Table of Contents
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tabset - create and manipulate tabs as as set
tabset pathName ?options?
itk::Widget <- tabset
background font selectBackgroundcursor
foreground selectForeground disabledForegroundheight
width
See the "options" manual entry for details on the standard
options.
- Name:
- angle
- Class:
- Angle
- Command-Line Switch:
- -angle
Specifes the angle of slope from the inner edge to the
outer edge of the tab. An angle of 0 specifies square
tabs. Valid ranges are 0 to 45 degrees inclusive.
Default is 15 degrees. If tabPos is e or w, this option
is ignored.
- Name:
- backdrop
- Class:
- Backdrop
- Command-Line Switch:
- -backdrop
Specifies a background color to use when filling in the
area behind the tabs.
- Name:
- bevelAmount
- Class:
- BevelAmount
- Command-Line Switch:
- -bevelamount
Specifes the size of tab corners. A value of 0 with
angle set to 0 results in square tabs. A bevelAmount of
4, means that the tab will be drawn with angled corners
that cut in 4 pixels from the edge of the tab. The
default is 0.
- Name:
- command
- Class:
- Command
- Command-Line Switch:
- -command
Specifes the prefix of a Tcl command to invoke to change the view in the
widget associated with the tabset. When a user selects a tab, a Tcl command
is invoked. The actual command consists of this option followed by a space
and a number. The number is the numerical index of the tab that has been
selected.
- Name:
- equalTabs
- Class:
- EqualTabs
- Command-Line Switch:
- -equaltabs
Specifies whether to force tabs to be equal sized or
not. A value of true means constrain tabs to be equal
sized. A value of false allows each tab to size based
on the text label size. The value may have any of the
forms accepted by the Tcl_GetBoolean, such as true,
false, 0, 1, yes, or no.
For horizontally positioned tabs (tabPos is either s or
n), true forces all tabs to be equal width (the width
being equal to the longest label plus any padX specified).
Horizontal tabs are always equal in height.
For vertically positioned tabs (tabPos is either w or
e), true forces all tabs to be equal height (the height
being equal to the height of the label with the largest
font). Vertically oriented tabs are always equal in
width.
- Name:
- gap
- Class:
- Gap
- Command-Line Switch:
- -gap
Specifies the amount of pixel space to place between
each tab. Value may be any pixel offset value. In addition,
a special keyword overlap can be used as the
value to achieve a standard overlap of tabs. This value
may have any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.
- Name:
- margin
- Class:
- Margin
- Command-Line Switch:
- -margin
Specifies the amount of space to place between the outside
edge of the tabset and the outside edge of its
tabs. If tabPos is s, this is the amount of space
between the bottom edge of the tabset and the bottom
edge of the set of tabs. If tabPos is n, this is the
amount of space between the top edge of the tabset and
the top edge of the set of tabs. If tabPos is e, this
is the amount of space between the right edge of the
tabset and the right edge of the set of tabs. If tabPos
is w, this is the amount of space between the left edge
of the tabset and the left edge of the set of tabs.
This value may have any of the forms acceptable to
Tk_GetPixels.
- Name:
- padX
- Class:
- PadX
- Command-Line Switch:
- -padx
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how much
extra space to request for a tab around its label in
the X-direction. When computing how large a window it
needs, the tab will add this amount to the width it
would normally need The tab will end up with extra
internal space to the left and right of its text label.
This value may have any of the forms acceptable to
Tk_GetPixels.
- Name:
- padY
- Class:
- PadY
- Command-Line Switch:
- -pady
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how much
extra space to request for a tab around its label in
the Y-direction. When computing how large a window it
needs, the tab will add this amount to the height it
would normally need The tab will end up with extra
internal space to the top and bottom of its text label.
This value may have any of the forms acceptable to
Tk_GetPixels.
- Name:
- raiseSelect
- Class:
- RaiseSelect
- Command-Line Switch:
- -raiseselect
Specifes whether to slightly raise the selected tab
from the rest of the tabs. The selected tab is drawn 2
pixels closer to the outside edge of the tabset than
the unselected tabs. A value of true says to raise
selected tabs, a value of false turns this off. The
default is false. The value may have any of the forms
accepted by the Tcl_GetBoolean, such as true, false, 0,
1, yes, or no.
