treeview(n) BLT Built-In Commands treeview(n)______________________________________________________________________________NAMEtreeview - Create and manipulate hierarchical table widgets
_________________________________________________________________SYNOPSIStreeview pathName ?options?
DESCRIPTION
The treeview widget displays a tree of data with styles, tags, and data
sharing (via tree data objects).
INTRODUCTION
The treeview widget manages a collection of entries where each entry
contains a tree node plus added style and attribute information.
Entries are usually inserted into a treeview with a label-list to spec‐
ify the unique hierarchical position relative to root (or the -at
node); The tail of this label-list is unique within its hierarchical
level. If no label is given, the generated node-id is used as the
label. Labels provide a convenient way to index entries using the ->
notation. eg.
treeview .t
.t insert end
.t insert end X
.t insert end A {A a} {A b} B C
.t insert end a b c {c i} {c ii} -at root->B
set id [.t index root->B->c->i]
puts [.t get $id]; # outputs i
puts [.t get -full $id]; # outputs {B c i}
pack .t
COLUMN DATA
Column data can be stored within an entry using the -data option or
entry sub-commands, eg.
treeview .t
.t column insert end X Y Z
.t insert end A -data {X 1 Y 2}
.t insert end B -data {X 3 Y 4 Z 5}
.t entry conf root->B -data {X 5 Y 4 Z 3}
.t entry set root->A Z 3
.t entry incr root->B Y
pack .t
Labels can be created with auto-generated sequence numbers using an
empty string or a trailing #auto.
treeview .t
.t column insert end X
.t insert end {} -data {X 0}; # Label is "1"
.t insert end #auto -data {X 1}; # Label is "2"
.t insert end Foo#auto -data {X 2}; # Label is "Foo1"
pack .t
TREE DATA OBJECT
Node data in treeview is actually stored in a tree data object, which
separates data storage from widget appearance. The -tree option can be
used to explictly set a tree (externally created with the tree command)
thus giving access to trees more extensive data manipulation facili‐
ties, eg.
set t [tree create]
$t insert root -label A
$t insert root->A -label B -data {X 1}
treeview .t -tree $t
.t column insert end X
pack .t
A tree can also be attached to a treeview, eg.
set t [tree create]
$t attach [.t cget -tree]
set dump [$t dump root]
tree destroy $t
Note that when inserting data via the tree sub-commands, unique label
checking is not performed.
SYNTAXtreeview pathName ?option value?... The treeview command creates a new
window pathName and makes it into a treeview widget. At the time this
command is invoked, there must not exist a window named pathName, but
pathName's parent must exist. Additional options may be specified on
the command line or in the option database to configure aspects of the
widget such as its colors and font. See the configure operation below
for the exact details about what option and value pairs are valid.
If successful, treeview returns the path name of the widget. It also
creates a new Tcl command by the same name. You can use this command
to invoke various operations that query or modify the widget. The
operations available are described in the TREEVIEW OPERATIONS section.
Treeview displays nodes as row entries in the widget. Each entry has a
text label and icon. When a node has children, its entry is drawn with
a small button to the left of the label. Clicking the mouse over this
button opens or closes the node. When a node is open, its children are
exposed. When it is closed, the children and their descedants are hid‐
den. The button is normally a + or - symbol (ala Windows Explorer),
but can be replaced with a pair of Tk images (open and closed images).
If the node has data associated with it, they can be displayed in col‐
umns running vertically on either side the tree. You can control the
color, font, etc of each entry. Any entry label or data field can be
edited in-place.
IDS AND TAGS
Nodes can be inserted into a tree using the treeview widget
blt::treeview .t
set node [.t insert end "one"]
or tree command.
set tree [blt::tree create]
set node [$tree insert root -label "one"]
blt::treeview .t -tree $tree
In both cases, a number identifying the node is returned (the value of
$node). This serial number or id uniquely identifies the node. Please
note that you can't infer a location or position of a node from its id.
The only exception is that the root node is always id 0. Since nodes
may have the same labels or be moved within the tree, ids provide an
convenient way to identify nodes. If a tree is shared, the ids will be
the same regardless if you are using by the treeview widget or the tree
command. Ids are recycled only when all nodes are deleted.
A node may also have any number of tags associated with it. A tag is
just a string of characters, and it may take any form except that of an
integer. For example, "x123" is valid, but "123" isn't. The same tag
may be associated with many different nodes. This is typically done to
associate a group of nodes. Many operations in the treeview widget
take either node ids or tag names as arguments. Using a tag means
apply the operation to all nodes with that tag.
Commands that take a tagnode will also accept a list of zero or more
integer node numbers (node-list). A node-list consist of space sepa‐
rated integers, without leading spaces. Node lists can simplify the
use of iterating commands and are used widely in the tree command.
There are four built-in or psuedo tags:
all Applies to every node in the tree.
nonroot Applies to every node in the tree except the root
node.
rootchildren
Applies to every node in the tree whose parent is the
root node.
root Managed automatically by the tree object, root speci‐
fies the node that is currently set as the root node
for the tree.
Tags are shared between clients. This means for example that tags cre‐
ated by the tree command are available in the treeview widget.
SPECIAL NODE IDS
There are several special non-numeric ids. Special ids differ from
tags in that they are always translated to a single numeric node. They
also take precedence over tags. For example, you can't use a tag name
that is a special id. These ids are specific to the treeview widget.
active The node where the mouse pointer is currently located.
When a node is active, it is drawn using its active icon
(see the -activeicon option). The active id is changed
automatically by moving the mouse pointer over another
node or by using the entry activate operation. Note that
there can be only one active node at a time.
anchor The node representing the fixed end of the current
selection. The anchor is set by the selection anchor
operation.
bottom The last viewable node.
current The node where the mouse pointer is currently located.
But unlike active, this id changes while the selection
is dragged. It is used to determine the current node
during button drags.
down The next open node from the current focus. The down of
the last open node is the same.
end The last node at depth 1 in tree.
focus The node that currently has focus. When a node has
focus, it receives key events. To indicate focus, the
node is drawn with a dotted line around its label. You
can change the focus using the focus operation.
last Same as tail.
mark The node representing the non-fixed end of the current
selection. The mark is set by the selection mark opera‐
tion.
next The next open node from the current focus. But unlike
down, when the focus is on last open node, next wraps
around to the root node.
nextsibling The next sibling from the node with the current focus.
If the node is already the last sibling then it is the
nextsibling.
parent The parent of the node with the current focus. The par‐
ent of the root is also the root.
prev The last open node from the current focus. But unlike
up, when the focus is at root, last wraps around to the
last open node in the tree.
prevsibling The previous sibling from the node with the current
focus. If the node is already the first sibling then it
is the prevsibling.
root The root node. You can also use id 0 to indicate the
root.
tail The last node in the tree, viewable or not.
top The first node.
up The last open node (in depth-first order) from the cur‐
rent focus. The up of the root node (i.e. the root has
focus) is also the root.
view.top First node that's current visible in the widget.
view.bottom Last node that's current visible in the widget.
@x,y Indicates the node that covers the point in the treeview
window specified by x and y (in pixel coordinates). If
no part of the entryd covers that point, then the clos‐
est node to that point is used.
ID->LABEL->LABEL...
Lookup via node labels, eg. 0->Main->Users. Quotes can
be used around labels that use reserved words or contain
spaces, eg. 0->"Main"->'User Groups'. See the tree man
page for more details.
A node may be specified as an id or tag. If the specifier is an integer
then it is assumed to refer to the single node with that id. If the
specifier is not an integer, it's checked to see if it's a special id
(such as focus). Otherwise, it's assumed to be tag. Some operations
only operate on a single node at a time; if a tag refers to more than
one node, then an error is generated.
DATA FIELDS
Nodes in treeview can manage data fields associated with columns. Data
is displayed in columns running on either side of the displayed tree.
Any node that doesn't have a specific field will show as blank. Col‐
umns can (interactively) be resized, hidden, and, moved.
Nodes can contain disjoint data fields (they aren't required to set all
fields). And data manipulated via the tree command does not require an
associated treeview column at all.
ARRAY REFERENCES
Like tree, treeview supports accessing data sub-fields with an array
notation, eg.
treeview .t
.t col insert end A
.t insert end a -data {A "x 1 y 2 z 3"}
.t entry incr root->a A(x)
.t entry set root->a A(w) 0
.t entry unset root->a A(z)
Only the following treeview commmands support the array notation: entry
get, entry set, entry incr, entry unset, and find -column. See tree
for more complete support.
ENTRY BINDINGS
You can bind Tcl commands to be invoked when events occur on nodes
(much like Tk canvas items). You can bind a node using its id or its
bindtags. Bindtags are simply names that associate a binding with one
or more nodes. There is a built-in tag all that all node entries auto‐
matically have.
TREEVIEW OPERATIONS
The treeview operations are the invoked by specifying the widget's
pathname, the operation, and any arguments that pertain to that opera‐
tion. The general form is:
pathName operation ?arg arg ...?
Operation and the args determine the exact behavior of the command.
The following operation are available for treeview widgets:
pathName bbox ?-screen? tagOrId...
Returns a list of 4 numbers, representing a bounding box of
around the specified entries. The entries is given by one or
more tagOrId arguments. If the -screen flag is given, then the
x-y coordinates of the bounding box are returned as screen coor‐
dinates, not virtual coordinates. Virtual coordinates start from
0 from the root node and include the title. If the -world flag
is given, then the y coordinate the title height is added in.
The returned list contains the following values.
x X-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the bounding
box.
y Y-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the bounding
box.
width Width of the bounding box.
height Height of the bounding box.
pathName bind tagName ?sequence command?
Associates command with tagName such that whenever the event
sequence given by sequence occurs for a node with this tag, com‐
mand will be invoked. The syntax is similar to the bind command
except that it operates on treeview entries, rather than wid‐
gets. The tagName can be an entry or tag, or predefined tags
such as all, Entry or Button. See the bind manual entry for
complete details on sequence and the substitutions performed on
command before invoking it.
