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authorrjohnson <rjohnson>1998-04-01 09:37:39 (GMT)
committerrjohnson <rjohnson>1998-04-01 09:37:39 (GMT)
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+'\"
+'\" 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.
+'\"
+'\" SCCS: @(#) grab.n 1.15 96/03/26 18:22:48
+'\"
+.so man.macros
+.TH grab n "" Tk "Tk Built-In Commands"
+.BS
+'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below!
+.SH NAME
+grab \- Confine pointer and keyboard events to a window sub-tree
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+\fBgrab \fR?\fB\-global\fR? \fIwindow\fR
+.sp
+\fBgrab \fIoption \fR?\fIarg arg \fR...?
+.BE
+
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+.PP
+This command implements simple pointer and keyboard grabs for Tk.
+Tk's grabs are different than the grabs
+described in the Xlib documentation.
+When a grab is set for a particular window, Tk restricts all pointer
+events to the grab window and its descendants in Tk's window hierarchy.
+Whenever the pointer is within the grab window's subtree, the pointer
+will behave exactly the same as if there had been no grab at all
+and all events will be reported in the normal fashion.
+When the pointer is outside \fIwindow\fR's tree, button presses and
+releases and
+mouse motion events are reported to \fIwindow\fR, and window entry
+and window exit events are ignored.
+The grab subtree ``owns'' the pointer:
+windows outside the grab subtree will be visible on the screen
+but they will be insensitive until the grab is released.
+The tree of windows underneath the grab window can include top-level
+windows, in which case all of those top-level windows
+and their descendants will continue to receive mouse events
+during the grab.
+.PP
+Two forms of grabs are possible: local and global.
+A local grab affects only the grabbing application: events will
+be reported to other applications as if the grab had never occurred.
+Grabs are local by default.
+A global grab locks out all applications on the screen,
+so that only the given subtree of the grabbing application will be
+sensitive to pointer events (mouse button presses, mouse button releases,
+pointer motions, window entries, and window exits).
+During global grabs the window manager will not receive pointer
+events either.
+.PP
+During local grabs, keyboard events (key presses and key releases)
+are delivered as usual: the window
+manager controls which application receives keyboard events, and
+if they are sent to any window in the grabbing application then they are
+redirected to the focus window.
+During a global grab Tk grabs the keyboard so that all keyboard events
+are always sent to the grabbing application.
+The \fBfocus\fR command is still used to determine which window in the
+application receives the keyboard events.
+The keyboard grab is released when the grab is released.
+.PP
+Grabs apply to particular displays. If an application has windows
+on multiple displays then it can establish a separate grab on each
+display.
+The grab on a particular display affects only the windows on
+that display.
+It is possible for different applications on a single display to have
+simultaneous local grabs, but only one application can have a global
+grab on a given display at once.
+.PP
+The \fBgrab\fR command can take any of the following forms:
+.TP
+\fBgrab \fR?\fB\-global\fR? \fIwindow\fR
+Same as \fBgrab set\fR, described below.
+.TP
+\fBgrab current \fR?\fIwindow\fR?
+If \fIwindow\fR is specified, returns the name of the current grab
+window in this application for \fIwindow\fR's display, or an empty
+string if there is no such window.
+If \fIwindow\fR is omitted, the command returns a list whose elements
+are all of the windows grabbed by this application for all displays,
+or an empty string if the application has no grabs.
+.TP
+\fBgrab release \fIwindow\fR
+Releases the grab on \fIwindow\fR if there is one, otherwise does
+nothing. Returns an empty string.
+.TP
+\fBgrab set \fR?\fB\-global\fR? \fIwindow\fR
+Sets a grab on \fIwindow\fR. If \fB\-global\fR is specified then the
+grab is global, otherwise it is local.
+If a grab was already in effect for this application on
+\fIwindow\fR's display then it is automatically released.
+If there is already a grab on \fIwindow\fR and it has the same
+global/local form as the requested grab, then the command
+does nothing. Returns an empty string.
+.TP
+\fBgrab status \fIwindow\fR
+Returns \fBnone\fR if no grab is currently set on \fIwindow\fR,
+\fBlocal\fR if a local grab is set on \fIwindow\fR, and
+\fBglobal\fR if a global grab is set.
+
+.SH BUGS
+.PP
+It took an incredibly complex and gross implementation to produce
+the simple grab effect described above.
+Given the current implementation, it isn't safe for applications
+to use the Xlib grab facilities at all except through the Tk grab
+procedures.
+If applications try to manipulate X's grab mechanisms directly,
+things will probably break.
+.PP
+If a single process is managing several different Tk applications,
+only one of those applications can have a local grab for a given
+display at any given time. If the applications are in different
+processes, this restriction doesn't exist.
+
+.SH KEYWORDS
+grab, keyboard events, pointer events, window