- Name:
- start
- Class:
- Start
- Command-Line Switch:
- -start
Specifies the amount of space to place between the left
or top edge of the tabset and the starting edge of its
tabs. For horizontally positioned tabs, this is the
amount of space between the left edge of the tabset and
the left edge of the first tab. For vertically positioned
tabs, this is the amount of space between the
top of the tabset and the top of the first tab. This
value may change if the user performs a MButton-2
scroll on the tabs. This value may have any of the
forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels.
- Name:
- state
- Class:
- State
- Command-Line Switch:
- -state
Sets the active state of the tabset. Specifying normal
allows all tabs to be selectable. Specifying disabled
disables the tabset causing all tabs to be drawn in the
disabledForeground color.
- Name:
- tabBorders
- Class:
- TabBorders
- Command-Line Switch:
- -tabborders
Specifies whether to draw the borders of tabs that are
not selected. Specifying true (the default) draws these
borders, specifying false draws only the border around
the selected tab. The value may have any of the forms
accepted by the Tcl_GetBoolean, such as true, false, 0,
1, yes, or no.
- Name:
- tabPos
- Class:
- TabPos
- Command-Line Switch:
- -tabpos
Specifies the location of the set of tabs in relation
to another widget. Must be n, s, e, or w. Defaults to
s. North tabs open downward, South tabs open upward.
West tabs open to the right, east tabs open to the
left.
_________________________________________________________________
The tabset command creates a new window (given by the pathName
argument) and makes it into a tabset widget. Additional
options, described above may be specified on the command
line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
tabset such as its colors, font, and text. The tabset 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 tabset is a widget that contains a set of Tab buttons. It
displays these tabs in a row or column depending on it tabpos.
When a tab is clicked on, it becomes the only tab in
the tab set that is selected. All other tabs are deselected.
The Tcl command prefix associated with this tab (through the
command tab configure option) is invoked with the tab index
number appended to its argument list. This allows the tabset
to control another widget such as a Notebook.
Tabs are drawn to appear attached to another widget. The
tabset draws an edge boundary along one of its edges. This
edge is known as the attachment edge. This edge location is
dependent on the value of tabPos. For example, if tabPos is
s, the attachment edge wil be on the top side of the tabset
(in order to attach to the bottom or south side of its
attached widget). The selected tab is draw with a 3d relief
to appear above the other tabs. This selected tab "opens"
toward attachment edge.
Tabs can be controlled in their location along the edges,
the angle that tab sides are drawn with, gap between tabs,
starting margin of tabs, internal padding around labels in a
tab, the font, and its text or bitmap.
The tabset 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.
Many of the widget commands for a tabset take as one argument
an indicator of which tab of the tabset to operate on.
These indicators are called indexes and may be specified in
any of the following forms:
number
Specifies the tab numerically, where 0 corresponds to
the first tab in the tab set, 1 to the second, and so
on.
select
Specifies the currently selected tab's index. If no tab
is currently selected, the value -1 is returned.
end Specifes the last tab in the tabset's index. If the
tabset is empty this will return -1.
pattern
If the index doesn't satisfy any of the above forms,
then this form is used. Pattern is pattern-matched
against the label of each tab in the tabset, in order
from the first to the last tab, until a matching entry
is found. The rules of Tcl_StringMatch are used.
The following commands are possible for tabset widgets:
pathName add ?option value option value ...?
Add a new tab at the end of the tabset. Returns
the child site pathName. If additional arguments
are present, they specify any of the following
options:
- -angle value
-
Specifes the angle of slope from the inner
edge to the outer edge of the tab. An angle
of 0 specifies square tabs. Valid ranges are
0 to 45 degrees inclusive. Default is 15
degrees. If this option is specified as an
empty string (the default), then the angle
option for the overall tabset is used.
- -background value
-
Specifies a background color to use for
displaying tabs when they are in their normal
state (unselected). If this option is specified
as an empty string (the default), then
the background option for the overall tabset
is used.
- -bevelamount value
-
Specifes the size of tab corners. A value of
0 with angle set to 0 results in square tabs.
A bevelAmount of 4, means that the tab will
be drawn with angled corners that cut in 4
pixels from the edge of the tab. The default
is 0. This is generally only set at the tabset
configuration level. Tabs normally will
want to share the same bevelAmount.
- -bitmap value
-
If label is a non-empty string, specifies a
bitmap to display in the tab. Bitmap may be
of any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap.
- -disabledforeground value
-
Specifies a foreground color to use for
displaying tab labels when tabs are in their
disable state. If this option is specified as
an empty string (the default), then the disabledforeground
option for the overall tabset
is used.
