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iwidgets::menubar(1) |
[incr Widgets] |
iwidgets::menubar(1) |
iwidgets::menubar - Create and manipulate menubar menu widgets
iwidgets::menubar pathName ?options?
itk::Widget <- iwidgets::Menubar
activeBackground activeBorderWidth activeForeground
anchor background borderWidth
cursor disabledForeground font
foreground highlightBackground hightlightColor
highligthThickness justify relief
padX padY wrapLength
See the "options" manual entry for details on the
standard options.
Name: helpVariable
Class: HelpVariable
Command-Line Switch: -helpvariable
- Specifies the global variable to update whenever the mouse is in motion
over a menu entry. This global variable is updated with the current value
of the active menu entry's helpStr. Other widgets can
"watch" this variable with the trace command, or as is the case
with entry or label widgets, they can set their textVariable to the
same global variable. This allows for a simple implementation of a help
status bar. Whenever the mouse leaves a menu entry, the helpVariable is
set to the empty string {}. The mainwindow(1) associates its helpstatus
and its menubar in this fashion.
Name: menuButtons
Class: MenuButtons
Command-Line Switch: -menubuttons
- The menuButton option is a string which specifies the arrangement of
menubuttons on the menubar frame. Each menubutton entry is delimited by
the newline character.
-
iwidgets::menubar .mb -menubuttons {
menubutton file -text File
menubutton edit -text Edit
menubutton options -text Options
}
- specifies that three menubuttons will be added to the menubar (file, edit,
options). Each entry is translated into an add command call.
- The menuButtons option can accept embedded variables, commands, and
backslash quoting. Embedded variables and commands must be enclosed in
curly braces ({}) to ensure proper parsing of the substituted values.
The iwidgets::menubar command creates a new window (given by the
pathName argument) and makes it into a menubar menu widget.
Additional options, described above may be specified on the command line or in
the option database to configure aspects of the menubar such as its colors and
font. The iwidgets::menubar command returns its pathName
argument. At the time this command is invoked, there must not exist a window
named pathName, but pathName's parent must exist.
A menubar is a widget that simplifies the task of creating
menu hierarchies. It encapsulates a frame widget, as well as
menubuttons, menus, and menu entries. The menubar
allows menus to be specified and referenced in a more consistent manner than
using Tk to build menus directly.
Menubar allows a menu tree to be expressed in a hierachical
"language". The menubar accepts a menuButtons option
that allows a list of menubuttons to be added to the menubar. In turn, each
menubutton accepts a menu option that specifies a list of menu
entries to be added to the menubutton's menu. Cascade entries also accept
the menu option for specifying a list of menu entries to be added to
the cascade's menu.
Additionally, the menubar allows each component of the menubar
system to be referenced by a simple menuPathName syntax. The menubar
also extends the set of options for menu entries to include a helpStr
option.
A menuPathName is a series of component names separated by the `.'
character. Each menubar component can be referenced via these
menuPathNames. menuPathNames are similar to widget pathNames in
Tk. Some correspond directly to a widget pathName (components of type
menu or menubutton), others correspond to a menu entry type.
Every widget and entry in a menubar can be referenced with the
menuPathName naming convention. A menubar can have four types of
components:
- frame. A menubar holds exactly one frame which manages menubuttons.
The frame is always signified by the `.' character as the path name.
- menubutton. A menubutton corresponds directly to a Tk menubutton.
See menubutton(n).
- menu. A menu is attached to a menubutton and corresponds directly
to Tk's menu widget. A menu is always signified by the menuPathName
ending with the keyword menu. See menu(n).
- entry. An entry corresponds directly to Tk's menu widget entries.
Menus consist of a column of one line entries. Entries may be of type:
command, checkbutton, radiobutton, separator,
or cascade. For a complete description of these types see the
discussion on ENTRIES in menu(n).
The suffix of a menuPathName may have the form of:
- tkWidgetName
- Specifies the name of the component, either a frame,
menubutton, menu, or an entry. This is the normal
naming of widgets. For example, .file references a menubutton named
file.
The menuPathName is a series of segment names, each
separated by the '.' character. Segment names may be one of the following
forms:
- number
- Specifies the index of the the component. For menubuttons, 0 corresponds
to the left-most menubutton of the menu bar frame. As an example,
.1 would correspond to the second menubutton on the menu bar
frame.
- For entries, 0 corresponds to the top-most entry of the menu. For example,
.file.0 would correspond to the first entry on the menu attached to the
menubutton named file.
- end
- Specifes the last component. For menubuttons, it specifies the right-most
entry of the menu bar frame. For menu entries, it specifies the
bottom-most entry of the menu.
- last
- Same as end.
Finally, menu components always end with the menu keyword.
These components are automatically created via the -menu option on
menubuttons and cascades or via the add or insert
commands.
- menu
- Specifes the menu pane that is associated with the given menubutton
prefix. For example, .file.menu specifies the menu pane attached to
the .file menubutton.