If all arguments are specified then a new binding is created,
replacing any existing binding for the same sequence and tag‐
Name. If the first character of command is + then command aug‐
ments an existing binding rather than replacing it. If no com‐
mand argument is provided then the command currently associated
with tagName and sequence (it's an error occurs if there's no
such binding) is returned. If both command and sequence are
missing then a list of all the event sequences for which bind‐
ings have been defined for tagName.
pathName button operation ?args?
This command is used to control the button selectors within a
treeview widget. It has several forms, depending on operation:
pathName button activate tagOrId
Designates the node given by tagOrId as active. When a
node is active it's entry is drawn using its active icon
(see the -activeicon option). Note that there can be
only one active entry at a time. The special id active
indicates the currently active node.
pathName button bind tagName ?sequence command?
Associates command with tagName such that whenever the
event sequence given by sequence occurs for an button of
a node entry with this tag, command will be invoked. The
syntax is similar to the bind command except that it
operates on treeview buttons, rather than widgets. See
the bind manual entry for complete details on sequence
and the substitutions performed on command before invok‐
ing it.
If all arguments are specified then a new binding is cre‐
ated, replacing any existing binding for the same
sequence and tagName. If the first character of command
is + then command augments an existing binding rather
than replacing it. If no command argument is provided
then the command currently associated with tagName and
sequence (it's an error occurs if there's no such bind‐
ing) is returned. If both command and sequence are miss‐
ing then a list of all the event sequences for which
bindings have been defined for tagName.
pathName button cget option
Returns the current value of the configuration option
given by option. Option may have any of the values
accepted by the configure operation described below.
pathName button configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
Query or modify the configuration options of the widget.
If no option is specified, returns a list describing all
of the available options for pathName (see Tk_Configure‐
Info for information on the format of this list). If
option is specified with no value, then the command
returns a list describing the one named option (this list
will be identical to the corresponding sublist of the
value returned if no option is specified). If one or
more option-value pairs are specified, then the command
modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s); in this case the command returns an empty
string. Option and value are described in the section
BUTTON OPTIONS below.
pathName cget option
Returns the current value of the configuration option given by
option. Option may have any of the values accepted by the con‐
figure operation described below.
pathName close ?-recurse? ?-trees? tagOrId...
Closes the node specified by tagOrId. In addition, if a Tcl
script was specified by the -closecommand option, it is invoked.
If the node is already closed, this command has no effect. If
the -recurse flag is present, each child node is recursively
closed. The -trees flag is like -recurse but operates only on
nodes with children, excluding the root.
pathName column operation ?args?
The following operations are available for treeview columns.
pathName column activate column
Sets the active column to column. Column is the name of
a column in the widget. When a column is active, it's
drawn using its -activetitlebackground and -activetitle‐
foreground options. If column is the "", then no column
will be active. If no column argument is provided, then
the name of the currently active column is returned.
pathName column bbox ?-visible? column entry
Returns a list of 4 numbers, representing a bounding box
of around the specified entries cell. Giving an entry of
-1 matches the title row. If -visible is given, the
width is constrained to not extend past the widgets dis‐
play.
pathName column bind column ?sequence command?
These deal with the title part of columns. Associates
command with column such that whenever the event sequence
given by sequence occurs for a column node entry with
this tag, command will be invoked. The syntax is similar
to the bind command except that it operates on treeview
colunns, rather than widgets. See the bind manual entry
for complete details on sequence and the substitutions
performed on command before invoking it.
pathName column cget name option
Returns the current value of the column configuration
option given by option for name. Name is the name of
column that corresponds to a data field. Option may have
any of the values accepted by the configure operation
described below.
pathName column configure name ?name ...? ?option? ?value option
value ...?
Query or modify the configuration options of one or more
columns name. Name is the name of the column correspond‐
ing to a data field. If no option is specified, returns
a list describing all of the available options for path‐
Name (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format
of this list). If option is specified with no value,
then the command returns a list describing the one named
option (this list will be identical to the corresponding
sublist of the value returned if no option is specified).
If one or more option-value pairs are specified, then the
command modifies the given widget option(s) to have the
given value(s); in this case the command returns an
empty string. Option and value are described in the sec‐
tion COLUMN OPTIONS below.
pathName column current
Get column currently under the mouse.
pathName column delete field ?field...?
Deletes one of more columns designated by field.
Requests to delete the tree column are silently ignored.
Note that this does not delete the data fields them‐
selves.
pathName column index index
Return the integer for index. May use "end" or "end-N".
pathName column insert position field ?field ...? ?options...?
Inserts one (or more) columns designated by field. A
column displays each entry node's data field using this
name. If the node doesn't define the given field, the
cell is left blank. Position indicates where in the list
of columns to add the new column. It may be either a
name, a number or end. If multiple column fields are
given, only the first can start with a dash. If field is
the empty string or #auto, a name is generated prefixed
by the string Col and a unique integer. If field ends
with #auto, the generated name uses it's prefix instead.
The returned values is the created column names. Note
that the tree column #0 is predefined and can not be
deleted.
pathName column invoke field
Invokes the Tcl command associated with the column field,
if there is one (using the column's -command option).
The command is ignored if the column's -state option set
to disabled.
pathName column isset ?startOrTag? ?end?
Returns list of data columns for elements in range actu‐
ally having data values set in them. One possible use
for this might be hiding columns which are empty. With
no arguments, checks only entries on the visible screen.
With one argument, checks all entries matching a tag or
id. With two arguments, checks all entries between start
and end range.
pathName column istree field
Return 1 if column is the tree column.
pathName column move name dest
Moves the column name to the destination position. Dest
is the offset, name of another column or a screen posi‐
tion in the form @x,y.
pathName column names ?-visible? ?PATTERN?
Returns a list of the names of all columns in the widget.
The list is ordered as the columns are drawn from left-
to-right. If -visible, then display only columns where
-hide is 0. A pattern may be specified to limit results.
pathName column nearest x ?y?
Returns the name of the column closest to the given X-Y
screen coordinate. If you provide a y argument (it's
optional), a name is returned only when if the point is
over a column's title.
pathName column offsets
Returns the starting offsets for each column.
pathName column resize op ...
Operations for resize where op is one of activate,
anchor, mark or set.
pathName column see ?-anchor anchor? field
Adjusts the view so that the column given by field is
visible in the widget window. The node's position on the
screen can be set using the -anchor flag. Its value is a
Tk anchor position: w, c, e.
pathName column values ?-visible? ?-default value? field ?start?
?end?
Returns a list of data values for a column. The -visible
flag excludes the values that are hidden or inside closed
subtrees. The root nodes does not get included when
-hideroot is true. The -default option specifies a value
to substitute for unset data column cells.
pathName configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
Query or modify the configuration options of the widget. If no
option is specified, returns a list describing all of the avail‐
able options for pathName (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information
on the format of this list). If option is specified with no
value, then the command returns a list describing the one named
option (this list will be identical to the corresponding sublist
of the value returned if no option is specified). If one or
more option-value pairs are specified, then the command modifies
the given widget option(s) to have the given value(s); in this
case the command returns an empty string. Option and value are
described in the section TREEVIEW OPTIONS below.
pathName curselection
Returns a list containing the ids of all of the entries that are
currently selected. If there are no entries selected, then the
empty string is returned.
pathName delete tagnode...
Deletes one or more entries given by tagnode and its children.
pathName edit ?-test? ?-root? ?-noscroll? ?-scroll? ?X Y?
Handle cell editing. The x,y coordinates are usually required,
except when using the scroll options.
-noscroll Disable scrolling. Useful when displaying an edit
subwindow.
-scroll Re-enable scrolling. Usually bound to a destroy event
of an edit subwindow.
-root Use root coordinates.
-test Test if edit is complete.
pathName entry operation ?args?
The following operations are available for treeview entries.
pathName entry activate tagOrId
Sets the active entry to the one specified by tagOrId.
When an entry is active it is drawn using its active icon
(see the -activeicon and -activeleaficon options). The
special id of the currently active node is active. Note
that there can be only one active node at a time and cur‐
rently icons must be the same size/shape as the back‐
grounds are not cleared. But bind can be used to over‐
come these limitations.
pathName entry cget option
Returns the current value of the configuration option
given by option. Option may have any of the values
accepted by the configure operation described below.
pathName entry children tagOrId ?first? ?last?
Returns a list of ids for the given range of children of
tagOrId. TagOrId is the id or tag of the node to be
examined. If only a first argument is present, then the
id of the that child at that numeric position is
returned. If both first and last arguments are given,
then the ids of all the children in that range are
returned. Otherwise the ids of all children are
returned.
pathName entry configure tagnode ?option? ?value option value
...?
Query or modify the configuration options of the widget.
If no option is specified, returns a list describing all
of the available options for tagnode (see Tk_Configure‐
Info for information on the format of this list). If
option is specified with no value, then the command
returns a list describing the one named option (this list
will be identical to the corresponding sublist of the
value returned if no option is specified). If one or
more option-value pairs are specified, then the command
modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s); in this case the command returns an empty
string. Option and value are described below:
pathName entry delete tagOrId ?first ?last?
Deletes the one or more children nodes of the parent
tagOrId. If first and last arguments are present, they
are positions designating a range of children nodes to be
deleted.
pathName entry depth tagOrId
Return tree depth of node where root is 0.
pathName entry down tagOrId
The next open node from the given node. The down of the
last open node is the same.
pathName entry exists tagOrId
Return 1 if entry exists.
pathName entry get tagOrId ?key? ?default?
Return a key-field value for an entry. When no key is
given, returns the values of all visible columns. If the
given key is undefined, return default if given, else
throw an error. Unlike entry set, the tree is accessed
directly so keys not having associated columns are sup‐
ported.
pathName entry incr tagOrId key ?amount?
