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man pages section 3: Extended Library Functions, Volume 1

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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

Tk_CreateOptionTable (3tk)

Name

Tk_CreateOptionTable - tions, Tk_FreeSavedOptions, Tk_RestoreSavedOptions, Tk_GetOptionValue, Tk_GetOptionInfo, Tk_FreeConfigOptions, Tk_Offset - process configura- tion options

Synopsis

#include <tk.h>

Tk_OptionTable
Tk_CreateOptionTable(interp, templatePtr)

Tk_DeleteOptionTable(optionTable)

int
Tk_InitOptions(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, tkwin)

int
Tk_SetOptions(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, objc, objv, tkwin, savePtr, maskPtr)

Tk_FreeSavedOptions(savedPtr)

Tk_RestoreSavedOptions(savedPtr)

Tcl_Obj *
Tk_GetOptionValue(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, namePtr, tkwin)

Tcl_Obj *
Tk_GetOptionInfo(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, namePtr, tkwin)

Tk_FreeConfigOptions(recordPtr, optionTable, tkwin)

int
Tk_Offset(type, field)

Description

Tk_SetOptions(3tk)           Tk Library Procedures          Tk_SetOptions(3tk)



______________________________________________________________________________

NAME
       Tk_CreateOptionTable,  Tk_DeleteOptionTable,  Tk_InitOptions, Tk_SetOp-
       tions, Tk_FreeSavedOptions, Tk_RestoreSavedOptions,  Tk_GetOptionValue,
       Tk_GetOptionInfo,  Tk_FreeConfigOptions, Tk_Offset - process configura-
       tion options

SYNOPSIS
       #include <tk.h>

       Tk_OptionTable
       Tk_CreateOptionTable(interp, templatePtr)

       Tk_DeleteOptionTable(optionTable)

       int
       Tk_InitOptions(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, tkwin)

       int
       Tk_SetOptions(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, objc, objv, tkwin, savePtr, maskPtr)

       Tk_FreeSavedOptions(savedPtr)

       Tk_RestoreSavedOptions(savedPtr)

       Tcl_Obj *
       Tk_GetOptionValue(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, namePtr, tkwin)

       Tcl_Obj *
       Tk_GetOptionInfo(interp, recordPtr, optionTable, namePtr, tkwin)

       Tk_FreeConfigOptions(recordPtr, optionTable, tkwin)

       int
       Tk_Offset(type, field)

ARGUMENTS
       Tcl_Interp *interp (in)                     A  Tcl  interpreter.   Most
                                                   procedures  use  this  only
                                                   for  returning  error  mes-
                                                   sages;  if  it is NULL then
                                                   no   error   messages   are
                                                   returned.  For Tk_CreateOp-
                                                   tionTable the value  cannot
                                                   be   NULL;   it  gives  the
                                                   interpreter  in  which  the
                                                   option table will be used.

       const Tk_OptionSpec *templatePtr (in)       Points   to   an  array  of
                                                   static   information   that
                                                   describes the configuration
                                                   options that are supported.
                                                   Used     to     build     a
                                                   Tk_OptionTable.  The infor-
                                                   mation  pointed  to by this
                                                   argument must exist for the
                                                   lifetime       of       the
                                                   Tk_OptionTable.

       Tk_OptionTable optionTable (in)             Token for an option  table.
                                                   Must  have been returned by
                                                   a previous call to  Tk_Cre-
                                                   ateOptionTable.

       char *recordPtr (in/out)                    Points   to   structure  in
                                                   which values of  configura-
                                                   tion  options  are  stored;
                                                   fields of this  record  are
                                                   modified by procedures such
                                                   as Tk_SetOptions  and  read
                                                   by   procedures   such   as
                                                   Tk_GetOptionValue.

       Tk_Window tkwin (in)                        For   options    such    as
                                                   TK_OPTION_COLOR, this argu-
                                                   ment indicates  the  window
                                                   in which the option will be
                                                   used.  If optionTable  uses
                                                   no         window-dependent
                                                   options, then a NULL  value
                                                   may  be  supplied  for this
                                                   argument.

       int objc (in)                               Number of values in objv.

