Creating widgets and determining how to display them are done with separate
commands. You can create a widget with one of the widget
creation methods (such as
Button
,
Canvas
, etc.),
but you display them using a geometry manager.
The three geometry managers are
pack
,
grid
,
and
place
.
pack
is by far the most commonly used.
You can either pack a widget as you create it, or you can
create the widget object and pack it separately.
For example, the previous "Hello World!" example might have read:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use Tk;
my $mw = MainWindow->new;
$button = $mw->Button(-text => "Hello World!", -command =>sub{exit});
$button->pack;
MainLoop;
With the
pack
geometry manager, widgets cannot overlap or
cover each other, either partially or completely. Once a
widget is packed into a window, the next widget is packed
in the remaining space around it.
pack
sets up an "allocation rectangle" for each widget,
determined by the dimensions of the parent window and the
positioning of the widgets already packed into it.
This means that the order
in which you pack your widgets is very important.
By default,
pack
places widgets at the top center of the
allocation rectangle. However, you can use options to
pack
to
control where a widget is placed and how much padding is placed around it.
Options for
pack
are:
-
-side =>
side
-
Puts the widget
against the specified side of the window. Values for
side
are
'left'
,
'right'
,
'top'
, and
'bottom'
. The default is
'top'
.
-
-fill =>
direction
-
Causes the widget to fill the
allocation rectangle in the specified direction.
Values for
direction
are
'none'
,
'x'
,
'y'
, and
'both'
. The default is
'none'
.
-
-expand =>
boolean
-
Causes the allocation
rectangle to fill the remaining space available in the window.
Values are
'yes'
,
'no'
,
1
, and
0
. The default is
0
(
'no'
).
-
-anchor =>
position
-
Anchors the widget inside the allocation rectangle.
Values for
position
are
'n'
,
'ne'
,
'e'
,
'se'
,
's'
,
'sw'
,
'w'
,
'nw'
,
and
'center'
. The default is
'center'
.
-
-after =>
$widget
-
Puts the widget after another widget in packing
order.
-
-before =>
$widget
-
Puts the widget before another widget in
packing order.
-
-in =>
$window
-
Packs the widget inside another window rather
than inside its parent.
-
-ipadx =>
amount
-
Increases the size of the widget horizontally
by
amount
* 2.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-ipady =>
amount
-
Increases the size of the widget vertically
by
amount
* 2.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-padx =>
amount
-
Places padding on the left and right of the widget.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-pady
amount
-
Places padding on the top and bottom of the widget.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
The following methods are associated with
pack
:
-
packForget
-
Causes a widget to be removed from view.
$widget->packForget;
The widget is not destroyed, but is no longer managed by
pack
.
The widget is removed from the packing order, so if it were repacked
later, it would appear at the end of the packing order.
-
packInfo
-
Returns a list containing all pack information about that widget.
$info = $widget->packInfo;
-
packPropagate
-
Suppresses automatic resizing of a Toplevel or Frame widget to accommodate items
packed inside of it. The following line turns off automatic resizing:
$widget->packPropagate(0);
-
packSlaves
-
Returns an ordered list of all the widgets packed into the parent
widget.
$children = $widget->packSlaves;
The
grid
geometry manager divides the window into a grid
composed of columns and rows starting at 0,0 in the upper left-hand
corner. The resulting grid resembles a spreadsheet, with each
widget assigned a cell according to the options to
grid
.
To create a grid, create a frame that is packed inside the parent
window and then grid the widgets within the frame.
You can specify explicit rows and columns using options to
grid
.
However, if several widgets are meant to appear in the same row,
you can use a single
grid
command with
a list of widgets rather than calling
grid
for each one.
The first widget invokes the
grid
command, and all other
widgets for that column are specified as options to
grid
.
Any subsequent
grid
commands increment the row by one and
start again.
You can use special characters as placeholders:
-
-
(minus sign)
-
The previous widget should span this column as well. May not
follow
^
or
x
.
-
x
-
Leave a blank space.
-
^
-
The widget above this one (same column, previous row) should span
this row.
Options to
grid
are:
-
-column =>
n
-
The column in which to place the widget.
n
is any integer >= 0.
-
-row =>
m
-
The row in which to place the widget.
m
is any integer >= 0.
-
-columnspan =>
n
-
The number of columns for the widget to span, beginning with
the column specified with
-column
.
n
is any integer > 0.
