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author | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2018-12-25 19:56:49 (GMT) |
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committer | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2018-12-25 19:56:49 (GMT) |
commit | d5a4b3667e9d26b9c13905ccb51021d13ce87c58 (patch) | |
tree | fc0f3692516c8c3e8090df20223d342a1b64df93 /tk8.6/doc/text.n | |
parent | ff51550ee89b473c63df78de6b2a413f21105687 (diff) | |
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diff --git a/tk8.6/doc/text.n b/tk8.6/doc/text.n new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a161e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/tk8.6/doc/text.n @@ -0,0 +1,2285 @@ +'\" +'\" Copyright (c) 1992 The Regents of the University of California. +'\" Copyright (c) 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. +'\" +'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution +'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. +'\" +.TH text n 8.5 Tk "Tk Built-In Commands" +.so man.macros +.BS +'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below! +.SH NAME +text, tk_textCopy, tk_textCut, tk_textPaste \- Create and manipulate 'text' hypertext editing widgets +.SH SYNOPSIS +.nf +\fBtext\fR \fIpathName \fR?\fIoptions\fR? +\fBtk_textCopy\fR \fIpathName\fR +\fBtk_textCut\fR \fIpathName\fR +\fBtk_textPaste\fR \fIpathName\fR +.SO +\-background \-highlightthickness \-relief +\-borderwidth \-insertbackground \-selectbackground +\-cursor \-insertborderwidth \-selectborderwidth +\-exportselection \-insertofftime \-selectforeground +\-font \-insertontime \-setgrid +\-foreground \-insertwidth \-takefocus +\-highlightbackground \-padx \-xscrollcommand +\-highlightcolor \-pady \-yscrollcommand +.SE +.SH "WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS" +.OP \-autoseparators autoSeparators AutoSeparators +Specifies a boolean that says whether separators are automatically inserted in +the undo stack. Only meaningful when the \fB\-undo\fR option is true. +.OP \-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. +.OP \-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. +.OP \-height height Height +Specifies the desired height for the window, in units of characters in the +font given by the \fB\-font\fR option. Must be at least one. +.OP \-inactiveselectbackground inactiveSelectBackground Foreground +Specifies the colour to use for the selection (the \fBsel\fR tag) when the +window does not have the input focus. If empty, \fB{}\fR, then no selection is +shown when the window does not have the focus. +.OP \-insertunfocussed insertUnfocussed InsertUnfocussed +.VS 8.6 +Specifies how to display the insertion cursor when the widget does not have +the focus. Must be \fBnone\fR (the default) which means to not display the +cursor, \fBhollow\fR which means to display a hollow box, or \fBsolid\fR which +means to display a solid box. Note that \fBhollow\fR and \fBsolid\fR will +appear very similar when the \fB\-blockcursor\fR option is false. +.VE 8.6 +.OP \-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. +.OP \-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 +\fB\-spacing1\fR options in tags. +.OP \-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 +\fB\-spacing2\fR options in tags. +.OP \-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 +\fB\-spacing3\fR options in tags. +.OP \-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. +.OP \-state state State +Specifies one of two states for the text: \fBnormal\fR or \fBdisabled\fR. 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. +.OP \-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 \fBleft\fR, \fBright\fR, \fBcenter\fR, or +\fBnumeric\fR, which specifies how to justify text relative to the tab stop. +\fBLeft\fR is the default; it causes the text following the tab character to +be positioned with its left edge at the tab position. \fBRight\fR means that +the right edge of the text following the tab character is positioned at the +tab position, and \fBcenter\fR means that the text is centered at the tab +position. \fBNumeric\fR 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, +.QW "\fB\-tabs {2c left 4c 6c center}\fR" +creates three tab stops at two-centimeter intervals; the first two use left +justification and the third uses center justification. +.RS +.PP +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 \fB\-tabs\fR option may be overridden by +\fB\-tabs\fR options in tags. +.PP +If no \fB\-tabs\fR 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 +.QW "\fB\-tabs \N'34'[expr {4 * [font measure $font 0]}] left\N'34' \-tabstyle wordprocessor\fR" . +.RE +.OP \-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 \fBtabular\fR (the default) +or \fBwordprocessor\fR. Note that tabs are interpreted as they are encountered +in the text. If the tab style is \fBtabular\fR then the \fIn\fR'th tab +character in the line's text will be associated with the \fIn\fR'th tab stop +defined for that line. If the tab character's x coordinate falls to the right +of the \fIn\fR'th tab stop, then a gap of a single space will be inserted as a +fallback. If the tab style is \fBwordprocessor\fR 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 +\fB\-tabstyle\fR option may be overridden by \fB\-tabstyle\fR options in tags. +.OP \-undo undo Undo +Specifies a boolean that says whether the undo mechanism is active or not. +.OP \-width width Width +Specifies the desired width for the window in units of characters in the font +given by the \fB\-font\fR option. If the font does not have a uniform width +then the width of the character +.QW 0 +is used in translating from character units to screen units. +.OP \-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 \fBnone\fR or \fBchar\fR +or \fBword\fR. A wrap mode of \fBnone\fR 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 \fBchar\fR mode a screen line break may occur after any character; in +\fBword\fR mode a line break will only be made at word boundaries. +.BE +.SH DESCRIPTION +.PP +The \fBtext\fR command creates a new window (given by the \fIpathName\fR +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 \fBtext\fR command returns the path name of the new window. +.PP +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 \fBTAGS\fR below for more details. +.PP +The second form of annotation consists of floating markers in the text called +.QW marks . +Marks are used to keep track of various interesting positions in the text as +it is edited. See \fBMARKS\fR below for more details. +.PP +The third form of annotation allows arbitrary windows to be embedded in a text +widget. See \fBEMBEDDED WINDOWS\fR below for more details. +.PP +The fourth form of annotation allows Tk images to be embedded in a text +widget. See \fBEMBEDDED IMAGES\fR below for more details. +.PP +The text widget also has a built-in undo/redo mechanism. See +\fBTHE UNDO MECHANISM\fR below for more details. +.PP +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 \fBPEER WIDGETS\fR below for more details. +.SH INDICES +.PP +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 +.CS +\fIbase modifier modifier modifier ...\fR +.CE +Where \fIbase\fR gives a starting point and the \fImodifier\fRs adjust the +index from the starting point (e.g. move forward or backward one character). +Every index must contain a \fIbase\fR, but the \fImodifier\fRs are optional. +Most modifiers (as documented below) allow an optional submodifier. Valid +submodifiers are \fBany\fR and \fBdisplay\fR. 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 \fImodifier\fR. +Typically the \fBdisplay\fR submodifier adjusts the meaning of the following +\fImodifier\fR 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 \fIcount\fR is used as part of a modifier, it can be positive or +negative, so +.QW "\fIbase\fR \- \-3 lines" +is perfectly valid (and equivalent to +.QW "\fIbase\fR +3lines" ). +.PP +The \fIbase\fR for an index must have one of the following forms: +.TP 12 +\fIline\fB.\fIchar\fR +. +Indicates \fIchar\fR'th character on line \fIline\fR. 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 \fIchar\fR is \fBend\fR then +it refers to the newline character that ends the line. +.TP 12 +\fB@\fIx\fB,\fIy\fR +. +Indicates the character that covers the pixel whose x and y coordinates within +the text's window are \fIx\fR and \fIy\fR. +.TP 12 +\fBend\fR +. +Indicates the end of the text (the character just after the last newline). +.TP 12 +\fImark\fR +. +Indicates the character just after the mark whose name is \fImark\fR. +.TP 12 +\fItag\fB.first\fR +. +Indicates the first character in the text that has been tagged with \fItag\fR. +This form generates an error if no characters are currently tagged with +\fItag\fR. +.TP 12 +\fItag\fB.last\fR +. +Indicates the character just after the last one in the text that has been +tagged with \fItag\fR. This form generates an error if no characters are +currently tagged with \fItag\fR. +.TP 12 +\fIpathName\fR +. +Indicates the position of the embedded window whose name is \fIpathName\fR. +This form generates an error if there is no embedded window by the given name. +.TP 12 +\fIimageName\fR +. +Indicates the position of the embedded image whose name is \fIimageName\fR. +This form generates an error if there is no embedded image by the given name. +.PP +If the \fIbase\fR could match more than one of the above forms, such as a +\fImark\fR and \fIimageName\fR 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 \fBchars\fR and \fBwordend\fR may be abbreviated as long as the +abbreviation is unambiguous. +.TP +\fB+ \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBchars\fR +. +Adjust the index forward by \fIcount\fR characters, moving to later lines in +the text if necessary. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR characters in the +text after the current index, then set the index to the last index in the +text. Spaces on either side of \fIcount\fR are optional. If the \fBdisplay\fR +submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over without being +counted. If \fBany\fR 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 \fBINDICES\fR for details). This +behaviour may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index +count, you are encouraged to use \fBindices\fR instead wherever possible. +.TP +\fB\- \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBchars\fR +. +Adjust the index backward by \fIcount\fR characters, moving to earlier lines +in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR 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 \fIcount\fR are optional. If the +\fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over without +being counted. If \fBany\fR 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 \fBINDICES\fR for details). This +behavior may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index +count, you are encouraged to use \fBindices\fR instead wherever possible. +.TP +\fB+ \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBindices\fR +. +Adjust the index forward by \fIcount\fR index positions, moving to later lines +in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR 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 \fIcount\fR are optional. Note +that an index position is either a single character or a single embedded image +or embedded window. If the \fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided indices +are skipped over without being counted. If \fBany\fR is given, then all +indices are counted; this is also the default behaviour if no modifier is +given. +.TP +\fB\- \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBindices\fR +. +Adjust the index backward by \fIcount\fR index positions, moving to earlier +lines in the text if necessary. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR 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 \fIcount\fR +are optional. If the \fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided indices are +skipped over without being counted. If \fBany\fR is given, then all indices +are counted; this is also the default behaviour if no modifier is given. +.TP +\fB+ \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBlines\fR +. +Adjust the index forward by \fIcount\fR lines, retaining the same character +position within the line. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR 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 \fIcount\fR are optional. If the \fBdisplay\fR +submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted separately. +Otherwise, if \fBany\fR (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. +.TP +\fB\- \fIcount\fR ?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBlines\fR +. +Adjust the index backward by \fIcount\fR logical lines, retaining the same +character position within the line. If there are fewer than \fIcount\fR 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 \fIcount\fR are optional. If the +\fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted +separately. Otherwise, if \fBany\fR (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. +.TP +?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBlinestart\fR +. +Adjust the index to refer to the first index on the line. If the \fBdisplay\fR +submodifier is given, this is the first index on the display line, otherwise +on the logical line. +.TP +?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBlineend\fR +. +Adjust the index to refer to the last index on the line (the newline). If the +\fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, this is the last index on the display +line, otherwise on the logical line. +.TP +?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBwordstart\fR +. +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 \fBdisplay\fR submodifier is given, this only examines +non-elided characters, otherwise all characters (elided or not) are examined. +.TP +?\fIsubmodifier\fR? \fBwordend\fR +. +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 \fBdisplay\fR +submodifier is given, this only examines non-elided characters, otherwise all +characters (elided or not) are examined. +.PP +If more than one modifier is present then they are applied in left-to-right +order. For example, the index +.QW "\fBend \- 1 chars\fR" +refers to the next-to-last character in the text and +.QW "\fBinsert wordstart \- 1 c\fR" +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 +.QW "\fB1.0 \-1c +1c\fR" +refers to the index +.QW \fB2.0\fR . +.PP +Where modifiers result in index changes by display lines, display chars or +display indices, and the \fIbase\fR refers to an index inside an elided tag, +that base index is considered to be equivalent to the first following +non-elided index. +.SH TAGS +.PP +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 +.QW " " +(space), \fB+\fR, or \fB\-\fR: 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. +.PP +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 +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag raise\fR" +and +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag lower\fR" +widget commands. +.PP +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 \fB\-background\fR, \fB\-font\fR, and \fB\-foreground\fR +options for the text widget. However, display options may be associated with +individual tags using the +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag configure\fR" +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: +.TP +\fB\-background \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the background color to use for characters associated +with the tag. It may have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. +.TP +\fB\-bgstipple \fIbitmap\fR +. +\fIBitmap\fR specifies a bitmap that is used as a stipple pattern for the +background. It may have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetBitmap\fR. If +\fIbitmap\fR has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, +then a solid fill will be used for the background. +.TP +\fB\-borderwidth \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR specifies the width of a border to draw around the tag using any +of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetPixels\fR. This option should be used in +conjunction with the \fB\-relief\fR option to provide the desired border. +.TP +\fB\-elide \fIboolean\fR +. +\fIElide\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-fgstipple \fIbitmap\fR +. +\fIBitmap\fR 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 \fBTk_GetBitmap\fR. If \fIbitmap\fR has not been +specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then a solid fill will be +used. +.TP +\fB\-font \fIfontName\fR +. +\fIFontName\fR is the name of a font to use for drawing characters. It may +have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetFont\fR. +.TP +\fB\-foreground \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the color to use when drawing text and other foreground +information such as underlines. It may have any of the forms accepted by +\fBTk_GetColor\fR. +.TP +\fB\-justify \fIjustify\fR +. +If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag for which this +option has been specified, then \fIjustify\fR determines how to justify the +line. It must be one of \fBleft\fR, \fBright\fR, or \fBcenter\fR. 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. +.TP +\fB\-lmargin1 \fIpixels\fR +. +If the first non-elided character of a text line has a tag for which this +option has been specified, then \fIpixels\fR specifies how much the line +should be indented from the left edge of the window. \fIPixels\fR 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 \fB\-lmargin2\fR +option controls the indentation for subsequent lines. +.TP +\fB\-lmargin2 \fIpixels\fR +. +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 \fIpixels\fR specifies how +much the line should be indented from the left edge of the window. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-lmargincolor \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the background color to use in regions that do not +contain characters because they are indented by \fB\-lmargin1\fR or +\fB\-lmargin2\fR. It may have any of the forms accepted by +\fBTk_GetColor\fR. If \fIcolor\fR has not been specified, or if it is +specified as an empty string, then the color used is specified by the +\fB-background\fR tag option (or, if this is also unspecified, by the +\fB-background\fR widget option). +.TP +\fB\-offset \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. \fIPixels\fR may have any of the standard forms for screen +distances. +.TP +\fB\-overstrike \fIboolean\fR +. +Specifies whether or not to draw a horizontal rule through the middle of +characters. \fIBoolean\fR may have any of the forms accepted by +\fBTcl_GetBoolean\fR. +.TP +\fB\-overstrikefg \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the color to use when displaying the overstrike. It may +have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. If \fIcolor\fR has not +been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then the color +specified by the \fB\-foreground\fR tag option is used. +.TP +\fB\-relief \fIrelief\fR +. +\fIRelief\fR specifies the relief style to use for drawing the border, in any +of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetRelief\fR. This option is used in +conjunction with the \fB\-borderwidth\fR option to enable to the desired +border appearance. +.TP +\fB\-rmargin \fIpixels\fR +. +If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag for which this +option has been specified, then \fIpixels\fR specifies how wide a margin to +leave between the end of the line and the right edge of the window. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-rmargincolor \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the background color to use in regions that do not +contain characters because they are indented by \fB\-rmargin\fR. It may +have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. If \fIcolor\fR has not +been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then the color +used is specified by the \fB-background\fR tag option (or, if this is also +unspecified, by the \fB-background\fR widget option). +.TP +\fB\-selectbackground \fIcolor\fR +\fIColor\fR specifies the background color to use when displaying selected +items. It may have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. If +\fIcolor\fR has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty +string, then the color specified by the \fB\-background\fR tag option is +used. +.TP +\fB\-selectforeground \fIcolor\fR +\fIColor\fR specifies the foreground color to use when displaying selected +items. It may have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. If +\fIcolor\fR has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty +string, then the color specified by the \fB\-foreground\fR tag option is +used. +.TP +\fB\-spacing1 \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-spacing2 \fIpixels\fR +. +For lines that wrap, this option specifies how much additional space to leave +between the display lines for a single text line. \fIPixels\fR may have any of +the standard forms for screen distances. +.TP +\fB\-spacing3 \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-tabs \fItabList\fR +. +\fITabList\fR specifies a set of tab stops in the same form as for the +\fB\-tabs\fR 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 \fB\-tags\0{\0}\fR, then it +requests default 8-character tabs as described for the \fB\-tags\fR widget +option. +.TP +\fB\-tabstyle \fIstyle\fR +. +\fIStyle\fR specifies either the \fItabular\fR or \fIwordprocessor\fR 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). +.TP +\fB\-underline \fIboolean\fR +. +\fIBoolean\fR specifies whether or not to draw an underline underneath +characters. It may have any of the forms accepted by \fBTcl_GetBoolean\fR. +.TP +\fB\-underlinefg \fIcolor\fR +. +\fIColor\fR specifies the color to use when displaying the underline. It may +have any of the forms accepted by \fBTk_GetColor\fR. If \fIcolor\fR has not +been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then the color +specified by the \fB\-foreground\fR tag option is used. +.TP +\fB\-wrap \fImode\fR +. +\fIMode\fR specifies how to handle lines that are wider than the text's +window. This option only applies to a display line if it applies to the +first non-elided character on that display line. It has the same legal +values as the \fB\-wrap\fR option for the text widget: \fBnone\fR, +\fBchar\fR, or \fBword\fR. If this tag option is specified, it +overrides the \fB\-wrap\fR option for the text widget. +.PP +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. +.PP +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 +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag bind\fR" +widget command below. Tag bindings are shared between all peer widgets +(including any bindings for the special \fBsel\fR tag). +.PP +The third use for tags is in managing the selection. See \fBTHE SELECTION\fR +below. With the exception of the special \fBsel\fR tag, all tags are shared +between peer text widgets, and may be manipulated on an equal basis from any +such widget. The \fBsel\fR tag exists separately and independently in each +peer text widget (but any tag bindings to \fBsel\fR are shared). +.SH MARKS +.PP +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 +.QW "\fIpathName \fBmark\fR" +widget command, and their current locations may be determined by using the +mark name as an index in widget commands. +.PP +Each mark also has a +.QW gravity , +which is either \fBleft\fR or \fBright\fR. 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 \fBright\fR. +.PP +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. +.PP +Two marks have special significance. First, the mark \fBinsert\fR is +associated with the insertion cursor, as described under +\fBTHE INSERTION CURSOR\fR +below. Second, the mark \fBcurrent\fR 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: +\fBcurrent\fR 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. +.SH "EMBEDDED WINDOWS" +.PP +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). +.PP +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. +.PP +Eliding an embedded window immediately after scheduling it for creation via +\fIpathName \fBwindow create \fIindex \fB-create\fR will prevent it from being +effectively created. Uneliding an elided embedded window scheduled for creation +via \fIpathName \fBwindow create \fIindex \fB-create\fR will automatically +trigger the associated creation script. After destroying an elided embedded +window, the latter won't get automatically recreated. +.PP +When an embedded window is added to a text widget with the \fIpathName +\fBwindow create\fR widget command, several configuration options may be +associated with it. These options may be modified later with the \fIpathName +\fBwindow configure\fR widget command. The following options are currently +supported: +.TP +\fB\-align \fIwhere\fR +. +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. \fIWhere\fR must have +one of the values \fBtop\fR (align the top of the window with the top of the +line), \fBcenter\fR (center the window within the range of the line), +\fBbottom\fR (align the bottom of the window with the bottom of the line's +area), or \fBbaseline\fR (align the bottom of the window with the baseline of +the line). +.TP +\fB\-create \fIscript\fR +. +Specifies a Tcl script that may be evaluated to create the window for the +annotation. If no \fB\-window\fR option has been specified for the annotation +this script will be evaluated when the annotation is about to be displayed on +the screen. \fIScript\fR must create a window for the annotation and return +the name of that window as its result. Two substitutions will be performed in +\fIscript\fR before evaluation. \fI%W\fR will be substituted by the name of +the parent text widget, and \fI%%\fR will be substituted by a single \fI%\fR. +If the annotation's window should ever be deleted, \fIscript\fR will be +evaluated again the next time the annotation is displayed. +.TP +\fB\-padx \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-pady \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-stretch \fIboolean\fR +. +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 \fB\-pady\fR +option has been specified as well, then the requested padding will be retained +even if the window is stretched. +.TP +\fB\-window \fIpathName\fR +. +Specifies the name of a window to display in the annotation. Note that if a +\fIpathName\fR has been set, then later configuring a window to the empty +string will not delete the widget corresponding to the old \fIpathName\fR. +Rather it will remove the association between the old \fIpathName\fR and the +text widget. If multiple peer widgets are in use, it is usually simpler to use +the \fB\-create\fR option if embedded windows are desired in each peer. +.SH "EMBEDDED IMAGES" +.PP +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. +.PP +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 \fIpathName \fBimage create\fR. If the range of text +containing the embedded image is deleted then that copy of the image is removed +from the screen. +.PP +Eliding an embedded image immediately after scheduling it for creation via +\fIpathName \fBimage create \fIindex \fB-create\fR will prevent it from being +effectively created. Uneliding an elided embedded image scheduled for creation +via \fIpathName \fBimage create \fIindex \fB-create\fR will automatically +trigger the associated creation script. After destroying an elided embedded +image, the latter won't get automatically recreated. +.PP +When an embedded image is added to a text widget with the \fIpathName \fBimage +create\fR 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 \fB\-name\fR option (described below). If the +\fB\-name\fR option is not provided, the \fB\-image\fR name is used instead. +If the \fIimageName\fR is already in use in the text widget, then \fB#\fInn\fR +is added to the end of the \fIimageName\fR, where \fInn\fR is an arbitrary +integer. This insures the \fIimageName\fR is unique. Once this name is +assigned to this instance of the image, it does not change, even though the +\fB\-image\fR or \fB\-name\fR values can be changed with \fIpathName \fBimage +configure\fR. +.PP +When an embedded image is added to a text widget with the \fIpathName \fBimage +create\fR widget command, several configuration options may be associated with +it. These options may be modified later with the \fIpathName \fBimage +configure\fR widget command. The following options are currently supported: +.TP +\fB\-align \fIwhere\fR +. +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. \fIWhere\fR must have one +of the values \fBtop\fR (align the top of the image with the top of the line), +\fBcenter\fR (center the image within the range of the line), \fBbottom\fR +(align the bottom of the image with the bottom of the line's area), or +\fBbaseline\fR (align the bottom of the image with the baseline of the line). +.TP +\fB\-image \fIimage\fR +. +Specifies the name of the Tk image to display in the annotation. If +\fIimage\fR is not a valid Tk image, then an error is returned. +.TP +\fB\-name \fIImageName\fR +. +Specifies the name by which this image instance may be referenced in the text +widget. If \fIImageName\fR is not supplied, then the name of the Tk image is +used instead. If the \fIimageName\fR is already in use, \fI#nn\fR is appended +to the end of the name as described above. +.TP +\fB\-padx \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.TP +\fB\-pady \fIpixels\fR +. +\fIPixels\fR 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. +.SH "THE SELECTION" +.PP +Selection support is implemented via tags. If the \fB\-exportselection\fR option +for the text widget is true then the \fBsel\fR tag will be associated with the +selection: +.IP [1] +Whenever characters are tagged with \fBsel\fR the text widget will claim +ownership of the selection. +.IP [2] +Attempts to retrieve the selection will be serviced by the text widget, +returning all the characters with the \fBsel\fR tag. +.IP [3] +If the selection is claimed away by another application or by another window +within this application, then the \fBsel\fR tag will be removed from all +characters in the text. +.IP [4] +Whenever the \fBsel\fR tag range changes a virtual event \fB<<Selection>>\fR +is generated. +.PP +The \fBsel\fR tag is automatically defined when a text widget is created, and +it may not be deleted with the +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag delete\fR" +widget command. Furthermore, the \fB\-selectbackground\fR, +\fB\-selectborderwidth\fR, and \fB\-selectforeground\fR options for the text +widget are tied to the \fB\-background\fR, \fB\-borderwidth\fR, and +\fB\-foreground\fR options for the \fBsel\fR tag: changes in either will +automatically be reflected in the other. Also the +\fB\-inactiveselectbackground\fR option for the text widget is used instead of +\fB\-selectbackground\fR when the text widget does not have the focus. This +allows programmatic control over the visualization of the \fBsel\fR tag for +foreground and background windows, or to have \fBsel\fR not shown at all (when +\fB\-inactiveselectbackground\fR is empty) for background windows. Each peer +text widget has its own \fBsel\fR tag which can be separately configured and +set. +.SH "THE INSERTION CURSOR" +.PP +The mark named \fBinsert\fR has special significance in text widgets. It is +defined automatically when a text widget is created and it may not be unset +with the +.QW "\fIpathName \fBmark unset\fR" +widget command. The \fBinsert\fR 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. +.SH "THE MODIFIED FLAG" +.PP +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 \fB<<Modified>>\fR virtual event is generated. See the +\fIpathName \fBedit modified\fR widget command for more details. +.SH "THE UNDO MECHANISM" +.PP +The text widget has an unlimited undo and redo mechanism (when the +\fB\-undo\fR widget option is true) which records every insert and delete +action on a stack. +.PP +Boundaries (called +.QW 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. +.PP +Separators are inserted automatically when the \fB\-autoseparators\fR 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. +.PP +The \fB<<UndoStack>>\fR virtual event is generated every time the undo stack +or the redo stack becomes empty or unempty. +.PP +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. +.PP +See below for the \fIpathName \fBedit\fR widget command that controls the undo +mechanism. +.SH "PEER WIDGETS" +.PP +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. +.PP +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. +.PP +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. +.PP +All data and markup is shared, except for a few small details. First, the +\fBsel\fR tag may be set and configured (in its display style) differently for +each peer. Second, each peer has its own \fBinsert\fR and \fBcurrent\fR mark +positions (but all other marks are shared). Third, embedded windows, which are +arbitrary other widgets, cannot be shared between peers. This means the +\fB\-window\fR option of embedded windows is independently set for each peer +(it is advisable to use the \fB\-create\fR 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. \fB\-font\fR, etc) can be set +independently, with the exception of \fB\-undo\fR, \fB\-maxundo\fR, +\fB\-autoseparators\fR (i.e. all undo, redo and modified state issues are +shared). +.PP +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 +.QW 1.0 +to +.QW 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 \fIpeerName \fBindex end\fR may return quite different values in +different peers. Similarly, commands like \fIpeerName \fBtag ranges\fR will +not return index ranges outside that which is meaningful to the peer. The +configuration options \fB\-startline\fR and \fB\-endline\fR may be used to +control how much of the underlying data is contained in any given text widget. +.PP +Note that peers are really peers. Deleting the +.QW original +text widget will not cause any other peers to be deleted, or otherwise +affected. +.PP +See below for the \fIpathName \fBpeer\fR widget command that controls the +creation of peer widgets. +.SH "ASYNCHRONOUS UPDATE OF LINE HEIGHTS" +.PP +In order to maintain a responsive user-experience, the text widget calculates +lines metrics (line heights in pixels) asynchronously. Because of this, some +commands of the text widget may return wrong results if the asynchronous +calculations are not finished at the time of calling. This applies to +\fIpathName \fBcount -ypixels\fR and \fIpathName \fByview\fR. +.PP +Again for performance reasons, it would not be appropriate to let these +commands always wait for the end of the update calculation each time they are +called. In most use cases of these commands a more or less inaccurate result +does not really matter compared to execution speed. +.PP +In case accurate result is needed (and if the text widget is managed by a +geometry manager), one can resort to \fIpathName \fBsync\fR and \fIpathName +\fBpendingsync\fR to control the synchronization of the view of text widgets. +.PP +The \fB<<WidgetViewSync>>\fR virtual event fires when the line heights of the +text widget become obsolete (due to some editing command or configuration +change), and again when the internal data of the text widget are back in sync +with the widget view. The detail field (%d substitution) is either true (when +the widget is in sync) or false (when it is not). +.PP +\fIpathName \fBsync\fR, \fIpathName \fBpendingsync\fR and +\fB<<WidgetViewSync>>\fR apply to each text widget independently of its peers. +.PP +Examples of use: +.CS +## Example 1: +# immediately complete line metrics at any cost (GUI unresponsive) +$w sync +$w yview moveto $fraction + +## Example 2: +# synchronously wait for up-to-date line metrics (GUI responsive) +# before executing the scheduled command, but don't block execution flow +$w sync -command [list $w yview moveto $fraction] + +## Example 3: +# init +set yud($w) 0 +proc updateaction w { +\&set ::yud($w) 1 +\&# any other update action here... +} +# runtime, synchronously wait for up-to-date line metrics (GUI responsive) +$w sync -command [list updateaction $w] +vwait yud($w) +$w yview moveto $fraction + +## Example 4: +# init +set todo($w) {} +proc updateaction w { +\&foreach cmd $::todo($w) {uplevel #0 $cmd} +\&set todo($w) {} +} +# runtime +lappend todo($w) [list $w yview moveto $fraction] +$w sync -command [list updateaction $w] + +## Example 5: +# init +set todo($w) {} +bind $w <<WidgetViewSync>> { +\&if {%d} { +\&\&foreach cmd $todo(%W) {eval $cmd} +\&\&set todo(%W) {} +\&} +} +# runtime +if {![$w pendingsync]} { +\&$w yview moveto $fraction +} else { +\&lappend todo($w) [list $w yview moveto $fraction] +} +.CE +.SH "WIDGET COMMAND" +.PP +The \fBtext\fR 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: +.CS +\fIpathName option \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +.CE +\fIPathName\fR is the name of the command, which is the same as the text +widget's path name. \fIOption\fR and the \fIarg\fRs determine the exact +behavior of the command. The following commands are possible for text widgets: +.TP +\fIpathName \fBbbox \fIindex\fR +. +Returns a list of four elements describing the screen area of the character +given by \fIindex\fR. 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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBcget\fR \fIoption\fR +. +Returns the current value of the configuration option given by \fIoption\fR. +\fIOption\fR may have any of the values accepted by the \fBtext\fR command. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBcompare\fR \fIindex1 op index2\fR +. +Compares the indices given by \fIindex1\fR and \fIindex2\fR according to the +relational operator given by \fIop\fR, and returns 1 if the relationship is +satisfied and 0 if it is not. \fIOp\fR must be one of the operators <, <=, ==, +>=, >, or !=. If \fIop\fR is == then 1 is returned if the two indices refer to +the same character, if \fIop\fR is < then 1 is returned if \fIindex1\fR refers +to an earlier character in the text than \fIindex2\fR, and so on. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBconfigure\fR ?\fIoption\fR? \fI?value option value ...\fR? +. +Query or modify the configuration options of the widget. If no \fIoption\fR is +specified, returns a list describing all of the available options for +\fIpathName\fR (see \fBTk_ConfigureInfo\fR for information on the format of +this list). If \fIoption\fR is specified with no \fIvalue\fR, 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 \fIoption\fR is +specified). If one or more \fIoption\-value\fR 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. \fIOption\fR may have any of +the values accepted by the \fBtext\fR command. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBcount\fR \fI?options\fR? \fIindex1 index2\fR +. +Counts the number of relevant things between the two indices. If \fIindex1\fR +is after \fIindex2\fR, 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 \fB\-chars\fR, +\fB\-displaychars\fR, \fB\-displayindices\fR, \fB\-displaylines\fR, +\fB\-indices\fR, \fB\-lines\fR, \fB\-xpixels\fR and \fB\-ypixels\fR. The +default value, if no option is specified, is \fB\-indices\fR. There is an +additional possible option \fB\-update\fR which is a modifier. If given (and +if the text widget is managed by a geometry manager), then all subsequent +options ensure that any possible out of date information is recalculated. +This currently only has any effect for the \fB\-ypixels\fR count (which, if +\fB\-update\fR is not given, will use the text widget's current cached value +for each line). This \fB\-update\fR option is obsoleted by \fIpathName +\fBsync\fR, \fIpathName \fBpendingsync\fR and \fB<<WidgetViewSync>>\fR. The +count options are interpreted as follows: +.RS +.IP \fB\-chars\fR +count all characters, whether elided or not. Do not count embedded windows or +images. +.IP \fB\-displaychars\fR +count all non-elided characters. +.IP \fB\-displayindices\fR +count all non-elided characters, windows and images. +.IP \fB\-displaylines\fR +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. +.IP \fB\-indices\fR +count all characters and embedded windows or images (i.e. everything which +counts in text-widget index space), whether they are elided or not. +.IP \fB\-lines\fR +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. +.IP \fB\-xpixels\fR +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 +.QW ".text count \-xpixels \N'34'${line}.0\N'34' \N'34'${line}.0 lineend\N'34'" . +.IP \fB\-ypixels\fR +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 +.QW ".text count \-ypixels 1.0 end" , +and to ensure this is up to date, use +.QW ".text count \-update \-ypixels 1.0 end" . +.PP +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 +.QW ".text count \-xpixels \-ypixels 1.3 4.5" +is perfectly valid and will return a list of two elements. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBdebug \fR?\fIboolean\fR? +. +If \fIboolean\fR 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 \fIboolean\fR has a false value then the debugging checks will be +turned off. In either case the command returns an empty string. If +\fIboolean\fR is not specified then the command returns \fBon\fR or \fBoff\fR +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. +.RS +.PP +When debugging is turned on, the drawing routines of the text widget set the +global variables \fBtk_textRedraw\fR and \fBtk_textRelayout\fR to the lists of +indices that are redrawn. The values of these variables are tested by Tk's +test suite. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBdelete \fIindex1 \fR?\fIindex2 ...\fR? +. +Delete a range of characters from the text. +If both \fIindex1\fR and \fIindex2\fR are specified, then delete +all the characters starting with the one given by \fIindex1\fR +and stopping just before \fIindex2\fR (i.e. the character at +\fIindex2\fR is not deleted). +If \fIindex2\fR does not specify a position later in the text +than \fIindex1\fR then no characters are deleted. +If \fIindex2\fR is not specified then the single character at +\fIindex1\fR is deleted. +Attempts to delete characters in a way that would leave +the text without a newline as the last character will be tweaked by the +text widget to avoid this. In particular, deletion of complete lines of +text up to the end of the text will also delete the newline character just +before the deleted block so that it is replaced by the new final newline +of the text widget. +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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBdlineinfo \fIindex\fR +. +Returns a list with five elements describing the area occupied by the display +line containing \fIindex\fR. 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 \fBnone\fR 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 \fIindex\fR is not visible on the screen then the return value is +an empty list. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBdump \fR?\fIswitches\fR? \fIindex1 \fR?\fIindex2\fR? +. +Return the contents of the text widget from \fIindex1\fR up to, but not +including \fIindex2\fR, including the text and information about marks, tags, +and embedded windows. If \fIindex2\fR is not specified, then it defaults to +one character past \fIindex1\fR. The information is returned in the following +format: +.RS +.LP +\fIkey1 value1 index1 key2 value2 index2\fR ... +.LP +The possible \fIkey\fR values are \fBtext\fR, \fBmark\fR, \fBtagon\fR, +\fBtagoff\fR, \fBimage\fR, and \fBwindow\fR. The corresponding \fIvalue\fR is +the text, mark name, tag name, image name, or window name. The \fIindex\fR +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: +.TP +\fB\-all\fR +. +Return information about all elements: text, marks, tags, images and windows. +This is the default. +.TP +\fB\-command \fIcommand\fR +. +Instead of returning the information as the result of the dump operation, +invoke the \fIcommand\fR on each element of the text widget within the range. +The command has three arguments appended to it before it is evaluated: the +\fIkey\fR, \fIvalue\fR, and \fIindex\fR. +.TP +\fB\-image\fR +. +Include information about images in the dump results. +.TP +\fB\-mark\fR +. +Include information about marks in the dump results. +.TP +\fB\-tag\fR +. +Include information about tag transitions in the dump results. Tag information +is returned as \fBtagon\fR and \fBtagoff\fR elements that indicate the begin +and end of each range of each tag, respectively. +.TP +\fB\-text\fR +. +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 \fIindex2\fR. 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. +.TP +\fB\-window\fR +. +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. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command controls the undo mechanism and the modified flag. The exact +behavior of the command depends on the \fIoption\fR argument that follows the +\fBedit\fR argument. The following forms of the command are currently +supported: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit canredo\fR +. +Returns a boolean true if redo is possible, i.e. when the redo stack is not +empty. Otherwise returns false. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit canundo\fR +. +Returns a boolean true if undo is possible, i.e. when the undo stack is not +empty. Otherwise returns false. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit modified \fR?\fIboolean\fR? +. +If \fIboolean\fR 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 \fIboolean\fR is specified, sets the modified flag +of the widget to \fIboolean\fR. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit redo\fR +. +When the \fB\-undo\fR 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 \fB\-undo\fR option is false. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit reset\fR +. +Clears the undo and redo stacks. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit separator\fR +. +Inserts a separator (boundary) on the undo stack. Does nothing when the +\fB\-undo\fR option is false. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBedit undo\fR +. +Undoes the last edit action when the \fB\-undo\fR 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 \fB\-undo\fR option is false. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBget\fR ?\fB\-displaychars\fR? ?\fB\-\-\fR? \fIindex1\fR ?\fIindex2 ...\fR? +. +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 \fIindex1\fR and +ending just before the one whose index is \fIindex2\fR (the character at +\fIindex2\fR will not be returned). If \fIindex2\fR is omitted then the single +character at \fIindex1\fR is returned. If there are no characters in the +specified range (e.g. \fIindex1\fR is past the end of the file or \fIindex2\fR +is less than or equal to \fIindex1\fR) 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 \fIpathName \fBget\fR. If the \fB\-displaychars\fR 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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBimage \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command is used to manipulate embedded images. The behavior of the +command depends on the \fIoption\fR argument that follows the \fBtag\fR +argument. The following forms of the command are currently supported: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBimage cget \fIindex option\fR +. +Returns the value of a configuration option for an embedded image. \fIIndex\fR +identifies the embedded image, and \fIoption\fR specifies a particular +configuration option, which must be one of the ones listed in the section +\fBEMBEDDED IMAGES\fR. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBimage configure \fIindex\fR ?\fIoption value ...\fR? +. +Query or modify the configuration options for an embedded image. If no +\fIoption\fR is specified, returns a list describing all of the available +options for the embedded image at \fIindex\fR (see \fBTk_ConfigureInfo\fR for +information on the format of this list). If \fIoption\fR is specified with no +\fIvalue\fR, 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 \fIoption\fR is specified). If one or more \fIoption\-value\fR +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 +\fBEMBEDDED IMAGES\fR for information on the options that are supported. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBimage create \fIindex\fR ?\fIoption value ...\fR? +. +This command creates a new image annotation, which will appear in the text at +the position given by \fIindex\fR. Any number of \fIoption\-value\fR 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 \fBEMBEDDED IMAGES\fR for +information on the options that are supported, and a description of the +identifier returned. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBimage names\fR +. +Returns a list whose elements are the names of all image instances currently +embedded in \fIwindow\fR. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBindex \fIindex\fR +. +Returns the position corresponding to \fIindex\fR in the form \fIline.char\fR +where \fIline\fR is the line number and \fIchar\fR is the character number. +\fIIndex\fR may have any of the forms described under \fBINDICES\fR above. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBinsert \fIindex chars \fR?\fItagList chars tagList ...\fR? +. +Inserts all of the \fIchars\fR arguments just before the character at +\fIindex\fR. If \fIindex\fR 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 \fIchars\fR argument and no \fItagList\fR, 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 +\fItagList\fR 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 +\fIchars\fR\-\fItagList\fR argument pairs are present, they produce the same +effect as if a separate \fIpathName \fBinsert\fR widget command had been +issued for each pair, in order. The last \fItagList\fR argument may be +omitted. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command is used to manipulate marks. The exact behavior of the command +depends on the \fIoption\fR argument that follows the \fBmark\fR argument. The +following forms of the command are currently supported: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark gravity \fImarkName\fR ?\fIdirection\fR? +. +If \fIdirection\fR is not specified, returns \fBleft\fR or \fBright\fR to +indicate which of its adjacent characters \fImarkName\fR is attached to. If +\fIdirection\fR is specified, it must be \fBleft\fR or \fBright\fR; the +gravity of \fImarkName\fR is set to the given value. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark names\fR +. +Returns a list whose elements are the names of all the marks that are +currently set. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark next \fIindex\fR +. +Returns the name of the next mark at or after \fIindex\fR. If \fIindex\fR is +specified in numerical form, then the search for the next mark begins at that +index. If \fIindex\fR 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 \fBmark next\fR 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 +\fIpathName \fBdump\fR operation. If a mark has been set to the special +\fBend\fR index, then it appears to be \fIafter\fR \fBend\fR with respect to +the \fIpathName \fBmark next\fR operation. An empty string is returned if +there are no marks after \fIindex\fR. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark previous \fIindex\fR +. +Returns the name of the mark at or before \fIindex\fR. If \fIindex\fR is +specified in numerical form, then the search for the previous mark begins with +the character just before that index. If \fIindex\fR 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 \fIpathName \fBmark previous\fR +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 \fIpathName \fBdump\fR +operation. An empty string is returned if there are no marks before +\fIindex\fR. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark set \fImarkName index\fR +. +Sets the mark named \fImarkName\fR to a position just before the character at +\fIindex\fR. If \fImarkName\fR 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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBmark unset \fImarkName \fR?\fImarkName markName ...\fR? +. +Remove the mark corresponding to each of the \fImarkName\fR arguments. The +removed marks will not be usable in indices and will not be returned by future +calls to +.QW "\fIpathName \fBmark names\fR" . +This command returns an empty string. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBpeer \fIoption args\fR +. +This command is used to create and query widget peers. It has two forms, +depending on \fIoption\fR: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBpeer create \fInewPathName\fR ?\fIoptions\fR? +. +Creates a peer text widget with the given \fInewPathName\fR, and any optional +standard configuration options (as for the \fItext\fR 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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBpeer names\fR +. +Returns a list of peers of this widget (this does not include the widget +itself). The order within this list is undefined. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBpendingsync\fR +Returns 1 if the line heights calculations are not up-to-date, 0 otherwise. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBreplace\fR \fIindex1 index2 chars\fR ?\fItagList chars tagList ...\fR? +Replaces the range of characters between \fIindex1\fR and \fIindex2\fR +with the given characters and tags. See the section on \fIpathName +\fBinsert\fR for an explanation of the handling of the \fItagList...\fR +arguments, and the section on \fIpathName +\fBdelete\fR for an explanation of the handling of the indices. If +\fIindex2\fR corresponds to an index earlier in the text than +\fIindex1\fR, an error will be generated. +.RS +.PP +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. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBscan \fIoption args\fR +. +This command is used to implement scanning on texts. It has two forms, +depending on \fIoption\fR: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBscan mark \fIx y\fR +. +Records \fIx\fR and \fIy\fR and the current view in the text window, for use +in conjunction with later \fIpathName \fBscan dragto\fR commands. Typically +this command is associated with a mouse button press in the widget. It returns +an empty string. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBscan dragto \fIx y\fR +. +This command computes the difference between its \fIx\fR and \fIy\fR arguments +and the \fIx\fR and \fIy\fR arguments to the last \fIpathName \fBscan mark\fR +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. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBsearch \fR?\fIswitches\fR? \fIpattern index \fR?\fIstopIndex\fR? +. +Searches the text in \fIpathName\fR starting at \fIindex\fR for a range of +characters that matches \fIpattern\fR. 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: +.RS +.TP +\fB\-forwards\fR +. +The search will proceed forward through the text, finding the first matching +range starting at or after the position given by \fIindex\fR. This is the +default. +.TP +\fB\-backwards\fR +. +The search will proceed backward through the text, finding the matching range +closest to \fIindex\fR whose first character is before \fIindex\fR (it is not +allowed to be at \fIindex\fR). Note that, for a variety of reasons, backwards +searches can be substantially slower than forwards searches (particularly when +using \fB\-regexp\fR), so it is recommended that performance-critical code use +forward searches. +.TP +\fB\-exact\fR +. +Use exact matching: the characters in the matching range must be identical to +those in \fIpattern\fR. This is the default. +.TP +\fB\-regexp\fR +. +Treat \fIpattern\fR as a regular expression and match it against the text +using the rules for regular expressions (see the \fBregexp\fR command +and the \fBre_syntax\fR page for +details). The default matching automatically passes both the +\fB\-lineanchor\fR and \fB\-linestop\fR options to the regexp engine (unless +\fB\-nolinestop\fR is used), so that \fI^$\fR match beginning and end of line, +and \fI.\fR, \fI[^\fR sequences will never match the newline character +\fI\en\fR. +.TP +\fB\-nolinestop\fR +. +This allows \fI.\fR and \fI[^\fR sequences to match the newline character +\fI\en\fR, which they will otherwise not do (see the \fBregexp\fR command for +details). This option is only meaningful if \fB\-regexp\fR is also given, and +an error will be thrown otherwise. For example, to match the entire text, use +.QW "\fIpathName \fBsearch \-nolinestop \-regexp\fR \N'34'.*\N'34' 1.0" . +.TP +\fB\-nocase\fR +. +Ignore case differences between the pattern and the text. +.TP +\fB\-count\fI varName\fR +. +The argument following \fB\-count\fR 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 +\fB\-elide\fR is not given), this is equivalent to the number of characters +matched. In either case, the range \fImatchIdx\fR to \fImatchIdx + $count +chars\fR will return the entire matched text. +.TP +\fB\-all\fR +. +Find all matches in the given range and return a list of the indices of the +first character of each match. If a \fB\-count\fI varName\fR switch is given, +then \fIvarName\fR 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 \fB\-all\fR behave very similarly to the Tcl command \fBregexp +\-all\fR, in that overlapping matches are not normally returned. For example, +applying an \fB\-all\fR search of the pattern +.QW \ew+ +against +.QW "hello there" +will just match twice, once for each word, and matching +.QW "Z[a\-z]+Z" +against +.QW ZooZooZoo +will just match once. +.TP +\fB\-overlap\fR +. +When performing \fB\-all\fR 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 \fB\-overlap\fR search of +the pattern +.QW \ew+ +against +.QW "hello there" +will just match twice (i.e. no different to just \fB\-all\fR), but matching +.QW Z[a\-z]+Z +against +.QW ZooZooZoo +will now match twice. An error will be thrown if this switch is used without +\fB\-all\fR. +.TP +\fB\-strictlimits\fR +. +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 +\fB\-strictlimits\fR flag, the entire matching range must lie inside the start +and stop limits specified for the match to be valid. +.TP +\fB\-elide\fR +. +Find elided (hidden) text as well. By default only displayed text is searched. +.TP +\fB\-\|\-\fR +. +This switch has no effect except to terminate the list of switches: the next +argument will be treated as \fIpattern\fR even if it starts with \fB\-\fR. +.PP +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 \fB$\fR to +match the end of a line, \fB^\fR to match the beginning of a line, and to +control whether \fB.\fR is allowed to match a new-line. If \fIstopIndex\fR is +specified, the search stops at that index: for forward searches, no match at +or after \fIstopIndex\fR will be considered; for backward searches, no match +earlier in the text than \fIstopIndex\fR will be considered. If +\fIstopIndex\fR 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 \fIstopIndex\fR is specified, +no wrap-around will occur. This means that, for example, if the search is +\fB\-forwards\fR but \fIstopIndex\fR is earlier in the text than +\fIstartIndex\fR, nothing will ever be found. See \fBKNOWN BUGS\fR below for a +number of minor limitations of the \fIpathName \fBsearch\fR command. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBsee \fIindex\fR +. +Adjusts the view in the window so that the character given by \fIindex\fR is +completely visible. If \fIindex\fR is already visible then the command does +nothing. If \fIindex\fR is a short distance out of view, the command adjusts +the view just enough to make \fIindex\fR visible at the edge of the window. +If \fIindex\fR is far out of view, then the command centers \fIindex\fR in the +window. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBsync\fR ?