Tk::DialogBox - create and manipulate a dialog screen.
use Tk::DialogBox
...
$d = $top->DialogBox(-title => "Title", -buttons => ["OK", "Cancel"]);
$w = $d->add(Widget, args)->pack;
...
$button = $d->Show;
DialogBox is very similar to Dialog except that it allows any
widget in the top Frame. DialogBox creates two Frames, top and
bottom. The bottom Frame shows all the specified Buttons, lined up from
left to right. The top Frame acts as a container for all other widgets that
can be added with the add() method.
The options recognized by DialogBox are as follows:
- -title
- Specify the title of the DialogBox. If this is not set, then the name of
the program is used.
- -buttons
- The button names to display in the bottom Frame. This is a reference to an
array of strings containing the text to put on each Button. There is no
default value for this. If you do not specify any button names, no Buttons
are displayed.
- -default_button
- Specifies the default Button that is considered invoked when user presses
<Return> on the DialogBox. This Button is highlighted. If no default
Button is specified, then the first element of the array whose reference
is passed to the -buttons option is used as the default.
- -cancel_button
- Specifies the Button that is considered invoked when the user closes the
DialogBox using the window manager's close button. If the
-cancel_button option is not given, and if there's only one button
configured, then this button is also used as the cancel button. Otherwise
no button is considered as the cancel button; in such a case Show
just returns "undef" when the user
closes the DialogBox.
- -command
- A callback which is executed after invoking an action to close the
DialogBox, but before restoring focus and grab information. The selected
button is passed as the first argument.
- -focus
- Specify the widget to receive the initial focus after popping up the
DialogBox. By default the -default_button widget receives the
initial focus.
- -showcommand
- A callback which is executed before displaying the DialogBox and waiting
for user input. The DialogBox itself is passed as the first argument.
DialogBox supports only two methods as of now:
- add(widget, options)
- Add the widget indicated by widget. Widget can be the name
of any Tk widget (standard or contributed). options are the options
that the widget accepts. The widget is advertized as a subwidget of
DialogBox. The name of widget is lower-cased and used as the
advertised name. If multiple instances of widget are created in the
DialogBox, then only the last one gets the advertised name.
add() does not automatically
pack() or grid() widget
into the DialogBox.
- Show(?-global?)
- Displays the Dialog until the user invokes one of the Buttons in the
bottom Frame. If the grab type -global is specified, then
Show uses that grab; otherwise it defaults to a local grab. Returns
the name of the Button invoked.
The actual Dialog is shown using the Popup method. Any
other options supplied to Show are passed to Popup, and
can be used to position the Dialog on the screen. Please read Tk::Popup
for details.
- Exit()
- Close the dialogbox, by emulating a click on the default button.
- top
- The subwidget reference to the top half of the DialogBox widget, the Frame
containing widgets added by the add method.
- bottom
- The subwidget reference to the bottom half of the DialogBox widget, the
Frame containing the Button widgets.
- B_"button-text"
- Individual subwidget references to the Buttons in the DialogBox widget.
The subwidget name is the string B_ concatenated with the Button's
-text value.
There is no way of removing a widget once it has been added to the top Frame,
unless you access the top subwidget and go through the child widgets.
There is no control over the appearance of the Buttons in the
bottom Frame nor is there any way to control the placement of the two Frames
with respect to each other.
Rajappa Iyer rsi@earthling.net
This code is distributed under the same terms as Perl.