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1 | The Tk Toolkit, Version 2.3 |
2 | ||
3 | by John Ousterhout | |
4 | University of California at Berkeley | |
5 | ||
6 | 1. Introduction | |
7 | --------------- | |
8 | ||
9 | This directory contains the sources and documentation for Tk, which | |
10 | is an X11 toolkit that provides the Motif look and feel and is | |
11 | implemented using the Tcl command language. | |
12 | ||
13 | For an introduction to Tcl and Tk you may wish to read two papers: | |
14 | ``Tcl: An Embeddable Command Language'', in the Proceedings of the | |
15 | 1990 Winter USENIX Conference, and ``An X11 Toolkit Based on the Tcl | |
16 | Language'', in the Proceedings of the 1991 Winter USENIX Conference. | |
17 | A copy of the first paper is present in Postscript form in the file | |
18 | "tcl/usenix.ps"; Postscript for the second paper is in "doc/usenix.ps". | |
19 | Both Tcl and Tk have evolved quite a bit since these papers were | |
20 | written so the papers are no longer complete or correct, but they will | |
21 | give you an introduction to the systems. | |
22 | ||
23 | The following things are present in this directory and its subdirectories: | |
24 | ||
25 | 1. Tk, a toolkit for X11 windowing applications. | |
26 | 2. Tcl, an embeddable command language on which Tk is based. | |
27 | 3. Wish, a simple windowing shell that uses Tk and Tcl. | |
28 | 4. A collection of demonstration scripts to illustrate the use | |
29 | of various features of Tk. | |
30 | ||
31 | The enclosed code is known to run on most versions of SunOS and Ultrix | |
32 | in combination with the X11R4 and X11R5 window servers from MIT. It | |
33 | should also run with few or no changes on H-P and IBM workstations. | |
34 | ||
35 | 2. What's New In This Release | |
36 | ----------------------------- | |
37 | ||
38 | Tk 2.2 is a major new release with a number of new features relative | |
39 | to the 2.1 release. Here is a summary of some of the most significant | |
40 | improvements: | |
41 | ||
42 | - There is now a text widget. It will display multiple lines of text | |
43 | and allows the text to be edited (but the set of bindings for | |
44 | editing isn't very rich yet). It also includes a tagging mechanism | |
45 | that allows you to change the fonts, colors, etc. on a character- | |
46 | by-character basis, and you can associate bindings with tags to | |
47 | implement hypertext-like features. It handles large texts | |
48 | efficiently. | |
49 | ||
50 | - Canvases have been improved in many ways, including new item types | |
51 | (arcs, bitmaps, and subwindows), Bezier spline support for lines | |
52 | and polygons, "coords" and "bbox" widget commands, and many other | |
53 | improvements and bug fixes. | |
54 | ||
55 | - There is a new "grab" command that can be used to create modal dialog | |
56 | boxes. | |
57 | ||
58 | - There is a new "tkwait" command for waiting for particular events to | |
59 | occur (such as modal dialog box to complete its task). | |
60 | ||
61 | - The menu bindings have been completely reworked to have better Motif | |
62 | compliance, such as keyboard traversal. | |
63 | ||
64 | - Individual menu entries can now have their own colors and fonts. | |
65 | ||
66 | - Most widgets (e.g. buttons, entries, text) now have a "-state" option | |
67 | that can be set to "disabled" to make the widget insensitive. | |
68 | ||
69 | - A new "-disabledForeground" option allows you to request that disabled | |
70 | buttons and menu entries be displayed in a dimmer color rather than with | |
71 | a stippled version of the original color. | |
72 | ||
73 | - Entries and messages can now be tied to a variable so that either is | |
74 | updated if the other changes. | |
75 | ||
76 | A good way to try out the new features is to run the "widget" demo; | |
77 | there are a number of new demonstrations to illustrate the new features. | |
78 | This release also contains many bug fixes. For a complete description | |
79 | of the changes in this release, see the file "changes". As far as I | |
80 | know there should not be any compatibility problems with respect to the | |
81 | 2.1 release. | |
82 | ||
83 | 3. Documentation | |
84 | ---------------- | |
85 | ||
86 | Manual entries for Tk are in the "doc" subdirectory as a set of files | |
87 | with ".man" extensions. Man pages whose names start with capital letters | |
88 | are for the procedures in Tk's C library. All other man pages document Tcl | |
89 | commands provided by Tk. To print any of the man pages, cd to the "doc" | |
90 | directory and invoke your favorite variant of troff using the normal | |
91 | -man macros, for example | |
92 | ||
93 | ditroff -man <file> | |
94 | ||
95 | where <file> is the name of the man page you'd like to print. If you'd | |
96 | like a complete set of hardcopy manual entries, send me a message with | |
97 | your street address. | |
98 | ||
99 | Manual entries for Tcl are available in the subdirectory "tcl/doc"; | |
100 | see the README file in the "tcl" directory for more information. | |
101 | ||
102 | Unfortunately, there doesn't yet exist a tutorial-style introduction | |
103 | to the facilities of Tcl and Tk. The papers give a general introduction, | |
104 | but it may be difficult to make the transition from the papers to the | |
105 | manual entries. If you are familiar with the Xt toolkit then the Tk | |
106 | facilities will probably be easy to pick up from the manual entries. | |
107 | If you have no experience with X or Xt, you may wish to wait another | |
108 | 6-12 months to use Tk, until a more gentle introduction is available. | |
109 | ||
110 | 4. Compiling Tk | |
111 | --------------- | |
