Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 architecture model.
[OpenSPARC-T2-SAM] / sam-t2 / devtools / amd64 / man / mann / bindtags.n
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246.TH bindtags n 4.0 Tk "Tk Built-In Commands"
247.BS
248'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below!
249.SH NAME
250bindtags \- Determine which bindings apply to a window, and order of evaluation
251.SH SYNOPSIS
252\fBbindtags \fIwindow \fR?\fItagList\fR?
253.BE
254
255.SH DESCRIPTION
256.PP
257When a binding is created with the \fBbind\fR command, it is
258associated either with a particular window such as \fB.a.b.c\fR,
259a class name such as \fBButton\fR, the keyword \fBall\fR, or any
260other string.
261All of these forms are called \fIbinding tags\fR.
262Each window contains a list of binding tags that determine how
263events are processed for the window.
264When an event occurs in a window, it is applied to each of the
265window's tags in order: for each tag, the most specific binding
266that matches the given tag and event is executed.
267See the \fBbind\fR command for more information on the matching
268process.
269.PP
270By default, each window has four binding tags consisting of the
271name of the window, the window's class name, the name of the window's
272nearest toplevel ancestor, and \fBall\fR, in that order.
273Toplevel windows have only three tags by default, since the toplevel
274name is the same as that of the window.
275The \fBbindtags\fR command allows the binding tags for a window to be
276read and modified.
277.PP
278If \fBbindtags\fR is invoked with only one argument, then the
279current set of binding tags for \fIwindow\fR is returned as a list.
280If the \fItagList\fR argument is specified to \fBbindtags\fR,
281then it must be a proper list; the tags for \fIwindow\fR are changed
282to the elements of the list.
283The elements of \fItagList\fR may be arbitrary strings; however,
284any tag starting with a dot is treated as the name of a window; if
285no window by that name exists at the time an event is processed,
286then the tag is ignored for that event.
287The order of the elements in \fItagList\fR determines the order in
288which binding scripts are executed in response to events.
289For example, the command
290.CS
291\fBbindtags .b {all . Button .b}\fR
292.CE
293reverses the order in which binding scripts will be evaluated for
294a button named \fB.b\fR so that \fBall\fR bindings are invoked
295first, following by bindings for \fB.b\fR's toplevel (``.''), followed by
296class bindings, followed by bindings for \fB.b\fR.
297If \fItagList\fR is an empty list then the binding tags for \fIwindow\fR
298are returned to the default state described above.
299.PP
300The \fBbindtags\fR command may be used to introduce arbitrary
301additional binding tags for a window, or to remove standard tags.
302For example, the command
303.CS
304\fBbindtags .b {.b TrickyButton . all}\fR
305.CE
306replaces the \fBButton\fR tag for \fB.b\fR with \fBTrickyButton\fR.
307This means that the default widget bindings for buttons, which are
308associated with the \fBButton\fR tag, will no longer apply to \fB.b\fR,
309but any bindings associated with \fBTrickyButton\fR (perhaps some
310new button behavior) will apply.
311.SH EXAMPLE
312If you have a set of nested \fBframe\fR widgets and you want events
313sent to a \fBbutton\fR widget to also be delivered to all the widgets
314up to the current \fBtoplevel\fR (in contrast to Tk's default
315behavior, where events are not delivered to those intermediate
316windows) to make it easier to have accelerators that are only active
317for part of a window, you could use a helper procedure like this to
318help set things up:
319.CS
320proc setupBindtagsForTreeDelivery {widget} {
321 set tags [list $widget [winfo class $widget]]
322 set w $widget
323 set t [winfo toplevel $w]
324 while {$w ne $t} {
325 set w [winfo parent $w]
326 lappend tags $w
327 }
328 lappend tags all
329 \fBbindtags\fR $widget $tags
330}
331.CE
332
333.SH "SEE ALSO"
334bind
335
336.SH KEYWORDS
337binding, event, tag