Athena Widget Set — C Language Interface
X Window System
X Version 11, Release 6.4
Chris D. Peterson
formerly MIT X Consortium
X Window System is a trademark of X Consortium, Inc.
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Copyright © 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991 Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts.
Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute this documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appears in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Digital not be used in in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission. Digital makes no representations about the suitability of the software described herein for any purpose. It is provided ‘‘as is’’ without express or implied warranty.
Acknowledgments
Many thanks go to Ralph Swick (Project Athena / Digital) who has contributed much time and effort to this widget set. Previous versions of the widget set are largely due to his time and effort. Many of the improvements that I have been able to make are because he provided a solid foundation to build upon. While much of the effort has been Ralph’s, many other people have contributed to the code.
Mark Ackerman (formerly Project Athena) Donna Converse (MIT X Consortium) Jim Fulton (formerly MIT X Consortium) Loretta Guarino-Reid (Digital WSL) Charles Haynes (Digital WSL) Rich Hyde (Digital WSL) Mary Larson (Digital UEG) Joel McCormack (Digital WSL) Ron Newman (formerly Project Athena) Jeanne Rich (Digital WSL) Terry Weissman (formerly Digital WSL) |
While not much remains of the X10 toolkit, many of the ideas for this widget set come from that original version. The design and implementation of the X10 toolkit were done by:
Mike Gancarz (formerly Digital UEG) Charles Haynes (Digital WSL) Phil Karlton (formerly Digital WSL) Kathleen Langone (Digital UEG) Mary Larson (Digital UEG) Ram Rao (Digital UEG) Smokey Wallace (formerly Digital WSL) Terry Weissman (formerly Digital WSL) |
I have used the formatting ideas, and some of the words from previous versions of this document. The X11R3 Athena widget document was written by:
Ralph R. Swick (Project Athena/ Digital) Terry Weissman (formerly Digital WSL) Al Mento (Digital UEG) |
Putting this manual together was a major task in and of itself. I would like to thank Ralph Swick, Donna Converse, and Jim Fulton for taking the time to help convert my technical knowledge into legible text. A special thanks to Jean Diaz (O’Reilly and Associates) for spending nearly a month with me working out all the annoying little details.
Chris D. Peterson
MIT X Consortium 1989
The R5 edition of this document has been edited by the research staff of the MIT X Consortium, with significant contributions by Jim Fulton (NCD).
Donna Converse
MIT X Consortium 1991
The R6 edition of this document has been edited to reflect changes brought about by research staff of the Omron Corporation, with special recognition to Li Yuhong, Seiji Kuwari, and Hiroshi Kuribayashi for the X11R5/contrib/lib/Xaw internationalization that inspired this version.
Frank Sheeran
Omron Corporation 1994
Chapter 1
Athena Widgets and The Intrinsics
The X Toolkit is made up of two distinct pieces, the Xt Intrinsics and a widget set. The Athena widget set is a sample implementation of a widget set built upon the Intrinsics. In the X Toolkit, a widget is the combination of an X window or subwindow and its associated input and output semantics.
Because the Intrinsics provide the same basic functionality to all widget sets it may be possible to use widgets from the Athena widget set with other widget sets based upon the Intrinsics. Since widget sets may also implement private protocols, all functionality may not be available when mixing and matching widget sets. For information about the Intrinsics, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
The Athena widget set is a library package layered on top of the Intrinsics and Xlib that provides a set of user interface tools sufficient to build a wide variety of applications. This layer extends the basic abstractions provided by X and provides the next layer of functionality primarily by supplying a cohesive set of sample widgets. Although the Intrinsics are a Consortium standard, there is no standard widget set.
To the extent possible, the Intrinsics are "policy-free". The application environment and widget set, not the Intrinsics, define, implement, and enforce:
• | Policy | ||
• |
Consistency |
||
• |
Style |
Each individual widget implementation defines its own policy. The X Toolkit design allows for, but does not necessarily encourage, the free mixing of radically differing widget implementations.
The X Toolkit provides tools that simplify the design of application user interfaces in the X Window System programming environment. It assists application programmers by providing a set of common underlying user-interface functions. It also lets widget programmers modify existing widgets, by subclassing, or add new widgets. By using the X Toolkit in their applications, programmers can present a similar user interface across applications to all workstation users.
The X Toolkit consists of:
• | A set of Intrinsics functions for building widgets | |
• |
An architectural model for constructing widgets |
|
• |
A widget set for application programming |
While the majority of the Intrinsics functions are intended for the widget programmer, a subset of the Intrinsics functions are to be used by application programmers (see X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface). The architectural model lets the widget programmer design new widgets by using the Intrinsics and by combining other widgets. The application interface layers built on top of the X Toolkit include a coordinated set of widgets and composition policies. Some of these widgets and policies are specific to a single application domain, and others are common to a variety of applications.
The remainder of this chapter discusses the X Toolkit and Athena widget set:
• | Terminology | ||
• |
Model |
||
• |
Conventions used in this manual |
||
• |
Format of the Widget Reference Chapters |
In addition to the terms already defined for X programming (see Xlib — C Language X Interface), the following terms are specific to the Intrinsics and Athena widget set and used throughout this document.
Application programmer
A programmer who uses the X Toolkit to produce an application user interface. |
Child
A widget that is contained within another "parent" widget. |
Class
The general group to which a specific object belongs. |
Client
A function that uses a widget in an application or for composing other widgets. |
FullName
The name of a widget instance appended to the full name of its parent. |
Instance
A specific widget object as opposed to a general widget class. |
Method
A function or procedure implemented by a widget class. |
Name
The name that is specific to an instance of a widget for a given client. This name is specified at creation time and cannot be modified. |
Object
A data abstraction consisting of private data and private and public functions that operate on the private data. Users of the abstraction can interact with the object only through calls to the object’s public functions. In the X Toolkit, some of the object’s public functions are called directly by the application, while others are called indirectly when the application calls the common Intrinsics functions. In general, if a function is common to all widgets, an application uses a single Intrinsics function to invoke the function for all types of widgets. If a function is unique to a single widget type, the widget exports the function. |
Parent
A widget that contains at least one other ("child") widget. A parent widget is also known as a composite widget. |
Resource
A named piece of data in a widget that can be set by a client, by an application, or by user defaults. |
Superclass
A larger class of which a specific class is a member. All members of a class are also members of the superclass. |
User
A person interacting with a workstation. |
Widget
An object providing a user-interface abstraction (for example, a Scrollbar widget). |
Widget class
The general group to which a specific widget belongs, otherwise known as the type of the widget. |
Widget programmer
A programmer who adds new widgets to the X Toolkit. |
The underlying architectural model is based on the following premises:
Widgets are X windows |
Every user-interface widget is associated with an X window. The X window ID for a widget is readily available from the widget. Standard Xlib calls can be used by widgets for many of their input and output operations. |
Information hiding |
The data for every widget is private to the widget and its subclasses. That is, the data is neither directly accessible nor visible outside of the module implementing the widget. All program interaction with the widget is performed by a set of operations (methods) that are defined for the widget. |
Widget semantics and widget layout geometry |
Widget semantics are clearly separated from widget layout geometry. Widgets are concerned with implementing specific user-interface semantics. They have little control over issues such as their size or placement relative to other widget peers. Mechanisms are provided for associating geometric managers with widgets and for widgets to make suggestions about their own geometry. |
• | All resources available to the widgets are listed with each widget. Many of these are available to more than one widget class due to the object oriented nature of the Intrinsics. The new resources for each widget are listed in bold text, and the inherited resources are listed in plain text. | |
• |
Global symbols are printed in bold and can be function names, symbols defined in include files, or structure names. Arguments are printed in italics. |
|
• |
Each function is introduced by a general discussion that distinguishes it from other functions. The function declaration itself follows, and each argument is specifically explained. General discussion of the function, if any is required, follows the arguments. Where applicable, the last paragraph of the explanation lists the return values of the function. |
|
• |
To eliminate any ambiguity between those arguments that you pass and those that a function returns to you, the explanations for all arguments that you pass start with the word specifies or, in the case of multiple arguments, the word specify. The explanations for all arguments that are returned to you start with the word returns or, in the case of multiple arguments, the word return. The explanations for all arguments that you can pass and are returned start with the words specifies and returns. |
|
• |
Any pointer to a structure that is used to return a value is designated as such by the _return suffix as part of its name. All other pointers passed to these functions are used for reading only. A few arguments use pointers to structures that are used for both input and output and are indicated by using the _in_out suffix. |
The majority of this document is a reference guide for the Athena widget set. Chapters three through six give the programmer all information necessary to use the widgets. The layout of the chapters follows a specific pattern to allow the programmer to easily find the desired information.
The first few pages of every chapter give an overview of the widgets in that section. Widgets are grouped into chapters by functionality.
Chapter 3 |
Simple Widgets |
Chapter 4 |
Menus |
Chapter 5 |
Text Widgets |
Chapter 6 |
Composite and Constraint Widget |
Following the introduction will be a description of each widget in that chapter. When no functional grouping is obvious the widgets are listed in alphabetical order, such as in chapters three and six.
The first section of each widget’s description is a table that contains general information about this widget class. Here is the table for the Box widget, and an explanation of all the entries.
