place(n) manual page
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place - Geometry manager for fixed or rubber-sheet
placement
place option arg ?arg ...?
The placer is a geometry
manager for Tk. It provides simple fixed placement of windows, where you
specify the exact size and location of one window, called the slave, within
another window, called the master. The placer also provides rubber-sheet
placement, where you specify the size and location of the slave in terms
of the dimensions of the master, so that the slave changes size and location
in response to changes in the size of the master. Lastly, the placer allows
you to mix these styles of placement so that, for example, the slave has
a fixed width and height but is centered inside the master.
- place window
option value ?option value ...?
- Arrange for the placer to manage the geometry
of a slave whose pathName is window. The remaining arguments consist of
one or more option-value pairs that specify the way in which window’s geometry
is managed. Option may have any of the values accepted by the place configure
command.
- place configure window ?option? ?value option value ...?
- Query or
modify the geometry options of the slave given by window. If no option
is specified, this command returns a list describing the available options
(see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format of this list). If option
is specified with no value, then the command returns a list describing
the one named option (this list will be identical to the corresponding
sublist of the value returned if no option is specified). If one or more
option-value pairs are specified, then the command modifies the given option(s)
to have the given value(s); in this case the command returns an empty string.
The following option-value pairs are supported:
- -anchor where
- Where specifies
which point of window is to be positioned at the (x,y) location selected
by the -x, -y, -relx, and -rely options. The anchor point is in terms of the
outer area of window including its border, if any. Thus if where is se then
the lower-right corner of window’s border will appear at the given (x,y)
location in the master. The anchor position defaults to nw.
- -bordermode mode
- Mode determines the degree to which borders within the master are used
in determining the placement of the slave. The default and most common value
is inside. In this case the placer considers the area of the master to be
the innermost area of the master, inside any border: an option of -x 0 corresponds
to an x-coordinate just inside the border and an option of -relwidth 1.0 means
window will fill the area inside the master’s border.
If mode is outside
then the placer considers the area of the master to include its border;
this mode is typically used when placing window outside its master, as
with the options -x 0 -y 0 -anchor ne. Lastly, mode may be specified as ignore,
in which case borders are ignored: the area of the master is considered
to be its official X area, which includes any internal border but no external
border. A bordermode of ignore is probably not very useful.
- -height size
- Size specifies the height for window in screen units (i.e. any of the forms
accepted by Tk_GetPixels). The height will be the outer dimension of window
including its border, if any. If size is an empty string, or if no -height
or -relheight option is specified, then the height requested internally
by the window will be used.
- -in master
- Master specifies the path name of
the window relative to which window is to be placed. Master must either
be window’s parent or a descendant of window’s parent. In addition, master
and window must both be descendants of the same top-level window. These restrictions
are necessary to guarantee that window is visible whenever master is visible.
If this option isn’t specified then the master defaults to window’s parent.
- -relheight size
- Size specifies the height for window. In this case the height
is specified as a floating-point number relative to the height of the master:
0.5 means window will be half as high as the master, 1.0 means window will
have the same height as the master, and so on. If both -height and -relheight
are specified for a slave, their values are summed. For example, -relheight
1.0 -height -2 makes the slave 2 pixels shorter than the master.
- -relwidth size
- Size specifies the width for window. In this case the width is specified
as a floating-point number relative to the width of the master: 0.5 means
window will be half as wide as the master, 1.0 means window will have the
same width as the master, and so on. If both -width and -relwidth are specified
for a slave, their values are summed. For example, -relwidth 1.0 -width 5
makes the slave 5 pixels wider than the master.
- -relx location
- Location specifies
the x-coordinate within the master window of the anchor point for window.
In this case the location is specified in a relative fashion as a floating-point
number: 0.0 corresponds to the left edge of the master and 1.0 corresponds
to the right edge of the master. Location need not be in the range 0.0-1.0.
If both -x and -relx are specified for a slave then their values are summed.
For example, -relx 0.5 -x -2 positions the left edge of the slave 2 pixels
to the left of the center of its master.
- -rely location
- Location specifies
the y-coordinate within the master window of the anchor point for window.
In this case the value is specified in a relative fashion as a floating-point
number: 0.0 corresponds to the top edge of the master and 1.0 corresponds
to the bottom edge of the master. Location need not be in the range 0.0-1.0.
If both -y and -rely are specified for a slave then their values are summed.
For example, -rely 0.5 -x 3 positions the top edge of the slave 3 pixels
below the center of its master.
- -width size
- Size specifies the width for
window in screen units (i.e. any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetPixels). The
width will be the outer width of window including its border, if any. If
size is an empty string, or if no -width or -relwidth option is specified,
then the width requested internally by the window will be used.
- -x location
- Location specifies the x-coordinate within the master window of the anchor
point for window. The location is specified in screen units (i.e. any of the
forms accepted by Tk_GetPixels) and need not lie within the bounds of the
master window.
- -y location
- Location specifies the y-coordinate within the
master window of the anchor point for window. The location is specified
in screen units (i.e. any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetPixels) and need
not lie within the bounds of the master window.
If the same value is specified
separately with two different options, such as -x and -relx, then the most
recent option is used and the older one is ignored.
- place forget window
- Causes the placer to stop managing the geometry of window. As a side effect
of this command window will be unmapped so that it doesn’t appear on the
screen. If window isn’t currently managed by the placer then the command
has no effect. This command returns an empty string.
- place info window
- Returns
a list giving the current configuration of window. The list consists of
option-value pairs in exactly the same form as might be specified to the
place configure command.
- place slaves window
- Returns a list of all the slave
windows for which window is the master. If there are no slaves for window
then an empty string is returned.
If the configuration of a window has been
retrieved with place info, that configuration can be restored later by
first using place forget to erase any existing information for the window
and then invoking place configure with the saved information.
It
is not necessary for the master window to be the parent of the slave window.
This feature is useful in at least two situations. First, for complex window
layouts it means you can create a hierarchy of subwindows whose only purpose
is to assist in the layout of the parent. The ‘‘real children’’ of the parent
(i.e. the windows that are significant for the application’s user interface)
can be children of the parent yet be placed inside the windows of the geometry-management
hierarchy. This means that the path names of the ‘‘real children’’ don’t reflect
the geometry-management hierarchy and users can specify options for the
real children without being aware of the structure of the geometry-management
hierarchy.
A second reason for having a master different than the slave’s
parent is to tie two siblings together. For example, the placer can be used
to force a window always to be positioned centered just below one of its
siblings by specifying the configuration
-in sibling -relx 0.5 -rely 1.0 -anchor n -bordermode outside
Whenever the sibling is repositioned in the future, the slave will be repositioned
as well.
Unlike many other geometry managers (such as the packer) the placer
does not make any attempt to manipulate the geometry of the master windows
or the parents of slave windows (i.e. it doesn’t set their requested sizes).
To control the sizes of these windows, make them windows like frames and
canvases that provide configuration options for this purpose.
Make
the label occupy the middle bit of the toplevel, no matter how it is resized:
label .l -text "In the\nMiddle!" -bg black -fg white
place .l -relwidth .3 -relx .35 -relheight .3 -rely .35
grid(n)
, pack(n)
geometry manager, height, location,
master, place, rubber sheet, slave, width
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