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author | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2019-01-07 21:04:53 (GMT) |
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committer | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2019-01-07 21:04:53 (GMT) |
commit | cc7a4dfe87646677f2ac17cb8a403e522b5bf2a1 (patch) | |
tree | 77a3612dc0841f96b4c485575ae6e72f4dc138be /tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man | |
parent | 47ba30ed109ae3ce6a00a25c6c607114cade5f9b (diff) | |
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update TEA 3.13
Diffstat (limited to 'tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man')
-rw-r--r-- | tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man | 369 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 369 deletions
diff --git a/tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man b/tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man deleted file mode 100644 index 25ba74b..0000000 --- a/tkcon/docs/tkcon.1.man +++ /dev/null @@ -1,369 +0,0 @@ -[comment {-*- tcl -*- tkcon manpage}] -[manpage_begin tkcon 1 2.5] -[copyright {Jeffrey Hobbs (jeff at hobbs.org)}] -[moddesc {TkCon}] -[titledesc {Tk console replacement}] - -[description] -[para] -TkCon is a replacement for the standard console that comes with Tk -(on Windows/Mac, but also works on Unix). -The console itself provides many more features than the standard -console. -TkCon works on all platforms where Tcl/Tk is available. -It is meant primarily to aid one when working with the little -details inside Tcl and Tk, giving Unix users the GUI console -provided by default in the Mac and Windows Tk. - -[list_begin definitions] -[call [cmd tkcon] [lb]\{[arg option] [arg value] | [arg tcl_script]\} ...[rb]] -[list_end] - -[section OPTIONS] -[para] -Except for [cmd -rcfile], command line arguments are handled after -the TkCon resource file is sourced, but before the slave -interpreter or the TkCon user interface is initialized. - -[para] -[cmd -rcfile] is handled right before it would be sourced, -allowing you to specify any alternate file. -Command line arguments are passed to each new console and -will be evaluated by each. -To prevent this from happening, you have to say - -[example_begin] -tkcon main set argv {}; tkcon main set argc 0 -[example_end] - -[para] -For these options, any unique substring is allowed. - -[list_begin definitions] -[def "[cmd -argv] (also [cmd --])"] -Causes TkCon to stop evaluating arguments and set the remaining -args to be argv/argc (with [cmd --] prepended). -This carries over for any further consoles. -This is meant only for wrapping TkCon -around programs that require their own arguments. - -[def "[cmd -color-<color>] [arg color]"] -Sets the requested color type to the specified color for tkcon. -See [cmd tkconrc](5) for the recognized [cmd <color>] names. - -[def "[cmd -eval] [arg tcl_script] (also [cmd -main] or [cmd -e])"] -A Tcl script to eval in each main interpreter. -This is evaluated after the resource file is loaded and the -slave interpreter is created. -Multiple [cmd -eval] switches will be recognized (in order). - -[def "[cmd -exec] [arg slavename]"] -Sets the named slave that tkcon operates in. -In general, this is only useful to set to [arg {""}] (empty), -indicating to tkcon to avoid the multi-interpreter model and -operate in the main environment. -When this is empty, any further arguments will be only used -in the first tkcon console and not passed onto further new consoles. -This is useful when using tkcon as a console for extended wish -executables that don't load there commands into slave interpreters. - -[def "[cmd -font] [arg font]"] -Sets the font that tkcon uses for its text windows. -If this isn't a fixed width font, tkcon will override it. - -[def "[cmd -nontcl] [arg TCL_BOOLEAN]"] -Sets [cmd ::tkcon::OPT(nontcl)] to [arg TCL_BOOLEAN] (see -[cmd tkconrc](5)). -Needed when attaching to non-Tcl interpreters. - -[def "[cmd -package] [arg package_name] (also [cmd -load])"] -Packages to automatically load into the slave interpreters (i.e. "Tk"). - -[def "[cmd -rcfile] [arg filename]"] -Specify an alternate tkcon resource file name. - -[def "[cmd -root] [arg widgetname]"] -Makes the named widget the root name of all consoles (i.e. .tkcon). - -[def "[cmd -slave] [arg tcl_script]"] -A Tcl script to eval in each slave interpreter. -This will append the one specified in the tkcon resource file, if any. - -[list_end] - -[section {KEY BINDINGS}] -[para] -Most of the bindings are the same as for the [cmd text] widget. -Some have been modified to make sure that the integrity