Application Header file<X11/Xaw/Box.h>
Class Header file | <X11/Xaw/BoxP.h> |
Class | boxWidgetClass |
Class Name | Box |
Superclass | Composite |
Application Header File |
This file must be included when an application uses this widget. It usually contains the class definition, and some resource macros. This is often called the ‘‘public’’ header file. |
Class Header File | This file will only be used by widget programmers. It will need to be included by any widget that subclasses this widget. This is often called the ‘‘private’’ header file. | |
Class |
This is the widget class of this widget. This global symbol is passed to XtCreateWidget so that the Intrinsics will know which type of widget to create. |
|
Class Name |
This is the resource name of this class. This name can be used in a resource file to match any widget of this class. |
|
Superclass |
This is the superclass that this widget class is descended from. If you understand how the superclass works it will allow you to more quickly understand what this widget does, since much of its functionality may be inherited from its superclass. |
After this table follows a general description of the default behavior of this widget, as seen by the user. In many cases this functionality may be overridden by the application programmer, or by the user.
The next section is a table showing the name, class, type and default value of each resource that is available to this widget. There is also a column containing notes describing special restrictions placed upon individual resources.
A | This resource may be automatically adjusted when another resource is changed. | |
C |
This resource is only settable at widget creation time, and may not be modified with XtSetValues. |
|
D |
Do not modify this resource. While setting this resource will work, it can cause unexpected behavior. When this symbol appears there is another, preferred, interface provided by the X Toolkit. |
|
R |
This resource is READ-ONLY, and may not be modified. |
After the resource table is a detailed description of every resource available to that widget. Many of these are redundant, but printing them with each widget saves page flipping. The names of the resources that are inherited are printed in plain text, while the names of the resources that are new to this class are printed in bold. If you have already read the description of the superclass you need only pay attention to the resources printed in bold.
For each composite widget there is a section on layout semantics that follows the resource description. This section will describe the effect of constraint resources on the layout of the children, as well as a general description of where it prefers to place its children.
Descriptions of default translations and action routines come next, for widgets to which they apply. The last item in each widget’s documentation is the description of all convenience routines provided by the widget.
Chapter 2
Using Widgets
Widgets serve as the primary tools for building a user interface or application environment. The Athena widget set consists of primitive widgets that contain no children (for example, a command button) and composite widgets which may contain one or more widget children (for example, a Box widget).
The remaining chapters explain the widgets that are provided by the Athena widget set. These user-interface components serve as an interface for application programmers who do not want to implement their own widgets. In addition, they serve as a starting point for those widget programmers who, using the Intrinsics mechanisms, want to implement alternative application programming interfaces.
This chapter is a brief introduction to widget programming. The examples provided use the Athena widgets, though most of the concepts will apply to all widget sets. Although there are several programming interfaces to the X Toolkit, only one is described here. A full description of the programming interface is provided in the document X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
If it is desirable that the application take advantage of internationalization (i18n), you must establish locale with XtSetLanguageProc before XtDisplayInitialize or XtAppInitialize is called. For full details, please refer to the document X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface, section 2.2. However, the following simplest-case call is sufficient in many or most applications.
XtSetLanguageProc(NULL, NULL, NULL); |
Most notably, this will affect the Standard C locale, determine which resource files will be loaded, and what fonts will be required of FontSet specifications. In many cases, the addition of this line is the only source change required to internationalize Xaw programs, and will not disturb the function of programs in the default "C" locale.
You must call a toolkit initialization function
before invoking any other toolkit routines (besides locale
setting, above). XtAppInitialize opens the X server
connection, parses the command line, and creates an initial
widget that will serve as the root of a tree of widgets
created by this application.
Widget XtAppInitialize(app_context_return,
application_class, options,
num_options,
argc_in_out, argv_in_out, fallback_resources, args, num_args) |
app_con_return | Returns the application context of this application, if non-NULL. |
application_class
Specifies the class name of this application, which is usually the generic name for all instances of this application. A useful convention is to form the class name by capitalizing the first letter of the application name. For example, the application named ‘‘xman’’ has a class name of ‘‘Xman’’. | ||
options |
Specifies how to parse the command line for any application-specific resources. The options argument is passed as a parameter to XrmParseCommand. For further information, see Xlib — C Language X Interface. |
|
num_options |
Specifies the number of entries in the options list. |
|
argc_in_out |
Specifies a pointer to the number of command line parameters. |
|
argv_in_out |
Specifies the command line parameters. |
fallback_resources
Specifies resource values to be used if the site-wide application class defaults file cannot be opened, or NULL. | ||
args |
Specifies the argument list to use when creating the Application shell. |
|
num_args |
Specifies the number of arguments in args. |
This function will remove the command line arguments that the toolkit reads from argc_in_out, and argv_in_out. It will then attempt to open the display. If the display cannot be opened, an error message is issued and XtAppInitialize terminates the application. Once the display is opened, all resources are read from the locations specified by the Intrinsics. This function returns an ApplicationShell widget to be used as the root of the application’s widget tree.
Creating a widget is a three-step process. First, the widget instance is allocated, and various instance-specific attributes are set by using XtCreateWidget. Second, the widget’s parent is informed of the new child by using XtManageChild. Finally, X windows are created for the parent and all its children by using XtRealizeWidget and specifying the top-most widget. The first two steps can be combined by using XtCreateManagedWidget. In addition, XtRealizeWidget is automatically called when the child becomes managed if the parent is already realized.
To allocate, initialize, and manage a widget, use
XtCreateManagedWidget.
Widget XtCreateManagedWidget(name,
widget_class, parent, args,
num_args)
String name;
WidgetClass widget_class;
Widget parent;
ArgList args;
Cardinal num_args;
name | Specifies the instance name for the created widget that is used for retrieving widget resources. |
widget_class
Specifies the widget class pointer for the created widget. | ||
parent |
Specifies the parent widget ID. |
|
args |
Specifies the argument list. The argument list is a variable-length list composed of name and value pairs that contain information pertaining to the specific widget instance being created. For further information, see Section 2.7.2. |
|
num_args |
Specifies the number of arguments in the argument list. If the num_args is zero, the argument list is never referenced. |
When a widget instance is successfully created, the widget identifier is returned to the application. If an error is encountered, the XtError routine is invoked to inform the user of the error.
For further information, see X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
The value for the cursorName resource is specified in the resource database as a string, and is of the following forms:
• | A standard X cursor name from < X11/cursorfont.h >. The names in cursorfont.h each describe a specific cursor. The resource names for these cursors are exactly like the names in this file except the XC_ is not used. The cursor definition XC_gumby has a resource name of gumby. | |
• |
Glyphs, as in FONT font-name glyph-index [[ font-name ] glyph-index ]. The first font and glyph specify the cursor source pixmap. The second font and glyph specify the cursor mask pixmap. The mask font defaults to the source font, and the mask glyph index defaults to the source glyph index. |
|
• |
A relative or absolute file name. If a relative or absolute file name is specified, that file is used to create the source pixmap. Then the string "Mask" is appended to locate the cursor mask pixmap. If the "Mask" file does not exist, the suffix "msk" is tried. If "msk" fails, no cursor mask will be used. If the filename does not start with ’/’ or ’./’ the the bitmap file path is used (see section 2.4.3). |
The string-to-pixel converter takes any name that is acceptable to XParseColor (see Xlib — C Language X Interface). In addition this routine understands the special toolkit symbols ‘XtDefaultForeground’ and ‘XtDefaultBackground’, described in X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface. In short the acceptable pixel names are:
• | Any color name for the rgb.txt file (typically in the directory /usr/lib/X11 on POSIX systems). | |
• |
A numeric specification of the form #<red><green><blue> where these numeric values are hexadecimal digits (both upper and lower case). |
|
• |
The special strings ‘XtDefaultForeground’ and ‘XtDefaultBackground’ |
The string-to-bitmap converter attempts to locate a file containing bitmap data whose name is specified by the input string. If the file name is relative (i.e. does not begin with / or ./), the directories to be searched are specified in the bitmapFilePath resource--class BitmapFilePath. This resource specifies a colon (:) separated list of directories that will be searched for the named bitmap or cursor glyph (see section 2.4.1). The bitmapFilePath resource is global to the application, and may not be specified differently for each widget that wishes to convert a cursor to bitmap. In addition to the directories specified in the bitmapFilePath resource a default directory is searched. When using POSIX the default directory is /usr/include/X11/bitmaps.
