text, tk_textCopy, tk_textCut, tk_textPaste -
Create and manipulate text widgets
text pathName ?options?
tk_textCopy pathName
tk_textCut pathName
tk_textPaste pathName
Name | Database name | Database class |
---|
-autoseparators | autoSeparators | AutoSeparators |
| Specifies a boolean that says whether separators are automatically inserted in
the undo stack. Only meaningful when the -undo option is true.
|
-blockcursor | blockCursor | BlockCursor |
| Specifies a boolean that says whether the blinking insertion cursor should be
drawn as a character-sized rectangular block. If false (the default) a thin
vertical line is used for the insertion cursor.
|
-endline | endLine | EndLine |
| Specifies an integer line index representing the line of the underlying
textual data store that should be just after the last line contained in
the widget. This allows a text widget to reflect only a portion of a
larger piece of text. Instead of an integer, the empty string can be
provided to this configuration option, which will configure the widget
to end at the very last line in the textual data store.
|
-height | height | Height |
| Specifies the desired height for the window, in units of characters in the
font given by the -font option. Must be at least one.
|
-inactiveselectbackground | inactiveSelectBackground | Foreground |
| Specifies the colour to use for the selection (the sel tag) when the
window does not have the input focus. If empty, {}, then no selection is
shown when the window does not have the focus.
|
-insertunfocussed | insertUnfocussed | InsertUnfocussed |
| Specifies how to display the insertion cursor when the widget does not have
the focus. Must be none (the default) which means to not display the
cursor, hollow which means to display a hollow box, or solid which
means to display a solid box. Note that hollow and solid will
appear very similar when the -blockcursor option is false.
|
-maxundo | maxUndo | MaxUndo |
| Specifies the maximum number of compound undo actions on the undo stack. A
zero or a negative value imply an unlimited undo stack.
|
-spacing1 | spacing1 | Spacing1 |
| Requests additional space above each text line in the widget, using any of the
standard forms for screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies
to the first line on the display. This option may be overridden with
-spacing1 options in tags.
|
-spacing2 | spacing2 | Spacing2 |
| For lines that wrap (so that they cover more than one line on the display)
this option specifies additional space to provide between the display lines
that represent a single line of text. The value may have any of the standard
forms for screen distances. This option may be overridden with
-spacing2 options in tags.
|
-spacing3 | spacing3 | Spacing3 |
| Requests additional space below each text line in the widget, using any of the
standard forms for screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies
to the last line on the display. This option may be overridden with
-spacing3 options in tags.
|
-startline | startLine | StartLine |
| Specifies an integer line index representing the first line of the underlying
textual data store that should be contained in the widget. This allows a text
widget to reflect only a portion of a larger piece of text. Instead of an
integer, the empty string can be provided to this configuration option, which
will configure the widget to start at the very first line in the textual data
store.
|
-state | state | State |
| Specifies one of two states for the text: normal or disabled. If
the text is disabled then characters may not be inserted or deleted and no
insertion cursor will be displayed, even if the input focus is in the widget.
|
-tabs | tabs | Tabs |
| Specifies a set of tab stops for the window. The option's value consists of a
list of screen distances giving the positions of the tab stops, each of which
is a distance relative to the left edge of the widget (excluding borders,
padding, etc). Each position may optionally be followed in the next list
element by one of the keywords left, right, center, or
numeric, which specifies how to justify text relative to the tab stop.
Left is the default; it causes the text following the tab character to
be positioned with its left edge at the tab position. Right means that
the right edge of the text following the tab character is positioned at the
tab position, and center means that the text is centered at the tab
position. Numeric means that the decimal point in the text is positioned
at the tab position; if there is no decimal point then the least significant
digit of the number is positioned just to the left of the tab position; if
there is no number in the text then the text is right-justified at the tab
position. For example,
"-tabs {2c left 4c 6c center}" creates three tab stops at two-centimeter intervals; the first two use left
justification and the third uses center justification.
If the list of tab stops does not have enough elements to cover all of the
tabs in a text line, then Tk extrapolates new tab stops using the spacing and
alignment from the last tab stop in the list. Tab distances must be strictly
positive, and must always increase from one tab stop to the next (if not, an
error is thrown). The value of the -tabs option may be overridden by
-tabs options in tags.
If no -tabs option is specified, or if it is specified as an empty
list, then Tk uses default tabs spaced every eight (average size) characters.
To achieve a different standard spacing, for example every 4 characters,
simply configure the widget with
"-tabs "[expr {4 * [font measure $font 0]}] left" -tabstyle wordprocessor".
|
-tabstyle | tabStyle | TabStyle |
| Specifies how to interpret the relationship between tab stops on a line and
tabs in the text of that line. The value must be tabular (the default)
or wordprocessor. Note that tabs are interpreted as they are encountered
in the text. If the tab style is tabular then the n'th tab
character in the line's text will be associated with the n'th tab stop
defined for that line. If the tab character's x coordinate falls to the right
of the n'th tab stop, then a gap of a single space will be inserted as a
fallback. If the tab style is wordprocessor then any tab character being
laid out will use (and be defined by) the first tab stop to the right of the
preceding characters already laid out on that line. The value of the
-tabstyle option may be overridden by -tabstyle options in tags.
|
-undo | undo | Undo |
| Specifies a boolean that says whether the undo mechanism is active or not.
|
-width | width | Width |
| Specifies the desired width for the window in units of characters in the font
given by the -font option. If the font does not have a uniform width
then the width of the character
"0" is used in translating from character units to screen units.
|
-wrap | wrap | Wrap |
| Specifies how to handle lines in the text that are too long to be displayed in
a single line of the text's window. The value must be none or char
or word. A wrap mode of none means that each line of text appears
as exactly one line on the screen; extra characters that do not fit on the
screen are not displayed. In the other modes each line of text will be broken
up into several screen lines if necessary to keep all the characters visible.
In char mode a screen line break may occur after any character; in
word mode a line break will only be made at word boundaries.
|
The text command creates a new window (given by the pathName
argument) and makes it into a text widget. Additional options, described
above, may be specified on the command line or in the option database to
configure aspects of the text such as its default background color and relief.
The text command returns the path name of the new window.
A text widget displays one or more lines of text and allows that text to be
edited. Text widgets support four different kinds of annotations on the text,
called tags, marks, embedded windows or embedded images. Tags allow different
portions of the text to be displayed with different fonts and colors. In
addition, Tcl commands can be associated with tags so that scripts are invoked
when particular actions such as keystrokes and mouse button presses occur in
particular ranges of the text. See TAGS below for more details.
The second form of annotation consists of floating markers in the text called
"marks". Marks are used to keep track of various interesting positions in the text as
it is edited. See MARKS below for more details.
The third form of annotation allows arbitrary windows to be embedded in a text
widget. See EMBEDDED WINDOWS below for more details.
The fourth form of annotation allows Tk images to be embedded in a text
widget. See EMBEDDED IMAGES below for more details.
The text widget also has a built-in undo/redo mechanism. See
THE UNDO MECHANISM below for more details.
The text widget allows for the creation of peer widgets. These are other text
widgets which share the same underlying data (text, marks, tags, images, etc).
See PEER WIDGETS below for more details.
Many of the widget commands for texts take one or more indices as arguments.
An index is a string used to indicate a particular place within a text, such
as a place to insert characters or one endpoint of a range of characters to
delete. Indices have the syntax
base modifier modifier modifier ...
Where base gives a starting point and the modifiers adjust the
index from the starting point (e.g. move forward or backward one character).
Every index must contain a base, but the modifiers are optional.
Most modifiers (as documented below) allow an optional submodifier. Valid
submodifiers are any and display. If the submodifier is
abbreviated, then it must be followed by whitespace, but otherwise there need
be no space between the submodifier and the following modifier.
Typically the display submodifier adjusts the meaning of the following
modifier to make it refer to visual or non-elided units rather than
logical units, but this is explained for each relevant case below. Lastly,
where count is used as part of a modifier, it can be positive or
negative, so
"base - -3 lines" is perfectly valid (and equivalent to
"base +3lines").
The base for an index must have one of the following forms:
- line.char
- Indicates char'th character on line line. Lines are numbered from
1 for consistency with other UNIX programs that use this numbering scheme.
Within a line, characters are numbered from 0. If char is end then
it refers to the newline character that ends the line.
- @x,y
- Indicates the character that covers the pixel whose x and y coordinates within
the text's window are x and y.
- end
- Indicates the end of the text (the character just after the last newline).
- mark
- Indicates the character just after the mark whose name is mark.
- tag.first
- Indicates the first character in the text that has been tagged with tag.
This form generates an error if no characters are currently tagged with
tag.
