scrollbar(n) manual page
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scrollbar - Create and manipulate scrollbar
widgets
scrollbar pathName ?options?
-activebackground | -highlightcolor | -repeatdelay |
-background | -highlightthickness | -repeatinterval |
-borderwidth | -jump | -takefocus |
-cursor | -orient | -troughcolor |
-highlightbackground | -relief |
Command-Line Name: -activerelief
Database Name: activeRelief
Database Class: ActiveRelief
Specifies the relief to use when displaying the element that is active,
if any. Elements other than the active element are always displayed with
a raised relief.
Command-Line Name: -command
Database Name: command
Database Class: Command
Specifies the prefix of a Tcl command to invoke to change the view in the
widget associated with the scrollbar. When a user requests a view change
by manipulating the scrollbar, a Tcl command is invoked. The actual command
consists of this option followed by additional information as described
later. This option almost always has a value such as .t xview or .t yview,
consisting of the name of a widget and either xview (if the scrollbar is
for horizontal scrolling) or yview (for vertical scrolling). All scrollable
widgets have xview and yview commands that take exactly the additional
arguments appended by the scrollbar as described in SCROLLING COMMANDS
below.
Command-Line Name: -elementborderwidth
Database Name: elementBorderWidth
Database Class: BorderWidth
Specifies the width of borders drawn around the internal elements of the
scrollbar (the two arrows and the slider). The value may have any of the
forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. If this value is less than zero, the value
of the borderWidth option is used in its place.
Command-Line Name: -width
Database Name: width
Database Class: Width
Specifies the desired narrow dimension of the scrollbar window, not including
3-D border, if any. For vertical scrollbars this will be the width and for
horizontal scrollbars this will be the height. The value may have any of
the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.
The scrollbar command
creates a new window (given by the pathName argument) and makes it into
a scrollbar widget. Additional options, described above, may be specified
on the command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
scrollbar such as its colors, orientation, and relief. The scrollbar 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 scrollbar is a widget that displays two arrows, one at each end of the
scrollbar, and a slider in the middle portion of the scrollbar. It provides
information about what is visible in an associated window that displays
a document of some sort (such as a file being edited or a drawing). The
position and size of the slider indicate which portion of the document
is visible in the associated window. For example, if the slider in a vertical
scrollbar covers the top third of the area between the two arrows, it means
that the associated window displays the top third of its document.
Scrollbars
can be used to adjust the view in the associated window by clicking or
dragging with the mouse. See the BINDINGS section below for details.
A
scrollbar displays five elements, which are referred to in the widget commands
for the scrollbar:
- arrow1
- The top or left arrow in the scrollbar.
- trough1
- The region between the slider and arrow1.
- slider
- The rectangle that indicates
what is visible in the associated widget.
- trough2
- The region between the
slider and arrow2.
- arrow2
- The bottom or right arrow in the scrollbar.
The scrollbar 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. The following
commands are possible for scrollbar widgets:
- pathName activate ?element?
- Marks the element indicated by element as active, which causes it to be
displayed as specified by the activeBackground and activeRelief options.
The only element values understood by this command are arrow1, slider,
or arrow2. If any other value is specified then no element of the scrollbar
will be active. If element is not specified, the command returns the name
of the element that is currently active, or an empty string if no element
is active.
- pathName cget option
- Returns the current value of the configuration
option given by option. Option may have any of the values accepted by the
scrollbar command.
- 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 scrollbar
command.
- pathName delta deltaX deltaY
- Returns a real number indicating the
fractional change in the scrollbar setting that corresponds to a given
change in slider position. For example, if the scrollbar is horizontal,
the result indicates how much the scrollbar setting must change to move
the slider deltaX pixels to the right (deltaY is ignored in this case).
If the scrollbar is vertical, the result indicates how much the scrollbar
setting must change to move the slider deltaY pixels down. The arguments
and the result may be zero or negative.
- pathName fraction x y
- Returns a
real number between 0 and 1 indicating where the point given by x and y
lies in the trough area of the scrollbar. The value 0 corresponds to the
top or left of the trough, the value 1 corresponds to the bottom or right,
0.5 corresponds to the middle, and so on. X and y must be pixel coordinates
relative to the scrollbar widget. If x and y refer to a point outside the
trough, the closest point in the trough is used.
- pathName get
- Returns the
scrollbar settings in the form of a list whose elements are the arguments
to the most recent set widget command.
- pathName identify x y
- Returns the
name of the element under the point given by x and y (such as arrow1),
or an empty string if the point does not lie in any element of the scrollbar.
X and y must be pixel coordinates relative to the scrollbar widget.
- pathName
set first last
- This command is invoked by the scrollbar’s associated widget
to tell the scrollbar about the current view in the widget. The command
takes two arguments, each of which is a real fraction between 0 and 1. The
fractions describe the range of the document that is visible in the associated
widget. For example, if first is 0.2 and last is 0.4, it means that the first
part of the document visible in the window is 20% of the way through the
document, and the last visible part is 40% of the way through.