       Tcl_Obj *const objv[] (in)                  Command-line arguments  for
                                                   setting         configuring
                                                   options.

       Tk_SavedOptions *savePtr (out)              If not NULL, the  structure
                                                   pointed to by this argument
                                                   is filled in with  the  old
                                                   values  of any options that
                                                   were modified and old  val-
                                                   ues  are restored automati-
                                                   cally if an error occurs in
                                                   Tk_SetOptions.

       int *maskPtr (out)                          If   not   NULL,  the  word
                                                   pointed to  by  maskPtr  is
                                                   filled in with the bit-wise
                                                   OR of the  typeMask  fields
                                                   for  the  options that were
                                                   modified.

       Tk_SavedOptions *savedPtr (in/out)          Points to a structure  pre-
                                                   viously    filled   in   by
                                                   Tk_SetOptions with old val-
                                                   ues of modified options.

       Tcl_Obj *namePtr (in)                       The value of this object is
                                                   the name  of  a  particular
                                                   option.   If NULL is passed
                                                   to  Tk_GetOptionInfo   then
                                                   information is returned for
                                                   all options.  Must  not  be
                                                   NULL when Tk_GetOptionValue
                                                   is called.

       type name type (in)                         The name of the type  of  a
                                                   record.

       field name field (in)                       The  name  of  a  field  in
                                                   records of type type.
______________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION
       These procedures handle most of the details  of  parsing  configuration
       options  such  as  those  for  Tk widgets.  Given a description of what
       options are supported, these procedures handle all the details of pars-
       ing options and storing their values into a C structure associated with
       the widget or object. The procedures were designed primarily  for  wid-
       gets  in  Tk, but they can also be used for other kinds of objects that
       have configuration options.  In the rest of this manual  page  "widget"
       will be used to refer to the object whose options are being managed; in
       practice the object may not actually be a  widget.   The  term  "widget
       record"  is used to refer to the C-level structure in which information
       about a particular widget or object is stored.

       Note: the easiest way to learn how to use these procedures is  to  look
       at  a  working  example.   In Tk, the simplest example is the code that
       implements the button family of widgets, which is in tkButton.c.  Other
       examples are in tkSquare.c and tkMenu.c.

       In  order  to use these procedures, the code that implements the widget
       must contain a static array of Tk_OptionSpec structures. This is a tem-
       plate  that  describes  the  various options supported by that class of
       widget; there is a separate template for each kind of widget.  The tem-
       plate  contains  information such as the name of each option, its type,
       its default value, and where the value of the option is stored  in  the
       widget record.  See TEMPLATES below for more detail.

       In  order to process configuration options efficiently, the static tem-
       plate must be augmented with additional information that  is  available
       only  at  runtime.   The  procedure  Tk_CreateOptionTable  creates this
       dynamic information from the  template  and  returns  a  Tk_OptionTable
       token  that  describes both the static and dynamic information.  All of
       the other procedures, such  as  Tk_SetOptions,  take  a  Tk_OptionTable
       token as argument.  Typically, Tk_CreateOptionTable is called the first
       time that a widget of a particular class is created and  the  resulting
       Tk_OptionTable  is used in the future for all widgets of that class.  A
       Tk_OptionTable may be used only in a single interpreter, given  by  the
       interp  argument  to  Tk_CreateOptionTable.  When an option table is no
       longer needed Tk_DeleteOptionTable should be called to free all of  its
       resources.   All  of  the option tables for a Tcl interpreter are freed
       automatically if the interpreter is deleted.

       Tk_InitOptions is invoked when a new  widget  is  created  to  set  the
       default  values  for  all of the widget's configuration options that do
       not have TK_OPTION_DONT_SET_DEFAULT set in their flags field.   Tk_Ini-
       tOptions  is  passed  a  token  for an option table (optionTable) and a
       pointer to a widget record (recordPtr), which is the C  structure  that
       holds  information about this widget.  Tk_InitOptions uses the informa-
       tion in the option table to choose  an  appropriate  default  for  each
       option,  except  those  having  TK_OPTION_DONT_SET_DEFAULT set, then it
       stores the default value directly into the widget  record,  overwriting
       any information that was already present in the widget record.  Tk_Ini-
       tOptions normally returns TCL_OK.  If an error occurred  while  setting
       the  default  values (e.g., because a default value was erroneous) then
       TCL_ERROR is returned and an error message is left in  interp's  result
       if interp is not NULL.

