            indicates  that  the  item  should be displayed in the list. The item
                            will only be displayed if:

                            [1]    each ancestor is  a  descendant  of  the  root  item  (not  an
                                   orphan), and

                            [2]    each ancestor's -visible option is true

                     -wrap boolean
                            Boolean  must  have  one  of the forms accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean. It
                            indicates that this item should be the  first  one  in  a  horizontal
                            range or vertical range of items. See also the widget option -wrap.

              pathName item delete first ?last?
                     Deletes   the  specified  item(s).   First  and  last  must  be  valid  item
                     descriptions.  If last isn't specified,  then  first  may  specify  multiple
                     items.   If  both  first  and  last  are specified, they must each decribe a
                     single item with a common ancestor; then the range of  items  between  first
                     and last is deleted.  The order of first and last doesn't matter.

                     Deleting  an  item  deletes any child items of the deleted item recursively.
                     If the current active item is deleted, the root item becomes the new  active
                     item.   If  the  current  selection  anchor  item  is deleted, the root item
                     becomes the new anchor item.  There is no way to delete the root item of the
                     treectrl widget; in all cases the specification of the root item is ignored.

                     For  each  call to this command, two events may be generated.  If any of the
                     deleted items are selected, then they are removed from the selection  and  a
                     <Selection>  event  is  generated just before the items are deleted.  If any
                     items are going to be deleted, then an <ItemDelete> event is generated  just
                     before the items are deleted.

              pathName item descendants itemDesc
                     Returns  a  list  containing  the  item  ids  of the descendants of the item
                     specified by itemDesc, i.e. the children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren
                     etc, of the item.

              pathName item dump itemDesc
                     Debug  command. Returns a list with 4 words in the form index index indexVis
                     indexVis.

              pathName item element command itemDesc column element ?arg ...?
                     This command is used to manipulate elements of the item.  The exact behavior
                     of  the  command  depends  on  the command argument that follows the element
                     argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

                     pathName item element actual itemDesc column element option
                            Deprecated. Use item element perstate instead.

                     pathName item element cget itemDesc column element option
                            This command returns the value of the option named option  associated
                            with  element  inside column of the item described by itemDesc, if it
                            was already configured for the actual item.  Option may have  any  of
                            the  values  accepted  by  the  type  of  the  specified element (see
                            ELEMENTS AND STYLES below)

                     pathName item element configure itemDesc  column  element  ?option?  ?value?
                     ?option value ...?
                            This  command  modifies  configuration  options  for  an element in a
                            column of an item.  If no option is specified, the command returns  a
                            list  describing  all  of  the available options for the element (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 the
                            element inside column of the item(s) described by itemDesc;  in  this
                            case the command returns an empty string. This is the only case where
                            itemDesc may refer to multiple items.

                            It is possible to configure multiple  elements  in  multiple  columns
                            with  a single call. To configure another element in the same column,
                            append a ´+' argument followed by  the  element  name.  To  configure
                            elements  in  another  column,  append a ',' argument followed by the
                            column.  For example:

                            .t item element configure $I \
                                                    $C1 $E1 -text "hello" + $E2 -text "world" , \
                                                    $C2 $E3 -fill Blue , \
                                                    $C3 $E1 -text "apples and oranges"

                            Each of the column description arguments to this command may refer to
                            multiple columns if at least one option-value pair is given.

                     pathName item element perstate itemDesc column element option ?stateList?
                            This  command returns the current value of the per-state option named
                            option for element inside column of the item described  by  itemDesc.
                            If  stateList  is  specified,  the  list  of  state names (static and
                            dynamic, see STATES) is used in place of the current state  for  item
                            and column.

              pathName item enabled itemDesc ?boolean?
                     Returns  1  if the item described by itemDesc has the state enabled switched
                     on, 0 otherwise. If boolean is specified, then the enabled  state  of  every
                     item  described  by  the  item description itemDesc is set accordingly.  New
                     items are  enabled  by  default  when  created.  Disabled  items  cannot  be
                     selected, and are ignored by the default key-navigation and mouse bindings.

              pathName item expand itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?
                     Switches on the open state of the item(s) described by itemDesc.  If an item
                     has descendants, then they are now displayed.  If an item is  already  open,
                     then  this  command  has  no effect on that item.  If -animate is specified,
                     then the item's button will animate as it transitions between states if  the
                     theme supports it; in this case only one item may be specified.  If -recurse
                     is specified, then all descendants of the items described by  itemDesc  will
                     also be expanded.  For every item that actually will be expanded, two events
                     are generated: an <Expand-before> event before the item  state  is  changed,
                     and an <Expand-after> event after the item state was changed.

              pathName item firstchild parent ?child?
                     If  child  is  not  specified, returns the item id of the first child of the
                     item described by parent.  If child is specified, it must describe  an  item
                     that  is  neither  the  root  item  nor an ancestor of parent.  Then it will
                     become the new first child of parent.

              pathName item id itemDesc
                     This command resolves the item description itemDesc into a  list  of  unique
                     item identifiers. If itemDesc doesn't refer to any existing items, then this
                     command returns an empty list.

              pathName item image itemDesc ?column? ?image? ?column image ...?
                     This command sets or retrieves the value of the per-state -image option  for
                     the  first image element in one or more columns.  If no column is specified,
                     this command returns a list of values, one  per  column.   If  no  image  is
                     specified, this command returns the value for column.

                     If one or more column-image pairs is specified, then the value of the -image
                     option in each column is set to image.  In this case itemDesc may  refer  to
                     multiple items and each column may refer to multiple columns.

                     Note  that  this  command is provided as a convenience. Use the item element
                     configure or item element cget commands if you want to set or  retrieve  the
                     value of the -image option for a specific image element.

              pathName item isancestor itemDesc descendant
                     Returns  1  if the item described by itemDesc is a direct or indirect parent
                     of the item decribed by descendant, 0 otherwise.

              pathName item isopen itemDesc
                     Returns 1 if the item described by itemDesc has the state open switched  on,
                     0 otherwise.

              pathName item lastchild parent ?child?
                     If child is not specified, returns the item id of the last child of the item
                     described by parent.  If child is specified, it must describe an  item  that
                     is  not  an  ancestor  of parent.  Then it will become the new last child of
                     parent.

              pathName item nextsibling sibling ?next?
                     If next is not specified, returns the item id of the  next  sibling  of  the
                     item  described  by sibling.  If next is specified, it must describe an item
                     that is not an ancestor of sibling.   Then  it  will  become  the  new  next
                     sibling of sibling.

              pathName item numchildren itemDesc
                     Returns the number of children of the item described by itemDesc.

              pathName item order itemDesc ?-visible?
                     This  command  returns  the  position  of  the item itemDesc relative to its
                     toplevel ancestor (usually the root item, unless the ancestor is an orphan).
                     If  you  imagine all the items flattened into a vertical list, the result of
                     this command is the row the item falls in. If the optional argument -visible
                     is  given,  only  the items whose ancestors are expanded, and whose -visible
                     option is true, get counted; in this case -1 is returned if the item is  not
                     visible.

              pathName item parent itemDesc
                     Returns the item id of the parent of the item described by itemDesc.

              pathName item prevsibling sibling ?prev?
                     If prev is not specified, returns the item id of the previous sibling of the
                     item described by sibling.  If prev is specified, it must describe  an  item
                     that  is  not  an ancestor of sibling.  Then it will become the new previous
                     sibling of sibling.

              pathName item range first last
                     Returns a list containing the item ids of all items  in  the  range  between
                     first and last, inclusive.  The order between first and last doesn't matter,
                     and the result is always sorted by the increasing order  of  the  items  (as
                     returned  by the item order command).  The items specified by first and last
                     must share a common ancestor.

              pathName item remove itemDesc
                     Removes the item described by itemDesc from the  list  of  children  of  its
                     parent, so that it will become an orphan.

              pathName item rnc itemDesc
                     Returns  a  list of two integers, which corresponds to the row and column of
                     the item described by itemDesc. The row and column corresponds  to  the  on-
                     screen  arrangement of items as determined by the -orient and -wrap options.
                     If the item is not displayed, this command returns an empty string.

              pathName item sort itemDesc ?option ...?
                     Sorts the children of the item described by  itemDesc,  and  redisplays  the
                     tree with the items in the new order.

                     The  range of items which should be sorted can be restricted by means of the
                     -first and/or -last options, which should be children of the item  described
                     by itemDesc; the order between these two limiting items doesn't matter.

                     The sort column can be specified by means of the -column option; this option
                     can be used repeatedly to define a multicolumn sort.  The sorting is done by
                     looking  at  the text of the element specified by the -element option, which
                     must be a text element defined in  the  style  of  the  sorting  column,  by
                     default the first text element is used.

                     If  the -notreally option is specified, no rearranging of the items is done;
                     instead the sorted items are returned as result of the command.

                     By default ASCII sorting is used with  the  result  returned  in  increasing
                     order.  Any of the following options may be specified to control the sorting
                     process  of  the  previously  specified  column  (unique  abbreviations  are
                     accepted):

                     -ascii Use  string  comparison  with  ASCII  collation  order.  This  is the
                            default.

                     -command command
                            Use command as a comparison command.  To compare two items,  evaluate
                            a  Tcl script consisting of command with the numerical ids of the two
                            items appended as additional arguments.  The script should return  an
                            integer  less  than, equal to, or greater than zero if the first item
                            is to be considered less than, equal to, or greater than the  second,
                            respectively.

                     -decreasing
                            Sort the items in decreasing order ("largest" items first).

                     -dictionary
                            Use  dictionary-style  comparison.  This is the same as -ascii except
                            (a) case is ignored except as a tie-breaker and (b)  if  two  strings
                            contain  embedded  numbers,  the  numbers  compare  as  integers, not
                            characters.  For example, in -dictionary mode, bigBoy  sorts  between
                            bigbang and bigboy, and x10y sorts between x9y and x11y.

                     -increasing
                            Sort  the items in increasing order ("smallest" items first). This is
                            the default.

                     -integer
                            Convert to integers and use integer comparison.

                     -real  Convert to floating-point values and use floating comparison.

              pathName item span itemDesc ?column? ?numColumns? ?column numColumns ...?
                     This command sets or retrieves the number of columns that  a  style  covers.
                     If  no  column  is  specified,  the return value is a list of spans, one per
                     column.  If no numColumns is specified, the return value  is  the  span  for
                     column.

                     If  one  or  more  column-numColumns  pairs  is specified, the span for each
                     column is set to numColumns. In this case itemDesc  may  refer  to  multiple
                     items and each column may refer to multiple columns.

              pathName item state command itemDesc ?arg ...?
                     This  command  is  used  to  manipulate  the  states  of an item.  The exact
                     behavior of the command depends on the command  argument  that  follows  the
                     style argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

                     pathName item state define stateName
                            Defines  a  new  state with the name stateName, which must not be the
                            name of an existing state.

                     pathName item state forcolumn itemDesc column ?stateDescList?
                            Just like item state set but manipulates dynamic states for a  single
                            item   column,   not  the  item  as  a  whole.  If  stateDescList  is
                            unspecified, this command returns a list containing the names of  all
                            the dynamic states which are switched on in column.