The XtRealizeWidget function performs two tasks:
• | Calculates the geometry constraints of all managed descendants of this widget. The actual calculation is put off until realize time for performance reasons. | |
• |
Creates an X window for the widget and, if it is a composite widget, realizes each of its managed children. |
void XtRealizeWidget(w)
Widget w;
w | Specifies the widget. |
For further information about this function, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
Now that the application has created, managed and
realized its widgets, it is ready to process the events that
will be delivered by the X Server to this client. A function
call that will process the events is XtAppMainLoop.
void XtAppMainLoop(app_context)
XtAppContext app_context;
app_context |
Specifies the application context of this application. The value is normally returned by XtAppInitialize. |
This function never returns: it is an infinite loop that processes the X events. User input can be handled through callback procedures and application defined action routines. More details are provided in X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
By default, widget windows are mapped (made
viewable) automatically by XtRealizeWidget. This
behavior can be disabled by using
XtSetMappedWhenManaged, making the client responsible
for calling XtMapWidget to make the widget viewable.
void XtSetMappedWhenManaged(w,
map_when_managed)
Widget w;
Boolean map_when_managed;
w | Specifies the widget. |
map_when_managed
Specifies the new value. If map_when_managed is True, the widget is mapped automatically when it is realized. If map_when_managed is False, the client must call XtMapWidget or make a second call to XtSetMappedWhenManaged to cause the child window to be mapped. |
The definition for XtMapWidget is:
void XtMapWidget(w)
Widget w;
w | Specifies the widget. |
When you are creating several children in
sequence for a previously realized common parent it is
generally more efficient to construct a list of children as
they are created (using XtCreateWidget) and then use
XtManageChildren to request that their parent managed
them all at once. By managing a list of children at one
time, the parent can avoid wasteful duplication of geometry
processing and the associated ‘‘screen
flash’’.
void XtManageChildren(children, num_children)
WidgetList children;
Cardinal num_children;
children | Specifies a list of children to add. |
num_children
Specifies the number of children to add. |
If the parent is already visible on the screen, it is especially important to batch updates so that the minimum amount of visible window reconfiguration is performed.
For further information about these functions, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
To destroy a widget instance of any type, use
XtDestroyWidget.
void XtDestroyWidget(w)
Widget w;
w | Specifies the widget. |
XtDestroyWidget destroys the widget and recursively destroys any children that it may have, including the windows created by its children. After calling XtDestroyWidget, no further references should be made to the widget or any children that the destroyed widget may have had.
To retrieve the current value of a resource
attribute associated with a widget instance, use
XtGetValues.
void XtGetValues(w, args, num_args)
Widget w;
ArgList args;
Cardinal num_args;
w | Specifies the widget. | |
args |
Specifies a variable-length argument list of name and address pairs that contain the resource name and the address into which the resource value is stored. |
|
num_args |
Specifies the number of arguments in the argument list. |
The arguments and values passed in the argument list are dependent on the widget. Note that the caller is responsible for providing space into which the returned resource value is copied; the ArgList contains a pointer to this storage (e.g. x and y must be allocated as Position). For further information, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
To modify the current value of a resource
attribute associated with a widget instance, use
XtSetValues.
void XtSetValues(w, args, num_args)
Widget w;
ArgList args;
Cardinal num_args;
w | Specifies the widget. | |
args |
Specifies an array of name and value pairs that contain the arguments to be modified and their new values. |
|
num_args |
Specifies the number of arguments in the argument list. |
The arguments and values that are passed will depend on the widget being modified. Some widgets may not allow certain resources to be modified after the widget instance has been created or realized. No notification is given if any part of a XtSetValues request is ignored.
For further information about these functions, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
Note
The argument list entry for XtGetValues specifies the address to which the caller wants the value copied. The argument list entry for XtSetValues, however, contains the new value itself, if the size of value is less than sizeof(XtArgVal) (architecture dependent, but at least sizeof(long)); otherwise, it is a pointer to the value. String resources are always passed as pointers, regardless of the length of the string.
Widgets can communicate changes in their state to
their clients by means of a callback facility. The format
for a client’s callback handler is:
void CallbackProc(w, client_data,
call_data)
Widget w;
XtPointer client_data;
XtPointer call_data;
w | Specifies widget for which the callback is registered. |
client_data
Specifies arbitrary client-supplied data that the widget should pass back to the client when the widget executes the client’s callback procedure. This is a way for the client registering the callback to also register client-specific data: a pointer to additional information about the widget, a reason for invoking the callback, and so on. If no additional information is necessary, NULL may be passed as this argument. This field is also frequently known as the closure. | ||
call_data |
Specifies any callback-specific data the widget wants to pass to the client. For example, when Scrollbar executes its jumpProc callback list, it passes the current position of the thumb in call_data. |
Callbacks can be registered either by creating an argument containing the callback list described below or by using the special convenience routines XtAddCallback and XtAddCallbacks. When the widget is created, a pointer to a list of callback procedure and data pairs can be passed in the argument list to XtCreateWidget. The list is of type XtCallbackList:
typedef struct {
XtCallbackProc callback; | ||
XtPointer closure; |
The callback list must be allocated and initialized before calling XtCreateWidget. The end of the list is identified by an entry containing NULL in callback and closure. Once the widget is created, the client can change or de-allocate this list; the widget itself makes no further reference to it. The closure field contains the client_data passed to the callback when the callback list is executed.
The second method for registering callbacks is to
use XtAddCallback after the widget has been created.
void XtAddCallback(w, callback_name, callback,
client_data)
Widget w;
String callback_name;
XtCallbackProc callback;
XtPointer client_data;
w | Specifies the widget to add the callback to. |
callback_name
Specifies the callback list within the widget to append to. | ||
callback |
Specifies the callback procedure to add. |
client_data
Specifies the data to be passed to the callback when it is invoked. |
XtAddCallback adds the specified callback to the list for the named widget.
All widgets provide a callback list named destroyCallback where clients can register procedures that are to be executed when the widget is destroyed. The destroy callbacks are executed when the widget or an ancestor is destroyed. The call_data argument is unused for destroy callbacks.
This section provides some guidelines on how to set up an application program that uses the X Toolkit.
When writing an application that uses the X Toolkit, you should make sure that your application performs the following:
1. | Include <X11/Intrinsic.h> in your application programs. This header file automatically includes <X11/Xlib.h>, so all Xlib functions also are defined. It may also be necessary to include < X11/StringDefs.h > when setting up argument lists, as many of the XtNsomething definitions are only defined in this file. | |
2. |
Include the widget-specific header files for each widget type that you need to use. For example, <X11/Xaw/Label.h> and <X11/Xaw/Command.h>. |
|
3. |
Call the XtAppInitialize function before invoking any other toolkit or Xlib functions. For further information, see Section 2.1 and the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface. |
|
4. |
To pass attributes to the widget creation routines that will override any site or user customizations, set up argument lists. In this document, a list of valid argument names is provided in the discussion of each widget. The names each have a global symbol defined that begins with XtN to help catch spelling errors. For example, XtNlabel is defined for the label resource of many widgets. |
For further information, see Section 2.9.2.2. |
5. | When the argument list is set up, create the widget with the XtCreateManagedWidget function. For further information, see Section 2.2 and the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface. | |
6. |
If the widget has any callback routines, set by the XtNcallback argument or the XtAddCallback function, declare these routines within the application. |
|
7. |
After creating the initial widget hierarchy, windows must be created for each widget by calling XtRealizeWidget on the top level widget. |
|
8. |
Most applications now sit in a loop processing events using XtAppMainLoop, for example: |
XtCreateManagedWidget(name, class,
parent, args, num_args); XtRealizeWidget(shell); XtAppMainLoop(app_context); For information about this function, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface. |
9. | Link your application with libXaw (the Athena widgets), libXmu (miscellaneous utilities), libXt (the X Toolkit Intrinsics), libSM (Session Management), libICE (Inter-Client Exchange), libXext (the extension library needed for the shape extension code which allows rounded Command buttons), and libX11 (the core X library). The following provides a sample command line: |
cc -o application application.c −lXaw −lXmu −lXt −lSM −lICE −lXext −lX11 |
The Intrinsics support two methods of changing the default resource values; the resource manager, and an argument list passed into XtCreateWidget. While resources values will get updated no matter which method you use, the two methods provide slightly different functionality.
Resource Manager |
This method picks up resource definitions described in Xlib — C Language X Interface from many different locations at run time. The locations most important to the application programmer are the fallback resources and the app-defaults file, (see X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for the complete list). Since these resource are loaded at run time, they can be overridden by the user, allowing an application to be customized to fit the particular needs of each individual user. These values can also be modified without the need to rebuild the application, allowing rapid prototyping of user interfaces. Application programmers should use resources in preference to hard-coded values whenever possible. |
Argument Lists | The values passed into the widget at creation time via an argument list cannot be modified by the user, and allow no opportunity for customization. It is used to set resources that cannot be specified as strings (e.g. callback lists) or resources that should not be overridden (e.g. window depth) by the user. |
It is important for all X Toolkit application programmers to understand how to use the X Resource Manager to specify resources for widgets in an X application. This section will describe the most common methods used to specify these resources, and how to use the X Resource manager.
Xrdb | The xrdb utility may be used to load a file containing resources into the X server. Once the resources are loaded, the resources will affect any new applications started on the display that they were loaded onto. | |
Application |
Defaults
The application defaults (app-defaults) file (normally in /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/classname) for an application is loaded whenever the application is started. |
The resource specification has two colon-separated parts, a name, and a value. The value is a string whose format is dependent on the resource specified by name. Name is constructed by appending a resource name to a full widget name.