       Tk_SetOptions  is  invoked  to  modify  configuration  options based on
       information specified in a Tcl command.  The command might be one  that
       creates a new widget, or a command that modifies options on an existing
       widget.  The objc and objv arguments describe the values of  the  argu-
       ments  from  the  Tcl  command.   Objv  must  contain an even number of
       objects: the first object of each pair gives the name of an option  and
       the  second  object gives the new value for that option.  Tk_SetOptions
       looks up each name in optionTable, checks that the  new  value  of  the
       option conforms to the type in optionTable, and stores the value of the
       option into the widget record given by recordPtr.   Tk_SetOptions  nor-
       mally  returns TCL_OK.  If an error occurred (such as an unknown option
       name or an illegal option value) then  TCL_ERROR  is  returned  and  an
       error message is left in interp's result if interp is not NULL.

       Tk_SetOptions has two additional features.  First, if the maskPtr argu-
       ment is not NULL then it points to an integer value that is  filled  in
       with information about the options that were modified.  For each option
       in the template passed to  Tk_CreateOptionTable  there  is  a  typeMask
       field.   The bits of this field are defined by the code that implements
       the widget; for example, each bit might correspond to a particular con-
       figuration  option.   Alternatively,  bits  might be used functionally.
       For example, one bit might be used  for  redisplay:  all  options  that
       affect the widget's display, such that changing the option requires the
       widget to be redisplayed, might have that bit set.  Another  bit  might
       indicate that the geometry of the widget must be recomputed, and so on.
       Tk_SetOptions OR's together the typeMask fields from  all  the  options
       that  were  modified and returns this value at *maskPtr; the caller can
       then use this information to optimize itself so that, for  example,  it
       does not redisplay the widget if the modified options do not affect the
       widget's appearance.

       The second additional feature of Tk_SetOptions has  to  do  with  error
       recovery.   If  an error occurs while processing configuration options,
       this feature makes it possible to restore all the configuration options
       to  their  previous  values.   Errors can occur either while processing
       options in Tk_SetOptions or later in the caller.   In  many  cases  the
       caller  does  additional  processing  after  Tk_SetOptions returns; for
       example, it might use an option value to set a trace on a variable  and
       may  detect  an  error if the variable is an array instead of a scalar.
       Error recovery is enabled by  passing  in  a  non-NULL  value  for  the
       savePtr  argument  to  Tk_SetOptions;  this  should  be a pointer to an
       uninitialized  Tk_SavedOptions  structure  on   the   caller's   stack.
       Tk_SetOptions  overwrites  the  structure  pointed  to  by savePtr with
       information about the old values of any options modified by the  proce-
       dure.   If  Tk_SetOptions  returns  successfully,  the  caller uses the
       structure in one of two ways.  If the caller completes  its  processing
       of  the new options without any errors, then it must pass the structure
       to Tk_FreeSavedOptions so that the old values can  be  freed.   If  the
       caller  detects  an error in its processing of the new options, then it
       should pass the structure to Tk_RestoreSavedOptions,  which  will  copy
       the old values back into the widget record and free the new values.  If
       Tk_SetOptions detects an  error  then  it  automatically  restores  any
       options  that had already been modified and leaves *savePtr in an empty
       state:  the  caller  need  not  call  either   Tk_FreeSavedOptions   or
       Tk_RestoreSavedOptions.   If  the  savePtr argument to Tk_SetOptions is
       NULL then Tk_SetOptions frees each old option value immediately when it
       sets  a  new value for the option.  In this case, if an error occurs in
       the third option, the old values for the first two  options  cannot  be
       restored.

       Tk_GetOptionValue  returns  the current value of a configuration option
       for a particular widget.  The namePtr argument contains the name of  an
       option;  Tk_GetOptionValue  uses  optionTable  to lookup the option and
       extract its value from the widget record pointed to by recordPtr,  then
       it  returns an object containing that value.  If an error occurs (e.g.,
       because namePtr contains an unknown option name) then NULL is  returned
       and an error message is left in interp's result unless interp is NULL.