                            If  stateDescList  is  specified, then itemDesc may refer to multiple
                            items and column may refer to multiple columns.

                     pathName item state get itemDesc ?stateName?
                            If no stateName is specified, returns a list containing the names  of
                            all  (static  and dynamic) states which are currently switched on for
                            the item described by itemDesc.  If a stateName is  specified,  1  is
                            returned  if  the  specified  state  is currently switched on for the
                            item, 0 otherwise.

                     pathName item state linkage stateName
                            Returns a string indicating whether  the  specified  state  is  user-
                            defined by means of the item state define widget command (dynamic) or
                            predefined by the treectrl widget itself (static).

                     pathName item state names
                            Returns a list containing the names of all user-defined states.

                     pathName item state set itemDesc ?lastItem? stateDescList
                            Every element of stateDescList must be the name of  a  dynamic  state
                            (see STATES below), optionally preceded by a ~ or ! character.  Every
                            state with a leading ! will be switched off for the item described by
                            itemDesc,  every  state  with  a leading ~ will be toggled, and every
                            state without leading ! or ~ will be switched  on.   If  lastItem  is
                            specified,  the state changes will be made for all items in the range
                            between itemDesc and lastItem.  If  lastItem  unspecified,  then  the
                            state changes are made for all items described by itemDesc.

                     pathName item state undefine ?stateName ...?
                            Every  stateName  must  be the name of a user-defined state.  Removes
                            this state from the list of user-defined states.

              pathName item style command itemDesc ?arg ...?
                     This command is used to  manipulate  the  styles  of  an  item.   The  exact
                     behavior  of  the  command  depends on the command argument that follows the
                     style argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

                     pathName item style elements itemDesc column
                            This command returns a list containing the names  of  elements  which
                            were  configured  by  the item element configure command for the item
                            described by itemDesc in column. If there is  no  style  assigned  to
                            column an error is returned.

                     pathName item style map itemDesc column style map
                            Like the item style set command, this command may be used to assign a
                            style to a specific column of an item. Unlike item  style  set,  this
                            command  can transfer configuration values of elements in the current
                            style to elements in the new style specified by style.  Map must be a
                            list  of  elementOld-elementNew pairs, where elementOld is an element
                            in the current style, and elementNew  is  an  element  in  the  style
                            specified  by  style.  Both  elementOld and elementNew must be of the
                            same type (bitmap, text etc).  ItemDesc may refer to  multiple  items
                            and column may refer to multiple columns.

                     pathName item style set itemDesc ?column? ?style? ?column style ...?
                            This  command  sets  or  retrieves  the style assigned to one or more
                            columns.  If no column is specified,  this  command  returns  a  list
                            containing  the  names  of the styles set for all columns of the item
                            described by itemDesc.   If  no  style  is  specified,  this  command
                            returns  the name of the style set for the item described by itemDesc
                            in column.

                            If one or more column-style pairs is specified,  then  the  style  in
                            each  column  is  set  to  style.  In this case itemDesc may refer to
                            multiple items and each column may refer to multiple columns.

              pathName item tag option ?arg arg ...?
                     This command is used to manipulate tags on items.  The exact behavior of the
                     command  depends  on the option argument that follows the item tag argument.
                     The following forms of the command are supported:

                     pathName item tag add itemDesc tagList
                            Adds each  tag  in  tagList  to  the  items  specified  by  the  item
                            description  itemDesc.   Duplicate tags are ignored. The list of tags
                            for an item can also be changed via an item's -tags option.

                     pathName item tag expr itemDesc tagExpr
                            Evaluates the tag expression tagExpr against every item specified  by
                            the  item description itemDesc. The result is 1 if the tag expression
                            evaluates to true for every item, 0 otherwise.

                     pathName item tag names itemDesc
                            Returns a list of tag names assigned to the items  specified  by  the
                            item  description  itemDesc.  The  result  is  the  union of any tags
                            assigned to the items.

                     pathName item tag remove itemDesc tagList
                            Removes each tag in tagList from the  items  specified  by  the  item
                            description  itemDesc.  It is not an error if any of the items do not
                            use any of the tags.  The list of  tags  for  an  item  can  also  be
                            changed via an item's -tags option.

              pathName item text itemDesc ?column? ?text? ?column text ...?
                     This  command  sets or retrieves the value of the -text option for the first
                     text element in one or more  columns.   If  no  column  is  specified,  this
                     command  returns a list of values, one per column.  If no text is specified,
                     this command returns the value for column.

                     If one or more column-text pairs is specified, then the value of  the  -text
                     option  in  each  column is set to text.  In this case itemDesc may refer to
                     multiple items and each column may refer to multiple columns.

                     Note that this command is provided as a convenience. Use  the  item  element
                     configure  or  item element cget commands if you want to set or retrieve the
                     value of the -text option for a specific text element.

              pathName item toggle itemDesc ?-animate? ?-recurse?
                     Changes the open state of the item(s) described by itemDesc.   If  the  open
                     state is currently switched off, then this command does the same as the item
                     expand widget command; otherwise  the  same  as  the  item  collapse  widget
                     command.   If  -animate is specified, then the item's button will animate as
                     it transitions between states if the theme supports it; in  this  case  only
                     one item may be specified.  If -recurse is specified, then the open state of
                     all descendants of the items described by itemDesc will also be toggled.

       pathName marquee option ?arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate the marquee, which can be used  to  implement  a
              resizable  selection rectangle, in a file browser for example.  One corner point of
              the marquee is fixed as long as the marquee is visible and called the  anchor;  the
              diagonally opposite corner is dragged with the mouse while resizing the marquee and
              simply called the corner.

              All coordinates handled by this widget command are  canvas  coordinates,  i.e.  the
              canvasx or canvasy widget command should be used to translate window coordinates to
              canvas coordinates.

              By default, the marquee is displayed as  a  1-pixel  thick  dotted  rectangle.   If
              either  of the -fill or -outline options is specified, then the marquee is drawn as
              a filled and/or outlined rectangle of the specified color(s).   The   -fill  option
              should  specify  a transparent gradient to avoid hiding what is inside the marquee.
              See GRADIENTS for more info.

              The exact behavior of the command depends on the option argument that  follows  the
              marquee argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName marquee anchor ?x y?
                     Returns  a  list  containing  the  x  and y coordinates of the anchor, if no
                     additional arguments are specified.  If two coordinates are specified,  sets
                     the anchor to the given coordinates x and y.

              pathName marquee cget option
                     This  command  returns the current value of the marquee option named option.
                     Option may have any of the values accepted by the marquee  configure  widget
                     command.

              pathName marquee configure ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This  command  is  similar  to  the  configure widget command except that it
                     modifies the marquee options instead of modifying options  for  the  overall
                     treectrl  widget.   If  no  option  is specified, the command returns a list
                     describing all of the available marquee options  (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  marquee
                     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 marquee option(s)
                     to have the given value(s); in  this  case  the  command  returns  an  empty
                     string.

                     The following marquee options are supported:

                     -fill color
                            Specifies  the  color  to  fill  the marquee rectangle with.  See the
                            comments above about using a transparent gradient here.

                     -outline color
                            Specifies the color to outline the marquee rectangle with.

                     -outlinewidth color
                            Specifies the  width  of  the  outline  drawn  inside  the  marquee's
                            rectangle.   The  outline  is not drawn if this value is less than 1.
                            This option has no effect if  the  -outline  option  is  unspecified,
                            i.e.,  the  default  dotted  rectangle  is unaffected by this option.
                            outlineWidth may be in any of the forms acceptable  to  Tk_GetPixels.
                            Defaults to 1.

                     -visible boolean
                            Specifies  a  boolean  value  which determines whether the marquee is
                            displayed.

              pathName marquee coords ?x1 y1 x2 y2?
                     Returns a list containing the x and y coordinates of the anchor followed  by
                     the  x  and  y  coordinates  of  the  corner, if no additional arguments are
                     specified.  If four coordinates are specified, sets the anchor to the  given
                     coordinates x1 and y1 and the corner to the coordinates x2 and y2.

              pathName marquee corner ?x y?
                     Returns  a  list  containing  the  x  and y coordinates of the corner, if no
                     additional arguments are specified.  If two coordinates are specified,  sets
                     the corner to the given coordinates x and y.

              pathName marquee identify
                     Returns  a  list  with information about any items intersecting the marquee.
                     The format of the returned list is:

                     {
                         {item {column element element ...} {column element element ...} ...}
                         {item {column element element ...} {column element element ...} ...}
                         ...
                     }

                     There may be zero sublists following an item id if the  marquee  is  in  the
                     button/line  area  of  an  item. There may be zero element names following a
                     column id if the item-column has  no  style  or  if  the  marquee  does  not
                     intersect any elements in that column.

       pathName notify option ?arg ...?
              Many  Tk  widgets  communicate with the outside world via -command callbacks and/or
              virtual events. For example, the Text widget evaluates its -yscrollcommand when the
              view in the widget changes, and generates a <<Modified>> virtual event when text is
              inserted or deleted.  A treectrl widget replaces both methods of communication with
              its own event mechanism accessed through the notify subcommands.

              The  exact  behavior of the command depends on the option argument that follows the
              notify argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName notify bind ?object? ?pattern? ?+??script?
                     This command associates Tcl scripts with  events  generated  by  a  treectrl
                     widget.   If all three arguments are specified, notify bind will arrange for
                     script (a Tcl script) to be evaluated whenever  the  event(s)  specified  by
                     pattern are generated by this treectrl widget.  If script is prefixed with a
                     "+", then it is appended to any existing  binding  for  pattern;   otherwise
                     script replaces any existing binding.  If script is an empty string then the
                     current binding for pattern is destroyed, leaving pattern unbound. In all of
                     the  cases where a script argument is provided, notify bind returns an empty
                     string.

                     If pattern is specified without a script, then the script currently bound to
                     pattern  is  returned, or an empty string is returned if there is no binding
                     for pattern. If neither pattern nor script is  specified,  then  the  return
                     value  is  a  list whose elements are all the patterns for which there exist
                     bindings for object.

                     The object argument determines which window(s) the binding applies  to.   If
                     object  begins with a dot, as in .a.b.c, then it must be the path name for a
                     window; otherwise it may be an  arbitrary  string.  Like  the  regular  bind
                     command,  bindings  on window names are automatically removed if that window
                     is destroyed.

              pathName notify configure object pattern ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This command sets and retrieves options for bindings created by  the  notify
                     bind command.

                     If  no  option  is  specified,  the command returns a list with option-value
                     pairs describing all the available binding options for  pattern  on  object.
                     If  option  is specified with no value, then the command returns the current
                     value of that option.  If one or more option-value pairs are specified, then
                     the  command modifies the given option(s) to have the given value(s) for the
                     binding; in this case the command returns an empty string.

                     The following binding options are supported:

                     -active boolean
                            Specifies if the binding should be active.  As long as this option is
                            specified  as  false, a binding script will not be evaluated when the
                            corresponding event is generated.

              pathName notify detailnames eventName
                     Returns a list containing the names of all details, which are installed  for
                     the  event  with  the  name  eventName by means of the notify install widget
                     command or by the treectrl widget itself.

              pathName notify eventnames
                     Returns a list containing the names of all events, which  are  installed  by
                     means of the notify install widget command or by the treectrl widget itself.

              pathName notify generate pattern ?charMap? ?percentsCommand?
                     This  command  causes the treectrl widget to generate an event. This command
                     is typically used to generate dynamic events created by the  notify  install
                     command,  but  may  be  used  to  generate  static  events  also.  The event
                     specified by pattern is generated, and any active  binding  scripts  on  the
                     event  are  evaluated after undergoing %-substitution.  If there are details
                     defined for the event, pattern must  describe  an  <eventName-detail>  pair,
                     otherwise pattern should be <eventName>.

                     The  optional  charMap is a list of char-value pairs as in the form returned
                     by array get.  Each char has to be exactly one character.   The  charMap  is
                     used in %-substitution.

                     If   percentsCommand   is  specified,  then  it  will  be  used  to  perform
                     %-substitution on any scripts bound to the event. If percentsCommand is  not
                     specified and the event is dynamic, then the %-subtitution command passed to
                     notify install will be used if it was provided. If the event is static or no
                     %-substitution  command  is available, then all %-substitution is done using
                     charMap only .  See notify install for a description of percentsCommand.

              pathName notify install pattern ?percentsCommand?
                     This command installs a new event or detail specified  by  pattern.   Events
                     created  by  this  command are called dynamic, whereas events created by the
                     treectrl widget itself are called static.  This command may be called to set
                     or retrieve the percentsCommand for an existing dynamic event.