Increment value by 1 or given amount and return the
value. The incr operation normally tries to use inte‐
gers, but uses doubles when one of value or amount is a
double. An array reference may also be used.
pathName entry isbefore tagOrId1 tagOrId2
Returns 1 if tagOrId1 is before tagOrId2 and 0 otherwise.
pathName entry ishidden tagOrId
Returns 1 if the node is currently hidden and 0 other‐
wise. A node is also hidden if any of its ancestor nodes
are closed or hidden.
pathName entry isleaf tagOrId
Returns 1 if the node is a leaf node.
pathName entry isopen tagOrId
Returns 1 if the node is currently open.
pathName entry isset tagOrId col
Return true if the entry sets a column-field (has a
value). The entry and column both must exist.
pathName entry isvisible tagOrId
Returns 1 if node is not hidden, inside a closed subtree.
pathName entry next tagOrId
The next open node from the given node. But unlike down,
when the focus is on last open node, next wraps around to
the root node.
pathName entry parent tagOrId
Returns parent of the given node.
pathName entry prev tagOrId
The last open node from the given node. But unlike up,
when the focus is at root, last wraps around to the last
open node in the tree.
pathName entry relabel tagOrId newLabel
Change the tree node label associated with an entry.
This sets the tree node label; ie. the value returned by
the get command. Note this is not the same thing as the
treeview entries -label option. Also, the -allowdupli‐
cates option must be enabled to use this command as no
duplicate checking will be performed.
pathName entry select tagOrId
Make the given node visible and give it the focus. When
in single selectmode, select it (calls ::blt::tv::MoveFo‐
cus)
pathName entry set tagOrId col ?value col value ...?
Get or set column-fields for an entry. Provides a simple
way to read or update fields from the -data option of an
entry. An array reference may also be used.
pathName entry sibling ?-before? tagOrId
The next/previous sibling from the given node. If the
node is already the last/first sibling then nothing is
returned.
pathName entry size -recurse tagOrId
Returns the number of children for parent node tagOrId.
If the -recurse flag is set, the number of all its
descendants is returned. The node itself is not counted.
pathName entry unset tagOrId col
Unset a column-field for an entry. An array reference
may also be used.
pathName entry up tagOrId
The last open node (in depth-first order) from the given
node. The up of the last node is itself.
pathName entry value tagOrId ?col?
Return the value for an entry column, or all visible col‐
umns if col not given. Unlike entry set, this gives
access to the formatted value from -formatcmd (if there
was one).
pathName find ?flags? first last
Finds for all entries matching the criteria given by flags. A
list of ids for all matching nodes is returned. First and last
are ids designating the range of the search in depth-first
order. If last is before first, then nodes are searched in
reverse order. The valid flags are:
-addtag NAME
Add tag to each matching entry. The tag will be cre‐
ated even if no nodes are tagged.
-cmdargs columns
Specify columns whose values are to be appended to
-command.
-command command
Invoke command for each matching node. Before command
is invoked, the id of the node is appended. If command
generates an error, processing stops and the find
operation returns an error. If command returns
return, then the returned integer is used to indicate
1 for match or 0 for mismatch.
-column col
Match name against value of given column. An array
reference may also be used. This option must be used
in conjunction with -name and may not be used with
-usepath.
-count Just return the number of matches.
-depth number
Entry must be at depth number.
-exact Patterns must match exactly. The is the default.
-exec string
Specifies a Tcl script to be evaluated for each match‐
ing node. If -var was also specified, that variable
is set with the value of the node id before each eval‐
uation. Otherwise, percent sustitutions are per‐
formed: note this is much less efficient than using
either -var or -command
The result of each eval gets appended to the return
list, unless the script issues a CONTINUE, in which
case that node is skipped.
The available percent substitutions on string are:
%# The id of the node.
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%V The current value (the node name, node label or
column value).
%F Like %V, but returns the on-screen value (from
-formatcmd).
%C The current column.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-glob Use global pattern matching. Matching is done in a
fashion similar to that used by string match.
-invert Invert the meaning of the pattern match for -name.
-isclosed Include only entries that are closed.
-isempty Only match nodes where the specified -column key value
was unset.
-ishidden Include only entries that are hidden, either because
the entry has set -hide, or is has style that is hid‐
den. The root node is not included.
-isleaf Entry must not have child nodes.
-ismapped Include only entries that are currently all or partly
drawn on screen. The root node is not included.
-isopen Include only entries that are opened.
-istree Entry must have child nodes.
-limit number
Stop searching after number matches.
-maxdepth Entry must be at depth or lower.
-mindepth Entry must be at depth or higher.
-name pattern
Specifies pattern to match against node names.
-nocase Comparisison is ignores case. For -regexp, the target
string gets lower cased (but not the pattern).
-notop Exclude the -top or starting node.
-regexp Use regular expression pattern matching (i.e. the same
as implemented by the regexp command).
-reldepth Change the meaning of -depth, -mindepth and -maxdepth
to be relative to the -top node.
-return col
Instead of the node id, return data value of named
column. If col starts with a %, performs percent sub‐
stitution as per -command. Note that a percent sub‐
stitution longer than 2 chars will append values as
list elements.
-top node Search is only at node and it's descendants. The
default is the root node.
-useformat
Compare pattern using -formatcmd value (if there is
one) instead key data value.
-uselabel Compare pattern using label (if there is one) instead
last component of path.
-usepath Compare pattern using the full path name.
-userow Compare pattern using the node value plus the values
of all keys in the row. If used with -visible, only
the visible column keys are used.
-visible Exclude values that are hidden or inside closed sub‐
trees. eg. The root node is excluded if -hideroot is
true.
-withouttag NAME
Match entries without tag.
-withtag NAME
Match entries with tag.
-var variable
A variable to set with the node id before each itera‐
tion of the -exec script.
-option name value
Specifies an option name and value to match against
the node entry's configuration option.
-- Indicates the end of flags.
pathName focus ?tagOrId?
Get or set the focus to the node given by tagOrId. When a node
has focus, it can receive keyboard events. The special id focus
designates the node that currently has focus.
pathName get ?-full? ?-labels? tagnode tagnode...
Translates one or more ids to their node entry names. It
returns a list of names for all the ids specified. If the -full
flag is set, then the full pathnames are returned. If the
-labels flag is set, then the full pathnames using labels are
returned.
Note: Except when a called with a single node id (ie. an inte‐
ger), the result will be a list (or list of lists when -separa‐
tor isn't set).
pathName hide ?flags? tagOrId...
Hides all nodes matching the criteria given by flags. If no
tagOrId are given, traverses entire tree. The valid flags are
described below:
-column col
Match name against value of given column. Must be
used with -name and can not use -usepath.
-depth number
Entry must be at depth number.
-exact Match patterns exactly. The is the default.
-glob Use global pattern matching. Matching is done in a
fashion similar to that used by string match.
-invert Invert the meaning of the pattern match for -name or
-option.
-maxdepth Entry must be at depth or lower.
-mindepth Entry must be at depth or higher.
-name pattern
Specifies pattern to match against node names.
-nocase Ignore case in match.
-option name value
Specifies an option name and value to match against
the node entry's configuration option.
-regexp Use regular expression pattern matching (i.e. the same
as implemented by the regexp command).
-uselabel Specifies that the -name pattern is to match the
label.
-usepath Specifies that the -name pattern is to match the full
path.
-withouttag NAME
Match entries with tag.
-withtag NAME
Match entries with tag.
-- Indicates the end of flags.
pathName index ?-at tagOrId? ?-path? ?-quiet? string
Returns the id of the node specified by string. String may be a
tag or node id. Some special ids are normally relative to the
node that has focus but the -at option can be used to change
this. The -path flag does a lookup using String as a path rela‐
tive the tree root (unless the -at option is given). The the
-quiet flag is given, lookup failures quietly return the empty
string.
pathName insert position ?path? ?path? ... ?options...?
Inserts one or more nodes at child position (a number or end) in
the parent node. The parent node is either root or the value
given by -at. The returned value is list of ids for the new
entries. Only the first path may start with a dash.
Path is the pathname of the new node. By default, pathnames are
a Tcl list (each element is a path component) however the -sepa‐
rator option can be used to change this. Pathnames are normally
relative to the root, but the -at switch lets you select a dif‐
ferent parent node. If path is ommitted, it defaults to #auto.
A path name of #auto will generate a name. This attempts to use
the tree node name as the path name.
If the last component of a path name ends in #auto, the path is
generated using the string prefix (before #auto) followed by a
sequential number unique within the parent, eg. .t insert end
{users u#auto}.
Note that all ancestors of the new node must already exist,
unless the -autocreate option is set. It is also an error if a
node already exists, unless the -allowduplicates option is set.
For large flat trees setting -allowduplicates to true can
greatly speedup loading #auto as it avoids checking overhead.
This is the fastest way to bulk load large numbers of nodes
(next to using -tree).
The option arguments may be any of the values accepted by entry
configure as described in the ENTRY OPTIONS section below, or
any unabbreviated insert-option. Note that for multi-node
inserts insert-options will apply to all following nodes, and
only the first path can start with a dash.
The valid insert-options are:
-at nodeid
Specify the parent node to insert entries into. The
default is root.
-node num
The -node switch lets you specify a tree node number id
directly instead of having one generating automatically.
For multi-node inserts, the node number gets incre‐
mented.
-styles list
The -styles switch specifies a list of column/stylename
pairs to set for entries having a -data option.
-tags list
The -tags switch specifies a list of tags to add to the
new entries.
pathName move tagnode how destId
Moves the node(s) given by tagnode to the destination node. The
node can not be an ancestor of the destination. DestId is the
id of the destination node and can not be the root of the tree.