When the user interacts with the scrollbar, for example by dragging
the slider, the scrollbar notifies the associated widget that it must change
its view. The scrollbar makes the notification by evaluating a Tcl command
generated from the scrollbar’s -command option. The command may take any of
the following forms. In each case, prefix is the contents of the -command
option, which usually has a form like .t yview
- prefix moveto fraction
- Fraction
is a real number between 0 and 1. The widget should adjust its view so that
the point given by fraction appears at the beginning of the widget. If fraction
is 0 it refers to the beginning of the document. 1.0 refers to the end of
the document, 0.333 refers to a point one-third of the way through the document,
and so on.
- prefix scroll number units
- The widget should adjust its view
by number units. The units are defined in whatever way makes sense for the
widget, such as characters or lines in a text widget. Number is either 1,
which means one unit should scroll off the top or left of the window, or
-1, which means that one unit should scroll off the bottom or right of the
window.
- prefix scroll number pages
- The widget should adjust its view by
number pages. It is up to the widget to define the meaning of a page; typically
it is slightly less than what fits in the window, so that there is a slight
overlap between the old and new views. Number is either 1, which means the
next page should become visible, or -1, which means that the previous page
should become visible.
In versions of Tk before 4.0, the
set and get widget commands used a different form. This form is still supported
for backward compatibility, but it is deprecated. In the old command syntax,
the set widget command has the following form:
- pathName set totalUnits
windowUnits firstUnit lastUnit
- In this form the arguments are all integers.
TotalUnits gives the total size of the object being displayed in the associated
widget. The meaning of one unit depends on the associated widget; for
example, in a text editor widget units might correspond to lines of text.
WindowUnits indicates the total number of units that can fit in the associated
window at one time. FirstUnit and lastUnit give the indices of the first
and last units currently visible in the associated window (zero corresponds
to the first unit of the object).
Under the old syntax the get widget command
returns a list of four integers, consisting of the totalUnits, windowUnits,
firstUnit, and lastUnit values from the last set widget command.
The commands
generated by scrollbars also have a different form when the old syntax
is being used:
- prefix unit
- Unit is an integer that indicates what should
appear at the top or left of the associated widget’s window. It has the same
meaning as the firstUnit and lastUnit arguments to the set widget command.
The most recent set widget command determines whether or not to use the
old syntax. If it is given two real arguments then the new syntax will be
used in the future, and if it is given four integer arguments then the
old syntax will be used.
Tk automatically creates class bindings
for scrollbars that give them the following default behavior. If the behavior
is different for vertical and horizontal scrollbars, the horizontal behavior
is described in parentheses.
- Pressing button 1 over arrow1 causes the view
in the associated widget to shift up (left) by one unit so that the document
appears to move down (right) one unit. If the button is held down, the action
auto-repeats.
- Pressing button 1 over trough1 causes the view in the associated
widget to shift up (left) by one screenful so that the document appears
to move down (right) one screenful. If the button is held down, the action
auto-repeats.
- Pressing button 1 over the slider and dragging causes the view
to drag with the slider. If the jump option is true, then the view doesn’t
drag along with the slider; it changes only when the mouse button is released.
- Pressing button 1 over trough2 causes the view in the associated widget
to shift down (right) by one screenful so that the document appears to
move up (left) one screenful. If the button is held down, the action auto-repeats.
- Pressing button 1 over arrow2 causes the view in the associated widget
to shift down (right) by one unit so that the document appears to move
up (left) one unit. If the button is held down, the action auto-repeats.
- If
button 2 is pressed over the trough or the slider, it sets the view to
correspond to the mouse position; dragging the mouse with button 2 down
causes the view to drag with the mouse. If button 2 is pressed over one
of the arrows, it causes the same behavior as pressing button 1.
- If button
1 is pressed with the Control key down, then if the mouse is over arrow1
or trough1 the view changes to the very top (left) of the document; if
the mouse is over arrow2 or trough2 the view changes to the very bottom
(right) of the document; if the mouse is anywhere else then the button
press has no effect.
- In vertical scrollbars the Up and Down keys have the
same behavior as mouse clicks over arrow1 and arrow2, respectively. In horizontal
scrollbars these keys have no effect.
- In vertical scrollbars Control-Up and
Control-Down have the same behavior as mouse clicks over trough1 and trough2,
respectively. In horizontal scrollbars these keys have no effect.
- In horizontal
scrollbars the Up and Down keys have the same behavior as mouse clicks
over arrow1 and arrow2, respectively. In vertical scrollbars these keys
have no effect.
- In horizontal scrollbars Control-Up and Control-Down have
the same behavior as mouse clicks over trough1 and trough2, respectively.
In vertical scrollbars these keys have no effect.
- The Prior and Next keys
have the same behavior as mouse clicks over trough1 and trough2, respectively.
- The Home key adjusts the view to the top (left edge) of the document.
- The
End key adjusts the view to the bottom (right edge) of the document.
Create
a window with a scrollable text widget:
toplevel .tl
text .tl.t -yscrollcommand {.tl.s set}
scrollbar .tl.s -command {.tl.t yview}
grid .tl.t .tl.s -sticky nsew
grid columnconfigure .tl 0 -weight 1
grid rowconfigure .tl 0 -weight 1
scrollbar, widget
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