                     The optional percentsCommand is a list containing the name of a Tcl command,
                     plus any optional arguments, to which  five  additional  arguments  will  be
                     appended.  The  command  will  be  called  to  perform %-substitution on any
                     scripts bound to the event specified  by  pattern  (see  EVENTS  AND  SCRIPT
                     SUBSTITUTIONS).  PercentsCommand should be defined as follows:

                     proc percentsCommand {?arg arg ...? char object event detail charMap} {
                                             switch -- $char {
                                             ...
                                             }
                                             return $value
                     }

                     The  optional  arg  arguments are part of the percentsCommand list.  Char is
                     the %-character to be substituted. Object is the same  as  the  argument  to
                     notify  bind. Event and detail specify the event. CharMap is the same as the
                     argument to notify generate.  PercentsCommand should  return  the  value  to
                     replace  the %-character by.  If an error occurs evaluating percentsCommand,
                     the %-character is replaced by itself.

                     notify install returns the current percentsCommand  for  the  event,  or  an
                     error if the event is not dynamic.

              pathName notify install detail eventName detail ?percentsCommand?
                     Deprecated.   Use  notify  install  with  a  pattern  of  <eventName-detail>
                     instead.

              pathName notify install event eventName ?percentsCommand?
                     Deprecated.  Use notify install with a pattern of <eventName> instead.

              pathName notify linkage pattern
                     Returns a string indicating whether the specified event or detail is created
                     by  means  of the notify install widget command (dynamic) or by the treectrl
                     widget itself (static).

              pathName notify linkage eventName ?detail?
                     Deprecated.  Use notify linkage with a pattern of <eventName> or <eventName-
                     detail> instead.

              pathName notify unbind object ?pattern?
                     If  no pattern is specified, all bindings on object are removed.  If pattern
                     is specified, then the current binding for  pattern  is  destroyed,  leaving
                     pattern unbound.

              pathName notify uninstall pattern
                     If  the  event or detail specified by pattern is static (i.e. created by the
                     treectrl widget itself), an error is generated.  Otherwise the dynamic event
                     or  detail  is  removed. If an event name is specified without a detail, all
                     details for that event are also removed.

              pathName notify uninstall detail eventName detail
                     Deprecated.  Use notify  uninstall  with  a  pattern  of  <eventName-detail>
                     instead.

              pathName notify uninstall event eventName
                     Deprecated.  Use notify uninstall with a pattern of <eventName> instead.

       pathName numcolumns
              Deprecated. Use the column count command instead.

       pathName numitems
              Deprecated. Use the item count command instead.

       pathName orphans
              Returns  a list containing the item ids of all items which have no parent.  When an
              item is created, it has no parent by default, and can later  become  an  orphan  by
              means of the item remove widget command. The root item is not returned.

       pathName range first last
              Deprecated. Use the item range command instead.

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

              pathName scan mark x y
                     Records x and y and the treectrl's current view;  used in  conjunction  with
                     later  scan  dragto  commands.  Typically  this command is associated with a
                     mouse button press in the widget and x and y  are  the  coordinates  of  the
                     mouse. It returns an empty string.

              pathName scan dragto x y ?gain?
                     This  command  computes  the difference between its x and y arguments (which
                     are typically mouse coordinates) and the x and y arguments to the last  scan
                     mark  command  for  the  widget.  It then adjusts the view by gain times the
                     difference in coordinates, where  gain  defaults  to  10.  This  command  is
                     typically  associated with mouse motion events in the widget, to produce the
                     effect of dragging the treectrl at  high  speed  through  its  window.   The
                     return value is an empty string.

       pathName see itemDesc ?columnDesc? ?option value ...?
              Adjust  the view in the treectrl so that the item described by itemDesc is visible.
              If the item is already visible then  the  command  has  no  effect;  otherwise  the
              treectrl  scrolls  to  bring  the  item into view, and the corresponding <Scroll-x>
              and/or <Scroll-y> events are generated. If columnDesc is specified then a  specific
              column of the item is scrolled into view instead of the entire item.

              The following options are supported:

              -center flags
                     Flags  is a string that contains zero or more of the characters x or y. This
                     option is used to center the item  horizontally  and/or  vertically  in  the
                     window.   The  item  will  be  centered  regardless of whether it is already
                     visible.

       pathName selection option args
              This command is used to adjust the selection within a  treectrl.   It  has  several
              forms, depending on option:

              pathName selection add first ?last?
                     First and last (if specified) must be valid item descriptions. If both first
                     and last are specified, then they may refer to a single item only;  in  this
                     case  the  command adds every unselected item in the range between first and
                     last, inclusive, to the selection without affecting the  selected  state  of
                     items outside that range.  If only first is specified, then every unselected
                     item specified by first is added to the selection.  A <Selection>  event  is
                     generated if any items were added to the selection.

              pathName selection anchor ?itemDesc?
                     If itemDesc is specified, the selection anchor is set to the described item.
                     The selection anchor is the  end  of  the  selection  that  is  fixed  while
                     dragging out a selection with the mouse.  The item description anchor may be
                     used to refer to the anchor item.  This command doesn't modify the selection
                     state of any item.  Returns the unique id of the selection anchor item.

              pathName selection clear ?first? ?last?
                     First and last (if specified) must be valid item descriptions. If both first
                     and last are specified, then they may refer to a single item only;  in  this
                     case  any selected items between first and last (inclusive) are removed from
                     the selection without affecting the selected state  of  items  outside  that
                     range.   If  only  first is specified, then every selected item specified by
                     first is removed  from  the  selection.   If  neither  first  nor  last  are
                     specified,  then  all  selected  items  are  removed  from the selection.  A
                     <Selection> event is generated if any items were removed from the selection.

              pathName selection count
                     Returns an integer indicating the number of items in the treectrl  that  are
                     currently selected.

              pathName selection get ?first? ?last?
                     When  no  additional  arguments  are  given,  the result is an unsorted list
                     containing the item ids of all  of  the  items  in  the  treectrl  that  are
                     currently selected.  If there are no items selected in the treectrl, then an
                     empty string is returned.  The optional arguments first and last are treated
                     as indices into the sorted list of selected items; these arguments allow in-
                     place lindex and lrange operations on the selection. For example:

                     .t selection get 0       ; # return the first selected item
                     .t selection get end     ; # return the last selected item
                     .t selection get 1 end-1 ; # return every selected item except the first and last

              pathName selection includes itemDesc
                     Returns 1 if the item described by itemDesc is currently selected, 0  if  it
                     isn't.

              pathName selection modify select deselect
                     Both  arguments  select  and  deselect  are  a  possibly-empty  list of item
                     descriptions.  Any unselected items in select are added  to  the  selection,
                     and  any  selected  items in deselect are removed from the selection (except
                     for those items which are also in select).  A <Selection> event is generated
                     if any items were selected or deselected.

       pathName state option args
              This  command  is  used  to  manipulate  the  list of user-defined item states, see
              section STATES below.  Item states  can  also  be  managed  using  the  item  state
              command.   To  manage  states for header-rows, use the header state widget command.
              The exact behavior of the command depends on the option argument that  follows  the
              state argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName state define stateName
                     Defines  a  new state with the name stateName, which must not be the name of
                     an existing state.

              pathName state linkage stateName
                     Returns a string indicating whether the specified state is  user-defined  by
                     means  of  the  state  define  widget command (dynamic) or predefined by the
                     treectrl widget itself (static).

              pathName state names
                     Returns a list containing the names of all user-defined states.

              pathName state undefine ?stateName ...?
                     Every stateName must be the name of  a  user-defined  state.   Removes  this
                     state from the list of user-defined states.

       pathName style option ?element? ?arg arg ...?
              This  command  is  used to manipulate styles, which can be thought of as a geometry
              manager for elements.  The exact behavior of the  command  depends  on  the  option
              argument  that  follows the style argument.  The following forms of the command are
              supported:

              pathName style cget style option
                     This command returns the current value of the option named option associated
                     with  the  style given by style.  Option may have any of the values accepted
                     by the style configure widget command.

                     This command also accepts the -statedomain option.

              pathName style configure style ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This command is similar to the  configure  widget  command  except  that  it
                     modifies  options  associated  with  the  style  given  by  style instead of
                     modifying options  for  the  overall  treectrl  widget.   If  no  option  is
                     specified,  the  command  returns  a  list  describing  all of the available
                     options for style (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 style; in this case the
                     command returns an empty string.

                     The following options are supported:

                     -buttony offset
                            Specifies  the  distance  from  the  top  of  the   item   that   the
                            expand/collapse button should be drawn.  If offset is an empty string
                            (the default) then the button is centered  vertically  in  the  item.
                            The value may have any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  This
                            option only has effect when the style is set in an item in  the  tree
                            column.

                     -orient varName
                            This  option  specifies  which orientation should be used when laying
                            out  the  elements  associated  with  this  style.   Must  be  either
                            horizontal  (the  default)  or  vertical or an abbreviation of one of
                            these.

              pathName style create name ?option value ...?
                     Creates a new style with the unique  user-defined  name  name.   After  name
                     there may be any number of option-value pairs, each of which sets one of the
                     configuration options for the style.  See the style  configure  command  for
                     the  possible  options.   The  result of this command is the name of the new
                     style (the same as the name option).

                     This command also accepts the -statedomain option with  a  value  of  either
                     header or item to specify where this style will be displayed.

              pathName style delete ?style ...?
                     Deletes each of the named styles and returns an empty string.  If a style is
                     deleted while it is still used to display one or  more  items,  it  is  also
                     removed from the style list of these items.

              pathName style elements style ?elementList?
                     Specifies  the  elements  which  should  be  layed  out by this style.  Each
                     element of elementList must be the name of an element created by the  widget
                     command  element  create.   Duplicate  names in elementList are ignored.  An
                     element which was specified in a former call of this command for  style  but
                     is  not included in elementList, will be deleted from the elements layed out
                     by style.

                     Every element used by a style must have been created with the same value for
                     the -statedomain option.

                     If  the elementList argument is not specified, a list is returned containing
                     the currently defined elements of style.

              pathName style layout style element ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This command is similar to the  configure  widget  command  except  that  it
                     modifies  options  used by style for laying out element instead of modifying
                     options for the overall treectrl widget.  If no  option  is  specified,  the
                     command  returns  a  list  with  option-value  pairs  describing  all of the
                     available options for the layout.  If option is  specified  with  no  value,
                     then  the  command  returns  the  value of the named option.  If one or more
                     option-value pairs are  specified,  then  the  command  modifies  the  given
                     option(s)  to  have  the  given  value(s)  for  the layout; in this case the
                     command returns an empty string.

                     The options of a layout have effect  on  exactly  the  one  element  element
                     managed by style.  The following options are supported:

                     -detach boolean
                            Specifies  whether  the  element should be positioned by itself, i.e.
                            independent from the other elements.  The default is false.

                     -center flags
                            Flags is a string that contains zero or more of the characters  x  or
                            y.   x  causes  the element to be centered horizontally, y causes the
                            element to be centered vertically.  When more than  one  element  has
                            -center  layout,  all  the  elements  between the first and last with
                            -center layout in the style's list of  elements  are  centered  as  a
                            group.   Consider  the following when there is another element to the
                            right of MyElement:

                            .t style layout MyStyle MyElement -expand we
                            .t style layout MyStyle MyElement -center x

                            With the first call, MyElement will be centered only within the space
                            that  is  not occupied by the other element, so MyElement will appear
                            off-center towards the left of the  style.   With  the  second  call,
                            MyElement  will  be  centered  within the style so long as it doesn't
                            overlap the other element.

                     -draw boolean
                            This is a per-state option that determines whether an element  should
                            be  drawn.  If the value of the option evaluates to false for a given
                            item state, then the element is not drawn, although it still consumes
                            space in the layout.