- tag.last
- Indicates the character just after the last one in the text that has been
tagged with tag. This form generates an error if no characters are
currently tagged with tag.
- pathName
- Indicates the position of the embedded window whose name is pathName.
This form generates an error if there is no embedded window by the given name.
- imageName
- Indicates the position of the embedded image whose name is imageName.
This form generates an error if there is no embedded image by the given name.
If the base could match more than one of the above forms, such as a
mark and imageName both having the same value, then the form
earlier in the above list takes precedence. If modifiers follow the base
index, each one of them must have one of the forms listed below. Keywords such
as chars and wordend may be abbreviated as long as the
abbreviation is unambiguous.
- + count ?submodifier? chars
- Adjust the index forward by count characters, moving to later lines in
the text if necessary. If there are fewer than count characters in the
text after the current index, then set the index to the last index in the
text. Spaces on either side of count are optional. If the display
submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over without being
counted. If any is given, then all characters are counted. For
historical reasons, if neither modifier is given then the count actually takes
place in units of index positions (see INDICES for details). This
behaviour may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index
count, you are encouraged to use indices instead wherever possible.
- - count ?submodifier? chars
- Adjust the index backward by count characters, moving to earlier lines
in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than count characters in
the text before the current index, then set the index to the first index in
the text (1.0). Spaces on either side of count are optional. If the
display submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over without
being counted. If any is given, then all characters are counted. For
historical reasons, if neither modifier is given then the count actually takes
place in units of index positions (see INDICES for details). This
behavior may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index
count, you are encouraged to use indices instead wherever possible.
- + count ?submodifier? indices
- Adjust the index forward by count index positions, moving to later lines
in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than count index positions
in the text after the current index, then set the index to the last index
position in the text. Spaces on either side of count are optional. Note
that an index position is either a single character or a single embedded image
or embedded window. If the display submodifier is given, elided indices
are skipped over without being counted. If any is given, then all
indices are counted; this is also the default behaviour if no modifier is
given.
- - count ?submodifier? indices
- Adjust the index backward by count index positions, moving to earlier
lines in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than count index
positions in the text before the current index, then set the index to the
first index position (1.0) in the text. Spaces on either side of count
are optional. If the display submodifier is given, elided indices are
skipped over without being counted. If any is given, then all indices
are counted; this is also the default behaviour if no modifier is given.
- + count ?submodifier? lines
- Adjust the index forward by count lines, retaining the same character
position within the line. If there are fewer than count lines after the
line containing the current index, then set the index to refer to the same
character position on the last line of the text. Then, if the line is not long
enough to contain a character at the indicated character position, adjust the
character position to refer to the last character of the line (the newline).
Spaces on either side of count are optional. If the display
submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted separately.
Otherwise, if any (or no modifier) is given, then each logical line (no
matter how many times it is visually wrapped) counts just once. If the
relevant lines are not wrapped, then these two methods of counting are
equivalent.
- - count ?submodifier? lines
- Adjust the index backward by count logical lines, retaining the same
character position within the line. If there are fewer than count lines
before the line containing the current index, then set the index to refer to
the same character position on the first line of the text. Then, if the line
is not long enough to contain a character at the indicated character position,
adjust the character position to refer to the last character of the line (the
newline). Spaces on either side of count are optional. If the
display submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted
separately. Otherwise, if any (or no modifier) is given, then each
logical line (no matter how many times it is visually wrapped) counts just
once. If the relevant lines are not wrapped, then these two methods of
counting are equivalent.
- ?submodifier? linestart
- Adjust the index to refer to the first index on the line. If the display
submodifier is given, this is the first index on the display line, otherwise
on the logical line.
- ?submodifier? lineend
- Adjust the index to refer to the last index on the line (the newline). If the
display submodifier is given, this is the last index on the display
line, otherwise on the logical line.
- ?submodifier? wordstart
- Adjust the index to refer to the first character of the word containing the
current index. A word consists of any number of adjacent characters that are
letters, digits, or underscores, or a single character that is not one of
these. If the display submodifier is given, this only examines
non-elided characters, otherwise all characters (elided or not) are examined.
- ?submodifier? wordend
- Adjust the index to refer to the character just after the last one of the word
containing the current index. If the current index refers to the last
character of the text then it is not modified. If the display
submodifier is given, this only examines non-elided characters, otherwise all
characters (elided or not) are examined.
If more than one modifier is present then they are applied in left-to-right
order. For example, the index
"end - 1 chars" refers to the next-to-last character in the text and
"insert wordstart - 1 c" refers to the character just before the first one in the word containing the
insertion cursor. Modifiers are applied one by one in this left to right
order, and after each step the resulting index is constrained to be a valid
index in the text widget. So, for example, the index
"1.0 -1c +1c" refers to the index
"2.0".
Where modifiers result in index changes by display lines, display chars or
display indices, and the base refers to an index inside an elided tag,
that base index is considered to be equivalent to the first following
non-elided index.
The first form of annotation in text widgets is a tag. A tag is a textual
string that is associated with some of the characters in a text. Tags may
contain arbitrary characters, but it is probably best to avoid using the
characters
" " (space), +, or -: these characters have special meaning in
indices, so tags containing them cannot be used as indices. There may be any
number of tags associated with characters in a text. Each tag may refer to a
single character, a range of characters, or several ranges of characters. An
individual character may have any number of tags associated with it.
A priority order is defined among tags, and this order is used in implementing
some of the tag-related functions described below. When a tag is defined (by
associating it with characters or setting its display options or binding
commands to it), it is given a priority higher than any existing tag. The
priority order of tags may be redefined using the
"pathName tag raise" and
"pathName tag lower" widget commands.
Tags serve three purposes in text widgets. First, they control the way
information is displayed on the screen. By default, characters are displayed
as determined by the -background, -font, and -foreground
options for the text widget. However, display options may be associated with
individual tags using the
"pathName tag configure" widget command. If a character has been tagged, then the display options
associated with the tag override the default display style. The following
options are currently supported for tags:
- -background color
- Color specifies the background color to use for characters associated
with the tag. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor.
- -bgstipple bitmap
- Bitmap specifies a bitmap that is used as a stipple pattern for the
background. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If
bitmap has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string,
then a solid fill will be used for the background.
- -borderwidth pixels
- Pixels specifies the width of a border to draw around the tag using any
of the forms accepted by Tk_GetPixels. This option should be used in
conjunction with the -relief option to provide the desired border.
- -elide boolean
- Elide specifies whether the data should be elided. Elided data
(characters, images, embedded windows, etc.) is not displayed and takes no
space on screen, but further on behaves just as normal data.
- -fgstipple bitmap
- Bitmap specifies a bitmap that is used as a stipple pattern when drawing
text and other foreground information such as underlines. It may have any of
the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If bitmap has not been
specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then a solid fill will be
used.
- -font fontName
- FontName is the name of a font to use for drawing characters. It may
have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetFont.
- -foreground color
- Color specifies the color to use when drawing text and other foreground
information such as underlines. It may have any of the forms accepted by
Tk_GetColor.
- -justify justify
- If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag for which this
option has been specified, then justify determines how to justify the
line. It must be one of left, right, or center. If a line
wraps, then the justification for each line on the display is determined by
the first non-elided character of that display line.
- -lmargin1 pixels
- If the first non-elided character of a text line has a tag for which this
option has been specified, then pixels specifies how much the line
should be indented from the left edge of the window. Pixels may have any
of the standard forms for screen distances. 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.
- -lmargin2 pixels
- If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag for which this
option has been specified, and if the display line is not the first for its
text line (i.e., the text line has wrapped), then pixels specifies how
much the line should be indented from the left edge of the window.
Pixels may have any of the standard forms for screen distances. This
option is only used when wrapping is enabled, and it only applies to the
second and later display lines for a text line.
- -offset pixels
- Pixels specifies an amount by which the text's baseline should be offset
vertically from the baseline of the overall line, in pixels. For example, a
positive offset can be used for superscripts and a negative offset can be used
for subscripts. Pixels may have any of the standard forms for screen
distances.
- -overstrike boolean
- Specifies whether or not to draw a horizontal rule through the middle of
characters. Boolean may have any of the forms accepted by
Tcl_GetBoolean.
- -relief relief
- Relief specifies the relief style to use for drawing the border, in any
of the forms accepted by Tk_GetRelief. This option is used in
conjunction with the -borderwidth option to enable to the desired
border appearance.
- -rmargin pixels
- If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag for which this
option has been specified, then pixels specifies how wide a margin to
leave between the end of the line and the right edge of the window.
Pixels may have any of the standard forms for screen distances. This
option is only used when wrapping is enabled. If a text line wraps, the right
margin for each line on the display is determined by the first non-elided
character of that display line.