The full widget name is a list of the name of every ancestor of the desired widget separated by periods (.). Each widget also has a class associated with it. A class is a type of widget (e.g. Label or Scrollbar or Box). Notice that class names, by convention, begin with capital letters and instance names begin with lower case letters. The class of any widget may be used in place of its name in a resource specification. Here are a few examples:
xman.form.button1 |
This is a fully specified resource name, and will affect only widgets called button1 that are children of widgets called form that are children of applications named xman. (Note that while typically two widgets that are siblings will have different names, it is not prohibited.) |
Xman.Form.Command |
This will match any Command widget that is a child of a Form widget that is itself a child of an application of class Xman. |
Xman.Form.button1 |
This is a mixed resource name with both widget names and classes specified. |
This syntax allows an application programmer to specify any widget in the widget tree. To match more than one widget (for example a user may want to make all Command buttons blue), use an asterisk (*) instead of a period. When an asterisk is used, any number of widgets (including zero) may exist between the two widget names. For example:
Xman*Command | This matches all Command widgets in the Xman application. | |
Foo*button1 |
This matches any widget in the Foo application that is named button1. |
The root of all application widget trees is the widget returned by XtAppInitialize. Even though this is actually an ApplicationShell widget, the toolkit replaces its widget class with the class name of the application. The name of this widget is either the name used to invoke the application (argv[0]) or the name of the application specified using the standard -name command line option supported by the Intrinsics.
The last step in constructing the resource name is to append the name of the resource with either a period or asterisk to the full or partial widget name already constructed.
*foreground:Blue | Specifies that all widgets in all applications will have a foreground color of blue. | |
Xman*borderWidth:10 |
Specifies that all widgets in an application whose class is Xman will have a border width of 10 (pixels). |
xman.form.button1.label:Testing
Specifies that a particular widget in the xman application will have a label named Testing. |
An exclamation point (!) in the first column of a line indicates that the rest of the line should be treated as a comment.
Final Words
The Resource manager is a powerful tool that can be used very effectively to customize X Toolkit applications at run time by either the application programmer or the user. Some final points to note:
• | An application programmer may add new resources to their application. These resources are associated with the global application, and not any particular widget. The X Toolkit function used for adding the application resources is XtGetApplicationResources. | |
• |
Be careful when creating resource files. Since widgets will ignore resources that they do not understand, any spelling errors will cause a resource to have no effect. |
|
• |
Only one resource line will match any given resource. There is a set of precedence rules, which take the following general stance. |
• | More specific overrides less specific, thus period always overrides asterisk. | |
• |
Names on the left are more specific and override names on the right. |
|
• |
When resource specifications are exactly the same, user defaults |
|
will override program defaults. |
For a complete explanation of the rules of precedence, and other specific topics see X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface and Xlib — C Language X Interface.
To set up an argument list for the inline specification of widget attributes, you may use any of the four approaches discussed in this section. Each resource name has a global symbol associated with it. This global symbol has the form XtNresource name. For example, the symbol for ‘‘foreground’’ is XtNforeground. For further information, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
Argument are specified by using the following structure:
typedef struct {
String name; | ||
XtArgVal value; |
The first approach is to statically initialize the argument list. For example:
static Arg arglist[] = {
{XtNwidth, (XtArgVal) 400}, | ||
{XtNheight, (XtArgVal) 300}, |
This approach is convenient for lists that do not need to be computed at runtime and makes adding or deleting new elements easy. The XtNumber macro is used to compute the number of elements in the argument list, preventing simple programming errors:
XtCreateWidget(name, class, parent, arglist, XtNumber(arglist)); |
The second approach is to use the XtSetArg macro. For example:
Arg arglist[10];
XtSetArg(arglist[1], XtNwidth, 400);
XtSetArg(arglist[2], XtNheight, 300);
To make it easier to insert and delete entries, you also can use a variable index:
Arg arglist[10];
Cardinal i=0;
XtSetArg(arglist[i], XtNwidth, 400); i++;
XtSetArg(arglist[i], XtNheight, 300); i++;
The i variable can then be used as the argument list count in the widget create function. In this example, XtNumber would return 10, not 2, and therefore is not useful.
Note
You should not use auto-increment or auto-decrement within the first argument to XtSetArg. As it is currently implemented, XtSetArg is a macro that dereferences the first argument twice.
The third approach is to individually set the elements of the argument list array:
Arg arglist[10];
arglist[0].name = XtNwidth;
arglist[0].value = (XtArgVal) 400;
arglist[1].name = XtNheight;
arglist[1].value = (XtArgVal) 300;
Note that in this example, as in the previous example, XtNumber would return 10, not 2, and therefore would not be useful.
The fourth approach is to use a mixture of the first and third approaches: you can statically define the argument list but modify some entries at runtime. For example:
static Arg arglist[] = {
{XtNwidth, (XtArgVal) 400}, | ||
{XtNheight, (XtArgVal) NULL}, |
In this example, XtNumber can be used, as in the first approach, for easier code maintenance.
Chapter 3
Simple Widgets
Each of these widgets performs a specific user interface function. They are simple because they cannot have widget children—they may only be used as leaves of the widget tree. These widgets display information or take user input.
Command | A push button that, when selected, may cause a specific action to take place. This widget can display a multi-line string or a bitmap or pixmap image. |
Grip |
A rectangle that, when selected, will cause an action to take place. |
Label |
A rectangle that can display a multi-line string or a bitmap or pixmap image. |
List |
A list of text strings presented in row column format that may be individually selected. When an element is selected an action may take place. |
Panner |
A rectangular area containing a slider that may be moved in two dimensions. Notification of movement may be continuous or discrete. |
Repeater |
A push button that triggers an action at an increasing rate when selected. This widget can display a multi-line string or a bitmap or pixmap image. |
Scrollbar |
A rectangular area containing a thumb that when slid along one dimension may cause a specific action to take place. The Scrollbar may be oriented horizontally or vertically. |
Simple |
The base class for most of the simple widgets. Provides a rectangular area with a settable mouse cursor and special border. |
StripChart |
A real time data graph that will automatically update and scroll. |
Toggle |
A push button that contains state information. Toggles may also be used as ‘‘radio buttons’’ to implement a ‘‘one of many’’ or ‘‘zero or one of many’’ group of buttons. This widget can display a multi-line string or a bitmap or pixmap image. |
When creating a Command widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | ||
bitmap |
A bitmap to display instead of the label. The default size of the widget will be just large enough to contain the bitmap and the widget’s internal width and height. The resource converter for this resource constructs bitmaps from the contents of files. (See Converting Bitmaps for details.) If this bitmap is one bit deep then the 1’s will be rendered in the foreground color, and the 0’s in the background color. If bitmap has a depth greater than one, it is copied directly into the window. |
|
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
|
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
|
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
|
callback |
A list of routines to be called when the notify action is invoked. |
|
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cornerRoundPercent
When a ShapeStyle of roundedRectangle is used, this resource controls the radius of the rounded corner. The radius of the rounded corners is specified as a percentage of the length of the shortest side of the widget. | |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
encoding |
The encoding method used by the value of the label resource. The value may be XawTextEncoding8bit or XawTextEncodingChar2b. When international is set to true this resource is not used. |
font |
The text font to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is false. |
fontSet |
The text font set to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is true. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the widget’s window. This color is also used to render all 1’s in a bitmap one plane deep. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
highlightThickness
The thickness of the rectangle that is used to highlight the internal border of this widget, alerting the user that it is ready to be selected. The default value is 2 pixels if the shapeStyle is rectangle, and 0 Pixels (no highlighting) otherwise. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
internalHeight |
||
internalWidth |
The minimum amount of space to leave between the graphic and the vertical and horizontal edges of the window. |
|
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. A value of false signals the widget to use pre-R6 internationalization (specifically, the lack thereof), such as using fonts for displaying text, etc. A value of true directs the widget to act in an internationalized manner, such as utilizing font sets for displaying text, etc. |
|
justify |
Specifies left, center, or right alignment of graphic within the widget. This resource may be specified with the values XtJustifyLeft, XtJustifyCenter, or XtJustifyRight. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: left, right, and center. This resource only has noticeable effect when the width of the widget is larger than necessary to display the graphic. Note that when the graphic is a multi-line label, the longest line will obey this justification while shorter lines will be left-justified with the longest one. |
|
label |
Specifies the text string to be displayed in the widget’s window if no bitmap is specified. The default is the name of this widget. Regardless of the value of encoding or international, a single newline character (1 byte) will cause a line break. |
|
leftBitmap |
Specifies a bitmap to display to the left of the graphic in the widget’s window. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
resize |
Specifies whether the widget should attempt to resize to its preferred dimensions whenever its resources are modified with XtSetValues. This attempt to resize may be denied by the parent of this widget. The parent is always free to resize the widget regardless of the state of this resource. |
|
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
shapeStyle |
Nonrectangular widgets may be created using this resource. Nonrectangular widgets are supported only on a server that supports the Shape Extension. If nonrectangular widgets are specified for a server lacking this extension, the shape is ignored and the widgets will be rectangular. The following shapes are currently supported: XmuShapeRectangle, XmuShapeOval, XmuShapeEllipse, and XmuShapeRoundedRectangle. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: rectangle, oval, ellipse, and roundedRectangle. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The Command widget supports the following actions:
• | Switching the button’s interior between the foreground and background colors with set, unset, and reset. | |
• |
Processing application callbacks with notify |
|
• |
Switching the internal border between highlighted and unhighlighted states with highlight and unhighlight |
The following are the default translation bindings used by the Command widget:
<EnterWindow>: | highlight() | |
<LeaveWindow>: | reset() | |
<Btn1Down>: | set() | |
<Btn1Up>: | notify() unset() |
The full list of actions supported by Command is:
highlight(condition) |
Displays the internal highlight border in the color (foreground or background ) that contrasts with the interior color of the Command widget. The conditions WhenUnset and Always are understood by this action procedure. If no argument is passed, WhenUnset is assumed. |
unhighlight() | Displays the internal highlight border in the color (foreground or background ) that matches the interior color of the Command widget. | |
set() |
Enters the set state, in which notify is possible. This action causes the button to display its interior in the foreground color. The label or bitmap is displayed in the background color. |
|
unset() |
Cancels the set state and displays the interior of the button in the background color. The label or bitmap is displayed in the foreground color. |
|
reset() |
Cancels any set or highlight and displays the interior of the button in the background color, with the label or bitmap displayed in the foreground color. |
|
notify() |
When the button is in the set state this action calls all functions in the callback list named by the callback resource. The value of the call_data argument passed to these functions is undefined. |
A very common alternative to registering callbacks is to augment a Command’s translations with an action performing the desired function. This often takes the form of:
*Myapp*save.translations: #augment <Btn1Down>,<Btn1Up>: Save()
Note
When a bitmap of depth greater that one (1) is specified the set(), unset(), and reset() actions have no effect, since there are no foreground and background colors used in a multi-plane pixmap.
