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351 lines
8.4 KiB
351 lines
8.4 KiB
#
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# Utilities for widget implementations.
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#
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### Focus management.
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#
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# See also: #1516479
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#
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## ttk::takefocus --
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# This is the default value of the "-takefocus" option
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# for ttk::* widgets that participate in keyboard navigation.
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#
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# NOTES:
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# tk::FocusOK (called by tk_focusNext) tests [winfo viewable]
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# if -takefocus is 1, empty, or missing; but not if it's a
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# script prefix, so we have to check that here as well.
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#
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#
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proc ttk::takefocus {w} {
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expr {[$w instate !disabled] && [winfo viewable $w]}
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}
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## ttk::GuessTakeFocus --
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# This routine is called as a fallback for widgets
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# with a missing or empty -takefocus option.
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#
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# It implements the same heuristics as tk::FocusOK.
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#
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proc ttk::GuessTakeFocus {w} {
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# Don't traverse to widgets with '-state disabled':
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#
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if {![catch {$w cget -state} state] && $state eq "disabled"} {
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return 0
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}
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# Allow traversal to widgets with explicit key or focus bindings:
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#
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if {[regexp {Key|Focus} [concat [bind $w] [bind [winfo class $w]]]]} {
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return 1;
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}
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# Default is nontraversable:
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#
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return 0;
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}
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## ttk::traverseTo $w --
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# Set the keyboard focus to the specified window.
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#
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proc ttk::traverseTo {w} {
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set focus [focus]
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if {$focus ne ""} {
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event generate $focus <<TraverseOut>>
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}
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focus $w
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event generate $w <<TraverseIn>>
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}
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## ttk::clickToFocus $w --
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# Utility routine, used in <ButtonPress-1> bindings --
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# Assign keyboard focus to the specified widget if -takefocus is enabled.
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#
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proc ttk::clickToFocus {w} {
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if {[ttk::takesFocus $w]} { focus $w }
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}
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## ttk::takesFocus w --
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# Test if the widget can take keyboard focus.
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#
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# See the description of the -takefocus option in options(n)
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# for details.
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#
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proc ttk::takesFocus {w} {
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if {![winfo viewable $w]} {
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return 0
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} elseif {[catch {$w cget -takefocus} takefocus]} {
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return [GuessTakeFocus $w]
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} else {
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switch -- $takefocus {
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"" { return [GuessTakeFocus $w] }
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0 { return 0 }
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1 { return 1 }
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default {
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return [expr {[uplevel #0 $takefocus [list $w]] == 1}]
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}
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}
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}
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}
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## ttk::focusFirst $w --
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# Return the first descendant of $w, in preorder traversal order,
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# that can take keyboard focus, "" if none do.
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#
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# See also: tk_focusNext
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#
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proc ttk::focusFirst {w} {
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if {[ttk::takesFocus $w]} {
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return $w
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}
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foreach child [winfo children $w] {
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if {[set c [ttk::focusFirst $child]] ne ""} {
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return $c
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}
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}
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return ""
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}
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### Grabs.
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#
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# Rules:
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# Each call to [grabWindow $w] or [globalGrab $w] must be
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# matched with a call to [releaseGrab $w] in LIFO order.
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#
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# Do not call [grabWindow $w] for a window that currently
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# appears on the grab stack.
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#
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# See #1239190 and #1411983 for more discussion.
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#
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namespace eval ttk {
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variable Grab ;# map: window name -> grab token
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# grab token details:
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# Two-element list containing:
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# 1) a script to evaluate to restore the previous grab (if any);
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# 2) a script to evaluate to restore the focus (if any)
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}
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## SaveGrab --
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# Record current grab and focus windows.
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#
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proc ttk::SaveGrab {w} {
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variable Grab
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if {[info exists Grab($w)]} {
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# $w is already on the grab stack.
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# This should not happen, but bail out in case it does anyway:
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#
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return
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}
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set restoreGrab [set restoreFocus ""]
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set grabbed [grab current $w]
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if {[winfo exists $grabbed]} {
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switch [grab status $grabbed] {
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global { set restoreGrab [list grab -global $grabbed] }
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local { set restoreGrab [list grab $grabbed] }
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none { ;# grab window is really in a different interp }
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}
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}
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set focus [focus]
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if {$focus ne ""} {
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set restoreFocus [list focus -force $focus]
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}
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set Grab($w) [list $restoreGrab $restoreFocus]
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}
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## RestoreGrab --
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# Restore previous grab and focus windows.
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# If called more than once without an intervening [SaveGrab $w],
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# does nothing.
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#
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proc ttk::RestoreGrab {w} {
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variable Grab
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if {![info exists Grab($w)]} { # Ignore
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return;
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}
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# The previous grab/focus window may have been destroyed,
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# unmapped, or some other abnormal condition; ignore any errors.
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#
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foreach script $Grab($w) {
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catch $script
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}
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unset Grab($w)
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}
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## ttk::grabWindow $w --
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# Records the current focus and grab windows, sets an application-modal
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# grab on window $w.