- -spacing1 pixels
- Pixels specifies how much additional space should be left above each
text line, using any of the standard forms for screen distances. If a line
wraps, this option only applies to the first line on the display.
- -spacing2 pixels
- For lines that wrap, this option specifies how much additional space to leave
between the display lines for a single text line. Pixels may have any of
the standard forms for screen distances.
- -spacing3 pixels
- Pixels specifies how much additional space should be left below each
text line, using any of the standard forms for screen distances. If a line
wraps, this option only applies to the last line on the display.
- -tabs tabList
- TabList specifies a set of tab stops in the same form as for the
-tabs option for the text widget. This option only applies to a display
line if it applies to the first non-elided character on that display line. If
this option is specified as an empty string, it cancels the option, leaving it
unspecified for the tag (the default). If the option is specified as a
non-empty string that is an empty list, such as -tags { }, then it
requests default 8-character tabs as described for the -tags widget
option.
- -tabstyle style
- Style specifies either the tabular or wordprocessor style of
tabbing to use for the text widget. This option only applies to a display line
if it applies to the first non-elided character on that display line. If this
option is specified as an empty string, it cancels the option, leaving it
unspecified for the tag (the default).
- -underline boolean
- Boolean specifies whether or not to draw an underline underneath
characters. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean.
- -wrap mode
- Mode specifies how to handle lines that are wider than the text's
window. It has the same legal values as the -wrap option for the text
widget: none, char, or word. If this tag option is
specified, it overrides the -wrap option for the text widget.
If a character has several tags associated with it, and if their display
options conflict, then the options of the highest priority tag are used. If a
particular display option has not been specified for a particular tag, or if
it is specified as an empty string, then that option will never be used; the
next-highest-priority tag's option will used instead. If no tag specifies a
particular display option, then the default style for the widget will be used.
The second purpose for tags is event bindings. You can associate bindings with
a tag in much the same way you can associate bindings with a widget class:
whenever particular X events occur on characters with the given tag, a given
Tcl command will be executed. Tag bindings can be used to give behaviors to
ranges of characters; among other things, this allows hypertext-like features
to be implemented. For details, see the description of the
"pathName tag bind" widget command below. Tag bindings are shared between all peer widgets
(including any bindings for the special sel tag).
The third use for tags is in managing the selection. See THE SELECTION
below. With the exception of the special sel tag, all tags are shared
between peer text widgets, and may be manipulated on an equal basis from any
such widget. The sel tag exists separately and independently in each
peer text widget (but any tag bindings to sel are shared).
The second form of annotation in text widgets is a mark. Marks are used for
remembering particular places in a text. They are something like tags, in that
they have names and they refer to places in the file, but a mark is not
associated with particular characters. Instead, a mark is associated with the
gap between two characters. Only a single position may be associated with a
mark at any given time. If the characters around a mark are deleted the mark
will still remain; it will just have new neighbor characters. In contrast, if
the characters containing a tag are deleted then the tag will no longer have
an association with characters in the file. Marks may be manipulated with the
"pathName mark" widget command, and their current locations may be determined by using the
mark name as an index in widget commands.
Each mark also has a
"gravity", which is either left or right. The gravity for a mark specifies
what happens to the mark when text is inserted at the point of the mark. If a
mark has left gravity, then the mark is treated as if it were attached to the
character on its left, so the mark will remain to the left of any text
inserted at the mark position. If the mark has right gravity, new text
inserted at the mark position will appear to the left of the mark (so that the
mark remains rightmost). The gravity for a mark defaults to right.
The name space for marks is different from that for tags: the same name may be
used for both a mark and a tag, but they will refer to different things.
Two marks have special significance. First, the mark insert is
associated with the insertion cursor, as described under
THE INSERTION CURSOR
below. Second, the mark current is associated with the
character closest to the mouse and is adjusted automatically to track the
mouse position and any changes to the text in the widget (one exception:
current is not updated in response to mouse motions if a mouse button is
down; the update will be deferred until all mouse buttons have been released).
Neither of these special marks may be deleted. With the exception of these two
special marks, all marks are shared between peer text widgets, and may be
manipulated on an equal basis from any peer.
The third form of annotation in text widgets is an embedded window. Each
embedded window annotation causes a window to be displayed at a particular
point in the text. There may be any number of embedded windows in a text
widget, and any widget may be used as an embedded window (subject to the usual
rules for geometry management, which require the text window to be the parent
of the embedded window or a descendant of its parent). The embedded window's
position on the screen will be updated as the text is modified or scrolled,
and it will be mapped and unmapped as it moves into and out of the visible
area of the text widget. Each embedded window occupies one unit's worth of
index space in the text widget, and it may be referred to either by the name
of its embedded window or by its position in the widget's index space. If the
range of text containing the embedded window is deleted then the window is
destroyed. Similarly if the text widget as a whole is deleted, then the window
is destroyed.
When an embedded window is added to a text widget with the pathName
window create widget command, several configuration options may be
associated with it. These options may be modified later with the pathName
window configure widget command. The following options are currently
supported:
- -align where
- If the window is not as tall as the line in which it is displayed, this option
determines where the window is displayed in the line. Where must have
one of the values top (align the top of the window with the top of the
line), center (center the window within the range of the line),
bottom (align the bottom of the window with the bottom of the line's
area), or baseline (align the bottom of the window with the baseline of
the line).
- -create script
- Specifies a Tcl script that may be evaluated to create the window for the
annotation. If no -window option has been specified for the annotation
this script will be evaluated when the annotation is about to be displayed on
the screen. Script must create a window for the annotation and return
the name of that window as its result. Two substitutions will be performed in
script before evaluation. %W will be substituted by the name of
the parent text widget, and %% will be substituted by a single %.
If the annotation's window should ever be deleted, script will be
evaluated again the next time the annotation is displayed.
- -padx pixels
- Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on each side of the
embedded window. It may have any of the usual forms defined for a screen
distance.
- -pady pixels
- Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on the top and on
the bottom of the embedded window. It may have any of the usual forms defined
for a screen distance.
- -stretch boolean
- If the requested height of the embedded window is less than the height of the
line in which it is displayed, this option can be used to specify whether the
window should be stretched vertically to fill its line. If the -pady
option has been specified as well, then the requested padding will be retained
even if the window is stretched.
- -window pathName
- Specifies the name of a window to display in the annotation. Note that if a
pathName has been set, then later configuring a window to the empty
string will not delete the widget corresponding to the old pathName.
Rather it will remove the association between the old pathName and the
text widget. If multiple peer widgets are in use, it is usually simpler to use
the -create option if embedded windows are desired in each peer.
The final form of annotation in text widgets is an embedded image. Each
embedded image annotation causes an image to be displayed at a particular
point in the text. There may be any number of embedded images in a text
widget, and a particular image may be embedded in multiple places in the same
text widget. The embedded image's position on the screen will be updated as
the text is modified or scrolled. Each embedded image occupies one unit's
worth of index space in the text widget, and it may be referred to either by
its position in the widget's index space, or the name it is assigned when the
image is inserted into the text widget with pathName image create. If
the range of text containing the embedded image is deleted then that copy of
the image is removed from the screen.
When an embedded image is added to a text widget with the pathName image
create widget command, a name unique to this instance of the image is
returned. This name may then be used to refer to this image instance. The name
is taken to be the value of the -name option (described below). If the
-name option is not provided, the -image name is used instead.
If the imageName is already in use in the text widget, then #nn
is added to the end of the imageName, where nn is an arbitrary
integer. This insures the imageName is unique. Once this name is
assigned to this instance of the image, it does not change, even though the
-image or -name values can be changed with pathName image
configure.
When an embedded image is added to a text widget with the pathName image
create widget command, several configuration options may be associated with
it. These options may be modified later with the pathName image
configure widget command. The following options are currently supported:
- -align where
- If the image is not as tall as the line in which it is displayed, this option
determines where the image is displayed in the line. Where must have one
of the values top (align the top of the image with the top of the line),
center (center the image within the range of the line), bottom
(align the bottom of the image with the bottom of the line's area), or
baseline (align the bottom of the image with the baseline of the line).
- -image image
- Specifies the name of the Tk image to display in the annotation. If
image is not a valid Tk image, then an error is returned.
- -name ImageName
- Specifies the name by which this image instance may be referenced in the text
widget. If ImageName is not supplied, then the name of the Tk image is
used instead. If the imageName is already in use, #nn is appended
to the end of the name as described above.
- -padx pixels
- Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on each side of the
embedded image. It may have any of the usual forms defined for a screen
distance.
- -pady pixels
- Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on the top and on
the bottom of the embedded image. It may have any of the usual forms defined
for a screen distance.
