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tkcon(1)							      tkcon(1)

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME
       tkcon - Tk console replacement

SYNOPSIS
       tkcon [{option value | tcl_script} ...]

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION
       TkCon  is a replacement for the standard console that comes with Tk (on
       Windows/Mac, but also works on Unix).  The console itself provides many
       more  features than the standard console.  TkCon works on all platforms
       where Tcl/Tk is available.  It is meant primarily to aid one when work‐
       ing  with  the  little details inside Tcl and Tk, giving Unix users the
       GUI console provided by default in the Mac and Windows Tk.

       tkcon [{option value | tcl_script} ...]

OPTIONS
       Except for -rcfile, command line arguments are handled after the	 TkCon
       resource file is sourced, but before the slave interpreter or the TkCon
       user interface is initialized.

       -rcfile is handled right before it would be sourced,  allowing  you  to
       specify	any alternate file.  Command line arguments are passed to each
       new console and will be evaluated by each.  To prevent this  from  hap‐
       pening, you have to say

       tkcon main set argv {}; tkcon main set argc 0

       For these options, any unique substring is allowed.

       -argv (also --)
	      Causes  TkCon to stop evaluating arguments and set the remaining
	      args to be argv/argc (with -- prepended).	 This carries over for
	      any  further  consoles.	This  is meant only for wrapping TkCon
	      around programs that require their own arguments.

       -color-<color> color
	      Sets the requested color type to the specified color for	tkcon.
	      See tkconrc(5) for the recognized <color> names.

       -eval tcl_script (also -main or -e)
	      A	 Tcl  script to eval in each main interpreter.	This is evalu‐
	      ated after the resource file is loaded and the slave interpreter
	      is  created.   Multiple  -eval  switches	will be recognized (in
	      order).

       -exec slavename
	      Sets the named slave that tkcon operates in.  In	general,  this
	      is  only	useful	to  set	 to "" (empty), indicating to tkcon to
	      avoid the multi-interpreter model and operate in the main	 envi‐
	      ronment.	When this is empty, any further arguments will be only
	      used in the first tkcon console and not passed onto further  new
	      consoles.	  This	is  useful  when  using tkcon as a console for
	      extended wish executables that don't load	 there	commands  into
	      slave interpreters.

       -font font
	      Sets  the	 font  that  tkcon uses for its text windows.  If this
	      isn't a fixed width font, tkcon will override it.

       -nontcl TCL_BOOLEAN
	      Sets  ::tkcon::OPT(nontcl)  to  TCL_BOOLEAN  (see	  tkconrc(5)).
	      Needed when attaching to non-Tcl interpreters.

       -package package_name (also -load)
	      Packages to automatically load into the slave interpreters (i.e.
	      "Tk").

       -rcfile filename
	      Specify an alternate tkcon resource file name.

       -root widgetname
	      Makes the named widget the  root	name  of  all  consoles	 (i.e.
	      .tkcon).

       -slave tcl_script
	      A	 Tcl  script  to  eval	in  each slave interpreter.  This will
	      append the one specified in the tkcon resource file, if any.

KEY BINDINGS
       Most of the bindings are the same as for the text  widget.   Some  have
       been  modified  to make sure that the integrity of the console is main‐
       tained.	Others have been added to enhance the usefulness of  the  con‐
       sole.  Only the modified or new bindings are listed here.

       Control-x or Cut (on Sparc5 keyboards)
	      Cut.

       Control-c or Copy (on Sparc5 keyboards)
	      Copy.

       Control-v or Paste (on Sparc5 keyboards)
	      Paste.

       Insert Insert (duh).

       Up     Goes up one level in the commands line history when cursor is on
	      the prompt line, otherwise it moves through the buffer.

       Down   Goes down one level in the commands line history when cursor  is
	      on  the  last line of the buffer, otherwise it moves through the
	      buffer.

       Control-p
	      Goes up one level in the commands line history.

       Control-n
	      Goes down one level in the commands line history.

       Tab    Tries to expand file path names, then variable names, then  proc
	      names.

       Escape Tries to expand file path names.

       Control-P
	      Tries  to	 expand	 procedure names.  The procedure names will be
	      those that are actually  in  the	attached  interpreter  (unless
	      nontcl  is specified, in which case it always does the lookup in
	      the default slave interpreter).

       Control-V
	      Tries to expand variable names (those returned by [info  vars]).
	      It's search behavior is like that for procedure names.

       Return or Enter
	      Evaluates	 the current command line if it is a complete command,
	      otherwise it just goes to a new line.

       Control-a
	      Go to the beginning of the current command line.

       Control-l
	      Clear the entire console buffer.

       Control-r
	      Searches backwards in the history for any command that  contains
	      the  string  in  the current command line.  Repeatable to search
	      farther back.  The matching substring off the found command will
	      blink.

       Control-s
	      As  above, but searches forward (only useful if you searched too
	      far back).

       Control-t
	      Transposes characters.

       Control-u
	      Clears the current command line.

       Control-z
	      Saves current command line in a buffer  that  can	 be  retrieved
	      with  another  Control-z.	 If the current command line is empty,
	      then any saved command is retrieved without  being  overwritten,
	      otherwise	 the  current  contents get swapped with what's in the
	      saved command buffer.

       Control-Key-1
	      Attaches console to the console's slave interpreter.

       Control-Key-2
	      Attaches console to the console's master interpreter.

       Control-Key-3
	      Attaches console to main TkCon interpreter.

       Control-A
	      Pops up the "About" dialog.

       Control-N
	      Creates a new console. Each console has separate state,  includ‐
	      ing it's own widget hierarchy (it's a slave interpreter).