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#
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proc ttk::grabWindow {w} {
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SaveGrab $w
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grab $w
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}
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## ttk::globalGrab $w --
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# Same as grabWindow, but sets a global grab on $w.
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#
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proc ttk::globalGrab {w} {
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SaveGrab $w
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grab -global $w
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}
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## ttk::releaseGrab --
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# Release the grab previously set by [ttk::grabWindow]
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# or [ttk::globalGrab].
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#
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proc ttk::releaseGrab {w} {
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grab release $w
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RestoreGrab $w
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}
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### Auto-repeat.
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#
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# NOTE: repeating widgets do not have -repeatdelay
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# or -repeatinterval resources as in standard Tk;
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# instead a single set of settings is applied application-wide.
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# (TODO: make this user-configurable)
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#
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# (@@@ Windows seems to use something like 500/50 milliseconds
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# @@@ for -repeatdelay/-repeatinterval)
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#
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namespace eval ttk {
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variable Repeat
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array set Repeat {
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delay 300
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interval 100
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timer {}
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script {}
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}
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}
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## ttk::Repeatedly --
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# Begin auto-repeat.
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#
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proc ttk::Repeatedly {args} {
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variable Repeat
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after cancel $Repeat(timer)
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set script [uplevel 1 [list namespace code $args]]
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set Repeat(script) $script
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uplevel #0 $script
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set Repeat(timer) [after $Repeat(delay) ttk::Repeat]
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}
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## Repeat --
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# Continue auto-repeat
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#
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proc ttk::Repeat {} {
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variable Repeat
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uplevel #0 $Repeat(script)
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set Repeat(timer) [after $Repeat(interval) ttk::Repeat]
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}
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## ttk::CancelRepeat --
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# Halt auto-repeat.
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#
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proc ttk::CancelRepeat {} {
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variable Repeat
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after cancel $Repeat(timer)
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}
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### Bindings.
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#
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## ttk::copyBindings $from $to --
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# Utility routine; copies bindings from one bindtag onto another.
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#
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proc ttk::copyBindings {from to} {
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foreach event [bind $from] {
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bind $to $event [bind $from $event]
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}
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}
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### Mousewheel bindings.
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#
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# Platform inconsistencies:
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#
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# On X11, the server typically maps the mouse wheel to Button4 and Button5.
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#
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# On OSX, Tk generates sensible values for the %D field in <MouseWheel> events.
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#
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# On Windows, %D must be scaled by a factor of 120.
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# In addition, Tk redirects mousewheel events to the window with
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# keyboard focus instead of sending them to the window under the pointer.
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# We do not attempt to fix that here, see also TIP#171.
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#
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# OSX conventionally uses Shift+MouseWheel for horizontal scrolling,
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# and Option+MouseWheel for accelerated scrolling.
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#
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# The Shift+MouseWheel behavior is not conventional on Windows or most
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# X11 toolkits, but it's useful.
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#
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# MouseWheel scrolling is accelerated on X11, which is conventional
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# for Tk and appears to be conventional for other toolkits (although
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# Gtk+ and Qt do not appear to use as large a factor).
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#
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## ttk::bindMouseWheel $bindtag $command...
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# Adds basic mousewheel support to $bindtag.
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# $command will be passed one additional argument
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# specifying the mousewheel direction (-1: up, +1: down).
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#
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proc ttk::bindMouseWheel {bindtag callback} {
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switch -- [tk windowingsystem] {
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x11 {
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bind $bindtag <ButtonPress-4> "$callback -1"
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bind $bindtag <ButtonPress-5> "$callback +1"
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}
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win32 {
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bind $bindtag <MouseWheel> [append callback { [expr {-(%D/120)}]}]
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}
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aqua {
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bind $bindtag <MouseWheel> [append callback { [expr {-(%D)}]} ]
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}
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}
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}
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## Mousewheel bindings for standard scrollable widgets.
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#
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# Usage: [ttk::copyBindings TtkScrollable $bindtag]
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#
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# $bindtag should be for a widget that supports the
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# standard scrollbar protocol.
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#
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switch -- [tk windowingsystem] {
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x11 {
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bind TtkScrollable <ButtonPress-4> { %W yview scroll -5 units }
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bind TtkScrollable <ButtonPress-5> { %W yview scroll 5 units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Shift-ButtonPress-4> { %W xview scroll -5 units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Shift-ButtonPress-5> { %W xview scroll 5 units }
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}
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win32 {
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bind TtkScrollable <MouseWheel> \
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{ %W yview scroll [expr {-(%D/120)}] units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Shift-MouseWheel> \
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{ %W xview scroll [expr {-(%D/120)}] units }
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}
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aqua {
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bind TtkScrollable <MouseWheel> \
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{ %W yview scroll [expr {-(%D)}] units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Shift-MouseWheel> \
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{ %W xview scroll [expr {-(%D)}] units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Option-MouseWheel> \
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{ %W yview scroll [expr {-10*(%D)}] units }
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bind TtkScrollable <Shift-Option-MouseWheel> \
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{ %W xview scroll [expr {-10*(%D)}] units }
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}
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}
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#*EOF*
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