Selection support is implemented via tags. If the -exportselection option
for the text widget is true then the sel tag will be associated with the
selection:
- Whenever characters are tagged with sel the text widget will claim
ownership of the selection.
- Attempts to retrieve the selection will be serviced by the text widget,
returning all the characters with the sel tag.
- If the selection is claimed away by another application or by another window
within this application, then the sel tag will be removed from all
characters in the text.
- Whenever the sel tag range changes a virtual event <<Selection>>
is generated.
The sel tag is automatically defined when a text widget is created, and
it may not be deleted with the
"pathName tag delete" widget command. Furthermore, the -selectbackground,
-selectborderwidth, and -selectforeground options for the text
widget are tied to the -background, -borderwidth, and
-foreground options for the sel tag: changes in either will
automatically be reflected in the other. Also the
-inactiveselectbackground option for the text widget is used instead of
-selectbackground when the text widget does not have the focus. This
allows programmatic control over the visualization of the sel tag for
foreground and background windows, or to have sel not shown at all (when
-inactiveselectbackground is empty) for background windows. Each peer
text widget has its own sel tag which can be separately configured and
set.
The mark named insert has special significance in text widgets. It is
defined automatically when a text widget is created and it may not be unset
with the
"pathName mark unset" widget command. The insert mark represents the position of the insertion
cursor, and the insertion cursor will automatically be drawn at this point
whenever the text widget has the input focus.
The text widget can keep track of changes to the content of the widget by
means of the modified flag. Inserting or deleting text will set this flag. The
flag can be queried, set and cleared programmatically as well. Whenever the
flag changes state a <<Modified>> virtual event is generated. See the
pathName edit modified widget command for more details.
The text widget has an unlimited undo and redo mechanism (when the
-undo widget option is true) which records every insert and delete
action on a stack.
Boundaries (called
"separators") are inserted between edit actions. The purpose of these separators is to group
inserts, deletes and replaces into one compound edit action. When undoing a
change everything between two separators will be undone. The undone changes
are then moved to the redo stack, so that an undone edit can be redone again.
The redo stack is cleared whenever new edit actions are recorded on the undo
stack. The undo and redo stacks can be cleared to keep their depth under
control.
Separators are inserted automatically when the -autoseparators widget
option is true. You can insert separators programmatically as well. If a
separator is already present at the top of the undo stack no other will be
inserted. That means that two separators on the undo stack are always
separated by at least one insert or delete action.
The undo mechanism is also linked to the modified flag. This means that
undoing or redoing changes can take a modified text widget back to the
unmodified state or vice versa. The modified flag will be set automatically to
the appropriate state. This automatic coupling does not work when the modified
flag has been set by the user, until the flag has been reset again.
See below for the pathName edit widget command that controls the undo
mechanism.
The text widget has a separate store of all its data concerning each line's
textual contents, marks, tags, images and windows, and the undo stack.
While this data store cannot be accessed directly (i.e. without a text widget
as an intermediary), multiple text widgets can be created, each of which
present different views on the same underlying data. Such text widgets are
known as peer text widgets.
As text is added, deleted, edited and coloured in any one widget, and as
images, marks, tags are adjusted, all such changes will be reflected in all
peers.
All data and markup is shared, except for a few small details. First, the
sel tag may be set and configured (in its display style) differently for
each peer. Second, each peer has its own insert and current mark
positions (but all other marks are shared). Third, embedded windows, which are
arbitrary other widgets, cannot be shared between peers. This means the
-window option of embedded windows is independently set for each peer
(it is advisable to use the -create script capabilities to allow each
peer to create its own embedded windows as needed). Fourth, all of the
configuration options of each peer (e.g. -font, etc) can be set
independently, with the exception of -undo, -maxundo,
-autoseparators (i.e. all undo, redo and modified state issues are
shared).
Finally any single peer need not contain all lines from the underlying data
store. When creating a peer, a contiguous range of lines (e.g. only lines 52
through 125) may be specified. This allows a peer to contain just a small
portion of the overall text. The range of lines will expand and contract as
text is inserted or deleted. The peer will only ever display complete lines of
text (one cannot share just part of a line). If the peer's contents contracts
to nothing (i.e. all complete lines in the peer widget have been deleted from
another widget), then it is impossible for new lines to be inserted. The peer
will simply become an empty shell on which the background can be configured,
but which will never show any content (without manual reconfiguration of the
start and end lines). Note that a peer which does not contain all of the
underlying data store still has indices numbered from
"1.0" to
"end". It is simply that those indices reflect a subset of the total data, and data
outside the contained range is not accessible to the peer. This means that the
command peerName index end may return quite different values in
different peers. Similarly, commands like peerName tag ranges will
not return index ranges outside that which is meaningful to the peer. The
configuration options -startline and -endline may be used to
control how much of the underlying data is contained in any given text widget.
Note that peers are really peers. Deleting the
"original" text widget will not cause any other peers to be deleted, or otherwise
affected.
See below for the pathName peer widget command that controls the
creation of peer widgets.
The text command creates a new Tcl command whose name is the same as the
path name of the text'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 text
widget's path name. Option and the args determine the exact
behavior of the command. The following commands are possible for text widgets:
- pathName bbox index
- Returns a list of four elements describing the screen area of the character
given by index. The first two elements of the list give the x and y
coordinates of the upper-left corner of the area occupied by the character,
and the last two elements give the width and height of the area. If the
character is only partially visible on the screen, then the return value
reflects just the visible part. If the character is not visible on the screen
then the return value is an empty list.
- pathName cget option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by option.
Option may have any of the values accepted by the text command.
- pathName compare index1 op index2
- Compares the indices given by index1 and index2 according to the
relational operator given by op, and returns 1 if the relationship is
satisfied and 0 if it is not. Op must be one of the operators <, <=, ==,
>=, >, or !=. If op is == then 1 is returned if the two indices refer to
the same character, if op is < then 1 is returned if index1 refers
to an earlier character in the text than index2, and so on.
- 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 text command.
- pathName count ?options? index1 index2
- Counts the number of relevant things between the two indices. If index1
is after index2, the result will be a negative number (and this holds
for each of the possible options). The actual items which are counted depend
on the options given. The result is a list of integers, one for the result of
each counting option given. Valid counting options are -chars,
-displaychars, -displayindices, -displaylines,
-indices, -lines, -xpixels and -ypixels. The
default value, if no option is specified, is -indices. There is an
additional possible option -update which is a modifier. If given, then
all subsequent options ensure that any possible out of date information is
recalculated. This currently only has any effect for the -ypixels count
(which, if -update is not given, will use the text widget's current
cached value for each line). The count options are interpreted as follows:
- -chars
- count all characters, whether elided or not. Do not count embedded windows or
images.
- -displaychars
- count all non-elided characters.
- -displayindices
- count all non-elided characters, windows and images.
- -displaylines
- count all display lines (i.e. counting one for each time a line wraps) from
the line of the first index up to, but not including the display line of the
second index. Therefore if they are both on the same display line, zero will
be returned. By definition displaylines are visible and therefore this only
counts portions of actual visible lines.
- -indices
- count all characters and embedded windows or images (i.e. everything which
counts in text-widget index space), whether they are elided or not.
- -lines
- count all logical lines (irrespective of wrapping) from the line of the first
index up to, but not including the line of the second index. Therefore if they
are both on the same line, zero will be returned. Logical lines are counted
whether they are currently visible (non-elided) or not.
- -xpixels
- count the number of horizontal pixels from the first pixel of the first index
to (but not including) the first pixel of the second index. To count the total
desired width of the text widget (assuming wrapping is not enabled), first
find the longest line and then use
".text count -xpixels "${line}.0" "${line}.0 lineend"".
- -ypixels
- count the number of vertical pixels from the first pixel of the first index to
(but not including) the first pixel of the second index. If both indices are
on the same display line, zero will be returned. To count the total number of
vertical pixels in the text widget, use
".text count -ypixels 1.0 end", and to ensure this is up to date, use
".text count -update -ypixels 1.0 end".
The command returns a positive or negative integer corresponding to the number
of items counted between the two indices. One such integer is returned for
each counting option given, so a list is returned if more than one option was
supplied. For example
".text count -xpixels -ypixels 1.3 4.5" is perfectly valid and will return a list of two elements.
- pathName debug ?boolean?
- If boolean is specified, then it must have one of the true or false
values accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean. If the value is a true one then internal
consistency checks will be turned on in the B-tree code associated with text
widgets. If boolean has a false value then the debugging checks will be
turned off. In either case the command returns an empty string. If
boolean is not specified then the command returns on or off
to indicate whether or not debugging is turned on. There is a single debugging
switch shared by all text widgets: turning debugging on or off in any widget
turns it on or off for all widgets. For widgets with large amounts of text,
the consistency checks may cause a noticeable slow-down.