When creating a Grip widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
callback |
All routines on this list are called whenever the GripAction action routine is invoked. The call_data contains all information passed to the action routine. A detailed description is given below in the Grip Actions section. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color used to flood fill the entire Grip widget. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. While not utilized in this widget, it can and should be checked by any subclasses that have behavior that should vary with locale. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The Grip widget does not declare any default event translation bindings, but it does declare a single action routine named GripAction. The client specifies an arbitrary event translation table, optionally giving parameters to the GripAction routine.
The GripAction routine executes the callbacks on the callback list, passing as call_data a pointer to a XawGripCallData structure, defined in the Grip widget’s application header file.
typedef struct _XawGripCallData {
XEvent *event; | ||
String *params; | ||
Cardinal num_params; |
In this structure, the event is a pointer to the input event that triggered the action. params and num_params give the string parameters specified in the translation table for the particular event binding.
The following is an example of a translation table that uses the GripAction:
<Btn1Down>: | GripAction(press) | |
<Btn1Motion>: | GripAction(move) | |
<Btn1Up>: | GripAction(release) |
For a complete description of the format of translation tables, see the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface.
When creating a Label widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
bitmap |
A bitmap to display instead of the label. The default size of the widget will be just large enough to contain the bitmap and the widget’s internal width and height. The resource converter for this resource constructs bitmaps from the contents of files. (See Converting Bitmaps for details.) If this bitmap is one bit deep then the 1’s will be rendered in the foreground color, and the 0’s in the background color. If bitmap has a depth greater than one, it is copied directly into the window. |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
encoding |
The encoding method used by the value of the label resource. The value may be XawTextEncoding8bit or XawTextEncodingChar2b. When international is set to true this resource is not used. |
font |
The text font to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is false. |
fontSet |
The text font set to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is true. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the widget’s window. This color is also used to render all 1’s in a bitmap one plane deep. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
internalHeight |
||
internalWidth |
The minimum amount of space to leave between the graphic and the vertical and horizontal edges of the window. |
|
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. A value of false signals the widget to use pre-R6 internationalization (specifically, the lack thereof), such as using fonts for displaying text, etc. A value of true directs the widget to act in an internationalized manner, such as utilizing font sets for displaying text, etc. |
|
justify |
Specifies left, center, or right alignment of graphic within the widget. This resource may be specified with the values XtJustifyLeft, XtJustifyCenter, or XtJustifyRight. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: left, right, and center. This resource only has noticeable effect when the width of the widget is larger than necessary to display the graphic. Note that when the graphic is a multi-line label, the longest line will obey this justification while shorter lines will be left-justified with the longest one. |
|
label |
Specifies the text string to be displayed in the widget’s window if no bitmap is specified. The default is the name of this widget. Regardless of the value of encoding or international, a single newline character (1 byte) will cause a line break. |
|
leftBitmap |
Specifies a bitmap to display to the left of the graphic in the widget’s window. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
resize |
Specifies whether the widget should attempt to resize to its preferred dimensions whenever its resources are modified with XtSetValues. This attempt to resize may be denied by the parent of this widget. The parent is always free to resize the widget regardless of the state of this resource. |
|
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
Application header file<X11/Xaw/List.h>
Class header file | <X11/Xaw/ListP.h> |
Class | listWidgetClass |
Class Name | List |
Superclass | Simple |
The List widget contains a list of strings formatted into rows and columns. When one of the strings is selected, it is highlighted, and the List widget’s Notify action is invoked, calling all routines on its callback list. Only one string may be selected at a time.
When creating a List widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
callback |
All functions on this list are called whenever the notify action is invoked. The call_data argument contains information about the element selected and is described in detail in the List Callbacks section. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
columnSpacing |
|
rowSpacing |
The amount of space, in pixels, between each of the rows and columns in the list. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
defaultColumns |
The default number of columns. This value is used when neither the width nor the height of the List widget is specified or when forceColumns is True. |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
font |
The text font to use when displaying the list, when the international resource is false. |
fontSet |
The text font set to use when displaying the list, when the international resource is true. |
forceColumns |
Forces the default number of columns to be used regardless of the List widget’s current size. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color used to paint the text of the list elements. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
internalHeight |
||
internalWidth |
The margin, in pixels, between the edges of the list and the corresponding edge of the List widget’s window. |
|
list |
An array of text strings displayed in the List widget. If numberStrings is zero (the default) then the list must be NULL terminated. If a value is not specified for the list, then numberStrings is set to 1, and the name of the widget is used as the list, and longest is set to the length of the name of the widget. The list is used in place, and must be available to the List widget for the lifetime of this widget, or until it is changed with XtSetValues or XawListChange. |
|
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. A value of false signals the widget to use pre-R6 internationalization (specifically, the lack thereof), such as using fonts for displaying text, etc. A value of true directs the widget to act in an internationalized manner, such as utilizing font sets for displaying text, etc. |
|
longest |
Specifies the width, in pixels, of the longest string in the current list. The List widget will compute this value if zero (the default) is specified. If this resource is set by hand, entries longer than this will be clipped to fit. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
numberStrings |
The number of strings in the current list. If a value of zero (the default) is specified, the List widget will compute it. When computing the number of strings the List widget assumes that the list is NULL terminated. |
|
pasteBuffer |
If this resource is set to True then the name of the currently selected list element will be put into CUT_BUFFER_0. |
|
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
verticalList |
If this resource is set to True then the list elements will be presented in column major order. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The List widget supports the following actions:
• | Highlighting and unhighlighting the list element under the pointer with Set and Unset | |
• |
Processing application callbacks with Notify |
The following is the default translation table used by the List Widget:
<Btn1Down>,<Btn1Up>: | Set() Notify() |
The full list of actions supported by List widget is:
Set() | Sets the list element that is currently under the pointer. To inform the user that this element is currently set, it is drawn with foreground and background colors reversed. If this action is called when there is no list element under the cursor, the currently set element will be unset. | |
Unset() |
Cancels the set state of the element under the pointer, and redraws it with normal foreground and background colors. |
|
Notify() |
Calls all callbacks on the List widget’s callback list. Information about the currently selected list element is passed in the call_data argument (see List Callbacks below). |
All procedures on the List widget’s callback list will have a XawListReturnStruct passed to them as call_data. The structure is defined in the List widget’s application header file.
typedef struct _XawListReturnStruct {
String string; | /* string shown in the list. */ | |
int list_index; | /* index of the item selected. */ |
Note
The list_index item used to be called simply index. Unfortunately, this name collided with a global name defined on some operating systems, and had to be changed.
To change the list that is displayed, use
XawListChange.
void XawListChange(w, list, nitems,
longest, resize)
Widget w;
String * list;
int nitems, longest;
Boolean resize;
w | Specifies the List widget. | |
list |
Specifies the new list for the List widget to display. |
|
nitems |
Specifies the number of items in the list. If a value less than 1 is specified, list must be NULL terminated, and the number of items will be calculated by the List widget. |
|
longest |
Specifies the length of the longest item in the list in pixels. If a value less than 1 is specified, the List widget will calculate the value. |
|
resize |
Specifies a Boolean value that if True indicates that the List widget should try to resize itself after making the change. The constraints of the List widget’s parent are always enforced, regardless of the value specified here. |
XawListChange will unset all list elements that are currently set before the list is actually changed. The list is used in place, and must remain usable for the lifetime of the List widget, or until list has been changed again with this function or with XtSetValues.
To highlight an item in the list, use
XawListHighlight.
void XawListHighlight(w, item)
Widget w;
int item;
w | Specifies the List widget. | |
item |
Specifies an index into the current list that indicates the item to be highlighted. |
Only one item can be highlighted at a time. If an item is already highlighted when XawListHighlight is called, the highlighted item is unhighlighted before the new item is highlighted.
To unhighlight the currently highlighted item in
the list, use XawListUnhighlight.
void XawListUnhighlight(w)
Widget w;
w | Specifies the List widget. |
To retrieve the list element that is currently
set, use XawListShowCurrent.