For example, the path .file.new specifies the entry named
new on the menu associated with the file menubutton located on the menu bar.
The path .file.menu specifies the menu pane associated with the
menubutton .file. The path .last specifies the last menu on
the menu bar. The path .0.last would specify the first menu (file)
and the last entry on that menu (quit), yielding .file.quit.
As a restriction, the last name segment of menuPathName
cannot be one of the keywords last, menu, end, nor may it be a numeric value
(integer).
The iwidgets::menubar command creates a new Tcl command whose name is
pathName. This command may be used to invoke various operations on the
widget. It has the following general form:
pathName option ?arg arg ...?
option and the args determine the exact behavior of
the command.
In addition, many of the widget commands for menubar take as one
argument a path name to a menu component. These path names are called
menuPathNames. See the discussion on MENUBAR PATH NAMES
above.
The following commands are possible for menubar widgets:
- pathName add type menuPathName ?option
value option value?
- Adds either a menu to the menu bar or a menu entry to a menu pane.
- If additional arguments are present, they specify options available
to component type entry. See the man pages for menu(1) in
the section on ENTRIES.
If type is one of cascade, checkbutton,
command, radiobutton, or separator it adds a new
entry to the bottom of the menu denoted by the prefix of
menuPathName. If additonal arguments are present, they specify
options available to menu entry widgets. In addition, the
helpStr option is added by the menubar widget to all components
of type entry.
- -helpstr value
- Specifes the string to associate with the entry. When the mouse moves over
the associated entry, the variable denoted by helpVariable is set.
Another widget can bind to the helpVariable and thus display status
help.
- If the type of the component added is menubutton or cascade,
a menubutton or cascade is added to the menubar. If additional arguments
are present, they specify options available to menubutton or cascade
widgets. In addition, the menu option is added by the menubar
widget to all menubutton and cascade widgets.
- -menu menuSpec
- This is only valid for menuPathNames of type menubutton or
cascade. Specifes an option set and/or a set of entries to place on
a menu and associate with the menubutton or cascade. The option
keyword allows the menu widget to be configured. Each item in the
menuSpec is treated as add commands (each with the possibility of
having other -menu options). In this way a menu can be recursively
built.
- The last segment of menuPathName cannot be one of the keywords
last, menu, end. Additionally, it may not be a
number. However the menuPathName may be referenced in this
manner (see discussion of COMPONENT PATH NAMES).
- Note that the same curly brace quoting rules apply to -menu option
strings as did to -menubuttons option strings. See the earlier
discussion on umenubuttons in the "WIDGET-SPECIFIC
OPTIONS" section.
- pathName cget option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option.
- pathName configure ?options 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.
- pathName delete menuPathName
?menuPathName2?
- If menuPathName is of component type Menubutton or
Menu, delete operates on menus. If menuPathName is of
component type Entry, delete operates on menu entries.
This command deletes all components between
menuPathName and menuPathName2 inclusive. If
menuPathName2 is omitted then it defaults to menuPathName.
Returns an empty string.
If menuPathName is of type menubar, then all menus and
the menu bar frame will be destroyed. In this case menuPathName2
is ignored.
- pathName index menuPathName
- If menuPathName is of type menubutton or menu, it returns the
position of the menu/menubutton on the menubar frame.
If menuPathName is of type command,
separator, radiobutton, checkbutton, or
cascade, it returns the menu widget's numerical index for the
entry corresponding to menuPathName. If path is not found or the
path is equal to ".", a value of -1 is returned.
- pathName insert menuPathName type name
?option value?
- Insert a new component named name before the component specified by
menuPathName.
- If menuPathName is of type Menubutton or Menu, the
new component inserted is of type Menu and given the name name. In
this case valid option value pairs are those accepted by
menubuttons.
- If menuPathName is of type Entry, the new component inserted
is of type entry and given the name name. In this case,
valid option value pairs are those accepted by menu entries.
Name cannot be one of the keywords last, menu,
end. Additionally, it may not be a number. However the
menuPathName may be referenced in this manner (see discussion of
COMPONENT PATH NAMES).
- pathName invoke menuPathName
- Invoke the action of the menu entry denoted by menuPathName. See
the sections on the individual entries in the menu(1) man pages. If the
menu entry is disabled then nothing happens. If the entry has a command
associated with it then the result of that command is returned as the
result of the invoke widget command. Otherwise the result is an
empty string.
If menuPathName is not a menu entry, an error is
issued.
- pathName menucget menuPathName option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option. The component type of menuPathName determines the
valid available options.
- pathName menuconfigure menuPathName ?option
value?
- Query or modify the configuration options of the componet of the menubar
specified by menuPathName. If no option is specified,
returns a list describing all of the available options for
menuPathName (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. The component
type of menuPathName determines the valid available options.
- pathName path ?mode? pattern
- Returns a fully formed menuPathName that matches pattern. If
no match is found it returns -1. The mode argument indicates how
the search is to be matched against pattern and it must have one of
the following values:
- -glob
- Pattern is a glob-style pattern which is matched against each component
path using the same rules as the string match command.