of the -console is maintained. -Others have been added to enhance the usefulness of the console. -Only the modified or new bindings are listed here. - -[list_begin definitions] - -[def "[cmd Control-x] or [cmd Cut] (on Sparc5 keyboards)"] -Cut. - -[def "[cmd Control-c] or [cmd Copy] (on Sparc5 keyboards)"] -Copy. - -[def "[cmd Control-v] or [cmd Paste] (on Sparc5 keyboards)"] -Paste. - -[def [cmd Insert]] -Insert (duh). - -[def [cmd Up]] -Goes up one level in the commands line history when cursor is on -the prompt line, otherwise it moves through the buffer. - -[def [cmd Down]] -Goes down one level in the commands line history when cursor -is on the last line of the buffer, otherwise it moves through the buffer. - -[def [cmd Control-p]] -Goes up one level in the commands line history. - -[def [cmd Control-n]] -Goes down one level in the commands line history. - -[def [cmd Tab]] -Tries to expand file path names, then variable names, then proc names. - -[def [cmd Escape]] -Tries to expand file path names. - -[def [cmd Control-P]] -Tries to expand procedure names. -The procedure names will be those that are actually in the attached -interpreter (unless nontcl is specified, in which case it always -does the lookup in the default slave interpreter). - -[def [cmd Control-V]] -Tries to expand variable names (those returned by [lb]info vars[rb]). -It's search behavior is like that for procedure names. - -[def "[cmd Return] or [cmd Enter]"] -Evaluates the current command line if it is a complete command, -otherwise it just goes to a new line. - -[def [cmd Control-a]] -Go to the beginning of the current command line. - -[def [cmd Control-l]] -Clear the entire console buffer. - -[def [cmd Control-r]] -Searches backwards in the history for any command that contains -the string in the current command line. -Repeatable to search farther back. -The matching substring off the found command will blink. - -[def [cmd Control-s]] -As above, but searches forward (only useful if you searched too far back). - -[def [cmd Control-t]] -Transposes characters. - -[def [cmd Control-u]] -Clears the current command line. - -[def [cmd Control-z]] -Saves current command line in a buffer that can be retrieved -with another [cmd Control-z]. -If the current command line is empty, then any saved command -is retrieved without being overwritten, otherwise the current -contents get swapped with what's in the saved command buffer. - -[def [cmd Control-Key-1]] -Attaches console to the console's slave interpreter. - -[def [cmd Control-Key-2]] -Attaches console to the console's master interpreter. - -[def [cmd Control-Key-3]] -Attaches console to main TkCon interpreter. - -[def [cmd Control-A]] -Pops up the "About" dialog. - -[def [cmd Control-N]] -Creates a new console. Each console has separate state, including -it's own widget hierarchy (it's a slave interpreter). - -[def [cmd Control-q]] -Close the current console OR Quit the program (depends on the -value of [cmd ::tkcon::TKCON(slaveexit)]). - -[def [cmd Control-w]] -Closes the current console. -Closing the main console will exit the program (something has -to control all the slaves...). - -[list_end] - -[para] -TkCon also has electric bracing (similar to that in emacs). -It will highlight matching pairs of {}'s, [lb][rb]'s, ()'s and ""'s. -For the first three, if there is no matching left element for the right, -then it blinks the entire current command line. -For the double quote, if there is no proper match then it just blinks -the current double quote character. -It does properly recognize most escaping (except escaped escapes), -but does not look for commenting (why would you interactively -put comments in?). - -[section COMMANDS] -[para] -There are several new procedures introduced in TkCon to improve -productivity and/or account for lost functionality in the Tcl -environment that users are used to in native environments. -There are also some redefined procedures. -Here is a non-comprehensive list: - -[list_begin definitions] - -[def "[cmd alias] ?[arg sourceCmd] [arg targetCmd] ?[arg arg] [arg arg] ...??"] -Simple alias mechanism. -It will overwrite existing commands. -When called without args, it returns current aliases. -Note that TkCon makes some aliases for you (in slaves). -Don't delete those. - -[def "[cmd clear] ?[arg percentage]?"] -Clears the text widget. -Same as the <[cmd Control-l]> binding, except this will accept a -percentage of the buffer to clear (1-100, 100 default). - -[def "[cmd dir] ?[arg -all]? ?[arg -full]? ?[arg -long]?\ - ?[arg pattern] [arg pattern] ...?"] -Cheap way to get directory listings. -Uses glob style pattern matching. - -[def "[cmd dump] [arg type] ?