       Tk_GetOptionInfo  returns  information about configuration options in a
       form suitable for configure widget commands.  If the  namePtr  argument
       is not NULL, it points to an object that gives the name of a configura-
       tion option; Tk_GetOptionInfo returns an object containing a list  with
       five  elements,  which  are  the name of the option, the name and class
       used for the option in the option database, the default value  for  the
       option,  and the current value for the option.  If the namePtr argument
       is NULL, then Tk_GetOptionInfo returns information about all options in
       the  form  of a list of lists; each sublist describes one option.  Syn-
       onym options are handled differently depending on  whether  namePtr  is
       NULL:  if  namePtr is NULL then the sublist for each synonym option has
       only two elements, which are the name of the option and the name of the
       other option that it refers to; if namePtr is non-NULL and names a syn-
       onym option then the object returned is the five-element list  for  the
       other  option  that  the  synonym refers to.  If an error occurs (e.g.,
       because namePtr contains an unknown option name) then NULL is  returned
       and an error message is left in interp's result unless interp is NULL.

       Tk_FreeConfigOptions  must  be  invoked  when  a widget is deleted.  It
       frees all of the resources associated with  any  of  the  configuration
       options defined in recordPtr by optionTable.

       The Tk_Offset macro is provided as a safe way of generating the objOff-
       set and internalOffset values for entries in Tk_OptionSpec  structures.
       It takes two arguments: the name of a type of record, and the name of a
       field in that record. It returns the byte offset of the named field  in
       records of the given type.

TEMPLATES
       The  array  of  Tk_OptionSpec structures passed to Tk_CreateOptionTable
       via its templatePtr argument describes the configuration  options  sup-
       ported  by a particular class of widgets.  Each structure specifies one
       configuration option and has the following fields:
              typedef struct {
                  Tk_OptionType type;
                  const char *optionName;
                  const char *dbName;
                  const char *dbClass;
                  const char *defValue;
                  int objOffset;
                  int internalOffset;
                  int flags;
                  const void *clientData;
                  int typeMask;
              } Tk_OptionSpec;
       The type field indicates what kind  of  configuration  option  this  is
       (e.g.  TK_OPTION_COLOR for a color value, or TK_OPTION_INT for an inte-
       ger value).  Type determines how the value  of  the  option  is  parsed
       (more  on  this below).  The optionName field is a string such as -font
       or -bg; it is the name used for the option in Tcl commands  and  passed
       to  procedures  via  the  objc  or  namePtr  arguments.  The dbName and
       dbClass fields are used by Tk_InitOptions to look up  a  default  value
       for  this  option  in  the  option database; if dbName is NULL then the
       option database is not used by Tk_InitOptions  for  this  option.   The
       defValue  field specifies a default value for this configuration option
       if no value is specified in the option  database.   The  objOffset  and
       internalOffset  fields indicate where to store the value of this option
       in widget records (more on this below); values for  the  objOffset  and
       internalOffset  fields  should  always  be generated with the Tk_Offset
       macro.  The flags field contains additional information to control  the
       processing  of  this  configuration  option  (see  below  for details).
       ClientData provides additional type-specific  data  needed  by  certain
       types.  For instance, for TK_OPTION_COLOR types, clientData is a string
       giving the default value  to  use  on  monochrome  displays.   See  the
       descriptions of the different types below for details.  The last field,
       typeMask, is used by Tk_SetOptions to return  information  about  which
       options  were  modified; see the description of Tk_SetOptions above for
       details.

       When Tk_InitOptions and Tk_SetOptions store the value of an option into
       the  widget  record,  they  can  do  it  in either of two ways.  If the
       objOffset field of the Tk_OptionSpec is greater than or equal to  zero,
       then the value of the option is stored as a (Tcl_Obj *) at the location
       in the widget record given by objOffset.  If the  internalOffset  field
       of  the  Tk_OptionSpec is greater than or equal to zero, then the value
       of the option is stored in a type-specific internal form at  the  loca-
       tion in the widget record given by internalOffset.  For example, if the
       option's type is TK_OPTION_INT then the internal form  is  an  integer.
       If  the objOffset or internalOffset field is negative then the value is
       not stored in that form.  At least one of the offsets must  be  greater
       than or equal to zero.