In conjunction with how, it describes how the move is performed.
before Moves the node before the destination node.
after Moves the node after the destination node.
into Moves the node to the end of the destination's list of
children.
pathName nearest ?-root? ?-strict? x y ?varName?
Returns the id of the node entry closest to the given X-Y screen
coordinate. If the coordinate is not directly over any node,
then the nearest node is returned. If the argument varName is
present, this is a Tcl variable that is set to either button,
icon, label, title, titlelabel, titleicon, datalabel, dataicon,
or "" depending what part of the entry the coordinate lies. The
-root option subtracts the windows root from the coordinates.
The -strict option fails the match if not directly over a node,
eg. in the title or past end of last row.
pathName open ?-recurse? ?-parent? ?-trees? tagnode...
Opens the one or more nodes specified by tagnode. If a node is
not already open, the Tcl script specified by the -opencommand
option is invoked. If the -recurse flag is present, then each
descendant is recursively opened. The -trees flag is like
-recurse but operates only on nodes with children. The -parent
flag ensures visibility by opening all parent nodes.
pathName range ?-open? first last
Returns the ids in depth-first order of the nodes between the
first and last ids. If the -open flag is present, it indicates
to consider only open nodes. If last is before first, then the
ids are returned in reverse order.
pathName scan option args
This command implements scanning. It has two forms, depending
on option:
pathName scan mark x y
Records x and y and the current view in the treeview win‐
dow; used in conjunction with later scan dragto com‐
mands. Typically this command is associated with a mouse
button press in the widget. It returns an empty string.
pathName scan dragto x y.
Computes the difference between its x and y arguments and
the x and y arguments to the last scan mark command for
the widget. It then adjusts the view by 10 times the
difference in coordinates. This command is typically
associated with mouse motion events in the widget, to
produce the effect of dragging the list at high speed
through the window. The return value is an empty string.
pathName see ?-anchor anchor? tagOrId
Adjusts the view of entries so that the node given by tagOrId is
visible in the widget window. It is an error if tagOrId is a
tag that refers to more than one node. The node's position on
the screen can be set using the -anchor flag. Its value is w,
but can be any one of the Tk anchor positions.
pathName selection option arg
This command is used to adjust the selection within a treeview
widget. It has several forms, depending on option:
pathName selection anchor ?tagOrId? ?column?
Sets the selection anchor to the node given by tagOrId.
If tagOrId refers to a non-existent node, then the clos‐
est node is used. The selection anchor is the end of the
selection that is fixed while dragging out a selection
with the mouse. The special id anchor may be used to
refer to the anchor node. With no arguments, returns
anchor entry and column if any.
pathName selection cells
Returns pairs of nodes and columns for all selected
cells. The -selectmode must be cell or multicell.
pathName selection clear first ?last? ?column?
Removes the entries between first and last (inclusive)
from the selection. Both first and last are ids repre‐
senting a range of entries. If last isn't given, then
only first is deselected. Entries outside the selection
are not affected.
pathName selection clearall
Clears the entire selection.
pathName selection mark tagOrId ?column?
Sets the selection mark to the node given by tagOrId.
This causes the range of entries between the anchor and
the mark to be temporarily added to the selection. The
selection mark is the end of the selection that is fixed
while dragging out a selection with the mouse. The spe‐
cial id mark may be used to refer to the current mark
node. If tagOrId refers to a non-existent node, then the
mark is ignored. Resetting the mark will unselect the
previous range. Setting the anchor finalizes the range.
pathName selection includes tagOrId ?column?
Returns 1 if the node given by tagOrId is currently
selected, 0 if it isn't.
pathName selection present
Returns 1 if any nodes are currently selected and 0 oth‐
erwise.
pathName selection set first ?last? ?column?
Selects all of the nodes in the range between first and
last, inclusive, without affecting the selection state of
nodes outside that range.
pathName selection toggle first ?last? ?column?
Selects/deselects nodes in the range between first and
last, inclusive, from the selection. If a node is cur‐
rently selected, it becomes deselected, and visa versa.
pathName show ?flags? tagOrId...
Un-hide nodes matching the criteria given by flags. If no
tagOrId are given, traverses entire tree. The flags are the
same as for the hide command.
pathName sort ?operation? args...
pathName sort auto ?boolean
Turns on/off automatic sorting of node entries. If bool‐
ean is true, entries will be automatically sorted as they
are opened, closed, inserted, or deleted. If no boolean
argument is provided, the current state is returned.
pathName sort cget option
Returns the current value of the configuration option
given by option. Option may have any of the values
accepted by the configure operation described below.
pathName sort configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
Query or modify the sorting configuration options of the
widget. If no option is specified, returns a list
describing all of the available options for pathName (see
Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format of this
list). If option is specified with no value, then the
command returns a list describing the one named option
(this list will be identical to the corresponding sublist
of the value returned if no option is specified). If one
or more option-value pairs are specified, then the com‐
mand modifies the given sorting option(s) to have the
given value(s); in this case the command returns an
empty string. Option and value are described below:
-column string
Specifies the column to sort. Entries in the wid‐
get are rearranged according to this column. If
column is "" then no sort is performed.
-command string
Specifies a Tcl procedure to be called when sort‐
ing nodes. The procedure is called with 6 argu‐
ments: the pathname of the widget, the node id of
two entries, the column key being sorted and the
label values of the two entries. The procedure
returns 1 if the first node is greater than the
second, -1 is the second is greater, and 0 if
equal.
-decreasing boolean
Indicates to sort in ascending/descending order.
If boolean is true, then the entries as in
descending order. The default is no.
-mode string
Specifies how to compare entries when sorting.
String may be one of the following:
-setflat bool
Used by SortColumn to remember if tree was forced
to flat by a sort.
ascii Use string comparison based upon
the ASCII collation order.
dictionary Use dictionary-style comparison.
This is the same as ascii except
(a) case is ignored except as a
tie-breaker and (b) if two strings
contain embedded numbers, the num‐
bers compare as integers, not char‐
acters. For example, "bigBoy"
sorts between "bigbang" and "big‐
boy", and "x10y" sorts between
"x9y" and "x11y".
integer Compares fields as integers.
real Compares fields as floating point
numbers.
command Use the Tcl proc specified by the
-command option to compare entries
when sorting. If no command is
specified, the sort reverts to dic‐
tionary sorting.
pathName sort once ?flags? tagOrId...
Sorts the children for each entries specified by tagOrId.
By default, entries are sorted by name, but you can spec‐
ify a Tcl proc to do your own comparisons.
-recurse Recursively sort the entire branch, not
just the children.
pathName style operation ?args?
Styles control how data is to be rendered by the widget. They
are created with the create subcommands (described below) A
default style name text is builtin. It is of type textbox and
is used as the default style for columns. Styles may also be
applied to entries, individual cells or widget options. For
example, the -altstyle option applies a style to every second
visible row entry while the -levelstyles option can specify a
different style for each node level.
The following operations are available for treeview styles.
pathName style activate ?entry? ?column?
Get or sets a particular cell as state to active. With
two arguments sets the current cell to active. With no
arguments returns the active cell. With one argument
whose entry is 0, sets no cell to active.
pathName style cget stylename option
Returns the current value of the configuration option
given by option. Option may have any of the values
accepted by the configure operation described below.
pathName style configure ?stylename option? ?value option value
...?
Query or modify the configuration options of the widget.
If no option is specified, returns a list describing all
of the available options for pathName (see Tk_Configure‐
Info for information on the format of this list). If
option is specified with no value, then the command
returns a list describing the one named option (this list
will be identical to the corresponding sublist of the
value returned if no option is specified). If one or
more option-value pairs are specified, then the command
modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s); in this case the command returns an empty
string. Option and value are described below:
pathName style create ...?
Create a named style. For a full list of style options,
see the section STYLE OPTIONS below.
pathName style create barbox stylename ?option value
option value ...?
A barbox displays numeric data plus a progressbar.
pathName style create checkbox stylename ?option value
option value ...?
A checkbox style displays boolean or 2-valued
data.
pathName style create combobox stylename ?option value
option value ...?
A combobox style displays multi-valued data.
pathName style create textbox stylename ?option value
option value ...?
A textbox style displays general text data.
pathName style create windowbox ?stylename? ?option value
option value ...?
The special style windowbox suports embedding sub‐
windows within data cells.
pathName style find stylename ?column? ?node? ...
Get all entries with the given style for a given column
in the given nodes. When no column is given, looks in
entry and data columns. Duplicates are not eliminated.
cell.
pathName style forget stylename ...
Eliminates one or more style names whose reference count
have reached zero (i.e. nothing is using it). Requests
to delete styles that are still in use are quietly
ignored. Note that the reference count of style text is
always greater than zero.
pathName style get column tagorid
Return the style(s) for column and nodes. cell.
pathName style highlight stylename ?on|off?
Turns on/off highlighting for a particular style. Used
primarily for columns.
pathName style names
Lists the names of all the current styles in the treeview
widget. %.TP %pathName style priority column node %Get
the priority style for the given cell.
pathName style set stylename column node ...
Sets a style for a given column for all the ids given.
If column is the tree, sets the entry style, otherwise
sets the style in the data column, thus setting the style
for a single cell in an entry. The style name may be an
empty string to unset the style. Cells that do not have
a value may not have a style set and so are silently
ignored. The number of cells that actually get set with
a style is returned.
pathName style slaves ?-col col? ?-id node? ?-style styleName?
?-visible bool? ?-info path?
With no arguments, lists all embedded window slaves. The
-col argument shows only windows in the given column.
The -id argument shows only windows for the given entry.
The -style argument shows only windows with the given
style. The -visible argument shows only windows that are
visible or invisible. The -info argument dumps all
information for a single window.
pathName style type ?name? ?newtype?
With no arguments, return list of all available styles.
