1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
|
'\"
'\" Copyright (c) 2004 Joe English
'\"
'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
'\"
'\" RCS: @(#) $Id: ttk_intro.n,v 1.3 2006/12/13 23:04:33 hobbs Exp $
'\"
.so man.macros
.TH ttk_intro n 8.5 Tk "Tk Themed Widget"
.BS
.SH NAME
ttk_intro \- Introduction to the Tk theme engine
.BE
.SH "OVERVIEW"
The Tk themed widget set is based on a revised and enhanced version
of TIP #48 (http://tip.tcl.tk/48) specified style engine.
The main concepts are described below.
The basic idea is to separate, to the extent possible,
the code implementing a widget's behavior from
the code implementing its appearance.
Widget class bindings are primarily responsible for
maintaining the widget state and invoking callbacks;
all aspects of the widgets appearance is
.SH "THEMES"
A \fItheme\fR is a collection of elements and styles
that determine the look and feel of the widget set.
Themes can be used to:
.IP \(bu
Isolate platform differences (X11 vs. classic Windows vs. XP vs. Aqua ...)
.IP \(bu
Adapt to display limitations (low-color, grayscale, monochrome, tiny screens)
.IP \(bu
Accessibility (high contrast, large type)
.IP \(bu
Application suite "branding"
.IP \(bu
Blend in with the rest of the desktop (Gnome, KDE, Java)
.IP \(bu
And, of course: eye candy.
.SH "ELEMENTS"
An \fIelement\fR displays an individual part of a widget.
For example, a vertical scrollbar widget contains \fBuparrow\fR,
\fBdownarrow\fR, \fBtrough\fR and \fBslider\fR elements.
.PP
Element names use a recursive dotted notation.
For example, \fBuparrow\fR identifies a generic arrow element,
and \fBScrollbar.arrow\fR and \fBCombobox.uparrow\fR identify
widget-specific elements.
When looking for an element, the style engine looks for
the specific name first, and if an element of that name is
not found it looks for generic elements by stripping off
successive leading components of the element name.
.PP
Like widgets, elements have \fIoptions\fR which
specify what to display and how to display it.
For example, the \fBtext\fR element
(which displays a text string) has
\fB-text\fR, \fB-font\fR, \fB-foreground\fR, \fB-background\fR,
\fB-underline\fR, and \fB-width\fR options.
The value of an element resource is taken from:
.IP \(bu
A dynamic setting specified by \fBstyle map\fR and the current state;
.IP \(bu
An option of the same name and type in the widget containing the element;
.IP \(bu
The default setting specified by \fBstyle default\fR; or
.IP \(bu
The element's built-in default value for the resource.
.SH "LAYOUTS"
A \fIlayout\fR specifies which elements make up a widget
and how they are arranged.
The layout engine uses a simplified version of the \fBpack\fR
algorithm: starting with an initial cavity equal to the size
of the widget, elements are allocated a parcel within the cavity along
the side specified by the \fB-side\fR option,
and placed within the parcel according to the \fB-sticky\fR
option.
For example, the layout for a horizontal scrollbar
.CS
style layout Horizontal.TScrollbar {
Scrollbar.trough -children {
Scrollbar.leftarrow -side left -sticky w
Scrollbar.rightarrow -side right -sticky e
Scrollbar.thumb -side left -expand true -sticky ew
}
}
.CE
By default, the layout for a widget is the same as its class name.
Some widgets may override this (for example, the \fBscrollbar\fR
widget chooses different layouts based on the \fB-orient\fR option).
.SH "STATES"
In standard Tk, many widgets have a \fB-state\fR option
which (in most cases) is either \fBnormal\fR or \fBdisabled\fR.
Some widgets support additional states, such
as the \fBentry\fR widget which has a \fBreadonly\fR state
and the various flavors of buttons which have \fBactive\fR state.
.PP
The themed Tk widgets generalizes this idea:
every widget has a bitmap of independent state flags.
Widget state flags include \fBactive\fR, \fBdisabled\fR,
\fBpressed\fR, \fBfocus\fR, etc.,
(see \fIttk_widget(n)\fR for the full list of state flags).
.PP
Instead of a \fB-state\fR option, every widget now has
a \fBstate\fR widget command which is used to set or query
the state.
A \fIstate specification\fR is a list of symbolic state names
indicating which bits are set, each optionally prefixed with an
exclamation point indicating that the bit is cleared instead.
.PP
For example, the class bindings for the \fBtbutton\fR
widget are:
.CS
bind TButton <Enter> { %W state active }
bind TButton <Leave> { %W state !active }
bind TButton <ButtonPress-1> { %W state pressed }
bind TButton <Button1-Leave> { %W state !pressed }
bind TButton <Button1-Enter> { %W state pressed }
bind TButton <ButtonRelease-1> \e
{ %W instate {pressed} { %W state !pressed ; %W invoke } }
.CE
This specifies that the widget becomes \fBactive\fR when
the pointer enters the widget, and inactive when it leaves.
Similarly it becomes \fBpressed\fR when the mouse button is pressed,
and \fB!pressed\fR on the ButtonRelease event.
In addition, the button unpresses if
pointer is dragged outside the widget while Button-1 is held down,
and represses if it's dragged back in.
Finally, when the mouse button is released, the widget's
\fB-command\fR is invoked, but only if the button is currently
in the \fBpressed\fR state.
(The actual bindings are a little more complicated than the above,
but not by much).
.PP
\fINote to self: rewrite that paragraph. It's horrible.\fR
.SH "STYLES"
Each widget is associated with a \fIstyle\fR,
which specifies values for element resources.
Style names use a recursive dotted notation like layouts and elements;
by default, widgets use the class name to look up a style in the current theme.
For example:
.CS
style default TButton \e
-background #d9d9d9 \e
-foreground black \e
-relief raised \e
;
.CE
Many elements are displayed differently depending on the widget state.
For example, buttons have a different background when they are active,
a different foreground when disabled, and a different relief when pressed.
The \fBstyle map\fR command specifies dynamic resources
for a particular style:
.CS
style map TButton \e
-background [list disabled #d9d9d9 active #ececec] \e
-foreground [list disabled #a3a3a3] \e
-relief [list {pressed !disabled} sunken] \e
;
.CE
.SH "SEE ALSO"
ttk_widget(n), ttk_style(n)
|