When debugging is turned on, the drawing routines of the text widget set the
global variables tk_textRedraw and tk_textRelayout to the lists of
indices that are redrawn. The values of these variables are tested by Tk's
test suite.
- pathName delete index1 ?index2 ...?
- Delete a range of characters from the text. If both index1 and
index2 are specified, then delete all the characters starting with the
one given by index1 and stopping just before index2 (i.e. the
character at index2 is not deleted). If index2 does not specify a
position later in the text than index1 then no characters are deleted.
If index2 is not specified then the single character at index1 is
deleted. It is not allowable to delete characters in a way that would leave
the text without a newline as the last character. The command returns an empty
string. If more indices are given, multiple ranges of text will be deleted.
All indices are first checked for validity before any deletions are made. They
are sorted and the text is removed from the last range to the first range so
deleted text does not cause an undesired index shifting side-effects. If
multiple ranges with the same start index are given, then the longest range is
used. If overlapping ranges are given, then they will be merged into spans
that do not cause deletion of text outside the given ranges due to text
shifted during deletion.
- pathName dlineinfo index
- Returns a list with five elements describing the area occupied by the display
line containing index. The first two elements of the list give the x and
y coordinates of the upper-left corner of the area occupied by the line, the
third and fourth elements give the width and height of the area, and the fifth
element gives the position of the baseline for the line, measured down from
the top of the area. All of this information is measured in pixels. If the
current wrap mode is none and the line extends beyond the boundaries of
the window, the area returned reflects the entire area of the line, including
the portions that are out of the window. If the line is shorter than the full
width of the window then the area returned reflects just the portion of the
line that is occupied by characters and embedded windows. If the display line
containing index is not visible on the screen then the return value is
an empty list.
- pathName dump ?switches? index1 ?index2?
- Return the contents of the text widget from index1 up to, but not
including index2, including the text and information about marks, tags,
and embedded windows. If index2 is not specified, then it defaults to
one character past index1. The information is returned in the following
format:
key1 value1 index1 key2 value2 index2 ...
The possible key values are text, mark, tagon,
tagoff, image, and window. The corresponding value is
the text, mark name, tag name, image name, or window name. The index
information is the index of the start of the text, mark, tag transition, image
or window. One or more of the following switches (or abbreviations thereof)
may be specified to control the dump:
- -all
- Return information about all elements: text, marks, tags, images and windows.
This is the default.
- -command command
- Instead of returning the information as the result of the dump operation,
invoke the command on each element of the text widget within the range.
The command has three arguments appended to it before it is evaluated: the
key, value, and index.
- -image
- Include information about images in the dump results.
- -mark
- Include information about marks in the dump results.
- -tag
- Include information about tag transitions in the dump results. Tag information
is returned as tagon and tagoff elements that indicate the begin
and end of each range of each tag, respectively.
- -text
- Include information about text in the dump results. The value is the text up
to the next element or the end of range indicated by index2. A text
element does not span newlines. A multi-line block of text that contains no
marks or tag transitions will still be dumped as a set of text segments that
each end with a newline. The newline is part of the value.
- -window
- Include information about embedded windows in the dump results. The value of a
window is its Tk pathname, unless the window has not been created yet. (It
must have a create script.) In this case an empty string is returned, and you
must query the window by its index position to get more information.
- pathName edit option ?arg arg ...?
- This command controls the undo mechanism and the modified flag. The exact
behavior of the command depends on the option argument that follows the
edit argument. The following forms of the command are currently
supported:
- pathName edit modified ?boolean?
- If boolean is not specified, returns the modified flag of the widget.
The insert, delete, edit undo and edit redo commands or the user can set or
clear the modified flag. If boolean is specified, sets the modified flag
of the widget to boolean.
- pathName edit redo
- When the -undo option is true, reapplies the last undone edits provided
no other edits were done since then. Generates an error when the redo stack is
empty. Does nothing when the -undo option is false.
- pathName edit reset
- Clears the undo and redo stacks.
- pathName edit separator
- Inserts a separator (boundary) on the undo stack. Does nothing when the
-undo option is false.
- pathName edit undo
- Undoes the last edit action when the -undo option is true. An edit
action is defined as all the insert and delete commands that are recorded on
the undo stack in between two separators. Generates an error when the undo
stack is empty. Does nothing when the -undo option is false.
- pathName get ?-displaychars? ?--? index1 ?index2 ...?
- Return a range of characters from the text. The return value will be all the
characters in the text starting with the one whose index is index1 and
ending just before the one whose index is index2 (the character at
index2 will not be returned). If index2 is omitted then the single
character at index1 is returned. If there are no characters in the
specified range (e.g. index1 is past the end of the file or index2
is less than or equal to index1) then an empty string is returned. If
the specified range contains embedded windows, no information about them is
included in the returned string. If multiple index pairs are given, multiple
ranges of text will be returned in a list. Invalid ranges will not be
represented with empty strings in the list. The ranges are returned in the
order passed to pathName get. If the -displaychars option is
given, then, within each range, only those characters which are not elided
will be returned. This may have the effect that some of the returned ranges
are empty strings.
- pathName image option ?arg arg ...?
- This command is used to manipulate embedded images. The behavior of the
command depends on the option argument that follows the tag
argument. The following forms of the command are currently supported:
- pathName image cget index option
- Returns the value of a configuration option for an embedded image. Index
identifies the embedded image, and option specifies a particular
configuration option, which must be one of the ones listed in the section
EMBEDDED IMAGES.
- pathName image configure index ?option value ...?
- Query or modify the configuration options for an embedded image. If no
option is specified, returns a list describing all of the available
options for the embedded image at index (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. See
EMBEDDED IMAGES for information on the options that are supported.
- pathName image create index ?option value ...?
- This command creates a new image annotation, which will appear in the text at
the position given by index. Any number of option-value pairs may
be specified to configure the annotation. Returns a unique identifier that may
be used as an index to refer to this image. See EMBEDDED IMAGES for
information on the options that are supported, and a description of the
identifier returned.
- pathName image names
- Returns a list whose elements are the names of all image instances currently
embedded in window.
- pathName index index
- Returns the position corresponding to index in the form line.char
where line is the line number and char is the character number.
Index may have any of the forms described under INDICES above.
- pathName insert index chars ?tagList chars tagList ...?
- Inserts all of the chars arguments just before the character at
index. If index refers to the end of the text (the character after
the last newline) then the new text is inserted just before the last newline
instead. If there is a single chars argument and no tagList, then
the new text will receive any tags that are present on both the character
before and the character after the insertion point; if a tag is present on
only one of these characters then it will not be applied to the new text. If
tagList is specified then it consists of a list of tag names; the new
characters will receive all of the tags in this list and no others, regardless
of the tags present around the insertion point. If multiple
chars-tagList argument pairs are present, they produce the same
effect as if a separate pathName insert widget command had been
issued for each pair, in order. The last tagList argument may be
omitted.
- pathName mark option ?arg arg ...?
- This command is used to manipulate marks. The exact behavior of the command
depends on the option argument that follows the mark argument. The
following forms of the command are currently supported:
- pathName mark gravity markName ?direction?
- If direction is not specified, returns left or right to
indicate which of its adjacent characters markName is attached to. If
direction is specified, it must be left or right; the
gravity of markName is set to the given value.
- pathName mark names
- Returns a list whose elements are the names of all the marks that are
currently set.
- pathName mark next index
- Returns the name of the next mark at or after index. If index is
specified in numerical form, then the search for the next mark begins at that
index. If index is the name of a mark, then the search for the next mark
begins immediately after that mark. This can still return a mark at the same
position if there are multiple marks at the same index. These semantics mean
that the mark next operation can be used to step through all the marks
in a text widget in the same order as the mark information returned by the
pathName dump operation. If a mark has been set to the special
end index, then it appears to be after end with respect to
the pathName mark next operation. An empty string is returned if
there are no marks after index.
- pathName mark previous index
- Returns the name of the mark at or before index. If index is
specified in numerical form, then the search for the previous mark begins with
the character just before that index. If index is the name of a mark,
then the search for the next mark begins immediately before that mark. This
can still return a mark at the same position if there are multiple marks at
the same index. These semantics mean that the pathName mark previous
operation can be used to step through all the marks in a text widget in the
reverse order as the mark information returned by the pathName dump
operation. An empty string is returned if there are no marks before
index.
- pathName mark set markName index
- Sets the mark named markName to a position just before the character at
index. If markName already exists, it is moved from its old
position; if it does not exist, a new mark is created. This command returns an
empty string.