112 | ||
113 | Before attempting to compile Tk, personalize Makefile by following the | |
114 | directions at the beginning of the file. You should also configure | |
115 | Tcl by following the directions in the file "tcl/README". Then type | |
116 | "make" in the top-level directory (the one that contains this file). | |
117 | This will compile the Tk library and generate a simple windowing shell | |
118 | called "wish". It will also compile the Tcl library, which is in the | |
119 | "tcl" subdirectory. | |
120 | ||
121 | 5. Installing Scripts | |
122 | --------------------- | |
123 | ||
124 | Tk depends on a library of scripts that establish default behaviors | |
125 | for Tk widgets and do many other things. Tk normally expects the | |
126 | scripts to be in /usr/local/lib/tk. Create this directory and copy | |
127 | everything in the "library" subdirectory to it, including both files | |
128 | and subdirectories. Or, if you don't want to create a subdirectory of | |
129 | /usr/local/lib (or if you can't), you can either make a symbolic link | |
130 | from there to the library subdirectory or you can add a "-DTK_LIBRARY" | |
131 | switch to CFLAGS in Makefile; this will allow you to put the script | |
132 | library anywhere you like. | |
133 | ||
134 | I also recommend installing the wish binary in /usr/local. The demo | |
135 | scripts all work best when it is installed there. | |
136 | ||
137 | 6. Getting Started | |
138 | ------------------ | |
139 | ||
140 | Once wish is compiled you can use it to play around with the Tk | |
141 | facilities. If you run wish with no arguments, it will open a small | |
142 | window on the screen and read Tcl commands from standard input. | |
143 | Or, you can play with some of the pre-canned scripts in the subdirectory | |
144 | scripts/demos. See the README file in the directory for a description | |
145 | of what's available. The file scripts/demos/widget is a script that | |
146 | you can use to invoke many individual demostrations of Tk's facilities. | |
147 | ||
148 | If you want to start typing Tcl/Tk commands to wish, I'd suggest | |
149 | starting with the "bind" command. Then learn about a widget-creation | |
150 | command like "button", and also learn about the "pack" and "place" | |
151 | commands for geometry management. Note: when you create a widget, | |
152 | it won't appear on the screen until you tell a geometry manager about | |
153 | it. The only geometry managers at present are the packer and the placer. | |
154 | If you don't already know Tcl, read the Tcl paper and the Tcl.man manual | |
155 | entry in the tcl subdirectory. | |
156 | ||
157 | The easiest way to learn about writing new widgets is probably to look | |
158 | at existing widget implementations. The demos directory contains an | |
159 | example of a trivial widget, which you might find useful as a starting | |
160 | point for writing new widgets. You might also take a look at main.c, | |
161 | the main program for wish, to see how to write a main program that uses | |
162 | the facilities of Tk and Tcl. | |
163 | ||
164 | 7. Newsgroup | |
165 | ------------ | |
166 | ||
167 | There is a network news group "comp.lang.tcl" intended for the exchange | |
168 | of information about Tcl, Tk, and related applications. Feel free to use | |
169 | this newsgroup both for general information questions and for bug reports. | |
170 | I read the newsgroup and will attempt to fix bugs and problems reported | |
171 | to it. | |
172 | ||
173 | 8. Known Problems | |
174 | ----------------- | |
175 | ||
176 | There are still many imperfections with the system. Below is a list | |
177 | of some of the more serious omissions and bugs: | |
178 | ||
179 | 1. The widgets don't look very good on monochrome displays right now, | |
180 | because I haven't had a chance to figure out how to do the 3-D | |
181 | effects right without color. The widgets should look pretty good in | |
182 | color. The widgets aren't fully Motif-compliant yet. In particular, | |
183 | there is no keyboard navigation yet. The widgets will eventually | |
184 | become fully Motif-compatible (assuming I can figure out how Motif | |
185 | widgets are supposed to look and feel). | |
186 | ||
187 | 2. Tk doesn't work very well with virtual-root window managers such | |
188 | as tvtwm. | |
189 | ||
190 | The file ToDo contains a list of various smaller bugs and mis-features | |
191 | that haven't been fixed yet. | |
192 | ||
193 | 9. Feedback Wanted | |
194 | ------------------ | |
195 | ||
196 | I'm very interested in getting feedback from you both about bugs and about | |
197 | overall design issues. Send your comments to "ouster@sprite.berkeley.edu". | |
198 | I'll do my best to fix show-stopping bugs quickly, but most other things | |
199 | may not get fast turnaround, since I already have a zillion high-priority | |
200 | things to fix or implement. Before submitting requests for new features | |
201 | you may wish to check the file ToDo, which has a list of things I already | |
202 | know about and plan to implement soon. | |
203 | ||
204 | 7. The Future | |
205 | ------------- | |
206 | ||
207 | Tk is still young. I expect it to undergo substantial changes as I learn | |
208 | more about its strengths and weaknesses. Some of the changes will not be | |
209 | backward compatible: at this point I think it's more important to fix | |
210 | problems and improve Tk's structure than to maintain compatibility. At | |
211 | some point in the next year or so there will be a new release with major | |
212 | incompatibilities. My plan is to save up as many as possible of the | |
213 | incompatible changes that are needed and do them all at once. |