XawListReturnStruct *XawListShowCurrent(w)
Widget w;
w | Specifies the List widget. |
XawListShowCurrent returns a pointer to an XawListReturnStruct structure, containing the currently highlighted item. If the value of the index member is XAW_LIST_NONE, the string member is undefined, and no item is currently selected.
Many programmers create a ‘‘scrolled list’’ by putting a List widget with many entries as a child of a Viewport widget. The List continues to create a window as big as its contents, but that big window is only visible where it intersects the parent Viewport’s window. (I.e., it is ‘‘clipped.’’)
While this is a useful technique, there is a serious drawback. X does not support windows above 32,767 pixels in width or height, but this height limit will be exceeded by a List’s window when the List has many entries (i.e., with a 12 point font, about 3000 entries would be too many.)
Application header file<X11/Xaw/Panner.h>
Class header file | <X11/Xaw/PannerP.h> |
Class | pannerWidgetClass |
Class Name | Panner |
Superclass | Simple |
A Panner widget is a rectangle, called the ‘‘canvas,’’ on which another rectangle, the ‘‘slider,’’ moves in two dimensions. It is often used with a Porthole widget to move, or ‘‘scroll,’’ a third widget in two dimensions, in which case the slider’s size and position gives feedback as to what portion of the third widget is visible.
The slider may be scrolled around the canvas by pressing, dragging, and releasing Button1; the default translation also enables scrolling via arrow keys and some other keys. While scrolling is in progress, the application receives notification through callback procedures. Notification may be done either continuously whenever the slider moves or discretely whenever the slider has been given a new location.
When creating a Panner widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). | |
allowOff |
Whether to allow the edges of the slider to go off the edges of the canvas. |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. |
backgroundStipple
The name of a bitmap pattern to be used as the background for the area representing the canvas. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
canvasHeight |
|
canvasWidth |
The size of the canvas. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
defaultScale |
The percentage size that the Panner widget should have relative to the size of the canvas. |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color used to draw the slider. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
internalSpace |
The width of internal border in pixels between a slider representing the full size of the canvas and the edge of the Panner widget. |
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. While not utilized in this widget, it can and should be checked by any subclasses that have behavior that should vary with locale. |
lineWidth |
The width of the lines in the rubberbanding rectangle when rubberbanding is in effect instead of continuous scrolling. The default is 0. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | |
reportCallback |
All functions on this callback list are called when the notify action is invoked. See the Panner Actions section for details. |
resize |
Whether or not to resize the panner whenever the canvas size is changed so that the defaultScale is maintained. |
rubberBand |
Whether or not scrolling should be discrete (only moving a rubberbanded rectangle until the scrolling is done) or continuous (moving the slider itself). This controls whether or not the move action procedure also invokes the notify action procedure. |
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
shadowColor |
The color of the shadow underneath the slider. |
shadowThickness |
The width of the shadow underneath the slider. |
sliderX |
|
sliderY |
The location of the slider in the coordinates of the canvas. |
sliderHeight |
|
sliderWidth |
The size of the slider. |
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
x |
|
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The actions supported by the Panner widget are:
start() | This action begins movement of the slider. | |
stop() |
This action ends movement of the slider. |
|
abort() |
This action ends movement of the slider and restores it to the position it held when the start action was invoked. |
|
move() |
This action moves the outline of the slider (if the rubberBand resource is True) or the slider itself (by invoking the notify action procedure). |
|
page(xamount, |
yamount)
This action moves the slider by the specified amounts. The format for the amounts is a signed or unsigned floating-point number (e.g., +1.0 or −.5) followed by either p indicating pages (slider sizes), or c indicating canvas sizes. Thus, page(+0,+.5p) represents vertical movement down one-half the height of the slider and page(0,0) represents moving to the upper left corner of the canvas. | |
notify() |
This action informs the application of the slider’s current position by invoking the reportCallback functions registered by the application. |
set(what,value) |
This action changes the behavior of the Panner. The what argument must currently be the string rubberband and controls the value of the rubberBand resource. The value argument may have one of the values on, off, or toggle. |
The default bindings for Panner are:
<Btn1Down>: | start() | |
<Btn1Motion>:move() | ||
<Btn1Up>: | notify() stop() | |
<Btn2Down>: | abort() | |
<Key>KP_Enter:set(rubberband,toggle) | ||
<Key>space: | page(+1p,+1p) | |
<Key>Delete:page(−1p,−1p) | ||
<Key>BackSpace:page(−1p,−1p) | ||
<Key>Left: | page(−.5p,+0) | |
<Key>Right: | page(+.5p,+0) | |
<Key>Up: | page(+0,−.5p) | |
<Key>Down: | page(+0,+.5p) | |
<Key>Home: | page(0,0) |
The functions registered on the
reportCallback list are invoked by the notify
action as follows:
void ReportProc(panner, client_data,
report)
Widget panner; | ||
XtPointer client_data; | ||
XtPointer report; /* (XawPannerReport *) */ |
panner | Specifies the Panner widget. |
client_data
Specifies the client data. | ||
report |
Specifies a pointer to an XawPannerReport structure containing the location and size of the slider and the size of the canvas. |
When creating a Repeater widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | ||
bitmap |
A bitmap to display instead of the label. The default size of the widget will be just large enough to contain the bitmap and the widget’s internal width and height. The resource converter for this resource constructs bitmaps from the contents of files. (See Converting Bitmaps for details.) If this bitmap is one bit deep then the 1’s will be rendered in the foreground color, and the 0’s in the background color. If bitmap has a depth greater than one, it is copied directly into the window. |
|
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
|
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
|
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
|
callback |
A list of routines to be called when the notify action is invoked. |
|
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cornerRoundPercent
When a ShapeStyle of roundedRectangle is used, this resource controls the radius of the rounded corner. The radius of the rounded corners is specified as a percentage of the length of the shortest side of the widget. | |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
decay |
The number of milliseconds that should be subtracted from each succeeding interval while the Repeater button is being held down until the interval has reached minimumDelay milliseconds. |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
encoding |
The encoding method used by the value of the label resource. The value may be XawTextEncoding8bit or XawTextEncodingChar2b. When international is set to true this resource is not used. |
flash |
Whether or not to flash the Repeater button whenever the timer goes off. |
font |
The text font to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is false. |
fontSet |
The text font set to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is true. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the widget’s window. This color is also used to render all 1’s in a bitmap one plane deep. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
highlightThickness
The thickness of the rectangle that is used to highlight the internal border of this widget, alerting the user that it is ready to be selected. The default value is 2 pixels if the shapeStyle is rectangle, and 0 Pixels (no highlighting) otherwise. | ||
initialDelay |
The number of milliseconds between the beginning of the Repeater button being held down and the first invocation of the callback function. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
internalHeight |
||
internalWidth |
The minimum amount of space to leave between the graphic and the vertical and horizontal edges of the window. |
|
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. A value of false signals the widget to use pre-R6 internationalization (specifically, the lack thereof), such as using fonts for displaying text, etc. A value of true directs the widget to act in an internationalized manner, such as utilizing font sets for displaying text, etc. |
|
justify |
Specifies left, center, or right alignment of graphic within the widget. This resource may be specified with the values XtJustifyLeft, XtJustifyCenter, or XtJustifyRight. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: left, right, and center. This resource only has noticeable effect when the width of the widget is larger than necessary to display the graphic. Note that when the graphic is a multi-line label, the longest line will obey this justification while shorter lines will be left-justified with the longest one. |
|
label |
Specifies the text string to be displayed in the widget’s window if no bitmap is specified. The default is the name of this widget. Regardless of the value of encoding or international, a single newline character (1 byte) will cause a line break. |
|
leftBitmap |
Specifies a bitmap to display to the left of the graphic in the widget’s window. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
minimumDelay |
The minimum time between callbacks in milliseconds. |
|
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
repeatDelay |
The number of milliseconds between each callback after the first (minus an increasing number of decays). |
|
resize |
Specifies whether the widget should attempt to resize to its preferred dimensions whenever its resources are modified with XtSetValues. This attempt to resize may be denied by the parent of this widget. The parent is always free to resize the widget regardless of the state of this resource. |
|
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
shapeStyle |
Nonrectangular widgets may be created using this resource. Nonrectangular widgets are supported only on a server that supports the Shape Extension. If nonrectangular widgets are specified for a server lacking this extension, the shape is ignored and the widgets will be rectangular. The following shapes are currently supported: XmuShapeRectangle, XmuShapeOval, XmuShapeEllipse, and XmuShapeRoundedRectangle. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: rectangle, oval, ellipse, and roundedRectangle. |
|
startCallback |
The list of functions to invoke by the start action (typically when the Repeater button is first pressed). The callback data parameter is set to NULL. |
|
stopCallback |
The list of functions to invoke by the stop action (typically when the Repeater button is released). The callback data parameter is set to NULL. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The Repeater widget supports the following actions beyond those of the Command button:
start() | This invokes the functions on the startCallback and callback lists and sets a timer to go off in initialDelay milliseconds. The timer will cause the callback functions to be invoked with increasing frequency until the stop action occurs. | |
stop() |
This invokes the functions on the stopCallback list and prevents any further timers from occuring until the next start action. |
The following are the default translation bindings used by the Repeater widget:
<EnterWindow>: | highlight() | |
<LeaveWindow>: | unhighlight() | |
<Btn1Down>: | set() start() | |
<Btn1Up>: | stop() unset() |
Application header file<X11/Xaw/Scrollbar.h>
Class header file | <X11/Xaw/ScrollbarP.h> |
Class | scrollbarWidgetClass |
Class Name | Scrollbar |
Superclass | Simple |
A Scrollbar widget is a rectangle, called the ‘‘canvas,’’ on which another rectangle, the ‘‘thumb,’’ moves in one dimension, either vertically or horizontally. A Scrollbar can be used alone, as a value generator, or it can be used within a composite widget (for example, a Viewport). When a Scrollbar is used to move, or ‘‘scroll,’’ the contents of another widget, the size and the position of the thumb usually give feedback as to what portion of the other widget’s contents are visible.