- pathName mark unset markName ?markName markName ...?
- Remove the mark corresponding to each of the markName arguments. The
removed marks will not be usable in indices and will not be returned by future
calls to
"pathName mark names". This command returns an empty string.
- pathName peer option args
- This command is used to create and query widget peers. It has two forms,
depending on option:
- pathName peer create newPathName ?options?
- Creates a peer text widget with the given newPathName, and any optional
standard configuration options (as for the text command). By default the
peer will have the same start and end line as the parent widget, but these can
be overridden with the standard configuration options.
- pathName peer names
- Returns a list of peers of this widget (this does not include the widget
itself). The order within this list is undefined.
- pathName replace index1 index2 chars ?tagList chars tagList ...?
- Replaces the range of characters between index1 and index2 with
the given characters and tags. See the section on pathName insert for
an explanation of the handling of the tagList... arguments, and the
section on pathName delete for an explanation of the handling of the
indices. If index2 corresponds to an index earlier in the text than
index1, an error will be generated.
The deletion and insertion are arranged so that no unnecessary scrolling of
the window or movement of insertion cursor occurs. In addition the undo/redo
stack are correctly modified, if undo operations are active in the text
widget. The command returns an empty string.
- pathName scan option args
- This command is used to implement scanning on texts. It has two forms,
depending on option:
- pathName scan mark x y
- Records x and y and the current view in the text window, for use
in conjunction with later pathName scan dragto commands. Typically
this command is associated with a mouse button press in the widget. It returns
an empty string.
- pathName scan dragto x y
- This command computes the difference between its x and y arguments
and the x and y arguments to the last pathName scan mark
command for the widget. It then adjusts the view by 10 times the difference in
coordinates. This command is typically associated with mouse motion events in
the widget, to produce the effect of dragging the text at high speed through
the window. The return value is an empty string.
- pathName search ?switches? pattern index ?stopIndex?
- Searches the text in pathName starting at index for a range of
characters that matches pattern. If a match is found, the index of the
first character in the match is returned as result; otherwise an empty string
is returned. One or more of the following switches (or abbreviations thereof)
may be specified to control the search:
- -forwards
- The search will proceed forward through the text, finding the first matching
range starting at or after the position given by index. This is the
default.
- -backwards
- The search will proceed backward through the text, finding the matching range
closest to index whose first character is before index (it is not
allowed to be at index). Note that, for a variety of reasons, backwards
searches can be substantially slower than forwards searches (particularly when
using -regexp), so it is recommended that performance-critical code use
forward searches.
- -exact
- Use exact matching: the characters in the matching range must be identical to
those in pattern. This is the default.
- -regexp
- Treat pattern as a regular expression and match it against the text
using the rules for regular expressions (see the regexp command
and the re_syntax page for
details). The default matching automatically passes both the
-lineanchor and -linestop options to the regexp engine (unless
-nolinestop is used), so that ^$ match beginning and end of line,
and ., [^ sequences will never match the newline character
\n.
- -nolinestop
- This allows . and [^ sequences to match the newline character
\n, which they will otherwise not do (see the regexp command for
details). This option is only meaningful if -regexp is also given, and
an error will be thrown otherwise. For example, to match the entire text, use
"pathName search -nolinestop -regexp ".*" 1.0".
- -nocase
- Ignore case differences between the pattern and the text.
- -count varName
- The argument following -count gives the name of a variable; if a match
is found, the number of index positions between beginning and end of the
matching range will be stored in the variable. If there are no embedded images
or windows in the matching range (and there are no elided characters if
-elide is not given), this is equivalent to the number of characters
matched. In either case, the range matchIdx to matchIdx + $count
chars will return the entire matched text.
- -all
- Find all matches in the given range and return a list of the indices of the
first character of each match. If a -count varName switch is given,
then varName is also set to a list containing one element for each
successful match. Note that, even for exact searches, the elements of this
list may be different, if there are embedded images, windows or hidden text.
Searches with -all behave very similarly to the Tcl command regexp
-all, in that overlapping matches are not normally returned. For example,
applying an -all search of the pattern
"\w+" against
"hello there" will just match twice, once for each word, and matching
"Z[a-z]+Z" against
"ZooZooZoo" will just match once.
- -overlap
- When performing -all searches, the normal behaviour is that matches
which overlap an already-found match will not be returned. This switch changes
that behaviour so that all matches which are not totally enclosed within
another match are returned. For example, applying an -overlap search of
the pattern
"\w+" against
"hello there" will just match twice (i.e. no different to just -all), but matching
"Z[a-z]+Z" against
"ZooZooZoo" will now match twice. An error will be thrown if this switch is used without
-all.
- -strictlimits
- When performing any search, the normal behaviour is that the start and stop
limits are checked with respect to the start of the matching text. With the
-strictlimits flag, the entire matching range must lie inside the start
and stop limits specified for the match to be valid.
- -elide
- Find elided (hidden) text as well. By default only displayed text is searched.
- --
- This switch has no effect except to terminate the list of switches: the next
argument will be treated as pattern even if it starts with -.
The matching range may be within a single line of text, or run across multiple
lines (if parts of the pattern can match a new-line). For regular expression
matching one can use the various newline-matching features such as $ to
match the end of a line, ^ to match the beginning of a line, and to
control whether . is allowed to match a new-line. If stopIndex is
specified, the search stops at that index: for forward searches, no match at
or after stopIndex will be considered; for backward searches, no match
earlier in the text than stopIndex will be considered. If
stopIndex is omitted, the entire text will be searched: when the
beginning or end of the text is reached, the search continues at the other end
until the starting location is reached again; if stopIndex is specified,
no wrap-around will occur. This means that, for example, if the search is
-forwards but stopIndex is earlier in the text than
startIndex, nothing will ever be found. See KNOWN BUGS below for a
number of minor limitations of the pathName search command.
- pathName see index
- Adjusts the view in the window so that the character given by index is
completely visible. If index is already visible then the command does
nothing. If index is a short distance out of view, the command adjusts
the view just enough to make index visible at the edge of the window.
If index is far out of view, then the command centers index in the
window.
- pathName tag option ?arg arg ...?
- This command is used to manipulate tags. The exact behavior of the command
depends on the option argument that follows the tag argument. The
following forms of the command are currently supported:
- pathName tag add tagName index1 ?index2 index1 index2 ...?
- Associate the tag tagName with all of the characters starting with
index1 and ending just before index2 (the character at
index2 is not tagged). A single command may contain any number of
index1-index2 pairs. If the last index2 is omitted then the
single character at index1 is tagged. If there are no characters in the
specified range (e.g. index1 is past the end of the file or index2
is less than or equal to index1) then the command has no effect.
- pathName tag bind tagName ?sequence? ?script?
- This command associates script with the tag given by tagName.
Whenever the event sequence given by sequence occurs for a character
that has been tagged with tagName, the script will be invoked. This
widget command is similar to the bind command except that it operates on
characters in a text rather than entire widgets. See the bind manual
entry for complete details on the syntax of sequence and the
substitutions performed on script before invoking it. If all arguments
are specified then a new binding is created, replacing any existing binding
for the same sequence and tagName (if the first character of
script is
"+" then script augments an existing binding rather than replacing it). In
this case the return value is an empty string. If script is omitted then
the command returns the script associated with tagName and
sequence (an error occurs if there is no such binding). If both
script and sequence are omitted then the command returns a list of
all the sequences for which bindings have been defined for tagName.
The only events for which bindings may be specified are those related to the
mouse and keyboard (such as Enter, Leave, ButtonPress,
Motion, and KeyPress) or virtual events. Event bindings for a text
widget use the current mark described under MARKS above. An
Enter event triggers for a tag when the tag first becomes present on the
current character, and a Leave event triggers for a tag when it ceases
to be present on the current character. Enter and Leave events can
happen either because the current mark moved or because the character at
that position changed. Note that these events are different than Enter
and Leave events for windows. Mouse and keyboard events are directed to
the current character. If a virtual event is used in a binding, that binding
can trigger only if the virtual event is defined by an underlying
mouse-related or keyboard-related event.
It is possible for the current character to have multiple tags, and for each
of them to have a binding for a particular event sequence. When this occurs,
one binding is invoked for each tag, in order from lowest-priority to highest
priority. If there are multiple matching bindings for a single tag, then the
most specific binding is chosen (see the manual entry for the bind
command for details). continue and break commands within binding
scripts are processed in the same way as for bindings created with the
bind command.
If bindings are created for the widget as a whole using the bind
command, then those bindings will supplement the tag bindings. The tag
bindings will be invoked first, followed by bindings for the window as a
whole.