With one argument, return the style type of name. With
two arguments, change the style type of name to newtype,
and reset all style options back to the defaults.
pathName style use stylename
Return the use count for a style. Note: in order to
remove a style with style forget, this count must be 0.
pathName tag operation args
Tags are a general means of selecting and marking nodes in the
tree. A tag is just a string of characters, and it may take any
form except that of an integer. The same tag may be associated
with many different nodes.
Both operation and its arguments determine the exact behavior of
the command. The operations available for tags are listed
below.
pathName tag add string ?id...?
Adds the tag string to one of more entries. If no nodes
are given, just creates the tag.
pathName tag delete string tagnode...
Deletes the tag string from one or more entries.
treeName tag exists string ?id?
If an id is given, return 1 (or 0) if entry has (or
hasn't) the tag. Otherwise, returns 1 if at least one
entry has tag string.
pathName tag forget string
Removes the tag string from all entries. It's not an
error if no entries are tagged as string.
pathName tag names ?id?
Returns a list of tags used. If an id argument is
present, only those tags used by the node designated by
id are returned.
pathName tag nodes name ?name ...?
Returns a list of ids that have any of the name tags. If
no node is tagged as name, then an empty list is
returned.
pathName toggle tagnode
Opens or closes the node given by tagOrId. If the corresponding
-opencommand or -closecommand option is set, then that command
is also invoked.
pathName xview args
This command is used to query and change the horizontal position
of the information in the widget's window. It can take any of
the following forms:
pathName xview
Returns a list containing two elements. Each element is
a real fraction between 0 and 1; together they describe
the horizontal span that is visible in the window. For
example, if the first element is .2 and the second ele‐
ment is .6, 20% of the treeview widget's text is off-
screen to the left, the middle 40% is visible in the win‐
dow, and 40% of the text is off-screen to the right.
These are the same values passed to scrollbars via the
-xscrollcommand option.
pathName xview tagOrId
Adjusts the view in the window so that the character
position given by tagOrId is displayed at the left edge
of the window. Character positions are defined by the
width of the character 0.
pathName xview moveto fraction
Adjusts the view in the window so that fraction of the
total width of the treeview widget's text is off-screen
to the left. fraction must be a fraction between 0 and
1.
pathName xview scroll number what
This command shifts the view in the window left or right
according to number and what. Number must be an integer.
What must be either units or pages or an abbreviation of
one of these. If what is units, the view adjusts left or
right by number character units (the width of the 0 char‐
acter) on the display; if it is pages then the view
adjusts by number screenfuls. If number is negative then
characters farther to the left become visible; if it is
positive then characters farther to the right become vis‐
ible.
pathName yview ?args?
This command is used to query and change the vertical position
of the text in the widget's window. It can take any of the fol‐
lowing forms:
pathName yview
Returns a list containing two elements, both of which are
real fractions between 0 and 1. The first element gives
the position of the node at the top of the window, rela‐
tive to the widget as a whole (0.5 means it is halfway
through the treeview window, for example). The second
element gives the position of the node just after the
last one in the window, relative to the widget as a
whole. These are the same values passed to scrollbars
via the -yscrollcommand option.
pathName yview tagOrId
Adjusts the view in the window so that the node given by
tagOrId is displayed at the top of the window.
pathName yview moveto fraction
Adjusts the view in the window so that the node given by
fraction appears at the top of the window. Fraction is a
fraction between 0 and 1; 0 indicates the first node,
0.33 indicates the node one-third the way through the
treeview widget, and so on.
pathName yview scroll number what
This command adjusts the view in the window up or down
according to number and what. Number must be an integer.
What must be either units or pages. If what is units,
the view adjusts up or down by number lines; if it is
pages then the view adjusts by number screenfuls. If
number is negative then earlier nodes become visible; if
it is positive then later nodes become visible.
TREEVIEW EDITING
A column of data is editable when its -edit option is set to True For
column 0, edit changes an entries -label option. For all other col‐
umns, edit will update the -data fields. Tree data traces can also be
used for edit control. Most of the following applies to textbox
styles. However, combobox and checkbox also generate <<TreeViewEdit‐
Start/End>> events while barbox and windowbox are not editable.
Text editing is aborted with <Escape> and finished with <Return>. A
newline may be inserted with a <Control-r>. Native Tk widgets are now
used for builtin editing, using the path $w.edit. By default an entry
widget will be used, however, column editing options can be changed
via -editopts and -validatecmd. Moreover, columns with a combobox style
can provide popup list of options in a listbox using the following
style options: -choices, -choicecmd, -choicekey, -choiceicons Two vir‐
tual events can be used to gain control the during edit: <<TreeViewEd‐
itStart>> and <<TreeViewEditEnd>>. The column index is passed in %x,
and the entry-row index is passed in %y. eg.
treeview .t
bind .t <<TreeViewEditStart>> {EditStart %W %x %y}
bind .t <<TreeViewEditEnd>> {EditEnd %W %x %y}
These gain control at the start and end of editing respectively, and
are general alternatives to -editopts -startcmd and -endcmd. For fur‐
ther details see blt::tv::EditCell in $blt_library/treeview.tcl.
TREEVIEW OPTIONS
In addition to the configure operation, widget configuration options
may also be set by the Tk option command. The class resource name is
TreeView.
option add *TreeView.Foreground white
option add *TreeView.Background blue
The following widget options are available:
-activeicons images
Specifies images to be displayed for an entry's icon when it is
active. Images is a list of two Tk images: the first image is
displayed when the node is open, the second when it is closed.
-activeleaficons images
Specifies images to be displayed for an leaf entry's icon when
it is active. Images is a list of two Tk images: the first image
is displayed when the node is open, the second when it is
closed.
-allowduplicates boolean
If boolean is true, allow nodes with duplicate pathnames when
inserting new nodes. Otherwise flag an error. The default is
no.
-altstyle stylename
Set a style to use on every other row. This provides a simple
way to implement alternating row colors without explicitly set‐
ting entry options. Note -altstyle has limitations. Mostly it
is used for setting the background, foreground and tile. Cur‐
rently the font will not be used in height sizing, and the icon
is ignored.
-autocreate boolean
If boolean is true, automatically create missing ancestor nodes
when inserting new nodes. Otherwise flag an error. The default
is no.
-background color
Sets the background color of the widget. The default is white.
-borderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the 3-D border around the outside edge of the
widget. The -relief option determines if the border is to be
drawn. The default is 2.
-button string
Indicates whether a entries should display button. If set to
anything other than the default of auto, buttons will not be
displayed.
-closecommand string
Specifies a Tcl script to be invoked when a node is closed. You
can overrider this for individual entries using the entry's
-closecommand option. The default is "". Percent substitutions
are performed on string before it is executed. The following
substitutions are valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%# The id of the node.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-columnshowhighlight bool
Enable display highlight color when column activated. Default
is false.
-cursor cursor
Specifies the widget's cursor. The default cursor is "".
-dashes number
Sets the dash style of the horizontal and vertical lines drawn
connecting entries. Number is the length in pixels of the dashes
and gaps in the line. If number is 0, solid lines will be drawn.
The default is 1 (dotted).
-emptystyle stylename
Set a style to be used for empty cells.
-entryshowhighlight bool
Enable display highlight color when entry activated. Default is
false.
-exportselection boolean
Indicates if the selection is exported. If the widget is
exporting its selection then it will observe the standard X11
protocols for handling the selection. Selections are available
as type STRING; the value of the selection will be the label of
the selected nodes, separated by newlines. The default is no.
-fillnull boolean
Indicates that empty data columns are to be drawn anyways, and
to apply the -nullstyle if defined. Turning this off will leave
unsightly gaps where attributes (eg. background and underline)
were normally expected to be displayed. The default is yes.
-flat boolean
Indicates whether to display the tree as a flattened list. If
boolean is true, then the hierarchy will be a list of full paths
for the nodes. Hide and show are not supported in flat mode.
This option also has affect on sorting. See the sort command
for more information. The default is no.
-focusdashes dashList
Sets the dash style of the outline rectangle drawn around the
entry label of the node that current has focus. Number is the
length in pixels of the dashes and gaps in the line. If number
is 0, a solid line will be drawn. The default is 1.
-focusforeground color
Sets the color of the focus rectangle. The default is black.
-focusheight value
Set the height in pixels to reserve for focus highlighting above
and below the line. The default is 1, but setting this to 0
will result in a more compact display.
-font fontName
Specifies the font to use for text. The default is TkDefault‐
Font.
-foreground color
Sets the text color of entry labels. You can override this for
individual entries with the entry's -foreground configuration
option. The default is black.
-height pixels
Specifies the requested height of widget. The default is 400.
-formatcmd scriptcmd
Command called to format the displayed data value. Percent sub‐
stitutions are performed on scriptcmd as per find -exec. The
called command returns the value to be displayed. This may be
overridden by column or style -formatcmd. For the tree column,
has no effect when using -showfull with -flat.
-hidedataicons boolean
If boolean is true, it indicates that data column icons (set via
styles) should not be displayed. The default is no.
-hidedatatext boolean
If boolean is true, it indicates that that data column text
should not be displayed. The default is no.
-hideicons boolean
If boolean is true, it indicates that tree column icons should
not be displayed. The default is no.
-hideleaves boolean
If boolean is true, it indicates that no leaves should be dis‐
played. The default is no.
-hideroot boolean
If boolean is true, it indicates that no entry for the root node
should be displayed. The default is no.
-highlightbackground color
Specifies the normal color of the traversal highlight region
when the widget does not have the input focus.
-highlightcolor color
Specifies the color of the traversal highlight rectangle when
the widget has the input focus. The default is black.
-highlightthickness pixels
Specifies the width of the highlight rectangle indicating when
the widget has input focus. The value may have any of the forms
acceptable to Tk_GetPixels. If the value is zero, no focus
highlight will be displayed. The default is 2.
-icons images
Specifies images for the entry's icon. Images is a list of two
Tk images: the first image is displayed when the node is open,
the second when it is closed.