                     -expand flags
                            This  option  allows  the  external  padding  around  the  element to
                            increase when a style has more screen space than it needs.  Flags  is
                            a  string  that contains zero or more of the characters n, s, w or e.
                            Each letter refers to the padding on the top, bottom, left, or  right
                            that should be allowed to increase.  This option is typically used to
                            justify an element.  The default is an empty string.

                     -iexpand flags
                            This option allows the  internal  padding  of  the  element  and  the
                            display  area of the element to increase when a style has more screen
                            space than it needs.  Flags  is a string that contains zero  or  more
                            of the characters x, y, n, s, w or e.  For n, s, w and e, each letter
                            refers to the padding on the top, bottom, left, or right that  should
                            be  allowed  to  increase.   For  x  and y, each letter refers to the
                            horizontal and vertical screen space the element can  display  itself
                            in  (i.e.,  the  space  between the padding). Note that if the -union
                            option is specified for this element, then the x and y flags have  no
                            effect, since the size of an element with -union layout is determined
                            by the elements it surrounds.  The default is an empty string.

                     -indent boolean
                            For item styles, this option specifies whether the element should  be
                            positioned  to  the right of the button/line area in the tree column.
                            When false, the element is displayed beneath the buttons and lines in
                            the  tree column. This option is ignored unless the -detach option is
                            true.

                            For header styles, this option specifies whether the  element  should
                            be  positioned  to the right of the -canvaspadx padding.  This option
                            is ignored unless the -detach option is true or the -union option  is
                            specified.

                            The default is true.

                     -ipadx amount

                     -ipady amount
                            Amount  specifies  how much internal padding to leave on the left and
                            right (for -ipadx) or top  and  bottom  (for  -ipady)  sides  of  the
                            element.  Amount  may  be a list of two values to specify padding for
                            the two sides separately.  The default value is 0.   This  option  is
                            typically  used with the -union layout option, to create space around
                            the enclosed elements.

                     -minheight pixels

                     -height pixels

                     -maxheight pixels
                            Specifies the minimum, fixed, and maximum height of the display  area
                            of the element.  The default is unspecified.

                     -minwidth pixels

                     -width pixels

                     -maxwidth pixels
                            Specifies  the  minimum, fixed, and maximum width of the display area
                            of the element.  The default is unspecified.

                     -padx amount

                     -pady amount
                            Amount specifies how much external padding to leave on the  left  and
                            right (for -padx) or top and bottom (for -pady) sides of the element.
                            Amount may be a list of two values to specify  padding  for  the  two
                            sides separately.  The default value is 0.

                     -squeeze flags
                            This  option allows the display area of an element to decrease when a
                            style has less space than it needs.  Flags is a string that  contains
                            zero  or  more  of  the  characters x or y.  x allows display area to
                            decrease horizontally, y allows display area to decrease  vertically.
                            This  option  is  typically used for text elements and will cause the
                            text element to display an ellipsis (...)  and/or  wrap  lines.   The
                            default is an empty string.

                     -sticky flags
                            This option controls how the actual display information (image, text,
                            etc) of an element is positioned (or stretched)  within  its  display
                            area.  Flags is a string that contains zero or more of the characters
                            n, s, w or e. Each letter refers to the top, bottom,  left  or  right
                            side  of the display area that the display information should "stick"
                            to.  The default is nswe.

                     -union elementList
                            Specifies a list of other elements which this element will  surround.
                            The  size  of an element with -union layout is determined by the size
                            and position of the elements in elementList.  The -ipadx  and  -ipady
                            options  in  this  case  refer  to  the  distance of the edges of the
                            display area of this element from those elements it  surrounds.  This
                            option  is  typically  used to display a selection rectangle around a
                            piece of text. If none of the elements in  elementList  are  visible,
                            then the element is not displayed.

                     -visible boolean
                            This is a per-state option that controls visibility of an element. If
                            the value of the option evaluates to false for a  given  item  state,
                            then  the  element  is  not  displayed  and  consumes no space in the
                            layout.

              pathName style names
                     Returns a list containing the names of all existing styles.

       pathName theme option ?arg ...?
              This command is used to interact  with  the  platform-specific  theme.   The  exact
              behavior  of  the  command  depends  on  the option argument that follows the theme
              argument.  The following forms of the command are supported:

              pathName theme platform
                     Returns the API used to draw themed parts of the treectrl.  On Mac OS X  the
                     result  is  always  aqua.   On  MS Windows the result is visualstyles if the
                     uxtheme.dll was loaded and visual  themes  are  in  use,  otherwise  X11  is
                     returned  to  indicate  the  Tk Xlib calls are drawing the themed parts.  On
                     Unix systems the result is gtk if the Gtk+ version of  treectrl  was  built,
                     otherwise X11 is returned.

              pathName theme setwindowtheme appname
                     The  command is available on MS Windows only.  If appname is "Explorer" then
                     the item buttons look like those in the Explorer  file  browser  (disclosure
                     triangles  under  Windows  Vista/7).  If appname is an empty string then the
                     buttons revert to their default appearance according to the system's current
                     visual style.

       pathName toggle ?-recurse? ?itemDesc ...?
              Use item toggle instead.

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

              pathName xview moveto fraction
                     Adjusts the view in the window so that fraction of the total  width  of  the
                     tree  is  off-screen to the left.  Fraction must be a fraction between 0 and
                     1.  A <Scroll-x> event is generated.

              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  in  units  determined  by  the -xscrollincrement option (which may be
                     zero, see the description of that option).  If what is pages then  the  view
                     adjusts  in  units of nine-tenths the window's width.  If number is negative
                     then information farther to the left becomes visible;   if  it  is  positive
                     then  information  farther to the right becomes visible.  A <Scroll-x> event
                     is generated.

       pathName yview ?args?
              This command is used to query and change the vertical position of  the  information
              displayed in the treectrl's window.  It can take any of the following forms:

              pathName yview
                     Returns  a  list  containing  two elements.  Each element is a real fraction
                     between 0 and 1;  together they describe the vertical span that  is  visible
                     in  the  window.   For  example,  if  the first element is .6 and the second
                     element is 1.0, the lowest 40% of the tree's area is visible in the  window.
                     These  are  the  same  values  passed  to scrollbars via the -yscrollcommand
                     option.

              pathName yview moveto fraction
                     Adjusts the view in the window so that fraction of the tree's area  is  off-
                     screen  to  the  top.  Fraction is a fraction between 0 and 1.  A <Scroll-y>
                     event is generated.

              pathName yview scroll number what
                     This command adjusts the view in the window up or down according  to  number
                     and  what.   Number must be an integer.  What must be either units or pages.
                     If  what  is  units,  the  view  adjusts  up  or  down  in  units   of   the
                     -yscrollincrement  option  (which  may  be zero, see the description of that
                     option).  If what is pages then the view adjusts in units of nine-tenths the
                     window's  height.   If  number  is  negative then higher information becomes
                     visible;  if it is positive  then  lower  information  becomes  visible.   A
                     <Scroll-y> event is generated.

HEADERS

       A treectrl widget can display zero or more rows of column headers.  When a treectrl widget
       is created, a single row of column headers (aka a header-row) is created as well; this top
       header-row  cannot  be  deleted.   Additional  header-rows  can be created with the header
       create command and deleted with header delete.

       There are no commands for changing the order of header-rows;  they are displayed from  top
       to bottom in the order they were created.

       Drag-and-drop  reordering  of  column  headers  is  supported within a widget.  To control
       column header drag-and-drop, use the header dragconfigure command.

       Header-rows in a treectrl may be specified in a number of ways.   See  HEADER  DESCRIPTION
       below.

       The  appearance  of individual column headers within a header-row may be customized in two
       different ways:

       [1]    By configuring various column header options with the header configure command

       [2]    By assigning a style to a column header with the header style command.

       When one of the options below is  specified  as  per-state,  the  state  names  are  those
       described in STATES for headers only, i.e. do not use item state names.

       The following options are supported for each individual column header:

       -arrow direction
              Indicates  whether  or  not  a  sort  arrow  should  be drawn in the column header.
              Direction must have one of the values none (the default), up, or down.

       -arrowbitmap bitmap
              Specifies as a per-state option the name of a bitmap to use to draw  the  arrow  if
              this column's -arrow option is not none.

       -arrowgravity direction
              Indicates  onto  which side the sort arrow should be packed, if there is more space
              available for drawing the arrow then needed.  direction must be  either  left  (the
              default) or right.

       -arrowimage image
              Specifies  as a per-state option the name of an image to use to draw the sort arrow
              if this column's -arrow option is not none.  If an image is specified for a certain
              state, it overrides the -arrowbitmap option.

       -arrowpadx amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the left and right of the sort arrow.
              Amount may be a  list  of  two  values  to  specify  padding  for  left  and  right
              separately; it defaults to 6.

       -arrowpady amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the top and bottom of the sort arrow.
              Amount may be a  list  of  two  values  to  specify  padding  for  top  and  bottom
              separately; it defaults to 0.

       -arrowside side
              Indicates  on  which  side of the bitmap/image/text the sort arrow should be drawn.
              Side must be either left or right (the default).

       -bitmap bitmap
              Specifies the name of a bitmap to display to the left of the column title.

       -background color
              Specifies as a per-state option the color to use for the background of  the  column
              header.

       -borderwidth size
              Specifies  a  non-negative  value  indicating  the  width of the 3-D border to draw
              around the outside of the column header (if such a  border  is  being  drawn;   the
              -relief  column  option  determines  this).   The  value  may have any of the forms
              acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.

       -button boolean
              Indicates whether or not the column header should be  treated  like  a  pushbutton.
              When  this  option  is  true,  the  default bindings track <Button-1> events in the
              header and generate a <Header-invoke> event when a <ButtonRelease-1>  event  occurs
              in the header. See DYNAMIC EVENTS.

       -font fontName
              Specifies the font to use for displaying the column title inside the column header.
              When the value of this option is unspecified, the  font  specified  by  the  widget
              option -headerfont is used.

       -image image
              Specifies  the  name  of an image to display to the left of the column title.  This
              option overrides the -bitmap column option.

       -imagepadx amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the left and right of the  image  (or
              bitmap).   Amount may be a list of two values to specify padding for left and right
              separately; it defaults to 6.

       -imagepady amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the top and bottom of the  image  (or
              bitmap).   Amount may be a list of two values to specify padding for top and bottom
              separately; it defaults to 0.

       -justify justification
              This option determines how the image and text in the column header are  positioned.
              Must be one of left (the default), center, or right.

       -state state
              Specifies  one  of  three states for the column header: normal, active, or pressed.
              The active state is used when the mouse is over the header.  The pressed  state  is
              used when the mouse button is pressed in the header.

              Changing the value of this option also affects the current set of header states for
              the column header, which may affect both the per-state options mentioned here (such
              as  -arrowimage)  as  well as the elements in any style that may be assigned to the
              column header.

       -text text
              Specifies a text string to be displayed as the column title.

       -textcolor color
              Specifies as a per-state option the color to display the column title  with.   When
              the  value  of this option is unspecified, the title will be drawn according to the
              system theme color, if any, otherwise the widget option -headerforeground is  used.
              The default is unspecified.

       -textlines count
              Specifies  the  maximum number of lines of text to display in the column title.  If
              this value is zero, the number of lines displayed  is  determined  by  any  newline
              characters  and  the effects of wrapping when the column width is less than needed.
              The default is 1. Note: Under OSX/Aqua this value is  always  set  to  1  when  the
              treectrl's  -usetheme  option  is true, because the Appearance Manager uses a fixed
              height for the column header; there is only room for a single line of text.

       -textpadx amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the  left  and  right  of  the  text.
              Amount  may  be  a  list  of  two  values  to  specify  padding  for left and right
              separately; it defaults to 6.

       -textpady amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the  top  and  bottom  of  the  text.
              Amount  may  be  a  list  of  two  values  to  specify  padding  for top and bottom
              separately; it defaults to 0.