-
-rowspan =>
m
-
The number of rows for the widget to span, beginning
with the column specified with
-row
.
m
is any integer > 0.
-
-sticky =>
sides
-
Stick widget to specified side(s).
sides
contains characters
n
,
s
,
e
, or
w
.
-
-in =>
$window
-
Grid widget inside another window instead
of its parent.
-
-ipadx =>
amount
-
Increases the size of the widget horizontally
by
amount
* 2.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-ipady =>
amount
-
Increases the size of the widget vertically
by
amount
* 2.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-padx =>
amount
-
Places padding on the left and right of the widget.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-pady
amount
-
Places padding on the top and bottom of the widget.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
The following methods are associated with
grid
:
-
gridColumnconfigure
-
Configures the column specified by the first argument using
-weight
and
-minsize
arguments. The
-weight
argument determines the amount of space to allocate to that column,
and the
-minsize
argument sets the minimum size in pixels.
For example:
$widget->gridColumnconfigure(3, -weight => 1);
-
gridRowconfigure
-
Configures the row specified by the first argument using
-weight
and
-minsize
arguments. The
-weight
argument determines the amount of space to allocate to that row,
and the
-minsize
argument sets the minimum size in pixels.
For example:
$widget->gridRowconfigure(3, -weight => 1);
-
gridBbox
-
Returns the bounding box in pixels for the space occupied by the
specified grid position (in the order of column, row). For example:
$widget->gridBbox(3,2);
-
gridForget
-
Causes the widget(s) to be removed from view. Additional widgets
can be specified as arguments.
$widget1->gridForget($widget2, widget3, ...);
-
gridInfo
-
Returns information about the widget in list format.
$widget->gridInfo;
-
gridLocation
-
Returns the column and row of the widget nearest the specified
x,y coordinates (in pixels).
$widget->gridLocation(120, 32);
-
gridPropagate
-
Turns off automatic resizing of the widget.
$widget->gridPropagate;
-
gridSize
-
Returns the size of the grid, i.e., the number of columns and rows.
$widget->gridSize;
-
gridSlaves
-
Returns a list of all widgets contained within a master widget.
Optional
-row
and
-column
arguments restrict the
response to the widget(s) within that row or column.
$children = $widget->gridSlaves(-row => 2);
The
place
geometry manager lets you position a window at
explicit x,y coordinates. With
place
, you can overlap
widgets, which isn't allowed with
grid
or
pack
.
For example, to position a button widget at the upper left corner
of a window:
$button->place(-x => 0, -y => 0);
Options to
place
are:
-
-anchor =>
position
-
The position
in the widget that will be placed at the coordinates specified.
Values for
position
are
'n'
,
'ne'
,
'e'
,
'se'
,
's'
,
'sw'
,
'w'
,
'nw'
, and
'center'
. Default is
'nw'
.
-
-bordermode =>
location
-
Determines whether or
not the border portion of the widget is included in the coordinate
system. Values for
location
are
'inside'
,
'outside'
, and
'ignore'
.
-
-height =>
amount
-
Absolute height of the widget.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-in =>
$window
-
The child widget will be packed inside the specified window instead
of the parent that created it. Any relative coordinates or sizes will
still refer to the parent.
-
-relheight =>
ratio
-
The height of the widget relates to the parent widget's height by the
specified ratio.
-
-relwidth =>
ratio
-
The width of the widget relates to the parent widget's width by the
specified ratio.
-
-relx =>
xratio
-
The widget will be placed relative to its parent by the specified
ratio.
xratio
is a floating point number from 0.0 to 1.0,
with 0.0 representing the left side of the parent widget and 1.0
representing the right side.
-
-rely =>
yratio
-
The widget will be placed relative to its parent by the specified
ratio.
yratio
is a floating point number from 0.0 to 1.0,
with 0.0 representing the top of the parent widget and 1.0
representing the bottom.
-
-width =>
amount
-
The width of the widget will be the specified amount.
amount
can be represented as a number followed
by
c
(centimeters),
i
(inches),
m
(millimeters),
and
p
(printer points). Pixels are the default units.
-
-x =>
xcoord
-
The widget will be placed at the specified x coordinate.
-
-y =>
ycoord
-
The widget will be placed at the specified y coordinate.
The following methods are associated with
place
:
-
placeForget
-
Causes the widget to be removed from view.
-
placeInfo
-
Returns information about the widget.
-
placeSlaves
-
Returns a list of widgets managed by the specified parent widget.
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