-imagecmd scriptcmd
Specifies a command to call the first time an image is displayed
for any image used in the -images, -*icon, and -*icons options.
Percent substitutions is performed on scriptcmd as per find
-exec, with the image name being used as the value (%V). The
called command can either modify the image or set a new icon.
The main use of -imagecmd is to perform image loading on demand
as they become visible for the first time. To use it, an icon
option must be set with a placeholder image. When this becomes
visible the first time, the callback will replaces it with a
real image. The callback may also add tags, styles or even
dynamically load data, eg.
proc ICMD {w id col img} {
$w entry conf $id -icon blt::tv::normalFile
#$img conf -file [GetFile $id $col]
$w tag add addimg $id
}
pack [treeview .t -imagecmd {ICMD %W %# %C %V}]
foreach i {A B C} {
.t insert end $i -icons [image create photo]
}
-inlinedata bool
Enables that data column values that start with a @ and are a
list of length 2, are to be interpreted as an inline style or
image name. If value is the name of an image, a style is cre‐
ated using the name of image with -icon set to that image. A
style is applied to the cell in the manner of style set.
Default is true.
-insertfirstnum
Upon inserts use forward search of tree label for num elements,
then fall back to a reverse search. The default is 1, which pro‐
vides for very fast insertions at the begining or near the end
of really long trees. Set to -1 for forward search only, for
example, if using -allowduplicates.
-leaficons images
Specifies images for a leaf entry's icons. Images is a list of
two Tk images: the first image is displayed when the node is
open, the second when it is closed.
-levelpad pixels
Indentation to add when displaying sub-tree levels.
-levelstyles stylenames
Set a list of styles to use for entries at a given level. The
first style is used for entries at level 1, the second for level
2, etc. This provides a simple way to specify colors for
entries at a given level without explicitly setting entry
options.
-linecolor color
Sets the color of the connecting lines drawn between entries.
The default is black.
-linespacing pixels
Sets the number of pixels spacing between entries. The default
is 0.
-linewidth pixels
Set the width of the lines drawn connecting entries. If pixels
is 0, no vertical or horizontal lines are drawn. The default is
1.
-minheight pixels
Set the minimum height for entries. Default is 0.
-nextautonum
For inserts at the root node, the start number for the next
#auto insert. This is automatically incremented at each insert
which speeds up bulk #auto inserts.
-nextsubautonum
For inserts not into the root node, the number the next child
#auto insert starts it's search from. The default is 1.
-newtags boolean
If boolean is true, when sharing a tree object (see the -tree
option), don't share its tags too. The default is 0.
-noautocloseleaf boolean
If boolean is true, then opening a leaf node will leave it in
open mode. The default is false, which automatically sets the
mode of a leaf node back to closed without invoking -closecom‐
mand.
-nofocusselectbackground color
Background select color when focus lost.
-nofocusselectforeground color
Foreground select color when focus lost.
-openanchor string
When a node with children is opened, defines the -anchor used to
the see sub-command. Must be one of: n c s. The default is c.
-opencommand string
Specifies a Tcl script to be invoked when a node is open. You
can override this for individual entries with the entry's -open‐
command configuration option. The default is "". Percent sub‐
stitutions are performed on string before it is executed. The
following substitutions are valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%# The id of the node.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-padx pixels
Set the padding on left and right of widget.
-pady pixels
Set the padding on top and bottom of widget.
-relief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect for the widget. Relief specifies how
the treeview widget should appear relative to widget it is
packed into; for example, raised means the treeview widget
should appear to protrude. The default is sunken.
-resizecursor string
Cursor to use on resize.
-rootnode num
Specifiy the node number that is to be the root. This allows a
subtree to appear as the root. Multiple treeviews may share a
tree with different root nodes, and thus supporting subviews.
Default is 0.
-scrollmode mode
Specifies the style of scrolling to be used. There are three
different modes of scrolling: listbox, canvas, and hierbox. In
listbox mode, the last entry can always be scrolled to the top
of the widget. In hierbox mode, the last entry is always drawn
at the bottom of the widget. The default is hierbox.
listbox Like the listbox widget, the last entry can always be
scrolled to the top of the widget window. This allows
the scrollbar thumb to shrink as the last entry is
scrolled upward.
hierbox Like the hierbox widget, the last entry can only be
viewed at the bottom of the widget window. The
scrollbar stays a constant size.
canvas Like the canvas widget, the entries are bound within
the scrolling area.
-scrolltile bool
Specifies if tiling should scroll with widget. The default is
false.
-selectbackground color
Sets the background color selected node entries. The default is
#ffffea.
-selectborderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the raised 3-D border drawn around the labels
of selected entries. The default is 0.
-selectcommand string
Specifies a Tcl script to invoked when the set of selected nodes
changes. The default is "".
-selectforeground color
Sets the color of the labels of selected node entries while the
widget has focus. The default is black.
-selectmode mode
Specifies the selection mode. If mode is single, only one node
can be selected at a time. If multiple more than one node can
be selected. If none no selection is displayed. If cell or
multicell then selection is for cells rather than whole nodes
(rows). The default is single.
-selectrelief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect of the selected text in the edit win‐
dow. Relief indicates how the text should appear relative to
the edit window; for example, raised means the text should
appear to protrude. The default is flat.
-selecttile image
Set a tile background image to use for selection.
-separator string
Specifies the character sequence to use when spliting the path
components. The separator may be several characters wide (such
as "::") Consecutive separators in a pathname are treated as
one. If string is the empty string, the pathnames are Tcl
lists. If string is the none, no splitting will is done. Each
element is a path component. The default is "".
-showfull boolean
Show full path name when in -flat mode. The default is true.
-showtitles boolean
If boolean is false, column titles are not be displayed. The
default is yes.
-sortselection boolean
If boolean is true, nodes in the selection are ordered as they
are currently displayed (depth-first or sorted), not in the
order they were selected. The default is no.
-stylecommand string
Specifies a Tcl command to handle references to unknown styles.
The call performs the same substitutions as the -exec option in
the find command, except string is used for %V. The called com‐
mand is expected to create the style. The default values is "%W
style create textbox %V".
Dynamic creation is performed for any style used in the config‐
ure subcommands. It also handles inline data of the form for
the image passed after the @ sign (see the -inlinedata option).
-substyle stylename
Set a style for use with the -sublabel. Note: you can hide all
sublabels by using a style with the -hide option set.
-takefocus focus
Provides information used when moving the focus from window to
window via keyboard traversal (e.g., Tab and Shift-Tab). If
focus is 0, this means that this window should be skipped
entirely during keyboard traversal. 1 means that the this win‐
dow should always receive the input focus. An empty value means
that the traversal scripts make the decision whether to focus on
the window. The default is "1".
-tile image
Set background tile image.
-titlefont font
Font to use for titles.
-titlepad N
Pad to add above and below title.
-tree tree
Use an externally created data tree object. Using a tree com‐
mand facilitates data access, tracing, and loading/saving. eg.
set t [tree create]
set n 0
while {[incr n]<30000} {
$t insert end -data {A 0 B 0}
}
pack [treeview .tv -tree $t]
.tv column insert end A B
-trim string
Specifies a string leading characters to trim from entry path‐
names before parsing. This only makes sense if the -separator
is also set. The default is "".
-underline height
Draw an underline of the given height below each entry across
its entire width. Use in conjunction with column reliefs this
provides a grid like effect. The default height is 0.
-width pixels
Sets the requested width of the widget. If pixels is 0, then
the with is computed from the contents of the treeview widget.
The default is 200.
-xscrollcommand string
Specifies the prefix for a command used to communicate with hor‐
izontal scrollbars. Whenever the horizontal view in the wid‐
get's window changes, the widget will generate a Tcl command by
concatenating the scroll command and two numbers. If this
option is not specified, then no command will be executed.
-xscrollincrement pixels
Sets the horizontal scrolling distance. The default is 20 pix‐
els.
-yscrollcommand string
Specifies the prefix for a command used to communicate with ver‐
tical scrollbars. Whenever the vertical view in the widget's
window changes, the widget will generate a Tcl command by con‐
catenating the scroll command and two numbers. If this option
is not specified, then no command will be executed.
-yscrollincrement pixels
Sets the vertical scrolling distance. The default is 20 pixels.
ENTRY OPTIONS
Many widget configuration options have counterparts in entries. For
example, there is a -closecommand configuration option for both widget
itself and for individual entries. Options set at the widget level are
global for all entries. If the entry configuration option is set, then
it overrides the widget option. This is done to avoid wasting memory
by replicated options. Most entries will have redundant options.
There is no resource class or name for entries.
-activeicons images
Specifies images to be displayed as the entry's icon when it is
active. This overrides the global -activeicons configuration
option for the specific entry. Images is a list of two Tk
images: the first image is displayed when the node is open, the
second when it is closed.
-bindtags tagList
Specifies the binding tags for nodes. TagList is a list of
binding tag names. The tags and their order will determine how
events are handled for nodes. Each tag in the list matching the
current event sequence will have its Tcl command executed. The
default value is all.
-button string
Indicates whether a button should be displayed on the left side
of the node entry. String can be yes, no, or auto. If auto,
then a button is automatically displayed if the node has chil‐
dren. This is the default.
-closecommand string
Specifies a Tcl script to be invoked when the node is closed.
This overrides the global -closecommand option for this entry.
The default is "". Percent substitutions are performed on
string before it is executed. The following substitutions are
valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%# The id of the node.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-data list
Initializes or change data fields for the node. List is a list
of name-value pairs to be set. Note, this can not be used to
unset or forget values for columns, meaning an empty list does
nothing. For unsetting use entry unset. The default is "".
-font fontName
Sets the font for entry row text. This overrides the widget's
-font option for this node.
-forcetree bool
Force node to be treated as a tree, even if it has no children.
