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altTheme.tcl
(3.26 KB)
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aquaTheme.tcl
(1.95 KB)
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button.tcl
(2.91 KB)
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clamTheme.tcl
(4.16 KB)
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classicTheme.tcl
(3.44 KB)
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combobox.tcl
(12.1 KB)
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cursors.tcl
(3.91 KB)
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defaults.tcl
(3.6 KB)
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entry.tcl
(15.77 KB)
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fonts.tcl
(5.44 KB)
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menubutton.tcl
(4.77 KB)
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notebook.tcl
(5.49 KB)
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panedwindow.tcl
(1.88 KB)
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progress.tcl
(1.06 KB)
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scale.tcl
(2.49 KB)
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scrollbar.tcl
(3.02 KB)
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sizegrip.tcl
(2.34 KB)
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spinbox.tcl
(4.16 KB)
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treeview.tcl
(8.66 KB)
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ttk.tcl
(4.44 KB)
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utils.tcl
(8.36 KB)
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vistaTheme.tcl
(9.13 KB)
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winTheme.tcl
(2.58 KB)
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xpTheme.tcl
(1.88 KB)
Editing: button.tcl
# # Bindings for Buttons, Checkbuttons, and Radiobuttons. # # Notes: <Button1-Leave>, <Button1-Enter> only control the "pressed" # state; widgets remain "active" if the pointer is dragged out. # This doesn't seem to be conventional, but it's a nice way # to provide extra feedback while the grab is active. # (If the button is released off the widget, the grab deactivates and # we get a <Leave> event then, which turns off the "active" state) # # Normally, <ButtonRelease> and <ButtonN-Enter/Leave> events are # delivered to the widget which received the initial <ButtonPress> # event. However, Tk [grab]s (#1223103) and menu interactions # (#1222605) can interfere with this. To guard against spurious # <Button1-Enter> events, the <Button1-Enter> binding only sets # the pressed state if the button is currently active. # namespace eval ttk::button {} bind TButton <Enter> { %W instate !disabled {%W state active} } bind TButton <Leave> { %W state !active } bind TButton <Key-space> { ttk::button::activate %W } bind TButton <<Invoke>> { ttk::button::activate %W } bind TButton <ButtonPress-1> \ { %W instate !disabled { ttk::clickToFocus %W; %W state pressed } } bind TButton <ButtonRelease-1> \ { %W instate pressed { %W state !pressed; %W instate !disabled { %W invoke } } } bind TButton <Button1-Leave> \ { %W state !pressed } bind TButton <Button1-Enter> \ { %W instate {active !disabled} { %W state pressed } } # Checkbuttons and Radiobuttons have the same bindings as Buttons: # ttk::copyBindings TButton TCheckbutton ttk::copyBindings TButton TRadiobutton # ...plus a few more: bind TRadiobutton <KeyPress-Up> { ttk::button::RadioTraverse %W -1 } bind TRadiobutton <KeyPress-Down> { ttk::button::RadioTraverse %W +1 } # bind TCheckbutton <KeyPress-plus> { %W select } # bind TCheckbutton <KeyPress-minus> { %W deselect } # activate -- # Simulate a button press: temporarily set the state to 'pressed', # then invoke the button. # proc ttk::button::activate {w} { $w instate disabled { return } set oldState [$w state pressed] update idletasks; after 100 ;# block event loop to avoid reentrancy $w state $oldState $w invoke } # RadioTraverse -- up/down keyboard traversal for radiobutton groups. # Set focus to previous/next radiobutton in a group. # A radiobutton group consists of all the radiobuttons with # the same parent and -variable; this is a pretty good heuristic # that works most of the time. # proc ttk::button::RadioTraverse {w dir} { set group [list] foreach sibling [winfo children [winfo parent $w]] { if { [winfo class $sibling] eq "TRadiobutton" && [$sibling cget -variable] eq [$w cget -variable] && ![$sibling instate disabled] } { lappend group $sibling } } if {![llength $group]} { # Shouldn't happen, but can. return } set pos [expr {([lsearch -exact $group $w] + $dir) % [llength $group]}] tk::TabToWindow [lindex $group $pos] }
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