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ActiveTcl User Guide |
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- NAME
- menubutton - Create and manipulate menubutton widgets
- SYNOPSIS
- menubutton pathName ?options?
- STANDARD OPTIONS
- -activebackground,
activeBackground, Foreground
- -activeforeground,
activeForeground, Background
- -anchor, anchor, Anchor
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -bitmap, bitmap, Bitmap
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -compound, compound,
Compound
- -cursor, cursor, Cursor
- -disabledforeground,
disabledForeground, DisabledForeground
- -font, font, Font
- -foreground or -fg,
foreground, Foreground
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -image, image, Image
- -justify, justify,
Justify
- -padx, padX, Pad
- -pady, padY, Pad
- -relief, relief, Relief
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -text, text, Text
- -textvariable,
textVariable, Variable
- -underline, underline,
Underline
- -wraplength, wrapLength,
WrapLength
- WIDGET-SPECIFIC
OPTIONS
- -direction, direction,
Height
- -height, height,
Height
- -indicatoron,
indicatorOn, IndicatorOn
- -menu, menu,
MenuName
- -state, state,
State
- -width, width,
Width
- INTRODUCTION
- WIDGET COMMAND
- pathName
cget option
- pathName
configure ?option? ?value option value
...?
- DEFAULT
BINDINGS
- KEYWORDS
menubutton - Create and manipulate menubutton widgets
menubutton pathName ?options?
- -activebackground,
activeBackground, Foreground
- -activeforeground,
activeForeground, Background
- -anchor, anchor,
Anchor
- -background or -bg,
background, Background
- -bitmap, bitmap,
Bitmap
- -borderwidth or -bd,
borderWidth, BorderWidth
- -compound, compound,
Compound
- -cursor, cursor,
Cursor
- -disabledforeground,
disabledForeground, DisabledForeground
- -font, font, Font
- -foreground or -fg,
foreground, Foreground
- -highlightbackground,
highlightBackground, HighlightBackground
- -highlightcolor,
highlightColor, HighlightColor
- -highlightthickness,
highlightThickness, HighlightThickness
- -image, image,
Image
- -justify, justify,
Justify
- -padx, padX, Pad
- -pady, padY, Pad
- -relief, relief,
Relief
- -takefocus, takeFocus,
TakeFocus
- -text, text, Text
- -textvariable,
textVariable, Variable
- -underline, underline,
Underline
- -wraplength, wrapLength,
WrapLength
- Command-Line Name: -direction
- Database Name: direction
- Database Class: Height
- Specifies where the menu is going to be popup up. above
tries to pop the menu above the menubutton. below tries to
pop the menu below the menubutton. left tries to pop the
menu to the left of the menubutton. right tries to pop the
menu to the right of the menu button. flush pops the menu directly over the
menubutton. In the case of above or below, the
direction will be reversed if the menu would show offscreen.
- Command-Line Name: -height
- Database Name: height
- Database Class: Height
- Specifies a desired height for the menubutton. If an image or
bitmap is being displayed in the menubutton then the value is in
screen units (i.e. any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels); for text it is in
lines of text. If this option isn't specified, the menubutton's
desired height is computed from the size of the image or bitmap or
text being displayed in it.
- Command-Line Name: -indicatoron
- Database Name: indicatorOn
- Database Class: IndicatorOn
- The value must be a proper boolean value. If it is true then a
small indicator rectangle will be displayed on the right side of
the menubutton and the default menu bindings will treat this as an
option menubutton. If false then no indicator will be
displayed.
- Command-Line Name: -menu
- Database Name: menu
- Database Class: MenuName
- Specifies the path name of the menu associated with this
menubutton. The menu must be a child of the menubutton.
- Command-Line Name: -state
- Database Name: state
- Database Class: State
- Specifies one of three states for the menubutton:
normal, active, or disabled. In normal state
the menubutton is displayed using the foreground and
background options. The active state is typically used when
the pointer is over the menubutton. In active state the menubutton
is displayed using the activeForeground and
activeBackground options. Disabled state means that the
menubutton should be insensitive: the default bindings will refuse
to activate the widget and will ignore mouse button presses. In
this state the disabledForeground and background
options determine how the button is displayed.