       The flags field consists of one or more bits ORed together. The follow-
       ing flags are supported:

       TK_OPTION_NULL_OK
              If this bit is set for an option then an empty  string  will  be
              accepted  as the value for the option and the resulting internal
              form will be a NULL pointer, a zero value, or None, depending on
              the  type  of  the  option.   If  the flag is not set then empty
              strings will result in errors.  TK_OPTION_NULL_OK  is  typically
              used  to  allow  a feature to be turned off entirely, e.g. set a
              cursor value to None so that a window simply inherits  its  par-
              ent's    cursor.     Not    all   option   types   support   the
              TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag; for those that do, there is an  explicit
              indication of that fact in the descriptions below.

       TK_OPTION_DONT_SET_DEFAULT
              If  this  bit is set for an option then no default value will be
              set in Tk_InitOptions for this option. Neither the option  data-
              base,  nor any system default value, nor optionTable are used to
              give a default value to this option. Instead it is assumed  that
              the  caller  has  already supplied a default value in the widget
              code.

       The type field of each Tk_OptionSpec structure determines how to  parse
       the  value  of that configuration option. The legal value for type, and
       the corresponding actions, are described below.  If the type requires a
       tkwin  value  to be passed into procedures like Tk_SetOptions, or if it
       uses the clientData field of the Tk_OptionSpec, then  it  is  indicated
       explicitly;  if  not  mentioned,  the  type  requires neither tkwin nor
       clientData.

       TK_OPTION_ANCHOR
              The value must be a standard anchor position such as ne or  cen-
              ter.   The  internal  form  is  a  Tk_Anchor value like the ones
              returned by Tk_GetAnchorFromObj.

       TK_OPTION_BITMAP
              The value must be a standard Tk bitmap name. The  internal  form
              is  a  Pixmap token like the ones returned by Tk_AllocBitmapFro-
              mObj.  This option type requires tkwin to be supplied to  proce-
              dures    such    as   Tk_SetOptions,   and   it   supports   the
              TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_BOOLEAN
              The value must be a standard boolean value such as true  or  no.
              The internal form is an integer with value 0 or 1.

       TK_OPTION_BORDER
              The  value must be a standard color name such as red or #ff8080.
              The internal form is a Tk_3DBorder token like the ones  returned
              by  Tk_Alloc3DBorderFromObj.  This option type requires tkwin to
              be supplied to procedures such as Tk_SetOptions, and it supports
              the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_COLOR
              The  value must be a standard color name such as red or #ff8080.
              The internal form is an (XColor *) token like the ones  returned
              by  Tk_AllocColorFromObj.  This option type requires tkwin to be
              supplied to procedures such as Tk_SetOptions,  and  it  supports
              the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_CURSOR
              The  value must be a standard cursor name such as cross or @foo.
              The internal form is a Tk_Cursor token like the ones returned by
              Tk_AllocCursorFromObj.   This  option  type requires tkwin to be
              supplied to procedures  such  as  Tk_SetOptions,  and  when  the
              option  is  set  the cursor for the window is changed by calling
              XDefineCursor.    This   option   type   also    supports    the
              TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_CUSTOM
              This option allows applications to define new option types.  The
              clientData field of the entry points to a structure defining the
              new  option type.  See the section CUSTOM OPTION TYPES below for
              details.

       TK_OPTION_DOUBLE
              The string value must be a floating-point number in  the  format
              accepted  by  strtol.   The  internal  form is a C double value.
              This option type supports the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag; if a  NULL
              value is set, the internal representation is set to zero.

       TK_OPTION_END
              Marks  the  end  of the template.  There must be a Tk_OptionSpec
              structure with type TK_OPTION_END at the end of  each  template.
              If  the  clientData field of this structure is not NULL, then it
              points to an  additional  array  of  Tk_OptionSpec's,  which  is
              itself terminated by another TK_OPTION_END entry.  Templates may
              be chained  arbitrarily  deeply.   This  feature  allows  common
              options to be shared by several widget classes.

