Provided by: tklib_0.8~20230222-1_all bug

NAME

       ntext - Alternative Bindings for the Text Widget

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.5

       package require Tk  8.5

       package require ntext  ?1.0?

       ::ntext::new_textCopy pathName

       ::ntext::new_textCut pathName

       ::ntext::new_textPaste pathName

       ::ntext::syncIndentColor pathName

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DESCRIPTION

       The  purpose  of  the  ntext  package  is  to  make  the  text widget behave more like other text-editing
       applications. It makes the text widget more useful for implementing a text editor, and makes it behave in
       a way that will be more familiar to most users.

       The  package  provides  a  binding  tag  named Ntext for use by text widgets in place of the default Text
       binding tag.

       Package ntext 's functions and variables are contained entirely in the ::ntext namespace; its other  code
       is  contained  in  the binding tag Ntext.  ntext has no exports to the global or other namespaces, and no
       new widget commands.  It uses modified copies of the Tk code, leaving the original  code,  and  the  Text
       binding tag, unchanged.

       The differences between the Ntext binding tag and the default Text binding tag are in three categories:

       •      Some  Text  bindings  behave  differently  from most text-editing applications.  Ntext gives these
              bindings more familiar behaviour.  For details see ntextBindings.

       •      When a logical line with leading whitespace is word-wrapped onto more than one display  line,  the
              wrapped  display  lines  begin further to the left than the first display line, which can make the
              text layout untidy and difficult to read.  Ntext can indent the wrapped lines to match the leading
              whitespace  of the first display line (this facility is switched off by default).  For details see
              ntextIndent.

       •      When the user navigates or selects text, Tcl/Tk sometimes needs to detect word boundaries.   Ntext
              provides improved rules for word boundary detection.  For details see ntextWordBreak.

       The  remainder of this page describes the basic use and configuration of all three aspects of Ntext.  For
       more detailed information on the different facilities of Ntext, see the pages ntextBindings, ntextIndent,
       and ntextWordBreak.

       See Section EXAMPLE for how to apply the Ntext binding tag in place of the Text binding tag.

COMMANDS

       ::ntext::new_textCopy pathName
              Replacement for ::tk_textCopy.

       ::ntext::new_textCut pathName
              Replacement for ::tk_textCut that also maintains Ntext indentation (see ntextIndent).

       ::ntext::new_textPaste pathName
              Replacement for ::tk_textPaste that also maintains Ntext indentation (see ntextIndent).

       ::ntext::syncIndentColor pathName
              Command  to  apply  the  current value of the variable ::ntext::indentColor to existing lines in a
              text widget.  This command is useful if a text widget has been created, text has been inserted  in
              the widget, and then the value of ::ntext::indentColor is changed (see ntextIndent).

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

       Ntext provides alternatives to a number of behaviours of the classic Text binding tag.  Where there is an
       option, the Ntext behaviour (except for display-line indentation) is switched on by default.

       The behaviour of Ntext may be configured application-wide by setting the values of a number of  namespace
       variables:

       ::ntext::classicAnchor0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. the anchor point is fixed

       •      1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. the anchor point is variable

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::classicExtras0  -  (default  value)  selects  Ntext  behaviour,  i.e. several traditional Text bindings are de-
              activated

       •      1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. all Text bindings are activated

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::classicMouseSelect0 - (default value) selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. the anchor point for mouse selection  operations
              is moved by keyboard navigation

       •      1 - selects classic Text behaviour

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::classicParagraphs0 - (default value) on macOS Aqua, certain keyboard bindings are made to behave in the same way as
              the Mac application TextEdit.  The bindings involve vertical  scrolling  of  the  screen  and  are
              <?Shift-?Option-(Up|Down)>.

       •      1  -  on macOS Aqua, certain keyboard bindings are made to behave in the same way as classic Text,
              ignoring the conventions of Aqua.  The bindings involve vertical scrolling of the screen  and  are
              <?Shift-?Option-(Up|Down)>.

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::classicSelection0  -  (default  value  on macOS Aqua) selects Mac-like behaviour, i.e. when a navigation keystroke
              cancels a selection, the insert mark first moves to the end of the  selection  determined  by  the
              navigation direction of the keystroke, and then the keystroke is applied.

       •      1  -  (default  value  except on macOS Aqua) selects PC-like behaviour (the same as classic Text),
              i.e. when a navigation keystroke cancels a selection, the insert mark  is  not  moved  before  the
              keystroke is applied.

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::classicWordBreak0  -  (default  value)  selects  Ntext  behaviour,  i.e. platform-independent, two classes of word
              characters and one class of non-word characters.

       •      1 - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. platform-dependent, one class of word characters and  one
              class of non-word characters

       •      After  changing  this value, the matching patterns should be recalculated.  See ntextWordBreak for
              details and advanced configuration options.

       ::ntext::classicWrap0 - selects Ntext behaviour, i.e. display lines of text widgets in -wrap word mode are indented to
              match  the  initial whitespace of the first display line of a logical line.  If the widget already
              holds text when this value is set, a function call may be necessary.  See ntextIndent for detailed
              instructions on the use of Ntext 's indentation.

       •      1 - (default value) selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. no indentation

       •      For more information see ntextIndent

       ::ntext::indentColor{} - if the value is the empty string, then the indent of wrapped display lines has the same color
              as the widget background.

       •      color - a valid Tk color to use for the indent of wrapped display lines (default value #d9d9d9).

              Coloring is implemented with the text widget tag option -lmargincolor, which is available from  Tk
              8.6.6 onwards.  Ntext indent coloring has no effect in earlier versions of Tk.

              The value of ::ntext::indentColor will often be set at startup.  If the value is changed when text
              widgets already exist  and  contain  text,  those  widgets  can  be  updated  by  calling  command
              ::ntext::syncIndentColor.

       •      For more information see ntextIndent

       ::ntext::overwrite0 - (initial value) text typed at the keyboard is inserted into the widget

       •      1 - text typed at the keyboard overwrites text already in the widget

       •      The value is toggled by the Insert key (except on macOS Aqua where there is no such key).

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

       ::ntext::useBlockCursor0   -  the  block  cursor  will  not  be  used.   When  the  widget  is  in  overwrite  mode  (see
              ::ntext::overwrite), the ordinary cursor will change color instead.

       •      1 - the block cursor will be used when the widget is in overwrite mode (see ::ntext::overwrite).

       •      The default value depends on the version of Tk.  In versions of Tk earlier than 8.5.12, the sizing
              of the block cursor had a bug, and ::ntext::useBlockCursor defaults to 0.  From 8.5.12 onwards the
              bug is fixed, and ::ntext::useBlockCursor defaults to 1.

       •      For more information see ntextBindings

BUGS

       This version of ntext is intended to be compatible with all releases of Tk 8.5  and  8.6,  and  with  the
       branches  core-8-5-branch,  core-8-6-branch,  and  trunk  in  the  source  code  repository  for Tk.  Any
       incompatibility with any of these versions, for any Tk windowing system, should be  reported  as  a  bug.
       Please report such in the category ntext of the Tklib Trackers [http://core.tcl.tk/tklib/reportlist].

EXAMPLE

       To create a text widget .t and use the Ntext bindings:

              package require ntext
              text .t
              bindtags .t {.t Ntext . all}

       See bindtags for more information.

SEE ALSO

       bindtags, ntextBindings, ntextIndent, ntextWordBreak, re_syntax, regexp, text

KEYWORDS

       bindtags, re_syntax, regexp, text