Each pointer button invokes a specific action. Pointer buttons 1 and 3 do not move the thumb automatically. Instead, they return the pixel position of the cursor on the scroll region. When pointer button 2 is clicked, the thumb moves to the current pointer position. When pointer button 2 is held down and the pointer is moved, the thumb follows the pointer.
The pointer cursor in the scroll region changes depending on the current action. When no pointer button is pressed, the cursor appears as a double-headed arrow that points in the direction that scrolling can occur. When pointer button 1 or 3 is pressed, the cursor appears as a single-headed arrow that points in the logical direction that the thumb will move. When pointer button 2 is pressed, the cursor appears as an arrow that points to the top or the left of the thumb.
When the user scrolls, the application receives notification through callback procedures. For both discrete scrolling actions, the callback returns the Scrollbar widget, the client_data, and the pixel position of the pointer when the button was released. For continuous scrolling, the callback routine returns the scroll bar widget, the client data, and the current relative position of the thumb. When the thumb is moved using pointer button 2, the callback procedure is invoked continuously. When either button 1 or 3 is pressed, the callback procedure is invoked only when the button is released and the client callback procedure is responsible for moving the thumb.
When creating a Scrollbar widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color used to draw the thumb. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. While not utilized in this widget, it can and should be checked by any subclasses that have behavior that should vary with locale. |
|
jumpProc |
All functions on this callback list are called when the NotifyThumb action is invoked. See the Scrollbar Actions section for details. |
|
length |
The height of a vertical scrollbar or the width of a horizontal scrollbar. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
minimumThumb |
The smallest size, in pixels, to which the thumb can shrink. |
|
orientation |
The orientation is the direction that the thumb will be allowed to move. This value can be either XtorientVertical or XtorientHorizontal. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: vertical and horizontal. |
|
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
scrollDCursor |
This cursor is used when scrolling backward in a vertical scrollbar. |
|
scrollHCursor |
This cursor is used when a horizontal scrollbar is inactive. |
|
scrollLCursor |
This cursor is used when scrolling forward in a horizontal scrollbar. |
|
scrollProc |
All functions on this callback list may be called when the NotifyScroll action is invoked. See the Scrollbar Actions section for details. |
|
scrollRCursor |
This cursor is used when scrolling backward in a horizontal scrollbar, or when thumbing a vertical scrollbar. |
|
scrollUCursor |
This cursor is used when scrolling forward in a vertical scrollbar, or when thumbing a horizontal scrollbar. |
|
scrollVCursor |
This cursor is used when a vertical scrollbar is inactive. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
shown |
This is the size of the thumb, expressed as a percentage (0.0 - 1.0) of the length of the scrollbar. |
|
thickness |
The width of a vertical scrollbar or the height of a horizontal scrollbar. |
|
thumb |
This pixmap is used to tile (or stipple) the thumb of the scrollbar. If no tiling is desired, then set this resource to None. This resource will accept either a bitmap or a pixmap that is the same depth as the window. The resource converter for this resource constructs bitmaps from the contents of files. (See Converting Bitmaps for details.) |
|
topOfThumb |
The location of the top of the thumb, as a percentage (0.0 - 1.0) of the length of the scrollbar. This resource was called top in previous versions of the Athena widget set. The name collided with the a Form widget constraint resource, and had to be changed. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The actions supported by the Scrollbar widget are:
StartScroll(value) |
The possible values are Forward, Backward, or Continuous. This must be the first action to begin a new movement. |
NotifyScroll(value) |
The possible values are Proportional or FullLength. If the argument to StartScroll was Forward or Backward, NotifyScroll executes the scrollProc callbacks and passes either; the position of the pointer, if value is Proportional, or the full length of the scroll bar, if value is FullLength. If the argument to StartScroll was Continuous, NotifyScroll returns without executing any callbacks. |
EndScroll() | This must be the last action after a movement is complete. | |
MoveThumb() |
Repositions the Scrollbar’s thumb to the current pointer location. |
|
NotifyThumb |
()
Calls the jumpProc callbacks and passes the relative position of the pointer as a percentage of the scroll bar length. |
The default bindings for Scrollbar are:
<Btn1Down>: | StartScroll(Forward) | |
<Btn2Down>: | StartScroll(Continuous) MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() | |
<Btn3Down>: | StartScroll(Backward) | |
<Btn2Motion>:MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() | ||
<BtnUp>: | NotifyScroll(Proportional) EndScroll() |
Examples of additional bindings a user might wish to specify in a resource file are:
*Scrollbar.Translations: \
~Meta<Key>space: | StartScroll(Forward) NotifyScroll(FullLength) \n\ | |
Meta<Key>space: | StartScroll(Backward) NotifyScroll(FullLength) \n\ | |
EndScroll() |
There are two callback lists provided by the Scrollbar widget. The procedural interface for these functions is described here.
The calling interface to the scrollProc
callback procedure is:
void ScrollProc(scrollbar, client_data,
position)
Widget scrollbar;
XtPointer client_data;
XtPointer position; /* int */
scrollbar | Specifies the Scrollbar widget. |
client_data
Specifies the client data. | ||
position |
Specifies a pixel position in integer form. |
The scrollProc callback is used for incremental scrolling and is called by the NotifyScroll action. The position argument is a signed quantity and should be cast to an int when used. Using the default button bindings, button 1 returns a positive value, and button 3 returns a negative value. In both cases, the magnitude of the value is the distance of the pointer in pixels from the top (or left) of the Scrollbar. The value will never be greater than the length of the Scrollbar.
The calling interface to the jumpProc
callback procedure is:
void JumpProc(scrollbar, client_data,
percent)
Widget scrollbar;
XtPointer client_data;
XtPointer percent_ptr; /* float* */
scrollbar | Specifies the ID of the scroll bar widget. |
client_data
Specifies the client data. |
percent_ptr
Specifies the floating point position of the thumb (0.0 − 1.0). |
The jumpProc callback is used to implement smooth scrolling and is called by the NotifyThumb action. Percent_ptr must be cast to a pointer to float before use; i.e.
float percent = *(float*)percent_ptr; |
With the default button bindings, button 2 moves the thumb interactively, and the jumpProc is called on each new position of the pointer, while the pointer button remains down. The value specified by percent_ptr is the current location of the thumb (from the top or left of the Scrollbar) expressed as a percentage of the length of the Scrollbar.
To set the position and length of a Scrollbar
thumb, use XawScrollbarSetThumb.
void XawScrollbarSetThumb(w, top,
shown)
Widget w;
float top;
float shown;
w | Specifies the Scrollbar widget. | |
top |
Specifies the position of the top of the thumb as a fraction of the length of the Scrollbar. |
|
shown |
Specifies the length of the thumb as a fraction of the total length of the Scrollbar. |
XawScrollbarThumb moves the visible thumb to a new position (0.0 − 1.0) and length (0.0 − 1.0). Either the top or shown arguments can be specified as −1.0, in which case the current value is left unchanged. Values greater than 1.0 are truncated to 1.0.
If called from jumpProc, XawScrollbarSetThumb has no effect.
The shown and topOfThumb resources are of type float. These resources can be difficult to get into an argument list. The reason is that C performs an automatic cast of the float value to an integer value, usually truncating the important information. The following code fragment is one portable method of getting a float into an argument list.
top = 0.5; | ||
if (sizeof(float) > sizeof(XtArgVal)) { | ||
/* | ||
* If a float is larger than an XtArgVal then pass this | ||
* resource value by reference. | ||
*/ | ||
XtSetArg(args[0], XtNshown, &top); | ||
} | ||
else { | ||
/* | ||
* Convince C not to perform an automatic conversion, which | ||
* would truncate 0.5 to 0. | ||
*/ | ||
XtArgVal * l_top = (XtArgVal *) ⊤ | ||
XtSetArg(args[0], XtNshown, *l_top); | ||
} |
When creating a Simple widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. While not utilized in this widget, it can and should be checked by any subclasses that have behavior that should vary with locale. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
When creating a StripChart widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | |
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color that will be used to draw the graph. |
getValue |
A list of callback functions to call every update seconds. This list should contain one function, which returns the value to be graphed by the StripChart widget. The following section describes the procedural interface. Behavior when this list has more than one function is undefined. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
highlight |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the color that will be used to draw the scale lines on the graph. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. While not utilized in this widget, it can and should be checked by any subclasses that have behavior that should vary with locale. |
|
jumpScroll |
When the graph reaches the right edge of the window it must be scrolled to the left. This resource specifies the number of pixels it will jump. Smooth scrolling can be achieved by setting this resource to 1. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
minScale |
The minimum scale for the graph. The number of divisions on the graph will always be greater than or equal to this value. |
|
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
update |
The number of seconds between graph updates. Each update is represented on the graph as a 1 pixel wide line. Every update seconds the getValue procedure will be used to get a new graph point, and this point will be added to the right end of the StripChart. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The StripChart widget will call the application routine passed to it as the getValue callback function every update seconds to obtain another point for the StripChart graph.