       TK_OPTION_FONT
              The  value  must  be a standard font name such as Times 16.  The
              internal form is a Tk_Font handle  like  the  ones  returned  by
              Tk_AllocFontFromObj.  This option type requires tkwin to be sup-
              plied to procedures such as Tk_SetOptions, and it  supports  the
              TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_INT
              The  string  value  must be an integer in the format accepted by
              strtol (e.g. 0 and 0x prefixes may be used to specify  octal  or
              hexadecimal  numbers,  respectively).   The internal form is a C
              int value.

       TK_OPTION_JUSTIFY
              The value must be a standard justification value such  as  left.
              The  internal  form  is a Tk_Justify like the values returned by
              Tk_GetJustifyFromObj.

       TK_OPTION_PIXELS
              The value must specify a screen distance such as 2i or 6.4.  The
              internal  form  is an integer value giving a distance in pixels,
              like the values returned by Tk_GetPixelsFromObj.  Note:  if  the
              objOffset  field is not used then information about the original
              value of this option will be lost.   See  OBJOFFSET  VS.  INTER-
              NALOFFSET  below  for  details.   This  option type supports the
              TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag; if a NULL value  is  set,  the  internal
              representation is set to zero.

       TK_OPTION_RELIEF
              The  value must be standard relief such as raised.  The internal
              form is an integer relief value such as TK_RELIEF_RAISED.   This
              option  type  supports  the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag; if the empty
              string is specified as the value for  the  option,  the  integer
              relief value is set to TK_RELIEF_NULL.

       TK_OPTION_STRING
              The  value  may  be any string.  The internal form is a (char *)
              pointer that points to  a  dynamically  allocated  copy  of  the
              value.  This option type supports the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

       TK_OPTION_STRING_TABLE
              For  this  type,  clientData is a pointer to an array of strings
              suitable for passing to Tcl_GetIndexFromObj.  The value must  be
              one of the strings in the table, or a unique abbreviation of one
              of the strings.  The internal form  is  an  integer  giving  the
              index  into  the  table  of the matching string, like the return
              value from Tcl_GetStringFromObj.

       TK_OPTION_SYNONYM
              This type is used to provide alternative  names  for  an  option
              (for  example,  -bg is often used as a synonym for -background).
              The clientData field is a string that gives the name of  another
              option  in the same table.  Whenever the synonym option is used,
              the information from the other option will be used instead.

       TK_OPTION_WINDOW
              The value must be a window path name.  The internal  form  is  a
              Tk_Window token for the window.  This option type requires tkwin
              to be supplied to procedures such as Tk_SetOptions (in order  to
              identify the application), and it supports the TK_OPTION_NULL_OK
              flag.

STORAGE MANAGEMENT ISSUES
       If a field of a widget record has its offset stored in the objOffset or
       internalOffset  field  of a Tk_OptionSpec structure then the procedures
       described here will handle all of the storage allocation  and  resource
       management  issues  associated  with  the  field.  When the value of an
       option is changed, Tk_SetOptions (or Tk_FreeSavedOptions) will automat-
       ically  free  any  resources  associated  with  the  old value, such as
       Tk_Fonts for TK_OPTION_FONT options or dynamically allocated memory for
       TK_OPTION_STRING  options.  For an option stored as an object using the
       objOffset field of a Tk_OptionSpec, the widget record shares the object
       pointed  to by the objv value from the call to Tk_SetOptions.  The ref-
       erence count for this object is incremented when a  pointer  to  it  is
       stored  in  the  widget record and decremented when the option is modi-
       fied.  When  the  widget  is  deleted  Tk_FreeConfigOptions  should  be
       invoked;  it  will  free  the resources associated with all options and
       decrement reference counts for any objects.

       However, the widget code is responsible for storing NULL or None in all
       pointer  and  token  fields  before  invoking  Tk_InitOptions.  This is
       needed to allow proper cleanup in the rare case where an  error  occurs
       in Tk_InitOptions.