[arg -nocomplain]? ?[arg {-filter pattern}]?\ - ?[cmd --]? [arg pattern] ?[arg pattern] ...?"] -The dump command provides a way for the user to spit out state -information about the interpreter in a Tcl readable (and -human readable) form. -See [cmd dump](n) for details. - -[def "[cmd echo] ?[arg arg] [arg arg] ...?"] -Concatenates the args and spits the result to the console (stdout). - -[def "[cmd edit] ?[arg {-type type}]? ?[arg {-find str}]?\ - ?[arg {-attach interp}]? [arg arg]"] -Opens an editor with the data from arg. -The optional type argument can be one of: [arg proc], [arg var] or [arg file]. -For proc or var, the arg may be a pattern. - -[def "[cmd idebug] [arg command] ?[arg args]?"] -Interactive debugging command. -See [cmd idebug](n) for details. - -[def "[cmd lremove] ?[arg -all]? ?[arg -regexp] [arg -glob]?\ - [arg list] [arg items]"] -Removes one or more items from a list and returns the new list. -If [arg -all] is specified, it removes all instances of each item -in the list. -If [arg -regexp] or [arg -glob] is specified, it interprets each item in -the items list as a regexp or glob pattern to match against. - -[def [cmd less]] -Aliased to [cmd edit]. - -[def [cmd ls]] -Aliased to [cmd dir] [arg -full]. - -[def [cmd more]] -Aliased to [cmd edit]. - -[def "[cmd observe] [arg type] ?[arg args]?"] -This command provides passive runtime debugging output for -variables and commands. -See [cmd observe](n) for details. - -[def "[cmd puts] (same options as always)"] -Redefined to put the output into TkCon. - -[def "[cmd tkcon] [arg method] ?[arg args]?"] -Multi-purpose command. -See [cmd tkcon](n) for details. - -[def "[cmd tclindex] [arg {?-extensions patternlist? ?-index TCL_BOOLEAN?\ - ?-package TCL_BOOLEAN? ?dir1 dir2 ...?}]"] -Convenience proc to update the [file tclIndex] (controlled by [arg -index] switch) -and/or [file pkgIndex.tcl] (controlled by [arg -package] switch) file in the named -directories based on the given pattern for files. -It defaults to creating the [file tclIndex] but not the [file pkgIndex.tcl] file, -with the directory defaulting to [lb]pwd[rb]. -The extension defaults to *.tcl, with *.[lb]info sharelibextension[rb] -added when [arg -package] is true. - -[def "[cmd unalias] [arg cmd]"] -unaliases command. - -[def "[cmd what] [arg string]"] -The what command will identify the word given in string in -the Tcl environment and return a list of types that it was recognized as. -Possible types are: alias, procedure, command, array variable, -scalar variable, directory, file, widget, and executable. -Used by procedures dump and which. - -[def "[cmd which] [arg command]"] -Like the [syscmd which] command of Unix shells, this will tell you if a -particular command is known, and if so, whether it is internal or -external to the interpreter. -If it is an internal command and there is a slot in [cmd auto_index] for it, -it tells you the file that [cmd auto_index] would load. -This does not necessarily mean that that is where the file came from, -but if it were not in the interpreter previously, then that -is where the command was found. - -[list_end] - -[para] -There are several procedures that I use as helpers that some may find -helpful in there coding (i.e. expanding pathnames). Feel free to lift -them from the code (but do assign proper attribution). - -[section EXAMLPES] -[para] -Some examples of tkcon command line startup situations: - -[example_begin] -[cmd megawish] /usr/bin/tkcon [cmd -exec] "" [cmd -root] .tkcon [arg mainfile.tcl] -[example_end] - -Use tkcon as a console for your [cmd megawish] application. -You can avoid starting the line with megawish if that is the -default [cmd wish] that TkCon would use. -The [cmd -root] ensures that tkcon will not conflict with the -application root window. - -[example_begin] -[cmd tkcon] [cmd -font] "Courier 12" [cmd -load] Tk -[example_end] - -Use the courier font for TkCon and always load Tk in slave -interpreters at startup. - -[example_begin] -[cmd tkcon] [cmd -rcfile] ~/.wishrc [cmd -color-bg] white -[example_end] - -Use the ~/.wishrc file as the resource file, and a white -background for TkCon's text widgets. - -[section FILES] -TkCon will search for a resource file in [file ~/.tkconrc]. -TkCon never sources the [file ~/.wishrc] file. -The resource file is sourced by each new instance of the console. -An example resource file is provided in [cmd tkconrc](5). - -[see_also [cmd tkconrc](5)] -[see_also [cmd dump](n) [cmd tkcon](n) [cmd idebug](n)] -[see_also [cmd observe](n) [cmd text](n)] -[keywords Tk console] - -[manpage_end] - |