- pathName tag cget tagName option
- This command returns the current value of the option named option
associated with the tag given by tagName. Option may have any of
the values accepted by the pathName tag configure widget command.
- pathName tag configure tagName ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
- This command is similar to the pathName configure widget command
except that it modifies options associated with the tag given by tagName
instead of modifying options for the overall text widget. If no option
is specified, the command returns a list describing all of the available
options for tagName (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 tagName; in this case the command returns an empty string.
See TAGS above for details on the options available for tags.
- pathName tag delete tagName ?tagName ...?
- Deletes all tag information for each of the tagName arguments. The
command removes the tags from all characters in the file and also deletes any
other information associated with the tags, such as bindings and display
information. The command returns an empty string.
- pathName tag lower tagName ?belowThis?
- Changes the priority of tag tagName so that it is just lower in priority
than the tag whose name is belowThis. If belowThis is omitted,
then tagName's priority is changed to make it lowest priority of all
tags.
- pathName tag names ?index?
- Returns a list whose elements are the names of all the tags that are active at
the character position given by index. If index is omitted, then
the return value will describe all of the tags that exist for the text (this
includes all tags that have been named in a
"pathName tag" widget command but have not been deleted by a
"pathName tag delete" widget command, even if no characters are currently marked with the tag). The
list will be sorted in order from lowest priority to highest priority.
- pathName tag nextrange tagName index1 ?index2?
- This command searches the text for a range of characters tagged with
tagName where the first character of the range is no earlier than the
character at index1 and no later than the character just before
index2 (a range starting at index2 will not be considered). If
several matching ranges exist, the first one is chosen. The command's return
value is a list containing two elements, which are the index of the first
character of the range and the index of the character just after the last one
in the range. If no matching range is found then the return value is an empty
string. If index2 is not given then it defaults to the end of the text.
- pathName tag prevrange tagName index1 ?index2?
- This command searches the text for a range of characters tagged with
tagName where the first character of the range is before the character
at index1 and no earlier than the character at index2 (a range
starting at index2 will be considered). If several matching ranges
exist, the one closest to index1 is chosen. The command's return value
is a list containing two elements, which are the index of the first character
of the range and the index of the character just after the last one in the
range. If no matching range is found then the return value is an empty string.
If index2 is not given then it defaults to the beginning of the text.
- pathName tag raise tagName ?aboveThis?
- Changes the priority of tag tagName so that it is just higher in
priority than the tag whose name is aboveThis. If aboveThis is
omitted, then tagName's priority is changed to make it highest priority
of all tags.
- pathName tag ranges tagName
- Returns a list describing all of the ranges of text that have been tagged with
tagName. The first two elements of the list describe the first tagged
range in the text, the next two elements describe the second range, and so on.
The first element of each pair contains the index of the first character of
the range, and the second element of the pair contains the index of the
character just after the last one in the range. If there are no characters
tagged with tag then an empty string is returned.
- pathName tag remove tagName index1 ?index2 index1 index2 ...?
- Remove the tag tagName from all of the characters starting at
index1 and ending just before index2 (the character at
index2 is not affected). A single command may contain any number of
index1-index2 pairs. If the last index2 is omitted then the
tag is removed from the single character at index1. If there are no
characters in the specified range (e.g. index1 is past the end of the
file or index2 is less than or equal to index1) then the command
has no effect. This command returns an empty string.
- pathName window option ?arg arg ...?
- This command is used to manipulate embedded windows. The behavior of the
command depends on the option argument that follows the window
argument. The following forms of the command are currently supported:
- pathName window cget index option
- Returns the value of a configuration option for an embedded window.
Index identifies the embedded window, and option specifies a
particular configuration option, which must be one of the ones listed in the
section EMBEDDED WINDOWS.
- pathName window configure index ?option value ...?
- Query or modify the configuration options for an embedded window. If no
option is specified, returns a list describing all of the available
options for the embedded window at index (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. See
EMBEDDED WINDOWS for information on the options that are supported.
- pathName window create index ?option value ...?
- This command creates a new window annotation, which will appear in the text at
the position given by index. Any number of option-value pairs may
be specified to configure the annotation. See EMBEDDED WINDOWS for
information on the options that are supported. Returns an empty string.
- pathName window names
- Returns a list whose elements are the names of all windows currently embedded
in window.
- pathName xview option args
- This command is used to query and change the horizontal position of the text
in the widget's window. It can take any of the following forms:
- pathName xview
- Returns a list containing two elements. Each element is a real fraction
between 0 and 1; together they describe the portion of the document's
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 text is off-screen to
the left, the middle 40% is visible in the window, and 40% of the text is
off-screen to the right. The fractions refer only to the lines that are
actually visible in the window: if the lines in the window are all very short,
so that they are entirely visible, the returned fractions will be 0 and 1,
even if there are other lines in the text that are much wider than the window.
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 horizontal span
of the text is off-screen to the left. Fraction is a fraction between 0
and 1.
- pathName xview scroll number what
- This command shifts the view in the window left or right according to
number and what. What must be units, pages or
pixels. If what is units or pages then number
must be an integer, otherwise number may be specified in any of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels, such as
"2.0c" or
"1i" (the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are given,
pixels are assumed). If what is units, the view adjusts left or
right by number average-width characters on the display; if it is
pages then the view adjusts by number screenfuls; if it is
pixels then the view adjusts by number pixels. If number is
negative then characters farther to the left become visible; if it is positive
then characters farther to the right become visible.
- pathName yview ?args?
- This command is used to query and change the vertical position of the text in
the widget's window. It can take any of the following forms:
- pathName yview
- Returns a list containing two elements, both of which are real fractions
between 0 and 1. The first element gives the position of the first visible
pixel of the first character (or image, etc) in the top line in the window,
relative to the text as a whole (0.5 means it is halfway through the text, for
example). The second element gives the position of the first pixel just after
the last visible one in the bottom line of the window, relative to the text as
a whole. These are the same values passed to scrollbars via the
-yscrollcommand option.
- pathName yview moveto fraction
- Adjusts the view in the window so that the pixel given by fraction
appears at the top of the top line of the window. Fraction is a fraction
between 0 and 1; 0 indicates the first pixel of the first character in the
text, 0.33 indicates the pixel that is one-third the way through the text; and
so on. Values close to 1 will indicate values close to the last pixel in the
text (1 actually refers to one pixel beyond the last pixel), but in such cases
the widget will never scroll beyond the last pixel, and so a value of 1 will
effectively be rounded back to whatever fraction ensures the last pixel is at
the bottom of the window, and some other pixel is at the top.
- pathName yview scroll number what
- This command adjust the view in the window up or down according to
number and what. What must be units, pages or
pixels. If what is units or pages then number
must be an integer, otherwise number may be specified in any of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels, such as
"2.0c" or
"1i" (the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are given,
pixels are assumed). If what is units, the view adjusts up or down
by number lines on the display; if it is pages then the view
adjusts by number screenfuls; if it is pixels then the view
adjusts by number pixels. If number is negative then earlier
positions in the text become visible; if it is positive then later positions
in the text become visible.
- pathName yview ?-pickplace? index
- Changes the view in the widget's window to make index visible. If the
-pickplace option is not specified then index will appear at the
top of the window. If -pickplace is specified then the widget chooses
where index appears in the window:
- If index is already visible somewhere in the window then the command
does nothing.
- If index is only a few lines off-screen above the window then it will be
positioned at the top of the window.
- If index is only a few lines off-screen below the window then it will be
positioned at the bottom of the window.
- Otherwise, index will be centered in the window.
The -pickplace option has been obsoleted by the pathName see
widget command (pathName see handles both x- and y-motion to make a
location visible, whereas the -pickplace mode only handles motion in
y).
- pathName yview number
- This command makes the first character on the line after the one given by
number visible at the top of the window. Number must be an
integer. This command used to be used for scrolling, but now it is obsolete.
Tk automatically creates class bindings for texts that give them the following
default behavior. In the descriptions below,
"word" is dependent on the value of the tcl_wordchars variable. See
tclvars(n).
- Clicking mouse button 1 positions the insertion cursor just before the
character underneath the mouse cursor, sets the input focus to this widget,
and clears any selection in the widget. Dragging with mouse button 1 strokes
out a selection between the insertion cursor and the character under the
mouse.
- Double-clicking with mouse button 1 selects the word under the mouse and
positions the insertion cursor at the start of the word. Dragging after a
double click will stroke out a selection consisting of whole words.
- Triple-clicking with mouse button 1 selects the line under the mouse and
positions the insertion cursor at the start of the line. Dragging after a
triple click will stroke out a selection consisting of whole lines.