HEADER DESCRIPTION

       Many of the commands for a treectrl take as an argument a description of which header-rows
       to  operate  on.   A  header  description  is  a  properly-formed tcl list of keywords and
       arguments. The first word of a header description must be one of the following:

       id     Specifies a unique header-row identifier, where id should be the return value of  a
              prior  call  of  the header create widget command, or 0 to specify the ever-present
              top header-row.

       QUALIFIERS
              Specifies a list of qualifiers. This gives the  same  result  as  all  followed  by
              QUALIFIERS; i.e., every header-row is tested for a match.

       tagExpr QUALIFIERS
              TagExpr  is a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS) against which every header-
              row's tags are tested for a match.  You may run into trouble if tagExpr looks  like
              a  header-row  id  or  other  keyword;  also,  tagExpr must look like a single list
              element since header-row descriptions are properly-formed lists. To be safe you may
              want to use the tag qualifier followed by tagExpr.

              .t header dragconfigure {tag -funky} -draw yes

       all QUALIFIERS
              Matches every header-row which satisfies QUALIFIERS.

       first QUALIFIERS
              Indicates the top header-row of the treectrl, or the first header-row starting from
              the top that satisfies QUALIFIERS.

       end QUALIFIERS

       last QUALIFIERS
              Indicates the last header-row which satisfies QUALIFIERS.

       The word QUALIFIERS above represents a series of zero or more of the following terms  that
       changes which header-row is chosen:

       tag tagExpr
              TagExpr is a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS) against which a header-row's
              tags are tested for a match.

       visible
              When this qualifier is given, only header-rows that are displayed are  matched.   A
              header-row  is  displayed  only  if both the -showheader widget option and -visible
              header-row option are true.  Also, if only the tail column is visible, then header-
              rows are not displayed.

       !visible
              When  this  qualifier  is  given,  only  header-rows  that  are *not* displayed are
              matched.

COLUMNS

       A treectrl widget is capable of displaying multiple columns next to each other.   An  item
       can be considered as a row, which reaches over all columns.

       Columns in a treectrl may be specified in a number of ways.  See COLUMN DESCRIPTION below.

       There is always one special column, the tail column, which fills all space to the right of
       the last ordinary column.  This column has no unique ID; it can only be specified  by  the
       keyword tail.

       For compatibility with older versions of treectrl (which did not support more than one row
       of column headers) any of the configuration options mentioned in the HEADERS section, such
       as  -arrow,  -text,  etc, may be passed to the top header-row through the column configure
       command and queried with the column cget command.

       The following options are supported for columns:

       -expand boolean
              Indicates whether or not any extra horizontal space should be distributed  to  this
              column.  This option has no effect if the -width option is set.

       -gridleftcolor color

       -gridrightcolor color
              Specifies the color of the lines drawn down the left and right edges of the column.
              These so-called "grid lines" are drawn over the elements of each item style in  the
              column  and down into the whitespace region below any items.  The default value for
              each option is an empty string meaning no lines are drawn.

       -itembackground colorList
              Specifies a list of zero or more colors, which are used as  alternating  background
              colors  for  items  in this column.  See also the -backgroundmode widget option for
              more on this.

       -itemjustify justification
              This option determines how the item styles in this column are aligned horizontally.
              Must  be  one  of left, center, or right. The default value is an empty string (for
              compatibility with older versions), in which case the  column  option  -justify  is
              used to align item styles in this column.

       -itemstyle style
              Style  is  the  name of a style that should be set in this column for newly-created
              items.

       -justify justification
              This option determines how item styles in  this  column  are  aligned  horizontally
              unless  overriden  by the -itemjustify option for this column.  Must be one of left
              (the default), center, or right.

              For compatibility with older versions of treectrl (which  did  not  allow  multiple
              rows  of  column  headers),  changing  the  value  of  this option also changes the
              -justify option of the column header in the top header-row.

       -lock lock
              This option allows a column to stick to the left or right edge of  the  window.   A
              locked  column  scrolls  vertically but not horizontally.  Must be one of none (the
              default), left, or right.

       -maxwidth size
              Specifies the maximum size, in screen  units,  that  will  be  permitted  for  this
              column.   If size is an empty string, then there is no limit on the maximum size of
              the column.  This option has no effect if the -width option is set.

       -minwidth size
              Specifies the minimum size, in screen  units,  that  will  be  permitted  for  this
              column.   If  size is an empty string, then the minimum size of the column is zero.
              This option has no effect if the -width option is set.

       -resize boolean
              Specifies a boolean value that indicates whether the  user  should  be  allowed  to
              resize the column by dragging the edge of the column's header. Default is true.

       -squeeze boolean
              Specifies  a  boolean  value that indicates whether or not the column should shrink
              when the content width of the treectrl is less than the total needed width  of  all
              visible  columns.  Defaults  to  false, which means the column will not get smaller
              than its needed width. The column will not  get  smaller  than  the  value  of  its
              -minwidth  option,  if specified. This option has no effect if the -width option is
              set.

       -stepwidth size
              Deprecated. Use the treectrl's -itemwidthmultiple option instead.

       -tags tagList
              TagList is a list of tag names that can be used to identify the column.   See  also
              the column tag command.

       -uniform group
              When  a  non-empty  value  is  supplied, this option 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.   This  option  is  based  on  the  grid
              geometry manager.

       -visible boolean
              Indicates whether or not the column should be displayed.

       -weight integer
              Sets  the relative weight for apportioning any extra space 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  columns.   This  option  is  based  on  the  grid
              geometry manager.

       -width size
              Specifies  a fixed width for the column. If this value is an empty string, then the
              column width is calculated as the maximum of: a) the width requested by  items;  b)
              the  width  requested by the column's header; and c) the column's -minwidth option.
              This calculated width is also affected  by  the  -expand,  -squeeze,  -uniform  and
              -weight  options.  In  any  case, the calculated width will not be greater than the
              -maxwidth option, if specified.

       -widthhack boolean
              Deprecated. Use the treectrl's -itemwidthequal option instead.

COLUMN DESCRIPTION

       Many of the commands and options for a treectrl take as an argument a description of which
       column  to  operate  on.   See  the  EXAMPLES section for examples.  The initial part of a
       column description must begin with one of the following terms:

       id     Specifies the unique column identifier, where id should be the return  value  of  a
              prior call of the column create widget command.  See also the -columnprefix option.

       QUALIFIERS
              Specifies  a  list  of  qualifiers.  This  gives the same result as all followed by
              QUALIFIERS; i.e., every column is tested for a match.

       tagExpr QUALIFIERS
              TagExpr is a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS) against which every column's
              tags  are  tested  for  a  match.  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers
              unless a single column is matched. You may run into trouble if tagExpr looks like a
              column  id  or  other  keyword;  also, tagExpr must look like a single list element
              since column descriptions are properly-formed lists. To be safe you may want to use
              the tag qualifier followed by tagExpr.

       all QUALIFIERS
              Indicates  every  column, including the tail column if the command allows it, which
              match QUALIFIERS.

       first QUALIFIERS
              Indicates the leftmost column of the treectrl which matches QUALIFIERS.

       end QUALIFIERS

       last QUALIFIERS
              Indicates the rightmost column of the treectrl (but  not  the  tail  column)  which
              matches QUALIFIERS.

       list columnDescs
              ColumnDescs  is a list (a single argument, i.e. "list {a b c}" not "list a b c") of
              other column descriptions.  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers unless
              a single column is matched.

       order n QUALIFIERS
              Indicates  the  nth  column  in the list of columns as returned by the column order
              command.

       range first last QUALIFIERS
              First and last specify a range of columns.  This keyword cannot be followed by  any
              modifiers unless a single column is specified.

       tail   Indicates the ever-present tail column of the treectrl.

       tree   Indicates the column specified by the -treecolumn option of the treectrl.

       The  initial  part  of  the  column  description (matching any of the values above) may be
       followed by one or more modifiers.  A modifier changes the column  used  relative  to  the
       description up to this point.  It may be specified in any of the following forms:

       next QUALIFIERS
              Use the column to the right matching QUALIFIERS.

       prev QUALIFIERS
              Use the column to the left matching QUALIFIERS.

       span N QUALIFIERS
              Starting  with (and counting) the single column specified by the column description
              so far, walk at most N  columns  rightwards,  stopping  if  any  of  the  following
              conditions is met:

              [1]    A column does not match QUALIFIERS.

              [2]    A column's -lock option does not match the first column's -lock option.

       The  word  QUALIFIERS  above  represents a sequence of zero or more of the following terms
       that changes which column is chosen:

       tag tagExpr
              TagExpr is a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS)  against  which  a  column's
              tags are tested for a match.

       !tail  When this qualifier is given, the tail column is not matched.

       visible
              When  this  qualifier  is  given,  only  columns  whose -visible option is TRUE are
              considered.

       !visible
              When this qualifier is given, only columns  whose  -visible  option  is  FALSE  are
              considered.

STATES

       For  every  column header and every item a set of boolean states is managed.  These states
       play an integral role in the appearance of headers and items; that role  is  described  in
       detail  in PER-STATE OPTIONS.  The set of states available to headers is separate from the
       set of states available to items.

       HEADER STATES
              The following states are predefined for every column header:

              active

              normal

              pressed
                     These states mirror the value of  a  column  header's  configuration  option
                     -state.   Exactly  one  of  these  states  is set at any time in each column
                     header.

              down

              up     These states mirror the value of  a  column  header's  configuration  option
                     -arrow.  If the -arrow option is none, then neither of these states is set.

              background
                     This state is set for every header-row if the toplevel window containing the
                     treectrl is not the foreground active window.  This state cannot be modified
                     by  means  of  a  widget  command,  but  is  maintained  in  reaction to the
                     <Activate> and <Deactivate> windowing system events.

              focus  This state is set for every header-row if the treectrl widget currently  has
                     the  focus.  It  cannot  be  modified  by  means of a widget command, but is
                     maintained in reaction to the  <FocusIn>  and  <FocusOut>  windowing  system
                     events.

       ITEM STATES
              The following states are predefined for every item:

              active At all times this state is set for exactly one item. The active item is used
                     with keyboard navigation.  When the treectrl widget is created or  when  the
                     active  item  is  deleted,  the root item will become the active item.  This
                     state can be modified by means of the widget command activate.

              enabled
                     This state is set for every item when it is created.  Disabled items  cannot
                     be  selected and are ignored by the default bindings when navigating via the
                     keyboard.  This state can be modified by means of the  widget  command  item
                     enabled.

              focus  This  state  is  set for every item if the treectrl widget currently has the
                     focus.  It cannot  be  modified  by  means  of  a  widget  command,  but  is
                     maintained in reaction to the <FocusIn> and <FocusOut> events.

              open   If  this  state  is switched on, the descendants of the item are displayed -
                     the item is expanded.  If this state is switched off, the descendants of the
                     item  are  not displayed - the item is collapsed.  For a new item this state
                     is switched on by default.  This state can  be  modified  by  means  of  the
                     widget commands item expand, item collapse, or item toggle.

              selected
                     This  state  is  set  for  every  item included in the selection.  It can be
                     modified by means of the widget command selection.

       By means of the state define widget command, up to 27 additional states can be defined.

PER-STATE OPTIONS

       The visual appearance of an item can change depending on the state the item is in, such as
       being  the  active  item,  being  included  in  the  selection,  being  collapsed, or some
       combination of those or other states. When a configuration option  is  described  as  per-
       state,  it  means  the option describes a value which varies depending on the state of the
       item. If a per-state option is specified as a single value, the  value  is  used  for  all
       states.  Otherwise  the  per-state  option must be specified as an even-numbered list. For
       example, to use the font "Times 12 bold" in a text element regardless of  the  item  state
       you can write:

       $T element configure MyTextElement -font {{Times 12 bold}}

       However, to use a different font when the item is selected you could write:

       $T element configure MyTextElement -font {{Courier 10} selected {Times 12 bold} {}}

       In  the  example  above,  the  -font  option  reads "value stateList value stateList".  If
       stateList is an empty list, the preceding value is used regardless of the  item  state.  A
       non-empty  stateList specifies a list of states which must be set for the item in order to
       use the preceding value. Each stateList can also include state names preceded by a ! sign,
       indicating the state must *not* be set for the item. For example:

       $T element configure MyRectElement -fill {blue {selected focus} gray {selected !focus}}

       In the example above, the rect element is filled with blue when the treectrl has the focus
       and the item is selected. If the treectrl does not have the focus, the  example  specifies
       that  gray  should be used for selected items. Also note that if the item is not selected,
       no color is specified for the -fill option.