- -regexp
- Pattern is treated as a regular expression and matched against each
component of the menuPathName using the same rules as the regexp
command. The default mode is -glob.
- pathName type menuPathName
- Returns the type of the component specified by menuPathName. For
menu entries, this is the type argument passed to the
add/insert widget command when the entry was created, such
as command or separator. Othewise it is either a
menubutton or a menu.
- pathName yposition menuPathName
- Returns a decimal string giving the y-coordinate within the menu window of
the topmost pixel in the entry specified by menuPathName. If the
menuPathName is not an entry, an error is issued.
The following example creates a menubar with "File", "Edit",
"Options" menubuttons. Each of these menubuttons has an associated
menu. In turn the File menu has menu entries, as well as the Edit menu and the
Options menu. The Options menu is a tearoff menu with selectColor (for
radiobuttons) set to blue. In addition, the Options menu has a cascade titled
More, with several menu entries attached to it as well. An entry widget is
provided to display help status.
package require Iwidgets 4.0
iwidgets::menubar .mb -helpvariable helpVar -menubuttons {
menubutton file -text File -menu {
options -tearoff false
command new -label New \
-helpstr "Open new document" \
-command {puts NEW}
command close -label Close \
-helpstr "Close current document" \
-command {puts CLOSE}
separator sep1
command exit -label Exit -command {exit} \
-helpstr "Exit application"
}
menubutton edit -text Edit -menu {
options -tearoff false
command undo -label Undo -underline 0 \
-helpstr "Undo last command" \
-command {puts UNDO}
separator sep2
command cut -label Cut -underline 1 \
-helpstr "Cut selection to clipboard" \
-command {puts CUT}
command copy -label Copy -underline 1 \
-helpstr "Copy selection to clipboard" \
-command {puts COPY}
command paste -label Paste -underline 0 \
-helpstr "Paste clipboard contents" \
-command {puts PASTE}
}
menubutton options -text Options -menu {
options -tearoff false -selectcolor blue
radiobutton byName -variable viewMode \
-value NAME -label "by Name" \
-helpstr "View files by name order" \
-command {puts NAME}
radiobutton byDate -variable viewMode \
-value DATE -label "by Date" \
-helpstr "View files by date order" \
-command {puts DATE}
cascade prefs -label Preferences -menu {
command colors -label Colors... \
-helpstr "Change text colors" \
-command {puts COLORS}
command fonts -label Fonts... \
-helpstr "Change text font" \
-command {puts FONT}
}
}
}
frame .fr -width 300 -height 300
entry .ef -textvariable helpVar
pack .mb -anchor nw -fill x -expand yes
pack .fr -fill both -expand yes
pack .ef -anchor sw -fill x -expand yes
Alternatively the same menu could be created by using the add and configure
methods:
package require Iwidgets 4.0
iwidgets::menubar .mb
.mb configure -menubuttons {
menubutton file -text File -menu {
command new -label New
command close -label Close
separator sep1
command quit -label Quit
}
menubutton edit -text Edit
}
.mb add command .edit.undo -label Undo -underline 0
.mb add separator .edit.sep2
.mb add command .edit.cut -label Cut -underline 1
.mb add command .edit.copy -label Copy -underline 1
.mb add command .edit.paste -label Paste -underline 0
.mb add menubutton .options -text Options -menu {
radiobutton byName -variable viewMode \
-value NAME -label "by Name"
radiobutton byDate -variable viewMode \
-value DATE -label "by Date"
}
.mb add cascade .options.prefs -label Preferences -menu {
command colors -label Colors...
command fonts -label Fonts...
}
pack .mb -side left -anchor nw -fill x -expand yes
The -menubuttons option as well as the -menu option is evaluated
by menubar with the subst command. The positive side of this is that
the option string may contain variables, commands, and/or backslash
substitutions. However, substitutions might expand into more than a single
word. These expansions can be protected by enclosing candidate substitutions
in curly braces ({}). This ensures, for example, a value for an option will
still be treated as a single value and not multiple values. The following
example illustrates this case:
-
set fileMenuName "File Menu"
set var {}
iwidgets::menubar .mb -menubuttons {
menubutton file -text {$fileMenuName}
menubutton edit -text Edit -menu {
checkbutton check \
-label Check \
-variable {[scope var]} \
-onvalue 1 \
-offvalue 0
}
menubutton options -text Options
}
- The variable fileMenuName will expand to "File Menu" when
the subst command is used on the menubutton specification. In
addition, the [scope...] command will expand to @scope :: var. By
enclosing these inside {} they stay as a single value. Note that only {}
work for this. [list...], "" etc. will not protect these from
the subst command.
Bret Schumaker
- 1994 - Early work on a menubar widget.
Mark Ulferts, Mark Harrison, John Sigler
- Invaluable feedback on grammar and usability of the menubar widget
frame, menu, menubutton, entries, help
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