\fB-command \fIcommand\fR? +Controls the synchronization of the view of the text widget. +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBsync\fR +Immediately brings the line metrics up-to-date by forcing computation of any +outdated line heights. The command returns immediately if there is no such +outdated line heights, otherwise it returns only at the end of the computation. +The command returns an empty string. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBsync -command \fIcommand\fR +Schedules \fIcommand\fR to be executed (by the event loop) exactly once as soon +as all line heights are up-to-date. If there are no pending line metrics +calculations, the scheduling is immediate. The command returns the empty +string. \fBbgerror\fR is called on \fIcommand\fR failure. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command is used to manipulate tags. The exact behavior of the command +depends on the \fIoption\fR argument that follows the \fBtag\fR argument. The +following forms of the command are currently supported: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag add \fItagName index1 \fR?\fIindex2 index1 index2 ...\fR? +. +Associate the tag \fItagName\fR with all of the characters starting with +\fIindex1\fR and ending just before \fIindex2\fR (the character at +\fIindex2\fR is not tagged). A single command may contain any number of +\fIindex1\fR\-\fIindex2\fR pairs. If the last \fIindex2\fR is omitted then the +single character at \fIindex1\fR is tagged. If there are no characters in the +specified range (e.g. \fIindex1\fR is past the end of the file or \fIindex2\fR +is less than or equal to \fIindex1\fR) then the command has no effect. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag bind \fItagName\fR ?\fIsequence\fR? ?\fIscript\fR? +. +This command associates \fIscript\fR with the tag given by \fItagName\fR. +Whenever the event sequence given by \fIsequence\fR occurs for a character +that has been tagged with \fItagName\fR, the script will be invoked. This +widget command is similar to the \fBbind\fR command except that it operates on +characters in a text rather than entire widgets. See the \fBbind\fR manual +entry for complete details on the syntax of \fIsequence\fR and the +substitutions performed on \fIscript\fR before invoking it. If all arguments +are specified then a new binding is created, replacing any existing binding +for the same \fIsequence\fR and \fItagName\fR (if the first character of +\fIscript\fR is +.QW + +then \fIscript\fR augments an existing binding rather than replacing it). In +this case the return value is an empty string. If \fIscript\fR is omitted then +the command returns the \fIscript\fR associated with \fItagName\fR and +\fIsequence\fR (an error occurs if there is no such binding). If both +\fIscript\fR and \fIsequence\fR are omitted then the command returns a list of +all the sequences for which bindings have been defined for \fItagName\fR. +.RS +.PP +The only events for which bindings may be specified are those related to the +mouse and keyboard (such as \fBEnter\fR, \fBLeave\fR, \fBButtonPress\fR, +\fBMotion\fR, and \fBKeyPress\fR) or virtual events. Event bindings for a text +widget use the \fBcurrent\fR mark described under \fBMARKS\fR above. An +\fBEnter\fR event triggers for a tag when the tag first becomes present on the +current character, and a \fBLeave\fR event triggers for a tag when it ceases +to be present on the current character. \fBEnter\fR and \fBLeave\fR events can +happen either because the \fBcurrent\fR mark moved or because the character at +that position changed. Note that these events are different than \fBEnter\fR +and \fBLeave\fR 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. +.PP +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 \fBbind\fR +command for details). \fBcontinue\fR and \fBbreak\fR commands within binding +scripts are processed in the same way as for bindings created with the +\fBbind\fR command. +.PP +If bindings are created for the widget as a whole using the \fBbind\fR +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. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag cget \fItagName option\fR +. +This command returns the current value of the option named \fIoption\fR +associated with the tag given by \fItagName\fR. \fIOption\fR may have any of +the values accepted by the \fIpathName \fBtag configure\fR widget command. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag configure \fItagName\fR ?\fIoption\fR? ?\fIvalue\fR? ?\fIoption value ...\fR? +. +This command is similar to the \fIpathName \fBconfigure\fR widget command +except that it modifies options associated with the tag given by \fItagName\fR +instead of modifying options for the overall text widget. If no \fIoption\fR +is specified, the command returns a list describing all of the available +options for \fItagName\fR (see \fBTk_ConfigureInfo\fR for information on the +format of this list). If \fIoption\fR is specified with no \fIvalue\fR, 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 +\fIoption\fR is specified). If one or more \fIoption\-value\fR pairs are +specified, then the command modifies the given option(s) to have the given +value(s) in \fItagName\fR; in this case the command returns an empty string. +See \fBTAGS\fR above for details on the options available for tags. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag delete \fItagName \fR?\fItagName ...\fR? +. +Deletes all tag information for each of the \fItagName\fR 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. +.TP +\fIpathName\fB tag lower \fItagName \fR?\fIbelowThis\fR? +. +Changes the priority of tag \fItagName\fR so that it is just lower in priority +than the tag whose name is \fIbelowThis\fR. If \fIbelowThis\fR is omitted, +then \fItagName\fR's priority is changed to make it lowest priority of all +tags. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag names \fR?\fIindex\fR? +. +Returns a list whose elements are the names of all the tags that are active at +the character position given by \fIindex\fR. If \fIindex\fR 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 +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag\fR" +widget command but have not been deleted by a +.QW "\fIpathName \fBtag delete\fR" +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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag nextrange \fItagName index1 \fR?\fIindex2\fR? +. +This command searches the text for a range of characters tagged with +\fItagName\fR where the first character of the range is no earlier than the +character at \fIindex1\fR and no later than the character just before +\fIindex2\fR (a range starting at \fIindex2\fR 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 \fIindex2\fR is not given then it defaults to the end of the text. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag prevrange \fItagName index1 \fR?\fIindex2\fR? +. +This command searches the text for a range of characters tagged with +\fItagName\fR where the first character of the range is before the character +at \fIindex1\fR and no earlier than the character at \fIindex2\fR (a range +starting at \fIindex2\fR will be considered). If several matching ranges +exist, the one closest to \fIindex1\fR 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 \fIindex2\fR is not given then it defaults to the beginning of the text. +.TP +\fIpathName\fB tag raise \fItagName \fR?\fIaboveThis\fR? +. +Changes the priority of tag \fItagName\fR so that it is just higher in +priority than the tag whose name is \fIaboveThis\fR. If \fIaboveThis\fR is +omitted, then \fItagName\fR's priority is changed to make it highest priority +of all tags. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag ranges \fItagName\fR +. +Returns a list describing all of the ranges of text that have been tagged with +\fItagName\fR. 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 \fItag\fR then an empty string is returned. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBtag remove \fItagName index1 \fR?\fIindex2 index1 index2 ...\fR? +. +Remove the tag \fItagName\fR from all of the characters starting at +\fIindex1\fR and ending just before \fIindex2\fR (the character at +\fIindex2\fR is not affected). A single command may contain any number of +\fIindex1\fR\-\fIindex2\fR pairs. If the last \fIindex2\fR is omitted then the +tag is removed from the single character at \fIindex1\fR. If there are no +characters in the specified range (e.g. \fIindex1\fR is past the end of the +file or \fIindex2\fR is less than or equal to \fIindex1\fR) then the command +has no effect. This command returns an empty string. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBwindow \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command is used to manipulate embedded windows. The behavior of the +command depends on the \fIoption\fR argument that follows the \fBwindow\fR +argument. The following forms of the command are currently supported: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBwindow cget \fIindex option\fR +. +Returns the value of a configuration option for an embedded window. +\fIIndex\fR identifies the embedded window, and \fIoption\fR specifies a +particular configuration option, which must be one of the ones listed in the +section \fBEMBEDDED WINDOWS\fR. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBwindow configure \fIindex\fR ?\fIoption value ...\fR? +. +Query or modify the configuration options for an embedded window. If no +\fIoption\fR is specified, returns a list describing all of the available +options for the embedded window at \fIindex\fR (see \fBTk_ConfigureInfo\fR for +information on the format of this list). If \fIoption\fR is specified with no +\fIvalue\fR, 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 \fIoption\fR is specified). If one or more \fIoption\-value\fR +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 +\fBEMBEDDED WINDOWS\fR for information on the options that are supported. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBwindow create \fIindex\fR ?\fIoption value ...\fR? +. +This command creates a new window annotation, which will appear in the text at +the position given by \fIindex\fR. Any number of \fIoption\-value\fR pairs may +be specified to configure the annotation. See \fBEMBEDDED WINDOWS\fR for +information on the options that are supported. Returns an empty string. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBwindow names\fR +. +Returns a list whose elements are the names of all windows currently embedded +in \fIwindow\fR. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fBxview \fIoption args\fR +. +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: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fBxview\fR +. +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 \fB\-xscrollcommand\fR +option. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBxview moveto\fI fraction\fR +. +Adjusts the view in the window so that \fIfraction\fR of the horizontal span +of the text is off-screen to the left. \fIFraction\fR is a fraction between 0 +and 1. +.TP +\fIpathName \fBxview scroll \fInumber what\fR +. +This command shifts the view in the window left or right according to +\fInumber\fR and \fIwhat\fR. \fIWhat\fR must be \fBunits\fR, \fBpages\fR or +\fBpixels\fR. If \fIwhat\fR is \fBunits\fR or \fBpages\fR then \fInumber\fR +must be an integer, otherwise number may be specified in any of the forms +acceptable to \fBTk_GetPixels\fR, such as +.QW 2.0c +or +.QW 1i +(the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are given, +pixels are assumed). If \fIwhat\fR is \fBunits\fR, the view adjusts left or +right by \fInumber\fR average-width characters on the display; if it is +\fBpages\fR then the view adjusts by \fInumber\fR screenfuls; if it is +\fBpixels\fR then the view adjusts by \fInumber\fR pixels. If \fInumber\fR is +negative then characters farther to the left become visible; if it is positive +then characters farther to the right become visible. +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview \fR?\fIargs\fR? +. +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: +.RS +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview\fR +. +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 +\fB\-yscrollcommand\fR option. +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview moveto\fI fraction\fR +. +Adjusts the view in the window so that the pixel given by \fIfraction\fR +appears at the top of the top line of the window. \fIFraction\fR 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. +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview scroll \fInumber what\fR +. +This command adjust the view in the window up or down according to +\fInumber\fR and \fIwhat\fR. \fIWhat\fR must be \fBunits\fR, \fBpages\fR or +\fBpixels\fR. If \fIwhat\fR is \fBunits\fR or \fBpages\fR then \fInumber\fR +must be an integer, otherwise number may be specified in any of the forms +acceptable to \fBTk_GetPixels\fR, such as +.QW 2.0c +or +.QW 1i +(the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are given, +pixels are assumed). If \fIwhat\fR is \fBunits\fR, the view adjusts up or down +by \fInumber\fR lines on the display; if it is \fBpages\fR then the view +adjusts by \fInumber\fR screenfuls; if it is \fBpixels\fR then the view +adjusts by \fInumber\fR pixels. If \fInumber\fR is negative then earlier +positions in the text become visible; if it is positive then later positions +in the text become visible. +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview \fR?\fB\-pickplace\fR? \fIindex\fR +. +Changes the view in the widget's window to make \fIindex\fR visible. If the +\fB\-pickplace\fR option is not specified then \fIindex\fR will appear at the +top of the window. If \fB\-pickplace\fR is specified then the widget chooses +where \fIindex\fR appears in the window: +.RS +.IP [1] +If \fIindex\fR is already visible somewhere in the window then the command +does nothing. +.IP [2] +If \fIindex\fR is only a few lines off-screen above the window then it will be +positioned at the top of the window. +.IP [3] +If \fIindex\fR is only a few lines off-screen below the window then it will be +positioned at the bottom of the window. +.IP [4] +Otherwise, \fIindex\fR will be centered in the window. +.PP +The \fB\-pickplace\fR option has been obsoleted by the \fIpathName \fBsee\fR +widget command (\fIpathName \fBsee\fR handles both x- and y-motion to make a +location visible, whereas the \fB\-pickplace\fR mode only handles motion in +y). +.RE +.TP +\fIpathName \fByview \fInumber\fR +. +This command makes the first character on the line after the one given by +\fInumber\fR visible at the top of the window. \fINumber\fR must be an +integer. This command used to be used for scrolling, but now it is obsolete. +.RE +.SH BINDINGS +.PP +Tk automatically creates class bindings for texts that give them the following +default behavior. In the descriptions below, +.QW word +is dependent on the value of the \fBtcl_wordchars\fR variable. See +\fBtclvars\fR(n). +.IP [1] +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. +.IP [2] +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. +.IP [3] +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. +.IP [4] +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. +.IP [5] +Clicking mouse button 1 with the Control key down will reposition the +insertion cursor without affecting the selection. +.IP [6] +If any normal printing characters are typed, they are inserted at the point of +the insertion cursor. +.IP [7] +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. +.IP [8] +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). +.IP [9] +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. +.IP [10] +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. +.IP [11] +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. +.IP [12] +Control-Next and Control-Prior scroll the view right or left by one page +without moving the insertion cursor or affecting the selection. +.IP [13] +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. +.IP [14] +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. +.IP [15] +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. +.IP [16] +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. +.IP [17] +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. +.IP [18] +Control-/ selects the entire contents of the widget. +.IP [19] +Control-\e clears any selection in the widget. +.IP [20] +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 \fBtk_textCopy\fR. +.IP [21] +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 \fBtk_textCut\fR. If there is no +selection in the widget then these keys have no effect. +.IP [22] +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 \fBtk_textPaste\fR. +.IP [23] +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. +.IP [24] +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. +.IP [25] +Control-d deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor. +.IP [26] +Meta-d deletes the word to the right of the insertion cursor. +.IP [27] +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. +.IP [28] +Control-o opens a new line by inserting a newline character in front of the +insertion cursor without moving the insertion cursor. +.IP [29] +Meta-backspace and Meta-Delete delete the word to the left of the insertion +cursor. +.IP [30] +Control-x deletes whatever is selected in the text widget after copying it to +the clipboard. +.IP [31] +Control-t reverses the order of the two characters to the right of the +insertion cursor. +.IP [32] +Control-z undoes the last edit action if the \fB\-undo\fR option is true. +Does nothing otherwise. +.IP [33] +Control-Z (or Control-y on Windows) reapplies the last undone edit action if +the \fB\-undo\fR option is true. Does nothing otherwise. +.PP +If the widget is disabled using the \fB\-state\fR 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. +.PP +The behavior of texts can be changed by defining new bindings for individual +widgets or by redefining the class bindings. +.SH "KNOWN ISSUES" +.SS "ISSUES CONCERNING CHARS AND INDICES" +.PP +Before Tk 8.5, the widget used the string +.QW 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 +.QW chars +and +.QW indices . +For backwards compatibility, however, the index modifiers +.QW "+N chars" +and +.QW "\-N chars" +continue to refer to indices. One must use any of the full forms +.QW "+N any chars" +or +.QW "\-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 +.QW "+N chars" +as a synonym for +.QW "+N any chars" . +.SS "PERFORMANCE ISSUES" +.PP +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. +.PP +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. +.PP +Very long text lines can be expensive, especially if they have many marks and +tags within them. +.PP +The display line with the insert cursor is redrawn each time the cursor +blinks, which causes a steady stream of graphics traffic. Set the +\fB\-insertofftime\fR attribute to 0 avoid this. +.SS "KNOWN BUGS" +.PP +The \fIpathName \fBsearch \-regexp\fR 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: +.CS +pack [\fBtext\fR .t] +\&.t insert 1.0 "aaaa\enbbbb\encccc\enbbbb\enaaaa\en" +\&.t search \-regexp \-\- {(a+|b+\enc+\enb+)+\ena+} 1.0 +.CE +will not find a match when one exists of 19 characters starting from the first +.QW b . +.PP +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: +.CS +pack [\fBtext\fR .t] +\&.t insert 1.0 "aaaa\enbbbb\enbbbb\enbbbb\enbbbb\\n" +\&.t search \-regexp \-backward \-\- {b+\en|a+\en(b+\en)+} end +.CE +matches at +.QW 5.0 +when a true greedy match would match at +.QW 1.0 . +Similarly if we add \fB\-all\fR to this case, it matches at all of +.QW 5.0 , +.QW 4.0 , +.QW 3.0 +and +.QW 1.0 , +when really it should only match at +.QW 1.0 +since that match encloses all the others. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +entry(n), scrollbar(n) +.SH KEYWORDS +text, widget, tkvars +'\" Local Variables: +'\" mode: nroff +'\" End: |