diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/text.n | 69 |
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 31 deletions
@@ -5,10 +5,10 @@ '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. '\" -'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: text.n,v 1.21 2003/11/15 02:41:41 jenglish Exp $ +'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: text.n,v 1.22 2003/11/16 14:13:09 vincentdarley Exp $ '\" .so man.macros -.TH text n 8.4 Tk "Tk Built-In Commands" +.TH text n 8.5 Tk "Tk Built-In Commands" .BS '\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below! .SH NAME @@ -187,12 +187,12 @@ 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 \fIsubmodifier\fRs are nothing, \fIany\fB -or \fIdisplay\fB. If the submodifier is abbreviated, then it must be +or \fIdisplay\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 \fIdisplay\fB +submodifier and the following \fImodifier\fR. Typically the \fIdisplay\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\fB +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 '\fIbase\fR - -3 lines' is perfectly valid (and equivalent to '\fIbase\fR +3lines'). @@ -254,8 +254,8 @@ 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 -\fIdisplay\fB submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over -without being counted. If \fIany\fB is given, then all characters are +\fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided characters are skipped over +without being counted. If \fIany\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, @@ -267,8 +267,8 @@ 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 \fIdisplay\fB submodifier is given, elided -characters are skipped over without being counted. If \fIany\fB is +are optional. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided +characters are skipped over without being counted. If \fIany\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 @@ -282,7 +282,7 @@ 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 -\fIdisplay\fB submodifier is given, elided indices are skipped over +\fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided indices are skipped over without being counted. If \fIany\fR is given, then all indices are counted, which is also the default behaviour if no modifier is given. .TP @@ -291,12 +291,12 @@ 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 \fIdisplay\fB +either side of \fIcount\fR are optional. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, elided indices are skipped over without being counted. If \fIany\fR is given, then all indices are counted, which is also the default behaviour if no modifier is given. .TP -\fB+ \fIcount\fB \fI?modifier?\fB lines\fR +\fB+ \fIcount\fB \fI?submodifier?\fB lines\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 @@ -304,7 +304,7 @@ 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 \fIdisplay\fB submodifier is given, +\fIcount\fR are optional. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted separately. Otherwise, if \fIany\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 @@ -318,23 +318,23 @@ 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 \fIdisplay\fB submodifier is given, +of \fIcount\fR are optional. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, then each visual display line is counted separately. Otherwise, if \fIany\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?submodifier? linestart\fR +\fB\fI?submodifier?\fB linestart\fR Adjust the index to refer to the first character on the line. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, this is the first character on the display line, otherwise on the logical line. .TP -\fB?submodifier? lineend\fR +\fB\fI?submodifier?\fB lineend\fR Adjust the index to refer to the last character on the line (the newline). If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, this is the last character on the display line, otherwise on the logical line. .TP -\fB?submodifier? wordstart\fR +\fB\fI?submodifier?\fB wordstart\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 @@ -342,7 +342,7 @@ not one of these. If the \fIdisplay\fR submodifier is given, this only examines non-elided characters, otherwise all characters (elided or not) are examined. .TP -\fB?submodifier? wordend\fR +\fB\fI?submodifier?\fB wordend\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 \fIdisplay\fR @@ -888,6 +888,7 @@ 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. +.VS 8.5 .TP \fIpathName \fBcount \fI?options\fI? \fIindex1 \fIindex2\fR Counts the number of relevant things between the two indices. @@ -951,6 +952,7 @@ than one option was supplied. For example '.text count -xpixels -ypixels 1.3 4.5' is perfectly valid and will return a list of two elements. .RE +.VE 8.5 .TP \fIpathName \fBdebug \fR?\fIboolean\fR? If \fIboolean\fR is specified, then it must have one of the true or @@ -1677,15 +1679,18 @@ span of the text is off-screen to the left. \fIpathName \fBxview scroll \fInumber what\fR This command shifts the view in the window left or right according to \fInumber\fR and \fIwhat\fR. -\fINumber\fR must be an integer. -\fIWhat\fR must be either \fBunits\fR or \fBpages\fR or an abbreviation -of one of these. -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 \fInumber\fR is negative then characters farther to the left -become visible; if it is positive then characters farther to the right -become visible. +\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 ``2.0c'' or ``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 \fI?args\fR? @@ -1773,12 +1778,12 @@ 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 end of the word. +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 end of the line. +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] @@ -1990,6 +1995,7 @@ limitation is that while a single logical line can result in multiple display lines, a single display line cannot be derived from multiple logical lines. This does mean, however, that logical lines which are completely elided have no problems. +.VS 8.5 .PP The \fBsearch -regexp\fR sub-command attempts to perform sophisticated regexp matching across multiple lines in an efficient fashion (since Tk @@ -2006,8 +2012,8 @@ 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: \fBpack [text .t] ; .t -insert 1.0 "aaaa\\nbbbb\\ncccc\\nbbbb\\naaaa\\n" ; .t search -regexp -- +a rare problem, but it can occur, for example: \fBpack [text .t] ; +.t insert 1.0 "aaaa\\nbbbb\\ncccc\\nbbbb\\naaaa\\n" ; .t search -regexp -- {(a+|b+\\nc+\\nb+)+\\na+} 1.0\fR will not find a match when one exists of 19 characters starting from the first 'b'. .PP @@ -2026,6 +2032,7 @@ Similarly if we add \fB-all\fR to this case, it matches at all of '5.0', '4.0', '3.0' and '1.0', when really it should only match at '1.0' since that match encloses all the others. +.VE 8.5 .SH KEYWORDS text, widget, tkvars |