OBJOFFSET VS. INTERNALOFFSET
       In  most  cases  it  is  simplest  to use the internalOffset field of a
       Tk_OptionSpec structure and not the objOffset field.   This  makes  the
       internal  form of the value immediately available to the widget code so
       the value does not have to be extracted from an object each time it  is
       used.   However,  there are two cases where the objOffset field is use-
       ful.  The first case is for TK_OPTION_PIXELS options.   In  this  case,
       the  internal  form  is an integer pixel value that is valid only for a
       particular screen.  If the value of the option is retrieved, it will be
       returned as a simple number.  For example, after the command .b config-
       ure -borderwidth 2m, the command .b configure -borderwidth might return
       7,  which  is  the  integer  pixel value corresponding to 2m.  Unfortu-
       nately, this loses the  original  screen-independent  value.  Thus  for
       TK_OPTION_PIXELS  options  it is better to use the objOffset field.  In
       this case the original value of the option is retained  in  the  object
       and  can be returned when the option is retrieved.  In most cases it is
       convenient to use the internalOffset field as well, so that the integer
       value  is  immediately  available  for use in the widget code (alterna-
       tively, Tk_GetPixelsFromObj can be used to extract  the  integer  value
       from  the  object  whenever it is needed).  Note: the problem of losing
       information on retrievals exists only for TK_OPTION_PIXELS options.

       The second reason to use the objOffset field is in order  to  implement
       new types of options not supported by these procedures.  To implement a
       new type of option, you can use TK_OPTION_STRING as  the  type  in  the
       Tk_OptionSpec  structure and set the objOffset field but not the inter-
       nalOffset field.  Then, after calling Tk_SetOptions, convert the object
       to internal form yourself.

CUSTOM OPTION TYPES
       Applications  can  extend  the  built-in configuration types with addi-
       tional configuration types by writing procedures to parse, print, free,
       and  restore saved copies of the type and creating a structure pointing
       to those procedures:
              typedef struct Tk_ObjCustomOption {
                  char *name;
                  Tk_CustomOptionSetProc *setProc;
                  Tk_CustomOptionGetProc *getProc;
                  Tk_CustomOptionRestoreProc *restoreProc;
                  Tk_CustomOptionFreeProc *freeProc;
                  ClientData clientData;
              } Tk_ObjCustomOption;

              typedef int Tk_CustomOptionSetProc(
                  ClientData clientData,
                  Tcl_Interp *interp,
                  Tk_Window tkwin,
                  Tcl_Obj **valuePtr,
                  char *recordPtr,
                  int internalOffset,
                  char *saveInternalPtr,
                  int flags);

              typedef Tcl_Obj *Tk_CustomOptionGetProc(
                  ClientData clientData,
                  Tk_Window tkwin,
                  char *recordPtr,
                  int internalOffset);

              typedef void Tk_CustomOptionRestoreProc(
                  ClientData clientData,
                  Tk_Window tkwin,
                  char *internalPtr,
                  char *saveInternalPtr);

              typedef void Tk_CustomOptionFreeProc(
                  ClientData clientData,
                  Tk_Window tkwin,
                  char *internalPtr);

       The Tk_ObjCustomOption structure contains six fields: a  name  for  the
       custom  option  type; pointers to the four procedures; and a clientData
       value to be passed to those procedures  when  they  are  invoked.   The
       clientData value typically points to a structure containing information
       that is needed by the procedures when they  are  parsing  and  printing
       options.   RestoreProc  and  freeProc  may  be NULL, indicating that no
       function should be called for those operations.

       The setProc procedure is invoked by Tk_SetOptions to convert a  Tcl_Obj
       into  an  internal  representation and store the resulting value in the
       widget record.  The arguments are:

              clientData
                     A copy of the clientData field in the  Tk_ObjCustomOption
                     structure.

              interp A pointer to a Tcl interpreter, used for error reporting.