This differs from -button above in that all drawing and querying
aspects of the node are treated as a tree. This option is use‐
ful primarily for deferring loading until a tree is opened. The
default is false.
-foreground color
Sets the text color of the entry label. This overrides the wid‐
get's -foreground configuration option. The default is "".
-height num
Set height for entry.
-hide bool
Hide the entry.
-icons images
Specifies images to be displayed for the entry's icon. This
overrides the global -icons configuration option. Images is a
list of two Tk images: the first image is displayed when the
node is open, the second when it is closed.
-isopen bool
Specify if the entries is in the open state. The default is
false.
-label string
Sets the text for the entry's displayed label. If set to "",
the label of the tree node is displayed The default is "" (see
entry relabel).
-opencommand string
Specifies a Tcl script to be invoked when the entry is opened.
This overrides the widget's -opencommand option for this node.
The default is "". Percent substitutions are performed on
string before it is executed. The following substitutions are
valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%# The id of the node.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-shadow color
Set shadow color for text.
-state value
Set the state of the entry where value is one of: normal,
active, disabled. The default state is normal. When the state
is set to disabled, the text color displays using -disabledfore‐
ground and the node ignores any attempted open or close.
-style stylename
Set the style to use for the entry. This will override the col‐
umn style, just as style set will override an entry style. This
is useful mostly for seting bg/fg/font for a row. Other options
may or may not do nothing. Note, setting icon in a style will
apply to all value columns, but not the tree column.
-sublabel string
Sets the text for the entry's sub-label to be displayed to the
right of the nodes -label value. This is rendered using the
-substyle style.
-underline num
Character to underline in an entries text label. Default is -1.
-userdata list
Extra space available for storing user data.
BUTTON OPTIONS
Button configuration options may also be set by the option command.
The resource subclass is Button. The resource name is always button.
option add *TreeView.Button.Foreground white
option add *TreeView.button.Background blue
The following are the configuration options available for buttons.
-activebackground color
Sets the background color of active buttons. A button is made
active when the mouse passes over it or by the button activate
operation.
-activeforeground color
Sets the foreground color of active buttons. A button is made
active when the mouse passes over it or by the button activate
operation.
-activeimages images
Specify images to use for active buttons.
-background color
Sets the background of the button. The default is white.
-borderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the 3-D border around the button. The -relief
option determines if a border is to be drawn. The default is 1.
-closerelief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect for the closed button. Relief indi‐
cates how the button should appear relative to the widget; for
example, raised means the button should appear to protrude. The
default is solid.
-cursor cursor
Sets the widget's cursor. The default cursor is "".
-foreground color
Sets the foreground color of buttons. The default is black.
-images images
Specifies images to be displayed for the button. Images is a
list of two Tk images: the first image is displayed when the
button is open, the second when it is closed. If the images is
the empty string, then a plus/minus gadget is drawn. The
default is "".
-openrelief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect of the open button. Relief indicates
how the button should appear relative to the widget; for exam‐
ple, raised means the button should appear to protrude. The
default is flat.
-size pixels
Sets the requested size of the button. The default is 0.
STYLE OPTIONS
Five style types are available: textbox, combobox, checkbox, barbox,
windowbox. Autocreated styles are by default of type textbox. A bar‐
box provides progressbars for numeric cell values. The special style
windowbox supports embedded subwindows within data cells.
The resource subclass is the name of the style, titlized, ie.
option add *TreeView.TextBoxStyle.tvBackground white
option add *TreeView.ComboBoxStyle.tvBackground green
option add *TreeView.CheckBoxStyle.tvBackground blue
A default textbox style text comes predefined and is set for each col‐
umns -style option. Styles may also be associated with entry-rows
and/or cells, as follows:
treeview .t -width 300 -height 200
pack .t -fill both -expand y
.t col insert end Size Age Weight
.t style create combobox MyStyle0 -bg red
.t style create textbox MyStyle1 -bg blue
.t style create textbox MyStyle2 -bg green
.t style create textbox MyStyle3 -bg orange
.t col conf Size -style MyStyle0
foreach i {Able Baker Charlie} {
.t insert end $i -data {Size 1 Age 2 Weight 3}
}
.t entry conf 2 -style MyStyle2
.t style set MyStyle3 Weight 3
.t insert end Empty
.t conf -emptystyle MyStyle1
See also the widget options -altstyle, -emptystyle and -levelstyles.
The following are available for all but the windowbox type. Note, some
of these options are utilized only in particular contexts:
-activebackground color
Specifies the active background color of a style. Alias is
-activebg.
-activeforeground color
Specifies the active foreground color of a style. Alias is
-activefg.
-background color
Background color override. Default is empty.
-cursor cursorname
Specifies the cursor of a style. This cursor for the widget when
an element is activated.
-editopts values
Cell option name/value pairs for the builtin text edit facilty.
These are appended to the columns -editopts. See column -edi‐
topts.
-font fontName
Sets the font for a style.
-foreground color
Specifies the foreground color of a style. Alias is -fg.
-gap N Specifies the gap.
-hide bool
Values or subtext having a style with hide on are to be hidden.
Columns and entries are unaffected.
-highlightbackground color
Specifies the highlight background color of a style. Alias is
-highlightbg.
-highlightforeground color
Specifies the highlight foreground color of a style. Alias is
-highlightfg.
-icon name
Specifies the icon.
-priority N
Specifies a priority for the style. Higher priorities are used
for overriding bg/fg/font. The default 0.
-readonly bool
Disallow editing for a cell whose column has -edit set to true.
The default is False.
-shadow shadow
Set shadow.
-tile img
Set tiling.
The following additional configuration options are available for
textbox:
-formatcmd scriptcmd
Command called to format the displayed key-data value. Percent
substitutions are performed on scriptcmd as per find -exec. The
called command returns the value to be displayed.
-iconside N
Specifies which side of the text the icon is placed. Default is
left.
-side N
Specifies which side of cell to anchor contents. Default is
top.
The following additional configuration options are available for com‐
bobox:
-buttonicons icons
A pair of icons to use for the button icon. The second icon is
drawn when style activate is used on a cell (managed automati‐
cally by the editing code).
-borderwidth pixel
Size of border.
-buttonborderwidth pixel
Size of buttons border
-buttonrelief relief
Relief of button.
-choicecmd cmd
Command called to get the list of choices for editing, after the
following substitutions: %X %Y %C %# %W %%. Used by the library
proc blt::tv::EditCell which implements builtin editing.
-choicekey key
Key field to in the current node to get the list of choices
from.
-choices lst
A list of choices for editing.
The following additional configuration options are available for check‐
box:
-boxcolor color
Color of box.
-boxsize num
Size of box.
-checkcolor color
Color of check.
-checkicons images
A pair of icons to use to represent the on/off state instead of
drawing a checkbox.
-fillcolor color
Color of fill.
-halo num
Halo around checkbox in which to accept a click. If num is less
than zero, accept a click anywhere in the cell. The default is
0.
-linewidth num
Line size.
-offvalue val
Value representing off.
-onvalue val
Value representing on.
-showvalue bool
Show value as well..
The following additional configuration options are available for bar‐
box:
-barbg color
Color for the background of the bar. Default is the empty
string.
-boxcolor color
Color of box around bar.
-barfg color
Color for the foreground of the bar. Default is green.
-barheight num
Height of bar. Default 10.
-barwidth num
Width of bar. Default 80.
-filltile tile
Image to tile-fill bar with.
-formatcmd scriptcmd
Command called to format the displayed value. Percent substitu‐
tions are performed on scriptcmd as per find -exec. The called
command returns the value to be displayed.
-linewidth num
Width of border around the bar. Default is 1.
-maxvalue val
The maxiumum value. Default is 100.0.
-minvalue val
The miniumum value. Default is 0.0.
-showvalue bool
Show the numeric value.
Only the following configuration options are available with windowbox:
-minheight num
Minimum height of window. Window height will be taller if the
the entry height is greater than num. Default is 0.
-minwidth num
Minimum width of window. Window width will be wider if the the
column width is greater than num. Default is 0.
-sticky val
Stickiness of the window inside the cell, as defined by the grid
command. The default value is w.
-windowcmd string
Command invoked to return window path. Percent substitutions
are performed on string before it is executed. The following
substitutions are valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%p The name of the node.
%P The full pathname of the node.
%# The id of the node.
%C The column identifier.
%% Translates to a single percent.
COLUMN OPTIONS
Column configuration options may also be set by the option command.
The resource subclass is Column. The resource name is the name of the
column.
option add *TreeView.Column.Foreground white
option add *TreeView.treeView.Background blue
The following configuration options are available for columns.
-activetitlebackground color
Active title background color.
-activetitleforeground color
Active title foreground color.
-autowidth value
If the maximum width of a column exceeds the given value, then
the column width uses this value instead -width. When value is
zero or -width is non-zero, has no effect. Allows setting a
default column width limit, while still permitting the user to
manually resize larger (unlike -max). The default value is 0.
-background color
Sets the background color of the column. This overrides the
widget's -background option. The default is white.
-bindtags string
Set binding tags for column.
-borderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the 3-D border of the column. The -relief
option determines if a border is to be drawn. The default is 0.
-colorpattern patcolors
Alter foreground color based on a string match against the cell
data value. Pattern/color pairs are specified in patcolors. If
the pattern matches, then color becomes the foreground of the
data cell. This provides a low-overhead way to display differ‐
ent colors depending only on the form of data.
-colorregexp patcolors
Does the same thing as -colorpattern, except uses regexp
instead, and has a lower priority.
-command string
Set command for use by invoke. This is called everytime the
column is selected. For example, sortable columns can be
enabled by a setting this to {blt::tv::SortColumn %W %C}, or
sort tree children of with {blt::tv::SortTree %W %C}. Note that
SortColumn can temporarily change the treeview mode to -flat.