The calling interface for the getValue
callback is:
void (*getValueProc)(w, client_data,
value)
Widget w;
XtPointer client_data;
XtPointer value; /* double * */
w | Specifies the StripChart widget. |
client_data
Specifies the client data. | ||
value |
Returns a pointer to a double. The application should set the address pointed to by this argument to a double containing the value to be graphed on the StripChart. |
This function is used by the StripChart to call an application routine. The routine will pass the value to be graphed back to the the StripChart in the value field of this routine.
When creating a Toggle widget instance, the following resources are retrieved from the argument list or from the resource database:
accelerators | A list of event to action bindings to be executed by this widget, even though the event occurred in another widget. (See the X Toolkit Intrinsics — C Language Interface for details). |
ancestorSensitive
The sensitivity state of the ancestors of this widget. A widget is insensitive if either it or any of its ancestors is insensitive. This resource should not be changed with XtSetValues, although it may be queried. | ||
background |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the widget’s window. |
backgroundPixmap
The background pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the background color. | ||
bitmap |
A bitmap to display instead of the label. The default size of the widget will be just large enough to contain the bitmap and the widget’s internal width and height. The resource converter for this resource constructs bitmaps from the contents of files. (See Converting Bitmaps for details.) If this bitmap is one bit deep then the 1’s will be rendered in the foreground color, and the 0’s in the background color. If bitmap has a depth greater than one, it is copied directly into the window. |
|
borderColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the border color of the widget’s window. |
|
borderPixmap |
The border pixmap of this widget’s window. If this resource is set to anything other than XtUnspecifiedPixmap, the pixmap specified will be used instead of the border color. |
|
borderWidth |
The width of this widget’s window border. |
|
callback |
A list of routines to be called when the notify action is invoked. |
|
colormap |
The colormap that this widget will use. |
cornerRoundPercent
When a ShapeStyle of roundedRectangle is used, this resource controls the radius of the rounded corner. The radius of the rounded corners is specified as a percentage of the length of the shortest side of the widget. | |
cursor |
The image that will be displayed as the pointer cursor whenever it is in this widget. The use of this resource is deprecated in favor of cursorName. |
cursorName |
The name of the symbol to use to represent the pointer cursor. This resource will override the cursor resource if both are specified. (See 2.4.1) |
depth |
The depth of this widget’s window. |
destroyCallback |
All functions on this list are called when this widget is destroyed. |
encoding |
The encoding method used by the value of the label resource. The value may be XawTextEncoding8bit or XawTextEncodingChar2b. When international is set to true this resource is not used. |
font |
The text font to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is false. |
fontSet |
The text font set to use when displaying the label, when the international resource is true. |
foreground |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the widget’s window. This color is also used to render all 1’s in a bitmap one plane deep. |
height |
|
width |
The height and width of this widget in pixels. |
highlightThickness
The thickness of the rectangle that is used to highlight the internal border of this widget, alerting the user that it is ready to be selected. The default value is 2 pixels if the shapeStyle is rectangle, and 0 Pixels (no highlighting) otherwise. |
insensitiveBorder
This pixmap will be tiled into the widget’s border if the widget becomes insensitive. | ||
internalHeight |
||
internalWidth |
The minimum amount of space to leave between the graphic and the vertical and horizontal edges of the window. |
|
international |
This is a boolean flag, only settable at widget creation time. A value of false signals the widget to use pre-R6 internationalization (specifically, the lack thereof), such as using fonts for displaying text, etc. A value of true directs the widget to act in an internationalized manner, such as utilizing font sets for displaying text, etc. |
|
justify |
Specifies left, center, or right alignment of graphic within the widget. This resource may be specified with the values XtJustifyLeft, XtJustifyCenter, or XtJustifyRight. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: left, right, and center. This resource only has noticeable effect when the width of the widget is larger than necessary to display the graphic. Note that when the graphic is a multi-line label, the longest line will obey this justification while shorter lines will be left-justified with the longest one. |
|
label |
Specifies the text string to be displayed in the widget’s window if no bitmap is specified. The default is the name of this widget. Regardless of the value of encoding or international, a single newline character (1 byte) will cause a line break. |
|
leftBitmap |
Specifies a bitmap to display to the left of the graphic in the widget’s window. |
mappedWhenManaged
If this resource is True, then the widget’s window will automatically be mapped by the Toolkit when it is realized and managed. | ||
pointerColor |
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the foreground color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. |
pointerColorBackground
A pixel value which indexes the widget’s colormap to derive the background color of the pointer symbol specified by the cursorName resource. | ||
radioData |
Specifies the data that will be returned by XawToggleGetCurrent when this is the currently set widget in the radio group. This value is also used to identify the Toggle that will be set by a call to XawToggleSetCurrent. The value NULL will be returned by XawToggleGetCurrent if no widget in a radio group is currently set. Programmers must not specify NULL (or Zero) as radioData. |
|
radioGroup |
Specifies another Toggle widget that is in the radio group to which this Toggle widget should be added. A radio group is a group of at least two Toggle widgets, only one of which may be set at a time. If this value is NULL (the default) then the Toggle will not be part of any radio group and can change state without affecting any other Toggle widgets. If the widget specified in this resource is not already in a radio group then a new radio group will be created containing these two Toggle widgets. No Toggle widget can be in multiple radio groups. The behavior of a radio group of one toggle is undefined. A converter is registered which will convert widget names to widgets without caching. |
|
resize |
Specifies whether the widget should attempt to resize to its preferred dimensions whenever its resources are modified with XtSetValues. This attempt to resize may be denied by the parent of this widget. The parent is always free to resize the widget regardless of the state of this resource. |
|
screen |
The screen on which this widget is displayed. This is not a settable resource. |
|
sensitive |
Whether or not the toolkit should pass user events to this widget. The widget will not get input events if either ancestorSensitive or sensitive is False. |
|
shapeStyle |
Nonrectangular widgets may be created using this resource. Nonrectangular widgets are supported only on a server that supports the Shape Extension. If nonrectangular widgets are specified for a server lacking this extension, the shape is ignored and the widgets will be rectangular. The following shapes are currently supported: XmuShapeRectangle, XmuShapeOval, XmuShapeEllipse, and XmuShapeRoundedRectangle. A converter is registered for this resource that will convert the following strings: rectangle, oval, ellipse, and roundedRectangle. |
|
state |
Specifies whether the Toggle widget is set (True) or unset (False). |
|
translations |
The event bindings associated with this widget. |
|
x |
||
y |
The location of the upper left outside corner of this widget in its parent. |
The Toggle widget supports the following actions:
• | Switching the Toggle widget between the foreground and background colors with set and unset and toggle | |
• |
Processing application callbacks with notify |
|
• |
Switching the internal border between highlighted and unhighlighted states with highlight and unhighlight |
The following are the default translation bindings used by the Toggle widget:
<EnterWindow>: | highlight(Always) | |
<LeaveWindow>: | unhighlight() | |
<Btn1Down>,<Btn1Up>:toggle() notify() |
The full list of actions supported by Toggle is:
highlight(condition) |
Displays the internal highlight border in the color (foreground or background ) that contrasts with the interior color of the Toggle widget. The conditions WhenUnset and Always are understood by this action procedure. If no argument is passed then WhenUnset is assumed. |
unhighlight() | Displays the internal highlight border in the color (foreground or background ) that matches the interior color of the Toggle widget. | |
set() |
Enters the set state, in which notify is possible. This action causes the Toggle widget to display its interior in the foreground color. The label or bitmap is displayed in the background color. |
|
unset() |
Cancels the set state and displays the interior of the Toggle widget in the background color. The label or bitmap is displayed in the foreground color. |
|
toggle() |
Changes the current state of the Toggle widget, causing to be set if it was previously unset, and unset if it was previously set. If the widget is to be set, and is in a radio group then this procedure may unset another Toggle widget causing all routines on its callback list to be invoked. The callback routines for the Toggle that is to be unset will be called before the one that is to be set. |
|
reset() |
Cancels any set or highlight and displays the interior of the Toggle widget in the background color, with the label displayed in the foreground color. |
|
notify() |
When the Toggle widget is in the set state this action calls all functions in the callback list named by the callback resource. The value of the call_data argument in these callback functions is undefined. |
Note
When a bitmap of depth greater that one (1) is specified the set(), unset(), and reset() actions have no effect, since there are no foreground and background colors used in a multi-plane pixmap.
There are typically two types of radio groups desired by applications. The default translations for the Toggle widget implement a "zero or one of many" radio group. This means that there may be no more than one Toggle widget active, but there need not be any Toggle widgets active.
The other type of radio group is "one of many" and has the more strict policy that there will always be exactly one radio button active. Toggle widgets can be used to provide this interface with a slight modification to the translation table of each Toggle in the group.