- -font value
-
Specifies the font to use when drawing the
label on a tab. If this option is specified
as an empty string then the font option for
the overall tabset is used.
- -foreground value
-
Specifies a foreground color to use for
displaying tab labels when tabs are in their
normal unselected state. If this option is
specified as an empty string (the default),
then the foreground option for the overall
tabset is used.
- -image value
-
If label is a non-empty string, specifies an
image to display in the tab. Image must have
been created with the image create command.
Typically, if the image option is specified
then it overrides other options that specify
a bitmap or textual value to display in the
widget; the image option may be reset to an
empty string to re-enable a bitmap or text
display.
- -label value
-
Specifies a text string to be placed in the
tabs label. If this value is set, the bitmap
option is overridden and this option is used
instead. This label serves as an additional
identifier used to reference the tab. This
label may be used for the index value in
widget commands.
- -selectbackground value
-
Specifies a background color to use for
displaying the selected tab. If this option
is specified as an empty string (the
default), then the selectBackground option
for the overall tabset is used.
- -selectforeground value
-
Specifies a foreground color to use for
displaying the selected tab. If this option
is specified as an empty string (the
default), then the selectForeground option
for the overall tabset is used.
- -padx value
-
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how
much extra space to request for a tab around
its label in the X-direction. When computing
how large a window it needs, the tab will add
this amount to the width it would normally
need The tab will end up with extra internal
space to the left and right of its text
label. This value may have any of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. If this option is
specified as an empty string (the default),
then the padX option for the overall tabset
is used
- -pady value
-
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how
much extra space to request for a tab around
its label in the Y-direction. When computing
how large a window it needs, the tab will add
this amount to the height it would normally
need The tab will end up with extra internal
space to the top and bottom of its text
label. This value may have any of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. If this option is
specified as an empty string (the default),
then the padY option for the overall tabset
is used
- -state value
-
Sets the state of the tab. Specifying normal
allows this tab to be selectable. Specifying
disabled disables the this tab causing its
tab label to be drawn in the disabledForeground
color. The tab will not respond to
events until the state is set back to normal.
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 path_Name
(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 tabset command.
pathName delete index1 ?index2?
Delete all of the tabs between index1 and index2
inclusive. If index2 is omitted then it defaults
to index1. Returns an empty string.
pathName index index
Returns the numerical index corresponding to
index.
pathName insert index ?option value option value ...?
Insert a new tab in the tabset before the tab
specified by index. The additional arguments are
the same as for the add command. Returns the tab's
pathName.
pathName next
Advances the selected tab to the next tab (order
is determined by insertion order). If the
currently selected tab is the last tab in the tabset,
the selection wraps around to the first tab.
It behaves as if the user selected the next tab.
pathName tabconfigure index ?option? ?value?
This command is similar to the configure command,
except that it applies to the options for an individual
tab, whereas configure applies to the
options for the tabset as a whole. Options may
have any of the values accepted by the add widget
command. If options are specified, options are
modified as indicated in the command and the command
returns an empty string. If no options are
specified, returns a list describing the current
options for tab index (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for
information on the format of this list).
pathName prev
Moves the selected tab to the previous tab (order
is determined by insertion order). If the
currently selected tab is the first tab in the
tabset, the selection wraps around to the last tab
in the tabset. It behaves as if the user selected
the previous tab.
pathName select index
Selects the tab specified by index as the
currently selected tab. It behaves as if the user
selected the new tab.
Following is an example that creates a tabset with two tabs
and a list box that the tabset controls. In addition selecting
an item from the list also selects the corresponding
tab.
# Define a proc that knows how to select an item
# from a list given an index from the tabset -command callback.
proc selectItem { item } {
.l selection clear [.l curselection]
.l selection set $item
.l see $item
}
# Define a proc that knows how to select a tab
# given a y pixel coordinate from the list..
proc selectTab { y } {
set whichItem [.l nearest $y]
.ts select $whichItem
}
# Create a listbox with two items (one and two)
# and bind button 1 press to the selectTab procedure.
listbox .l -selectmode single -exportselection false
.l insert end one
.l insert end two
.l selection set 0
pack .l
bind .l <ButtonPress-1> { selectTab %y }
# Create a tabset, set its -command to call selectItem
# Add two labels to the tabset (one and two).
tabset .ts -command selectItem
.ts add -label 1
.ts add -label 2
.ts select 0
pack .ts -fill x -expand no
Bill W. Scott
tab tabset notebook tabnotebook
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