              Tkwin  A copy of the tkwin argument to Tk_SetOptions

              valuePtr
                     A  pointer to a reference to a Tcl_Obj describing the new
                     value for  the  option;  it  could  have  been  specified
                     explicitly  in the call to Tk_SetOptions or it could come
                     from the option database or a default.  If the  objOffset
                     for  the  option  is  non-negative  (the  option value is
                     stored as a  (Tcl_Obj  *)  in  the  widget  record),  the
                     Tcl_Obj  pointer  referenced  by  valuePtr is the pointer
                     that will be stored at  the  objOffset  for  the  option.
                     SetProc  may  modify the value if necessary; for example,
                     setProc may change the  value  to  NULL  to  support  the
                     TK_OPTION_NULL_OK flag.

              recordPtr
                     A pointer to the start of the widget record to modify.

              internalOffset
                     Offset  in  bytes  from the start of the widget record to
                     the location where the  internal  representation  of  the
                     option value is to be placed.

              saveInternalPtr
                     A  pointer  to  storage  allocated  in  a Tk_SavedOptions
                     structure for the internal representation of the original
                     option  value.   Before  setting  the  option  to its new
                     value, setProc should set the value referenced by saveIn-
                     ternalPtr to the original value of the option in order to
                     support Tk_RestoreSavedOptions.

              flags  A copy of the flags field in the Tk_OptionSpec  structure
                     for the option

       SetProc  returns  a  standard Tcl result: TCL_OK to indicate successful
       processing, or TCL_ERROR to indicate a failure of any kind.   An  error
       message  may be left in the Tcl interpreter given by interp in the case
       of an error.

       The getProc procedure is invoked by Tk_GetOptionValue and Tk_GetOption-
       Info  to  retrieve a Tcl_Obj representation of the internal representa-
       tion of an option.  The clientData argument is a copy of the clientData
       field  in  the  Tk_ObjCustomOption  structure.   Tkwin is a copy of the
       tkwin argument to Tk_GetOptionValue or Tk_GetOptionInfo.  RecordPtr  is
       a pointer to the beginning of the widget record to query.  InternalOff-
       set is the offset in bytes from the beginning of the widget  record  to
       the  location  where the internal representation of the option value is
       stored.  GetProc must return a pointer to a  Tcl_Obj  representing  the
       value of the option.

       The  restoreProc  procedure  is  invoked  by  Tk_RestoreSavedOptions to
       restore a previously saved internal representation of a  custom  option
       value.   The  clientData  argument is a copy of the clientData field in
       the Tk_ObjCustomOption structure.  Tkwin is a copy of the  tkwin  argu-
       ment  to  Tk_GetOptionValue  or  Tk_GetOptionInfo.   InternalPtr  is  a
       pointer to the location where internal  representation  of  the  option
       value  is  stored.   SaveInternalPtr  is  a pointer to the saved value.
       RestoreProc must copy the value from saveInternalPtr to internalPtr  to
       restore  the  value.   RestoreProc  need not free any memory associated
       with either internalPtr or saveInternalPtr; freeProc will be invoked to
       free that memory if necessary.  RestoreProc has no return value.

       The  freeProc procedure is invoked by Tk_SetOptions and Tk_FreeSavedOp-
       tions to free any storage allocated for the internal representation  of
       a  custom  option.  The clientData argument is a copy of the clientData
       field in the Tk_ObjCustomOption structure.  Tkwin  is  a  copy  of  the
       tkwin  argument  to Tk_GetOptionValue or Tk_GetOptionInfo.  InternalPtr
       is a pointer to the location where the internal representation  of  the
       option  value is stored.  The freeProc must free any storage associated
       with the option.  FreeProc has no return value.

KEYWORDS
       anchor, bitmap, boolean, border, color, configuration  option,  cursor,
       double,  font,  integer, justify, pixels, relief, screen distance, syn-
       onym



ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE  |
       +---------------+------------------+
       |Availability   | runtime/tk-8     |
       +---------------+------------------+
       |Stability      | Uncommitted      |
       +---------------+------------------+

NOTES
       Source code for open source software components in Oracle  Solaris  can
       be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
       code-downloads.html.

       This    software    was    built    from    source     available     at
       https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland.    The  original  community
       source        was        downloaded        from         https://source-
       forge.net/projects/tcl/files/Tcl/8.6.7/tk8.6.7-src.tar.gz/download.

       Further information about this software can be found on the open source
       community website at https://www.tcl.tk/.



Tk                                    8.1                   Tk_SetOptions(3tk)