       Each value-stateList pair is checked in order from left to  right.  The  value  associated
       with the first stateList that matches the current item state is used. So stateLists should
       be listed from most-specific to least-specific.

       $T element configure MyRectElement -fill {gray {selected} blue {selected focus}}

       Written this way, gray will always be used for selected items since it appears first,  and
       blue will never be used for selected items regardless of the focus.

       A  value  followed  by  an  empty  stateList should always be last since it will be chosen
       regardless of the item's state.

ELEMENTS AND STYLES

       Elements and styles are the core visual building blocks that determine the  appearance  of
       items  (and optionally column headers).  An element can be of type bitmap, border, header,
       image, rect, text or window.  One or more elements  can  be  assigned  to  a  style  which
       manages  the  layout  of those elements.  It may be helpful to think of an element as a Tk
       widget and a style as a Tk geometry manager such as grid, pack or place.

       When an element is created by the element create command, that element is referred to as a
       master  element.   Similarly,  a  style that is created by style create is called a master
       style.  When a master style is assigned to a column of an  item  by  the  item  style  set
       command,  a  new instance style is allocated which refers back to the master style and its
       master elements.  In this way, a single master style may be shared by multiple columns  of
       multiple items.  If a master element or master style is modified, those changes affect all
       the items whose instance styles and elements refer to those masters.

       Although you probably want the font and selection-rectangle colors to  be  shared  by  all
       items,  you most likely don't want the text to be the same for every column of every item.
       The  item  element  configure  command  can  be  used  to  override  a  master   element's
       configuration  options  for  a  specific  column  of  an item.  When you call item element
       configure (or item text or item image), a new instance element is allocated, if one wasn't
       already, and that instance element's options will override the master element's.

       All  of  the  element  configuration  options  described below are unspecified by default,
       meaning that no value whatsoever has been given to the option.  It may seem strange to you
       that a boolean option would be unspecified instead of simply "true" or "false". The reason
       for this is that when an instance element used by an item has no value  specified  for  an
       option,  that  instance element refers to the master element for the value of that option.
       This allows items which are displaying a certain element to be redisplayed when the master
       element's  options  change.  The benefits of this are that you don't need to configure the
       font or text color for every item in  a  treectrl  individually,  saving  CPU  cycles  and
       memory.

       You  may be thinking that to change the color of a selection rectangle you would call item
       element configure when an item was selected, but that is not usually the case.   It  would
       be  wasteful  to allocate a new instance element for a selection rectangle just because an
       item became selected.  The solution is to allow the appearance of the selection  rectangle
       master  element  to  change based on the selected state of the item.  This is described in
       PER-STATE OPTIONS.

       For each element type there is a section below describing the options which can modify  an
       element of that type.

BITMAP ELEMENT

       An  element  of  type  bitmap  can  be used to display a bitmap in an item.  The following
       options are supported for bitmap elements:

       -background color
              Specifies as a per-state option the color to use  for  each  of  the  bitmap's  '0'
              valued  pixels.  If the value for a certain state is an empty string (the default),
              the bitmap is drawn transparent.

       -bitmap bitmap
              Specifies as a per-state option the bitmap to display in the element.

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated; use the style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies  as  a  per-state
              option  whether  to  draw the element. If the value for a certain state is an empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -foreground color
              Specifies as a per-state option the color to use  for  each  of  the  bitmap's  '1'
              valued  pixels.  If the value for a certain state is an empty string (the default),
              the bitmap's foreground color is black.

BORDER ELEMENT

       An element of type border can be used to display a 3D border in an  item.   The  following
       options are supported for border elements:

       -background color
              Specifies  as a per-state option the color to use for the background of the border.
              If the value for a certain state is an empty string (the default), the element will
              not be drawn.

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated;  use  the  style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies as a per-state
              option whether to draw the element. If the value for a certain state  is  an  empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -filled boolean
              Specifies  whether  the interior of the border should be filled with the background
              color. If this option is unspecified (the default), it it treated  as  false  which
              means that only the edges of the border will be drawn.

       -height size
              Specifies the height of the border. If this value is unspecified (the default), the
              border will be exactly as tall as its display  area  as  determined  by  the  style
              layout options.

       -relief relief
              Specifies  as  a  per-state  option  the  relief  of the border. If the value for a
              certain state is an empty string  (the  default),  it  is  treated  as  flat.   For
              acceptable  values  see the description of the -relief option in the options manual
              page.

       -thickness thickness
              Specifies the thickness of the edges of the border.

       -width size
              Specifies the width of the border. If this value is unspecified (the default),  the
              border  will  be  exactly  as  wide  as its display area as determined by the style
              layout options.

HEADER ELEMENT

       An element of type header can be used to display a themed (or  non-themed)  column  header
       background  and  sort arrow.  Header elements are best used surrounding other elements via
       the style layout option -union, so that the sort arrow can be displayed correctly.

       Some of the options for this type of element get their  default  values  from  the  header
       state  flags  that  are  set  in  the  column header in which the element is displayed. In
       particular, the -arrow option gets its default value by checking the  up  and  down  state
       flags,  and  the  -state option gets its default value by checking the active, normal, and
       pressed state flags.  If elements of this type are displayed  in  an  item  instead  of  a
       column header, then this behavior isn't used since those state flags aren't meaningful for
       items.

       The following options are supported for header elements:

       -arrow direction
              Indicates whether or not a sort arrow should be drawn. Direction must have  one  of
              the  values none, up, or down.  If unspecified, the value defaults to none (but see
              the note above regarding header states).

       -arrowbitmap bitmap
              Specifies as a per-state option the name of a bitmap to use to draw the sort  arrow
              if  this  element's -arrow option is not none.  This option is ignored when drawing
              themed headers on Mac OS X.

       -arrowgravity direction
              Indicates onto which side the sort arrow should be packed, if there is  more  space
              available  for  drawing  the  arrow  than needed.  Direction must be either left or
              right. If unspecified, the value defaults to left.  This  option  is  ignored  when
              drawing themed headers on Mac OS X.

       -arrowimage image
              Specifies  as a per-state option the name of an image to use to draw the sort arrow
              if this element's -arrow option is not none. If an image is specified for a certain
              state,  it  overrides the -arrowbitmap option.  This option is ignored when drawing
              themed headers on Mac OS X.

       -arrowpadx amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the left and right of the sort arrow.
              Amount  may  be  a  list  of  two  values to specify padding for the left and right
              separately. If unspecified, the value defaults to 6.  Padding to the right  of  the
              sort arrow is ignored when drawing themed headers on Mac OS X.

       -arrowpady amount
              Amount specifies how much padding to leave on the top and bottom of the sort arrow.
              Amount may be a list of two values to  specify  padding  for  the  top  and  bottom
              separately.  If  unspecified, the value defaults to 0.  This option is ignored when
              drawing themed headers on Mac OS X.

       -arrowside side
              Indicates on which side of the element the sort arrow should be drawn.   Side  must
              be either left or right. If unspecified, the value defaults to right.

       -background color
              Specifies  as a per-state option the color to use for the non-themed background and
              3D border.  If unspecified, the value defaults to either  the  Tk  button  widget's
              -background or -activebackground color.

       -borderwidth size
              Specifies  a non-negative value indicating the width of the non-themed 3D border to
              draw around the inner edges of the element (if such a border is  being  drawn;  the
              -relief option determines this).  The value may have any of the forms acceptable to
              Tk_GetPixels.  If unspecified, the value defaults to 2.

       -state state
              Specifies one of three states for the element:  normal,  active,  or  pressed.  The
              active  state is used when the mouse is over the header.  The pressed state is used
              when the mouse button is pressed in the header.  If unspecified, the value defaults
              to normal (but see the note above regarding header states).

IMAGE ELEMENT

       An  element  of  type  image  can  be  used to display an image in an item.  The following
       options are supported for image elements:

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated; use the style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies  as  a  per-state
              option  whether  to  draw the element. If the value for a certain state is an empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -height size
              Specifies  the  requested  height  of  the  display  area  for  this  element.   If
              unspecified (the default), the element requests a height equal to the height of the
              image, or zero if there is no image.

       -image image
              Specifies as a per-state option the image to display in the element.

       -tiled boolean
              Specifies  a  boolean  indicating  whether  or  not  the  image  should  be   tiled
              horizontally  and  vertically within the display area for the element.  The default
              is false.

       -width size
              Specifies the requested width of the display area for this element.  If unspecified
              (the  default),  the  element  requests a width equal to the width of the image, or
              zero if there is no image.

RECTANGLE ELEMENT

       An element of type rect can be used to display a rectangle  in  an  item.   The  following
       options are supported for rectangle elements:

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated;  use  the  style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies as a per-state
              option whether to draw the element. If the value for a certain state  is  an  empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -fill color
              Specifies  as a per-state option the color to be used to fill the rectangle's area.
              If the color for a certain state  is  an  empty  string  (the  default),  then  the
              rectangle will not be filled (but the outline may still be drawn).

       -height size
              Specifies  the height of the rectangle. If this value is unspecified (the default),
              the rectangle will be exactly as tall as its display  area  as  determined  by  the
              style layout options.

       -open open
              Specifies  as  a per-state option which edges of the rectangle should be left open.
              This option may be used to get an incomplete drawing of  the  outline  and  rounded
              corners,  often  to  give  the  appearance of the rectangle extending over adjacent
              columns or items.  Open is a string that contains zero or more of the characters n,
              s,  e  or  w.  Each letter refers to an edge (north, south, east, or west) on which
              the outline and rounded corners will not  be  drawn.   The  default  is  the  empty
              string, which causes all rounded corners and the outline to be drawn.

       -outline color
              Specifies  as  a  per-state  option the color to be used to draw the outline of the
              rectangle.  If the color for a certain state is an empty string (the default), then
              no outline is drawn for the rectangle.

       -outlinewidth outlineWidth
              Specifies  the  width  of  the  outline  to be drawn around the rectangle's region.
              outlineWidth may be in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.  If this option
              is specified as an empty string (the default), then no outline is drawn.

       -rx radius

       -ry radius
              Specifies  the  x  and y radius of each corner of a rounded rectangle in any of the
              forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.

       -showfocus boolean
              Specifies a boolean value indicating whether a "focus ring" should be drawn  around
              the  rectangle,  if  the  item  containing the rectangle is the active item and the
              treectrl widget currently has the focus.  If this option is specified as  an  empty
              string (the default), then a focus rectangle is not drawn.

       -width size
              Specifies  the  width of the rectangle. If this value is unspecified (the default),
              the rectangle will be exactly as wide as its display  area  as  determined  by  the
              style layout options.

TEXT ELEMENT

       An  element  of type text can be used to display a text in an item.  The following options
       are supported for text elements:

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated; use the style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies  as  a  per-state
              option  whether  to  draw the element. If the value for a certain state is an empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -data data
              Specifies a value that together with the -datatype  and  -format  options  will  be
              displayed as text.

       -datatype dataType
              Specifies  the  type  of  information  in  the -data option.  Acceptable values are
              double, integer, long, string, or time.

       -fill color
              Specifies as a per-state option the foreground color to use when displaying text.

              In items, if the color for a certain state is an empty string (the  default),  then
              the  text will be displayed using the color specified by the treectrl's -foreground
              option.

