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ActiveTcl User Guide |
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- NAME
- Tcl_DoOneEvent - wait for events and invoke event handlers
- SYNOPSIS
- ARGUMENTS
- DESCRIPTION
- TCL_WINDOW_EVENTS -
- TCL_FILE_EVENTS
-
- TCL_TIMER_EVENTS
-
- TCL_IDLE_EVENTS
-
- TCL_ALL_EVENTS
-
- TCL_DONT_WAIT
-
- KEYWORDS
Tcl_DoOneEvent - wait for events and invoke event handlers
#include <tcl.h>
int
Tcl_DoOneEvent(flags)
- int flags (in)
- This parameter is normally zero. It may be an OR-ed combination
of any of the following flag bits: TCL_WINDOW_EVENTS,
TCL_FILE_EVENTS, TCL_TIMER_EVENTS, TCL_IDLE_EVENTS, TCL_ALL_EVENTS,
or TCL_DONT_WAIT.
This procedure is the entry point to Tcl's event loop; it is
responsible for waiting for events and dispatching event handlers
created with procedures such as Tk_CreateEventHandler, Tcl_CreateFileHandler,
Tcl_CreateTimerHandler, and
Tcl_DoWhenIdle.
Tcl_DoOneEvent checks to see if events are already present
on the Tcl event queue; if so, it calls the handler(s) for the
first (oldest) event, removes it from the queue, and returns. If
there are no events ready to be handled, then Tcl_DoOneEvent
checks for new events from all possible sources. If any are found,
it puts all of them on Tcl's event queue, calls handlers for the
first event on the queue, and returns. If no events are found,
Tcl_DoOneEvent checks for Tcl_DoWhenIdle callbacks; if any
are found, it invokes all of them and returns. Finally, if no
events or idle callbacks have been found, then
Tcl_DoOneEvent sleeps until an event occurs; then it adds
any new events to the Tcl event queue, calls handlers for the first
event, and returns. The normal return value is 1 to signify that
some event was processed (see below for other alternatives).
If the flags argument to Tcl_DoOneEvent is
non-zero, it restricts the kinds of events that will be processed
by Tcl_DoOneEvent. Flags may be an OR-ed combination
of any of the following bits:
- TCL_WINDOW_EVENTS -
- Process window system events.
- TCL_FILE_EVENTS -
- Process file events.
- TCL_TIMER_EVENTS -
- Process timer events.
- TCL_IDLE_EVENTS -
- Process idle callbacks.
- TCL_ALL_EVENTS -
- Process all kinds of events: equivalent to OR-ing together all
of the above flags or specifying none of them.
- TCL_DONT_WAIT -
- Don't sleep: process only events that are ready at the time of
the call.
If any of the flags TCL_WINDOW_EVENTS,
TCL_FILE_EVENTS, TCL_TIMER_EVENTS, or
TCL_IDLE_EVENTS is set, then the only events that will be
considered are those for which flags are set. Setting none of these
flags is equivalent to the value TCL_ALL_EVENTS, which
causes all event types to be processed. If an application has
defined additional event sources with Tcl_CreateEventSource, then
additional flag values may also be valid, depending on those
event sources.
The TCL_DONT_WAIT flag causes Tcl_DoOneEvent not
to put the process to sleep: it will check for events but if none
are found then it returns immediately with a return value of 0 to
indicate that no work was done. Tcl_DoOneEvent will also
return 0 without doing anything if the only alternative is to block
forever (this can happen, for example, if flags is
TCL_IDLE_EVENTS and there are no Tcl_DoWhenIdle callbacks
pending, or if no event handlers or timer handlers exist).
Tcl_DoOneEvent may be invoked recursively. For example,
it is possible to invoke Tcl_DoOneEvent recursively from a
handler called by Tcl_DoOneEvent. This sort of operation is
useful in some modal situations, such as when a notification dialog
has been popped up and an application wishes to wait for the user
to click a button in the dialog before doing anything else.
callback, event, handler, idle, timer
Copyright © 1990-1992 The Regents of the University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Copyright © 1995-1997 Roger E. Critchlow Jr.