- Command-Line Name: -width
- Database Name: width
- Database Class: Width
- Specifies a desired width for the menubutton. If an image or
bitmap is being displayed in the menubutton then the value is in
screen units (i.e. any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels); for text it is in
characters. If this option isn't specified, the menubutton's
desired width is computed from the size of the image or bitmap or
text being displayed in it.
The menubutton command creates a new window (given by the
pathName argument) and makes it into a menubutton widget.
Additional options, described above, may be specified on the
command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
menubutton such as its colors, font, text, and initial relief. The
menubutton command returns its pathName argument. At
the time this command is invoked, there must not exist a window
named pathName, but pathName's parent must exist.
A menubutton is a widget that displays a textual string, bitmap,
or image and is associated with a menu widget. If text is
displayed, it must all be in a single font, but it can occupy
multiple lines on the screen (if it contains newlines or if
wrapping occurs because of the wrapLength option) and one of
the characters may optionally be underlined using the
underline option. In normal usage, pressing mouse button 1
over the menubutton causes the associated menu to be posted just
underneath the menubutton. If the mouse is moved over the menu
before releasing the mouse button, the button release causes the
underlying menu entry to be invoked. When the button is released,
the menu is unposted.
Menubuttons are typically organized into groups called menu bars
that allow scanning: if the mouse button is pressed over one
menubutton (causing it to post its menu) and the mouse is moved
over another menubutton in the same menu bar without releasing the
mouse button, then the menu of the first menubutton is unposted and
the menu of the new menubutton is posted instead.
There are several interactions between menubuttons and menus;
see the menu manual entry
for information on various menu configurations, such as pulldown
menus and option menus.
The menubutton command creates a new Tcl command whose name
is pathName. This command may be used to invoke various
operations on the widget. It has the following general form:
pathName option ?arg arg ...?
Option and the args determine the exact behavior of
the command. The following commands are possible for menubutton
widgets:
- pathName cget
option
- Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option. Option may have any of the values accepted by
the menubutton command.
- pathName configure ?option?
?value option value ...?
- Query or modify the configuration options of the widget. If no
option is specified, returns a list describing all of the
available options for pathName (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information
on the format of this list). If option is specified with no
value, 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 option is specified). If
one or more option-value 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.
Option may have any of the values accepted by the
menubutton command.
Tk automatically creates class bindings for menubuttons that give
them the following default behavior:
- [1]
- A menubutton activates whenever the mouse passes over it and
deactivates whenever the mouse leaves it.
- [2]
- Pressing mouse button 1 over a menubutton posts the menubutton:
its relief changes to raised and its associated menu is posted
under the menubutton. If the mouse is dragged down into the menu
with the button still down, and if the mouse button is then
released over an entry in the menu, the menubutton is unposted and
the menu entry is invoked.
- [3]
- If button 1 is pressed over a menubutton and then released over
that menubutton, the menubutton stays posted: you can still move
the mouse over the menu and click button 1 on an entry to invoke
it. Once a menu entry has been invoked, the menubutton unposts
itself.
- [4]
- If button 1 is pressed over a menubutton and then dragged over
some other menubutton, the original menubutton unposts itself and
the new menubutton posts.
- [5]
- If button 1 is pressed over a menubutton and released outside
any menubutton or menu, the menubutton unposts without invoking any
menu entry.
- [6]
- When a menubutton is posted, its associated menu claims the
input focus to allow keyboard traversal of the menu and its
submenus. See the menu
manual entry for details on these bindings.
- [7]
- If the underline option has been specified for a
menubutton then keyboard traversal may be used to post the
menubutton: Alt+x, where x is the underlined
character (or its lower-case or upper-case equivalent), may be
typed in any window under the menubutton's toplevel to post the
menubutton.
- [8]
- The F10 key may be typed in any window to post the first
menubutton under its toplevel window that isn't disabled.
- [9]
- If a menubutton has the input focus, the space and return keys
post the menubutton.
If the menubutton's state is disabled then none of the
above actions occur: the menubutton is completely
non-responsive.
The behavior of menubuttons can be changed by defining new
bindings for individual widgets or by redefining the class
bindings.
menubutton, widget
Copyright © 1990-1994 The Regents of the University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Copyright © 1995-1997 Roger E. Critchlow Jr.