OPTIONS(9)OPTIONS(9)NAMEoptions - Standard options supported by widgets
DESCRIPTION
This manual entry describes the common configuration options supported
by widgets in the Tk toolkit. Every widget does not necessarily sup‐
port every option (see the manual entries for individual widgets for a
list of the standard options supported by that widget), but if a widget
does support an option with one of the names listed below, then the
option has exactly the effect described below. For a description of
kinds of values that can passed to the various options, see types(9).
In the descriptions below, the name refers to the switch used in class
commands and configure widget commands to set this value. For example,
if an option's command-line switch is set to -foreground and there
exists a widget .a.b.c, then the command
.a.b.c configure -foreground black
may be used to specify the value black for the option in the the widget
.a.b.c.
-activebackground colour
Specifies background colour to use when drawing active elements.
An element (a widget or portion of a widget) is active if the
mouse cursor is positioned over the element and pressing a mouse
button will cause some action to occur.
-activeforeground colour
Specifies foreground colour to use when drawing active elements.
See above for definition of active elements.
-actx Returns the current x position of the widget in screen coordi‐
nates.
-acty Returns the current y position of the widget in screen coordi‐
nates.
-actwidth
Returns the current allocated width of the widget.
-actheight
Returns the current allocated height of the widget.
-anchor val
Specifies how the information in a widget (e.g. text or a bit‐
map) is to be displayed in the widget. Val must be one of the
values n, ne, e, se, s, sw, w, nw, or center. For example, nw
means display the information such that its top-left corner is
at the top-left corner of the widget.
-background colour or -bg colour
Specifies the normal background colour to use when displaying
the widget.
-bitmap bitmap
Specifies a bitmap to display in the widget. The exact way in
which the bitmap is displayed may be affected by other options
such as anchor or justify. Typically, if this option is speci‐
fied then it overrides other options that specify a textual
value to display in the widget; the bitmap option may be reset
to an empty string to re-enable a text display. In widgets that
support both bitmap and image options, image will usually over‐
ride bitmap. For those widgets that support the foreground
option, if the bitmap is monochrome it is displayed using the
foreground colour.
-borderwidth dist or -bd dist
Specifies a non-negative value indicating the width of the 3-D
border to draw around the outside of the widget (if such a bor‐
der is being drawn; the relief option typically determines
this). The value may also be used when drawing 3-D effects in
the interior of the widget.
-disabledcolor colour
Specifies the foreground colour to use when drawing disabled
widgets. Certain widgets can be disabled by use of their -state
option.
-font font
Specifies the font to use when drawing text inside the widget.
-foreground colour or -fg colour
Specifies the normal foreground colour to use when displaying
the widget.
-highlightcolor colour
Specifies the colour to use for the traversal highlight rectan‐
gle that is drawn around the widget when it has the input focus.
-highlightthickness dist
Specifies a non-negative value indicating the width of the high‐
light rectangle to draw around the outside of the widget when it
has the input focus. If the value is zero, no focus highlight
is drawn around the widget.
-image image
Specifies an image to display in the widget, which 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 bit‐
map or text display. For those widgets that support the fore‐
ground option, if the image is monochrome it is displayed using
the foreground colour.
-jump boolean
For widgets with a slider that can be dragged to adjust a value,
such as scrollbars, this option determines when notifications
are made about changes in the value. If the value is false,
updates are made continuously as the slider is dragged. If the
value is true, updates are delayed until the mouse button is
released to end the drag; at that point a single notification
is made (the value ``jumps'' rather than changing smoothly).
-justify val
When there are multiple lines of text displayed in a widget,
this option determines how the lines line up with each other.
Val must be one of left, center, or right. Left means that the
lines' left edges all line up, center means that the lines' cen‐
ters are aligned, and right means that the lines' right edges
line up.
-orient orientation
For widgets that can lay themselves out with either a horizontal
or vertical orientation, such as scrollbars, this option speci‐
fies which orientation should be used. Orientation must be
either horizontal or vertical.
-padx dist
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how much extra space
to request for the widget in the X-direction. When computing
how large a window it needs, the widget will add this amount to
the width it would normally need (as determined by the width of
the things displayed in the widget); if the geometry manager
can satisfy this request, the widget will end up with extra
internal space to the left and/or right of what it displays
inside. Most widgets only use this option for padding text: if
they are displaying a bitmap or image, then they usually ignore
padding options.
-pady dist
Specifies a non-negative value indicating how much extra space
to request for the widget in the Y-direction. When computing
how large a window it needs, the widget will add this amount to
the height it would normally need (as determined by the height
of the things displayed in the widget); if the geometry manager
can satisfy this request, the widget will end up with extra
internal space above and/or below what it displays inside. Most
widgets only use this option for padding text: if they are dis‐
playing a bitmap or image, then they usually ignore padding
options.
-relief val
Specifies the 3-D effect desired for the widget. Acceptable
values for val are raised, sunken, flat, ridge, and groove. The
value indicates how the interior of the widget should appear
relative to its exterior; for example, raised means the inte‐
rior of the widget should appear to protrude from the screen,
relative to the exterior of the widget.
-selectbackground colour
Specifies the background colour to use when displaying selected
items.
-selectborderwidth dist
Specifies a non-negative value indicating the width of the 3-D
border to draw around selected items.
-selectforeground colour
Specifies the foreground colour to use when displaying selected
items.
-takefocus boolean
Determines whether clicking on the widget will automatically
give it the keyboard focus, and also whether the widget will
become part of the keyboard focus list and made accessible by
keyboard navigation.
-text val
Specifies a string, val, to be displayed inside the widget. The
way in which the string is displayed depends on the particular
widget and may be determined by other options, such as anchor or
justify.
-underline integer
Specifies the integer index of a character to underline in the
widget. This option is used by the default bindings to imple‐
ment keyboard traversal for menu buttons and menu entries. 0
corresponds to the first character of the text displayed in the
widget, 1 to the next character, and so on.
-xscrollcommand command
Specifies the prefix for a command used to communicate with hor‐
izontal scrollbars. When the view in the widget's window
changes (or whenever anything else occurs that could change the
display in a scrollbar, such as a change in the total size of
the widget's contents), the widget will generate a Tk command by
concatenating command and two numbers. Each of the numbers is a
fraction between 0 and 1, which indicates a position in the doc‐
ument. 0 indicates the beginning of the document, 1 indicates
the end, .333 indicates a position one third the way through the
document, and so on. The first fraction indicates the first
information in the document that is visible in the window, and
the second fraction indicates the information just after the
last portion that is visible. The command is then passed to the
Tk interpreter for execution. Typically the -xscrollcommand
option consists of the path name of a scrollbar widget followed
by ``set'', e.g. ``.x.scrollbar set'': this will cause the
scrollbar to be updated whenever the view in the window changes.
If this option is not specified, then no command will be exe‐
cuted.
-yscrollcommand command
Specifies the prefix for a command used to communicate with ver‐
tical scrollbars. This option is treated in the same way as the
-xscrollcommand option, except that it is used for vertical
scrollbars and is provided by widgets that support vertical
scrolling. See the description of -xscrollcommand for details
on how this option is used.
OPTIONS(9)