              In headers, if the color for a certain state is an empty string, then the text will
              be  displayed  using the system theme color on Gtk+; if that color is not specified
              then the -headerforeground option is used.

       -font font
              Specifies as a per-state option the font to use when displaying the text.   If  the
              font  for  a certain state is an empty string, the text is displayed using the font
              specified by the treectrl's -font option in items  or  the  -headerfont  option  in
              headers.

       -format formatString
              This  option  specifies  the  format  string used to display the value of the -data
              option.  If -datatype is time, formatString should be a valid format string for the
              Tcl  clock  command.  For all other -datatype values formatString should be a valid
              format string for the Tcl  format  command.   If  this  value  is  unspecified  the
              following defaults are used: for -datatype double "%g", for -datatype integer "%d",
              for -datatype long "%ld", for -datatype string "%s", and  for  -datatype  time  the
              default format string of the Tcl clock command.

       -justify how
              Specifies  how  to justify the text when multiple lines are displayed.  How must be
              one of the values left, right, or center.  If this option is specified as an  empty
              string (the default), left is used.

       -lines lineCount
              Specifies  the  maximum  number  of lines to display.  If more than lineCount lines
              would be displayed, the last line will be truncated with an ellipsis at the  right.
              If  this  option is specified as zero or an empty string (the default), there is no
              limit to the number of lines displayed.

       -lmargin1 pixels
              Pixels is a screen distance that specifies how  much  a  line  of  text  should  be
              indented.   If  a line of text wraps, this option only applies to the first line on
              the display; the -lmargin2 option controls the indentation  for  subsequent  lines.
              If this option is specified as zero or an empty string (the default), then the line
              is not indented.  This option was based on the Tk Text widget  tag  option  of  the
              same name.

       -lmargin2 pixels
              Pixels  is  a  screen  distance  that  specifies  how much a line of text should be
              indented.  If a line of text wraps, this option only  applies  to  the  second  and
              later  display lines for a line of text.  If this option is specified as zero or an
              empty string (the default), then the line is not indented.  This option  was  based
              on the Tk Text widget tag option of the same name.

       -text string
              String  specifies  a  string  to  be  displayed by the element.  String may contain
              newline characters in which case multiple lines of text will be displayed.  If this
              option  is  specified, the -data, -datatype, -format, and -textvariable options are
              ignored.

       -textvariable varName
              Specifies the name of a variable.  The value of the variable  is  a  string  to  be
              displayed  by  the  element;   if  the variable value changes then the element will
              automatically update itself to display the new value.  If this option is specified,
              the -data, -datatype, and -format options are ignored.

       -underline charIndex
              Specifies  the  integer  index  of  a character to underline.  0 corresponds to the
              first character.  If charIndex is unspecified (the  default),  less  than  zero  or
              greater than the index of the last displayed character, the underline is not drawn.

       -width size
              Specifies  the  maximum line length in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.
              For text to wrap lines the value of the -width option must be less than the  needed
              width  of  the  text,  or  the  display area for this element must be less than the
              needed width of the text.  For the display area to be less than the needed width of
              the  text,  one  of  the style layout options -maxwidth, -width or -squeeze must be
              used.

       -wrap mode
              Mode specifies how to handle lines in the text that are  longer  than  the  maximum
              line  length.   Acceptable  values  are  none,  char  or  word.   If this option is
              unspecified (the default), word is used.  See the -width option for  a  description
              of how the maximum line length is determined.

WINDOW ELEMENT

       An  element  of  type window can be used to display a Tk window in an item.  The following
       options are supported for window elements:

       -clip boolean
              Specifies whether the associated Tk window is a borderless frame  which  should  be
              used  to  clip its child window so it doesn't overlap the header, borders, or other
              items or columns. When this option is true, the treectrl manages  the  geometry  of
              both the -window widget and its first child widget; in this case the -window widget
              (which should be a borderless frame) is kept sized and positioned  so  that  it  is
              never out-of-bounds.

       -destroy boolean
              Specifies  whether the associated Tk window should be destroyed when the element is
              deleted. The element is deleted when the item containing the  element  is  deleted,
              when  the  column  containing the element is deleted, or when the style assigned to
              the item's column is changed. If this option is unspecified (the  default),  it  is
              treated as false and the Tk window will not be destroyed.

       -draw boolean
              Deprecated;  use  the  style layout option -draw instead.  Specifies as a per-state
              option whether to draw the element. If the value for a certain state  is  an  empty
              string (the default), it is treated as true and the element will be drawn.

       -window pathName
              Specifies  the  window  to  associate  with  this  element. The window specified by
              pathName must either be a child of the treectrl widget or a child of some  ancestor
              of  the  treectrl widget. PathName may not refer to a top-level window. This option
              cannot be specified by the element create or element configure  commands,  only  by
              the  item  element  configure  command; i.e., the element must be associated with a
              particular item.

ITEM DESCRIPTION

       Many of the commands for a treectrl take as an argument a description of  which  items  to
       operate  on.  An item description is a properly-formed tcl list of keywords and arguments.
       The first word of an item description must be one of the following:

       id     Specifies the unique item identifier, where id should be  the  return  value  of  a
              prior call of the item create widget command, or 0 to specify the ever-present root
              item. See also the -itemprefix option.

       QUALIFIERS
              Specifies a list of qualifiers. This gives the  same  result  as  all  followed  by
              QUALIFIERS; i.e., every item is tested for a match.

       tagExpr QUALIFIERS
              TagExpr  is  a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS) against which every item's
              tags are tested for a match.  This keyword cannot  be  followed  by  any  modifiers
              unless  a single item is matched. You may run into trouble if tagExpr looks like an
              item id or other keyword; also, tagExpr must look like a single list element  since
              item descriptions are properly-formed lists. To be safe you may want to use the tag
              qualifier followed by tagExpr.

       active Indicates the item that is currently active, i.e. normally the  item  specified  as
              argument  of  the  last  successful activate widget command, or the root item if no
              such call happened yet.

       anchor Indicates the anchor item of the selection, i.e. normally  the  item  specified  as
              argument  of  the last successful selection anchor widget command, or the root item
              if no such call happened yet.

       all QUALIFIERS
              Indicates every item including orphans which match QUALIFIERS.  This keyword cannot
              be followed by any modifiers unless a single item is matched.

       first QUALIFIERS
              Indicates  the  first  item  of  the  treectrl  (the  root item), or the first item
              matching QUALIFIERS.

       end QUALIFIERS

       last QUALIFIERS
              Indicates the last item which matches QUALIFIERS.

       list itemDescs
              ItemDescs is a list (a single argument, i.e. "list {a b c}" not "list a  b  c")  of
              other item descriptions.  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers unless a
              single item is matched.

       nearest x y
              Indicates the item nearest to the point given by x and y.

       rnc row column
              Indicates the item in the given row and column.  The row and column corresponds  to
              the  on-screen arrangement of items as determined by the -orient and -wrap options.
              You can memorize rnc as an abbreviation of "row 'n' column".

       range first last QUALIFIERS
              First and last specify a range of items.  This keyword cannot be  followed  by  any
              modifiers unless a single item is matched.

       root   Indicates the root item of the treectrl.

       The  initial  part  of  the  item  description  (matching  any of the values above) may be
       followed by one or more modifiers.  A modifier changes  the  item  used  relative  to  the
       description up to this point.  It may be specified in any of the following forms:

       above  Use the item one row above in this column.

       ancestors QUALIFIERS
              Use  the ancestors of the item (like item ancestors but QUALIFIERS may change which
              ancestors match).  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers.

       below  Use the item one row below in this column.

       bottom Use the item in the last row of this column.

       child n QUALIFIERS
              Use the nth child of the item.

       children QUALIFIERS
              Use the children of the item (like item children but QUALIFIERS  may  change  which
              children match).  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers.

       descendants QUALIFIERS
              Use  the  descendants  of the item (like item descendants but QUALIFIERS may change
              which descendants match).  This keyword cannot be followed by any modifiers.

       firstchild QUALIFIERS
              Use the first child of the item.

       lastchild QUALIFIERS
              Use the last child of the item.

       left   Use the item one column to the left in the same row.

       leftmost
              Use the item of the first column in the same row.

       next QUALIFIERS
              Use the next item, which is the first item  from  the  following  list:  the  first
              child, the next sibling or the next sibling of the nearest ancestor which has one.

       nextsibling QUALIFIERS
              Use the next sibling of the item.

       parent Use the parent of the item.

       prev QUALIFIERS
              Use  the  last child of the previous sibling, or the parent if there is no previous
              sibling.

       prevsibling QUALIFIERS
              Use the previous sibling of the item.

       right  Use the item one column to the right in the same row.

       rightmost
              Use the item of the last column in the same row.

       sibling n QUALIFIERS
              Use the nth child of the item's parent.

       top    Use the item in the first row of this column.

       The word QUALIFIERS above represents a series of zero or more of the following terms  that
       changes which item is chosen:

       depth depth
              Matches items whose depth (as returned by the depth command) is equal to depth.

       state stateList
              StateList  is  a  list  of item state names (static and dynamic, see STATES).  Only
              items that have the given states set (or unset if  the  '!'  prefix  is  used)  are
              considered.

       tag tagExpr
              TagExpr is a tag expression (see ITEM AND COLUMN TAGS) against which an item's tags
              are tested for a match.

       visible
              When this qualifier is given, only items that are displayed are considered.

       !visible
              When this qualifier is given, only items that are *not* displayed are considered.

       To get the first item in the list that is enabled:

       $T item id "first state enabled"

       To get the ancestors that are not open of the last item in the list:

       $T item id "last ancestors state !open"

       To get the visible descendants of the root item:

       $T item id "root descendants visible"

       To get the every hidden item with tag "a" or "b":

       $T item id "all !visible tag a||b"
       $T item id "!visible tag a||b"
       $T item id "tag a||b !visible"
       $T item id "a||b !visible"

EVENTS AND SCRIPT SUBSTITUTIONS

       The script argument to notify bind is a Tcl script, which will be evaluated  whenever  the
       given  event is generated. Script will be executed in the same interpreter that the notify
       bind command was executed in, and it will run at global level (only global variables  will
       be  accessible).   If  script  contains  any  %  characters,  then  the script will not be
       evaluated directly.  Instead, a new script will be generated by replacing each %, and  the
       character  following  it,  with  information from the current event. Unlike the regular Tk
       bind  mechanism,  each  event  generated  by  a  treectrl  widget  has  its  own  set   of
       %-substitutions.

       The following %-substitutions are valid for all static events:

       %%     Replaced with a single %

       %d     The detail name

       %e     The event name

       %P     The pattern, either <event> or <event-detail>

       %W     The object argument to the notify bind command

       %T     The treectrl widget which generated the event

       %?     A  list of the format {char value char value ...} for each %-substitution character
              and the value it is replaced by

       The following events may be generated by a treectrl widget:

       <ActiveItem>
              Generated whenever the active item changes.

              %c     The current active item

              %p     The previous active item

       <Collapse-before>
              Generated before an item is collapsed.

              %I     The item id

       <Collapse-after>
              Generated after an item is collapsed.

              %I     The item id

       <Expand-before>
              Generated before an item is expanded. This event is useful if you want to add child
              items to the item just before the item is expanded.

              %I     The item id

       <Expand-after>
              Generated after an item is expanded.

              %I     The item id

       <ItemDelete>
              Generated when items are about to be deleted by the item delete command.

              %i     List of items ids being deleted.

       <ItemVisibility>
              Generated  when items become visible on screen and when items are no longer visible
              on screen.  This event is useful if you have a very large number of items and  want
              to assign styles only when items are actually going to be displayed.

              %h     List of items ids which are no longer visible.

              %v     List of items ids which are now visible.

       <Scroll-x>
              Generated whenever the view in the treectrl changes in such a way that a horizontal
              scrollbar should be redisplayed.

              %l     Same as the first fraction appended to -xscrollcommand. Think lower.