- The ends of the selection can be adjusted by dragging with mouse button 1
while the Shift key is down; this will adjust the end of the selection that
was nearest to the mouse cursor when button 1 was pressed. If the button is
double-clicked before dragging then the selection will be adjusted in units of
whole words; if it is triple-clicked then the selection will be adjusted in
units of whole lines.
- Clicking mouse button 1 with the Control key down will reposition the
insertion cursor without affecting the selection.
- If any normal printing characters are typed, they are inserted at the point of
the insertion cursor.
- The view in the widget can be adjusted by dragging with mouse button 2. If
mouse button 2 is clicked without moving the mouse, the selection is copied
into the text at the position of the mouse cursor. The Insert key also inserts
the selection, but at the position of the insertion cursor.
- If the mouse is dragged out of the widget while button 1 is pressed, the entry
will automatically scroll to make more text visible (if there is more text
off-screen on the side where the mouse left the window).
- The Left and Right keys move the insertion cursor one character to the left or
right; they also clear any selection in the text. If Left or Right is typed
with the Shift key down, then the insertion cursor moves and the selection is
extended to include the new character. Control-Left and Control-Right move the
insertion cursor by words, and Control-Shift-Left and Control-Shift-Right move
the insertion cursor by words and also extend the selection. Control-b and
Control-f behave the same as Left and Right, respectively. Meta-b and Meta-f
behave the same as Control-Left and Control-Right, respectively.
- The Up and Down keys move the insertion cursor one line up or down and clear
any selection in the text. If Up or Right is typed with the Shift key down,
then the insertion cursor moves and the selection is extended to include the
new character. Control-Up and Control-Down move the insertion cursor by
paragraphs (groups of lines separated by blank lines), and Control-Shift-Up
and Control-Shift-Down move the insertion cursor by paragraphs and also extend
the selection. Control-p and Control-n behave the same as Up and Down,
respectively.
- The Next and Prior keys move the insertion cursor forward or backwards by one
screenful and clear any selection in the text. If the Shift key is held down
while Next or Prior is typed, then the selection is extended to include the
new character.
- Control-Next and Control-Prior scroll the view right or left by one page
without moving the insertion cursor or affecting the selection.
- Home and Control-a move the insertion cursor to the beginning of its display
line and clear any selection in the widget. Shift-Home moves the insertion
cursor to the beginning of the display line and also extends the selection to
that point.
- End and Control-e move the insertion cursor to the end of the display line and
clear any selection in the widget. Shift-End moves the cursor to the end of
the display line and extends the selection to that point.
- Control-Home and Meta-< move the insertion cursor to the beginning of the text
and clear any selection in the widget. Control-Shift-Home moves the insertion
cursor to the beginning of the text and also extends the selection to that
point.
- Control-End and Meta-> move the insertion cursor to the end of the text and
clear any selection in the widget. Control-Shift-End moves the cursor to the
end of the text and extends the selection to that point.
- The Select key and Control-Space set the selection anchor to the position of
the insertion cursor. They do not affect the current selection. Shift-Select
and Control-Shift-Space adjust the selection to the current position of the
insertion cursor, selecting from the anchor to the insertion cursor if there
was not any selection previously.
- Control-/ selects the entire contents of the widget.
- Control-\ clears any selection in the widget.
- The F16 key (labelled Copy on many Sun workstations) or Meta-w copies the
selection in the widget to the clipboard, if there is a selection. This
action is carried out by the command tk_textCopy.
- The F20 key (labelled Cut on many Sun workstations) or Control-w copies the
selection in the widget to the clipboard and deletes the selection. This
action is carried out by the command tk_textCut. If there is no
selection in the widget then these keys have no effect.
- The F18 key (labelled Paste on many Sun workstations) or Control-y inserts the
contents of the clipboard at the position of the insertion cursor. This action
is carried out by the command tk_textPaste.
- The Delete key deletes the selection, if there is one in the widget. If there
is no selection, it deletes the character to the right of the insertion
cursor.
- Backspace and Control-h delete the selection, if there is one in the widget.
If there is no selection, they delete the character to the left of the
insertion cursor.
- Control-d deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor.
- Meta-d deletes the word to the right of the insertion cursor.
- Control-k deletes from the insertion cursor to the end of its line; if the
insertion cursor is already at the end of a line, then Control-k deletes the
newline character.
- Control-o opens a new line by inserting a newline character in front of the
insertion cursor without moving the insertion cursor.
- Meta-backspace and Meta-Delete delete the word to the left of the insertion
cursor.
- Control-x deletes whatever is selected in the text widget after copying it to
the clipboard.
- Control-t reverses the order of the two characters to the right of the
insertion cursor.
- Control-z (and Control-underscore on UNIX when tk_strictMotif is true)
undoes the last edit action if the -undo option is true. Does nothing
otherwise.
- Control-Z (or Control-y on Windows) reapplies the last undone edit action if
the -undo option is true. Does nothing otherwise.
If the widget is disabled using the -state option, then its view can
still be adjusted and text can still be selected, but no insertion cursor will
be displayed and no text modifications will take place.
The behavior of texts can be changed by defining new bindings for individual
widgets or by redefining the class bindings.
Before Tk 8.5, the widget used the string
"chars" to refer to index positions (which included characters, embedded windows and
embedded images). As of Tk 8.5 the text widget deals separately and correctly
with
"chars" and
"indices". For backwards compatibility, however, the index modifiers
"+N chars" and
"-N chars" continue to refer to indices. One must use any of the full forms
"+N any chars" or
"-N any chars" etc. to refer to actual character indices. This confusion may be fixed in a
future release by making the widget correctly interpret
"+N chars" as a synonym for
"+N any chars".
Text widgets should run efficiently under a variety of conditions. The text
widget uses about 2-3 bytes of main memory for each byte of text, so texts
containing a megabyte or more should be practical on most workstations. Text
is represented internally with a modified B-tree structure that makes
operations relatively efficient even with large texts. Tags are included in
the B-tree structure in a way that allows tags to span large ranges or have
many disjoint smaller ranges without loss of efficiency. Marks are also
implemented in a way that allows large numbers of marks. In most cases it is
fine to have large numbers of unique tags, or a tag that has many distinct
ranges.
One performance problem can arise if you have hundreds or thousands of
different tags that all have the following characteristics: the first and last
ranges of each tag are near the beginning and end of the text, respectively,
or a single tag range covers most of the text widget. The cost of adding and
deleting tags like this is proportional to the number of other tags with the
same properties. In contrast, there is no problem with having thousands of
distinct tags if their overall ranges are localized and spread uniformly
throughout the text.
Very long text lines can be expensive, especially if they have many marks and
tags within them.
The display line with the insert cursor is redrawn each time the cursor
blinks, which causes a steady stream of graphics traffic. Set the
-insertofftime attribute to 0 avoid this.
The pathName search -regexp sub-command attempts to perform
sophisticated regexp matching across multiple lines in an efficient fashion
(since Tk 8.5), examining each line individually, and then in small groups of
lines, whether searching forwards or backwards. Under certain conditions the
search result might differ from that obtained by applying the same regexp to
the entire text from the widget in one go. For example, when searching with a
greedy regexp, the widget will continue to attempt to add extra lines to the
match as long as one of two conditions are true: either Tcl's regexp library
returns a code to indicate a longer match is possible (but there are known
bugs in Tcl which mean this code is not always correctly returned); or if each
extra line added results in at least a partial match with the pattern. This
means in the case where the first extra line added results in no match and
Tcl's regexp system returns the incorrect code and adding a second extra line
would actually match, the text widget will return the wrong result. In
practice this is a rare problem, but it can occur, for example:
pack [text .t]
.t insert 1.0 "aaaa\nbbbb\ncccc\nbbbb\naaaa\n"
.t search -regexp -- {(a+|b+\nc+\nb+)+\na+} 1.0
will not find a match when one exists of 19 characters starting from the first
"b".
Whenever one possible match is fully enclosed in another, the search command
will attempt to ensure only the larger match is returned. When performing
backwards regexp searches it is possible that Tcl will not always achieve
this, in the case where a match is preceded by one or more short,
non-overlapping matches, all of which are preceded by a large match which
actually encompasses all of them. The search algorithm used by the widget does
not look back arbitrarily far for a possible match which might cover large
portions of the widget. For example:
pack [text .t]
.t insert 1.0 "aaaa\nbbbb\nbbbb\nbbbb\nbbbb\n"
.t search -regexp -backward -- {b+\n|a+\n(b+\n)+} end
matches at
"5.0" when a true greedy match would match at
"1.0". Similarly if we add -all to this case, it matches at all of
"5.0", "4.0", "3.0" and
"1.0", when really it should only match at
"1.0" since that match encloses all the others.
entry(n), scrollbar(n)
text, widget, tkvars