       Control-q
	      Close  the  current  console OR Quit the program (depends on the
	      value of ::tkcon::TKCON(slaveexit)).

       Control-w
	      Closes the current console.  Closing the main console will  exit
	      the program (something has to control all the slaves...).

       TkCon  also  has	 electric bracing (similar to that in emacs).  It will
       highlight matching pairs of {}'s, []'s, ()'s and ""'s.  For  the	 first
       three,  if  there  is  no  matching left element for the right, then it
       blinks the entire current command line.	For the double quote, if there
       is no proper match then it just blinks the current double quote charac‐
       ter.   It  does	properly  recognize  most  escaping  (except   escaped
       escapes), but does not look for commenting (why would you interactively
       put comments in?).

COMMANDS
       There are several new procedures introduced in TkCon to improve produc‐
       tivity  and/or  account	for  lost functionality in the Tcl environment
       that users are used to in native environments.	There  are  also  some
       redefined procedures.  Here is a non-comprehensive list:

       alias ?sourceCmd targetCmd ?arg arg ...??
	      Simple  alias  mechanism.	  It will overwrite existing commands.
	      When called without args, it returns current aliases.  Note that
	      TkCon  makes  some  aliases  for	you (in slaves).  Don't delete
	      those.

       clear ?percentage?
	      Clears the text widget.  Same as the <Control-l> binding, except
	      this will accept a percentage of the buffer to clear (1-100, 100
	      default).

       dir ?-all? ?-full? ?-long? ?pattern pattern ...?
	      Cheap way to get directory listings.  Uses  glob	style  pattern
	      matching.

       dump type ?-nocomplain? ?-filter pattern? ?--? pattern ?pattern ...?
	      The  dump	 command provides a way for the user to spit out state
	      information about the interpreter in a Tcl readable  (and	 human
	      readable) form.  See dump(n) for details.

       echo ?arg arg ...?
	      Concatenates  the args and spits the result to the console (std‐
	      out).

       edit ?-type type? ?-find str? ?-attach interp? arg
	      Opens an editor with the data from arg.  The optional type argu‐
	      ment can be one of: proc, var or file.  For proc or var, the arg
	      may be a pattern.

       idebug command ?args?
	      Interactive debugging command.  See idebug(n) for details.

       lremove ?-all? ?-regexp -glob? list items
	      Removes one or more items from a list and returns the new	 list.
	      If  -all	is specified, it removes all instances of each item in
	      the list.	 If -regexp or -glob is specified, it interprets  each
	      item  in	the  items  list  as a regexp or glob pattern to match
	      against.

       less   Aliased to edit.

       ls     Aliased to dir -full.

       more   Aliased to edit.

       observe type ?args?
	      This command provides passive runtime debugging output for vari‐
	      ables and commands.  See observe(n) for details.

       puts (same options as always)
	      Redefined to put the output into TkCon.

       tkcon method ?args?
	      Multi-purpose command.  See tkcon(n) for details.

       tclindex	  ?-extensions	patternlist?  ?-index  TCL_BOOLEAN?  ?-package
       TCL_BOOLEAN? ?dir1 dir2 ...?
	      Convenience proc to update the "tclIndex" (controlled by	-index
	      switch)  and/or  "pkgIndex.tcl"  (controlled by -package switch)
	      file in the named directories based on  the  given  pattern  for
	      files.   It  defaults  to	 creating  the	"tclIndex" but not the
	      "pkgIndex.tcl" file, with the  directory	defaulting  to	[pwd].
	      The extension defaults to *.tcl, with *.[info sharelibextension]
	      added when -package is true.

       unalias cmd
	      unaliases command.

       what string
	      The what command will identify the word given in string  in  the
	      Tcl  environment	and  return a list of types that it was recog‐
	      nized as.	 Possible types are: alias, procedure, command,	 array
	      variable,	 scalar	 variable,  directory,	file, widget, and exe‐
	      cutable.	Used by procedures dump and which.

       which command
	      Like the which command of Unix shells, this will tell you	 if  a
	      particular  command  is known, and if so, whether it is internal
	      or external to the interpreter.  If it is	 an  internal  command
	      and  there is a slot in auto_index for it, it tells you the file
	      that auto_index would load.  This does not necessarily mean that
	      that  is	where  the  file  came from, but if it were not in the
	      interpreter previously, then  that  is  where  the  command  was
	      found.

       There  are  several procedures that I use as helpers that some may find
       helpful in there coding (i.e. expanding pathnames). Feel free  to  lift
       them from the code (but do assign proper attribution).

EXAMLPES
       Some examples of tkcon command line startup situations:

       megawish /usr/bin/tkcon -exec "" -root .tkcon mainfile.tcl

       Use  tkcon  as  a console for your megawish application.	 You can avoid
       starting the line with megawish if that is the default wish that	 TkCon
       would  use.   The  -root	 ensures that tkcon will not conflict with the
       application root window.

       tkcon -font "Courier 12" -load Tk

       Use the courier font for TkCon and always load Tk in slave interpreters
       at startup.

       tkcon -rcfile ~/.wishrc -color-bg white

       Use the ~/.wishrc file as the resource file, and a white background for
       TkCon's text widgets.

FILES
       TkCon will search for a resource file  in  "~/.tkconrc".	  TkCon	 never
       sources the "~/.wishrc" file.  The resource file is sourced by each new
       instance of the console.	 An  example  resource	file  is  provided  in
       tkconrc(5).

SEE ALSO
       dump(n), idebug(n), observe(n), text(n), tkcon(n), tkconrc(5)

KEYWORDS
       Tk, console

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) Jeffrey Hobbs (jeff at hobbs.org)

TkCon				      2.5			      tkcon(1)
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