              %u     Same as the second fraction appended to -xscrollcommand. Think upper.

       <Scroll-y>
              Generated whenever the view in the treectrl changes in such a way that  a  vertical
              scrollbar should be redisplayed.

              %l     Same as the first fraction appended to -yscrollcommand. Think lower.

              %u     Same as the second fraction appended to -yscrollcommand. Think upper.

       <Selection>
              Generated  whenever  the  selection changes. This event gives information about how
              the selection changed.

              %c     Same as the selection count widget command

              %D     List of newly-deselected item ids

              %S     List of newly-selected item ids

DYNAMIC EVENTS

       In addition to the pre-defined static events such as  <ActiveItem>  and  <Selection>,  new
       dynamic events can be created by using the notify install command.

       The  library  scripts  provide an example of using a dynamic event called <Header-invoke>,
       which is generated when the mouse button is clicked and released over a column header.

       # Example application code
       treectrl .t
       .t notify install <Header-invoke>
       .t notify bind MyTag <Header-invoke> {
                               puts "column header %C clicked in header-row %H in treectrl %T"
       }
       # Library code in treectrl.tcl
       proc ::TreeCtrl::Release1 {w x y} {
                               ...
                               $w notify generate <Header-invoke> [list H $Priv(header) C $Priv(column)] \
                               [list ::TreeCtrl::PercentsCmd $w]
                               ...
       }

       In the example above, a new treectrl widget is created and the  <Header-invoke>  event  is
       installed. A script is bound to the event with notify bind which will print out the column
       ID, header ID and widget name to the console.  In a real application, any script bound  to
       <Header-invoke>  would  be  used  to  sort  the  list  based on the column header that was
       clicked.

       Note there is no percentsCommand argument to notify install; instead, the call  to  notify
       generate  specifies  the  %-substitution command.  The charMap argument to notify generate
       provides  a  list  of  %-substitution   characters   and   values   which   is   used   by
       ::TreeCtrl::PercentsCmd. In the example, any %C in any script bound to the <Header-invoke>
       event would be replaced by the value  of  $Priv(column),  and  %H  would  be  replaced  by
       $Priv(header).   The  library  procedure  ::TreeCtrl::PercentsCmd  also  supports the same
       common %-substitution characters as the built-in static events, such as %T, %P, %? etc.

       The following dynamic events may be generated by the library scripts:

       <ColumnDrag-begin>
              This event is generated just after the user begins dragging a  column  header.   At
              the  time  this event is generated, the header dragconfigure option -imagecolumn is
              set to the unique ID of the column being dragged, the -imageoffset option is set to
              the  horizontal  distance the mouse pointer has moved, and the -imagespan option is
              set to the span of the column header that was initially clicked.

       <ColumnDrag-indicator>
              This event is generated each time a new place to drop the dragged column header  is
              found.  At  the  time  this  event  is  generated,  the header dragconfigure option
              -indicatorcolumn is set to the unique ID of the column before or  after  which  the
              dragged column will be dropped, and the -indicatorspan option is set to the span of
              the column header for this newly-chosen indicator column.

       <ColumnDrag-receive>
              This event is generated when the user has successfully dragged and dropped a column
              header  to  a  new  position.  The library scripts do not actually move the dragged
              column. You must bind a script to this event to move the column.  See EXAMPLES.

       <ColumnDrag-end>
              This event is generated after the user finally releases the left mouse button while
              dragging a column header.  This event is generated after all the other <ColumnDrag>
              events even when the column wasn't dragged to a new location (i.e.,  even  when  no
              <ColumnDrag-receive> event was generated).

              %H     The header-row that contains the column header.

              %C     The column whose header is dragged within the header-row.

              %b     The  column  to  move  the dragged column(s) before.  Valid for <ColumnDrag-
                     receive> only.

       <Drag-begin>

       <Drag-receive>

       <Drag-end>
              Generated whenever the user drag-and-drops a file into a directory. This  event  is
              generated  by the filelist-bindings.tcl library code, which is not used by default.
              See the "Explorer" demos.

              %I     The item that the user dropped the dragged items on.

              %l     (lowercase L) The list of dragged items.

       <Edit-begin>

       <Edit-accept>

       <Edit-end>
              The filelist-bindings.tcl code will display  a  text-editing  window  if  the  user
              clicks on a selected file/folder name. See the "Explorer" demos.

              %I     The item containing the edited text element.

              %C     The column containing the edited text element.

              %E     The name of the edited text element.

              %t     The edited text.

       <Header-invoke>
              Generated  whenever  the user clicks and releases the left mouse button in a column
              header if the column header's -button option is true. You can bind a script to this
              event to sort the list.

              %H     The header-row that contains the column header.

              %C     The column whose header was clicked.

       <Header-state>
              Generated  when  the  column header option -state is changed by the library scripts
              during Motion and Button events.

              %H     The header-row that displays the column header.

              %C     The column within the header-row whose header option -state changed.

              %s     The new value of the column header option -state.

DEFAULT BINDINGS

       Tk automatically creates class bindings for treectrl widgets that give them the  following
       default behavior.

       [1]    Clicking  mouse button 1 over an item positions the active cursor on the item, sets
              the input focus to this widget, and resets the selection  of  the  widget  to  this
              item, if it is not already in the selection.

       [2]    Clicking mouse button 1 with the Control key down will reposition the active cursor
              and add the item to  the  selection  without  ever  removing  any  items  from  the
              selection.

       [3]    If  the  mouse is dragged out of the widget while button 1 is pressed, the treectrl
              will automatically scroll to make more items visible (if there are more items  off-
              screen on the side where the mouse left the window).

       [4]    The  Left  and Right keys move the active cursor one item to the left or right; for
              an hierarchical tree with vertical orientation nothing will happen, since it has no
              two  items  in the same row.  The selection is set to include only the active item.
              If Left or Right is typed with the Shift key down, then the active cursor moves and
              the selection is extended to include the new item.

       [5]    The  Up and Down keys move the active cursor one item up or down.  The selection is
              set to include only the active item.  If Up or Down is typed  with  the  Shift  key
              down, then the active cursor moves and the selection is extended to include the new
              item.

       [6]    The Next and Prior keys  move  the  active  cursor  forward  or  backwards  by  one
              screenful, without affecting the selection.

       [7]    Control-Next  and  Control-Prior  scroll the view right or left by one page without
              moving the active cursor or affecting the  selection.   Control-Left  and  Control-
              Right behave the same.

       [8]    The  Home and End keys scroll to the left or right end of the widget without moving
              the active cursor or affecting the selection.

       [9]    The Control-Home and Control-End keys scroll to the top or bottom  of  the  widget,
              they  also  activate  and  select the first or last item.  If also the Shift key is
              down, then the active cursor moves and the selection is extended to include the new
              item.

       [10]   The Space and Select keys set the selection to the active item.

       [11]   Control-/ selects the entire contents of the widget.

       [12]   Control-\\ clears any selection in the widget.

       [13]   The  +  and  -  keys expand or collapse the active item, the Return key toggles the
              active item.

       [14]   The mousewheel scrolls the view of the widget four lines up or  down  depending  on
              the  direction,  the  wheel  was turned.  The active cursor or the selection is not
              affected.

GRADIENTS

       Color gradients are an easy way to give your lists a more  modern  appearance.   Since  Tk
       provides  no  support for drawing gradients, the TkPath extension was used as a guide when
       implementing gradients in TkTreeCtrl.  The current implementation  has  some  limitations,
       however:

       [1]    Only linear gradients are supported.

       [2]    Gradients  can  only  be  painted  left-to-right or top-to-bottom, not at arbitrary
              angles.

       [3]    Gradients look bad on low-color displays. Before using gradients, you should  check
              that  the  display's  color  depth  is at least 15 or 16 by calling the winfo depth
              command.

       [4]    Gradients are fully opaque when XFillRectangle() is used to draw them (see  below).
              This  means  the opacity value of each color stop is ignored.  Keep that in mind if
              your application is cross-platform.

       [5]    Rounded  rectangles  cannot  be  filled  or   outlined   with   a   gradient   when
              XFillRectangle()  is  used  to  draw  gradients  (see below).  Instead, the rounded
              rectangle is painted with the gradient's first -stops color.

       Gradients may be used in the following places:

       [1]    The -gridleftcolor and -gridrightcolor options of columns.

       [2]    The -itembackground option of columns.

       [3]    The -fill and -outline options of rect elements.

       [4]    The -fill and -outline options of the marquee configure command.

       On Microsoft Windows, GDI+ is used where  it  is  available  (gdiplus.dll  is  dynamically
       loaded  at run-time).  On Mac OS X, CoreGraphics is used to draw gradients.  With the Gtk+
       build of treectrl, libcairo is used to draw gradients.  When native  gradient  support  is
       available, all the talk below about -steps can safely be ignored.

       When  no  native support for gradients is available, gradients are drawn simply by filling
       sub-rectangles using XFillRectangle().  The number of sub-rectangles drawn and  number  of
       colors  that  make  up  the displayed gradient are controlled by the gradient's -steps and
       -stops options.  The number of sub-rectangles is equal to the length of the -stops  option
       multiplied by the value of the -steps option. For example:

       $T gradient create myGradient -stops {{0 white} {1 gray}} -steps 8

       This  gradient  will  be drawn with 2x8=16 sub-rectangles of color.  The higher the -steps
       value, the smoother the color transitions will be, and the slower the gradient will be  to
       draw.  For the best appearance, make the number of sub-rectangles drawn less than or equal
       to the height or width of the gradient being drawn.  So if you  have  a  rect  element  18
       pixels  tall,  use  a  vertical gradient that has steps X stops=18.  Avoid using gradients
       with steps X stops greater than the height or width of the rectangle being drawn,  because
       then colors will overlap.

GRADIENT COORDINATES

       By  default,  a  gradient  brush  is  exactly the same size as whatever rectangle is being
       painted.  For example, if a column's -itembackground option  specifies  a  gradient  name,
       then  the  background  of  an  item  is painted with all the colors of the gradient.  So a
       vertical gradient from blue to green will start blue at the top and end with green at  the
       bottom of every item.

       By  specifying  any of the -bottom, -left, -right or -top gradient options the size of the
       gradient brush does not need to match that of the rectangle being painted.  These  options
       can  be  used  to  make a gradient appear to span across the entire width or height of the
       treectrl window, or across the entire canvas, for example.

       There is no point specifying -left or -right  if  the  gradient  is  vertical,  since  the
       gradient's  colors are constant horizontally, so changing the horizontal size of the brush
       won't change the appearance of the gradient.  The same reasoning applies for the -top  and
       -bottom options for a horizontal gradient.

       package require treectrl
       set T [treectrl .t -itemheight 20 -showheader no]
       $T gradient create G1 -orient vertical -top {0.0 canvas} -bottom {1.0 canvas} \
                               -stops {{0.0 blue} {0.5 green} {1.0 red}} -steps 25
       $T column create -expand yes -itembackground G1
       pack $T -expand yes -fill both

EXAMPLES

       Get the unique identifier for the leftmost visible column:

       set id [$T column index "first visible"]

       Delete the leftmost column:

       $T column delete "order 0"

       Take  the  visible  column that is to the left of the last column, and move that column in
       front of the tail column:

       $T column move "last prev visible" tail

       Get the unique identifier for the first visible item:

       set id [$T item index "first visible"]

       Delete the parent of the item that is under the point x,y:

       $T item delete "nearest $x $y parent"

       Add the 10th child of the second child of the root item to the selection:

       $T selection add "root firstchild nextsibling child 10"

       Move a column that the user drag-and-dropped:

       $T header dragconfigure -enable yes
       $T notify install <ColumnDrag-receive>
       $T notify bind MyTag <ColumnDrag-receive> {
                               %T column move %C %b
       }

SEE ALSO

       bind(3tk), bitmap(3tk), image(3tk), listbox(3tk), options(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       tree, widget