The following substitutions are valid:
%W The pathname of the widget.
%C The column identifier.
%% Translates to a single percent.
-edit num
Indicates if the column's data fields can be edited via the
builtin editing facility. If num is True the data fields in the
column can be edited. The default is False.
-editopts values
Sub-option pair settings for the builtin text edit facilty
implemented by ::blt::tv::EditCol. Note, these are used only
for cells with a style type of textbox and combobox. Following
is partial documentation of the fBtextbox (or see
::blt::tv::EditCol $blt_library/treeview.tcl).
-allowtypes type
List of types to allow text editing for, or * for all. The
default is textbox.
-autonl bool
Automatically use either an entry, spinbox or text as
appropriate. The default is to use an entry widget. Text
containing newlines will use a text widget. A column with
combobox style where -choices or -choicecmd is set will use
a spinbox.
-choices list
List of choices for spinbox/combo.
-conf values
Options to pass directly to the widget.
-embed bool
When True the edit window is managed internally via an
embedded windowbox style. When false place is used to man‐
age the window. The default is False. An embedded window
has advantages but will result in a re-layout at the begin
and end of editing. Note: place is always used for the
tree column.
-endcmd cmd
Command to call at end of edit, after the new value is set.
If a percent is found, command substitution occurs, other‐
wise the call appends 5 arguments: widget data olddata ind
col.
-leafs bool
Limit editing to leafs only. Default is false.
-nlkeys opt
Keys for inserting newline in multiline edits. The default
value is: <Control-r> <Shift-Return>.
-nottnull bool
Do not edit empty fields that have not had data assigned to
them. Default is false.
-optscmd cmd
Command called to get options. Called with 3 args: widget
ind col. Returns name/value pairs which are additional
options as accepted by -editopts. To indicate that a cell
is non-editable, return {-readonly True}.
-readonly bool
Cell is readonly. Do not edit.
-sel bool
Value is initially selected in edit window. Default is
true.
-startcmd cmd
Command to call at start of edit. If a percent is found,
command substitution occurs, otherwise the 3 arguments are
appended: widget ind col.
-tab opts
Setup a bind for Tab in the edit window (bool or args
passed to TabMove).
-titles bool
Enable editing of the title label. Default is false.
-treelabel bool
Edit -tree cmd label rather than treeview label. Default
is true.
-type bool
A basic wize type eg. bool, int, choice
-typecol column
Column/key to get -type from.
-vcmd cmd
Command to override the columns -validatecmd.
-widget wid
The widget to use. Builtin support types are: spinbox,
text, entry. The default is entry.
-withtag tag
Edit only if has tag.
-withouttag tag
Edit only if does not have tag.
-wrap value
Setting for wrap mode when edit window is a text widget.
Default is none.
For more generalized control of editing, bind to the <<TreeViewEdit‐
Start/End>> virtual events.
-font font
Sets the font for the column. Currently, should not be mixed
this with and a -style a font for the column.
-foreground color
Sets the text color the column.
-fillcmd scriptcmd
Demand load data into unset values, just prior to display. The
call occurs the first time each entry is displayed in the col‐
umn. Only cells not having a value/label set are updated.
Before calling, the id is appended. The new value should be
returned. For tree columns the result is used to set the entry
label, otherwise it sets a data cell value. If an error is
raised, the value is set to the empty string.
Here is an example that loads a large tree. It demonstrates
that only the first dozen or so are update initially, and more
as you scroll. A practical example might load data from a data‐
base.
set t [tree create]
$t create -num 10000
pack [treeview .t -tree $t]
proc FillLabel {id} { puts "L$id"; return L$id }
proc FillData {id} { return D$id }
.t col conf #0 -fillcmd FillLabel
.t col insert end A -fillcmd FillData
-hide boolean
If boolean is true, the column is not displayed. The default is
no.
-justify justify
Specifies how the column data fields text should be justified
within the column. This matters only when the column is wider
than the data field to be display. Justify must be left, right,
or center. The default is center.
-max size
Maximum size for column.
-min size
Minimum size for column.
-pad pad
Specifies how much padding for the left and right sides of the
column. Pad is a list of one or two screen distances. If pad
has two elements, the left side of the column is padded by the
first distance and the right side by the second. If pad has
just one distance, both the left and right sides are padded
evenly. The default is 2.
-relief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect of the column. Relief specifies how
the column should appear relative to the widget; for example,
raised means the column should appear to protrude. The default
is flat.
-ruledashes value
Set resize rule is dashed.
-scrolltile bool
Tile image scrolls.
-sortaltcolumns list
List of alternate columns sort can use when cell values are
equal. It is an error to include the current or tree column.
-sortcommand script
Command to actually compare entries during sort.
-sortmode mode
Used by scripts to set -mode for sort command (eg.
blt::tv::SortColumn).
-state state
Sets the state of the column. If state is disable then the col‐
umn title can not be activated nor invoked. The default is nor‐
mal.
-style stylename
Set the style to use for column.
-tile image
Image to tile column with.
-title string
Sets the title for the column. The default is "".
-titlearrow value
Forces an arrow to be drawn in the title. The value is one of:
left right up down none and defaults to none. This is used when
implementing custom sorts as the indicator.
-titlebackground color
Background for title.
-titleborderwidth size
Border size.
-titlefont font
Font for column title.
-titlejustify just
Side to place title.
-titleforeground color
Sets the foreground color of the column title. The default is
black.
-titlerelief relief
Relief for title.
-titleshadow color
Sets the color of the drop shadow of the column title. The
default is "".
-titlestyle style
A style to use for titles.
-width num
The user requested width for the column.
-underline num
Character to underline in column title text. Default is -1.
-validatecmd command
This option provides a command for validating or post processing
edits from the builtin column edit feature (enabled with col
conf -edit 1). If a percent is found, command substitution
occurs, otherwise 5 arguments are appended: widget data olddata
ind col. The called command should return newvalue, possibly
with modifications. To revert to the original value, just
return $oldvalue To continue editing, use return -code return
-weight float
Weighting to apply extra space.
-width pixels
Sets the requested width of the column. This overrides the com‐
puted with of the column. If pixels is 0, the width is computed
as from the contents of the column. The default is 0.
EMBEDDED WINDOWS
Embedded windows is supported for columns or cells via the special
style type windowbox. If -windowcmd is not being used, the cell data
is assumed to contain the widget name, or tail part of a widget name.
If the data does not provide a valid window it is silently ignored and
nothing is displayed. If multiple cells try to display the same widget
simultaneously, only the first one appears. The normal Tk slave window
rules apply (ie. must be child of the parent).
OLD TEXT EDITING OPTIONS
SECTION OBSOLETE.
This section is obsolete and has been replaced with builtin editing
using a Tk entry widget. See TREEVIEW EDITING above.
Text edit window configuration options may also be set by the Tk option
command. The resource class is TreeViewEditor. The resource name is
always edit.
option add *TreeViewEditor.Foreground white
option add *edit.Background blue
The following are the configuration options available for the text
editing window.
-background color
Sets the background of the text edit window. The default is
white.
-borderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the 3-D border around the edit window. The
-relief option determines if a border is to be drawn. The
default is 1.
-exportselection boolean
Indicates if the text selection is exported. If the edit window
is exporting its selection then it will observe the standard X11
protocols for handling the selection. Selections are available
as type STRING. The default is no.
-relief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect of the edit window. Relief indicates
how the background should appear relative to the edit window;
for example, raised means the background should appear to pro‐
trude. The default is solid.
-selectbackground color
Sets the background of the selected text in the edit window.
The default is white.
-selectborderwidth pixels
Sets the width of the 3-D border around the selected text in the
edit window. The -selectrelief option determines if a border is
to be drawn. The default is 1.
-selectforeground color
Sets the foreground of the selected text in the edit window.
The default is white.
-selectrelief relief
Specifies the 3-D effect of the selected text in the edit win‐
dow. Relief indicates how the text should appear relative to
the edit window; for example, raised means the text should
appear to protrude. The default is flat.
DEFAULT BINDINGS
Tk automatically creates class bindings for treeviews that give them
Motif-like behavior. Much of the behavior of a treeview widget is
determined by its -selectmode option, which selects one of two ways of
dealing with the selection.
If the selection mode is single, only one node can be selected at a
time. Clicking button 1 on an node selects it and deselects any other
selected item.
If the selection mode is multiple, any number of entries may be
selected at once, including discontiguous ranges. Clicking Control-
Button-1 on a node entry toggles its selection state without affecting
any other entries. Pressing Shift-Button-1 on a node entry selects it,
extends the selection.
[0] The virtual event <<TreeViewFocusEvent>> is generated for each
keyboard and mouse initiated change in focus. It is up to the
user to determine if the focus actually changed.
[1] In extended mode, the selected range can be adjusted by pressing
button 1 with the Shift key down: this modifies the selection
to consist of the entries between the anchor and the entry under
the mouse, inclusive. The un-anchored end of this new selection
can also be dragged with the button down.
[2] In extended mode, pressing button 1 with the Control key down
starts a toggle operation: the anchor is set to the entry under
the mouse, and its selection state is reversed. The selection
state of other entries isn't changed. If the mouse is dragged
with button 1 down, then the selection state of all entries
between the anchor and the entry under the mouse is set to match
that of the anchor entry; the selection state of all other
entries remains what it was before the toggle operation began.
[3] If the mouse leaves the treeview window with button 1 down, the
window scrolls away from the mouse, making information visible
that used to be off-screen on the side of the mouse. The
scrolling continues until the mouse re-enters the window, the
button is released, or the end of the hierarchy is reached.
[4] Mouse button 2 may be used for scanning. If it is pressed and
dragged over the treeview widget, the contents of the hierarchy
drag at high speed in the direction the mouse moves.
[5] If the Up or Down key is pressed, the location cursor (active
entry) moves up or down one entry, as does Control-p and Con‐
trol-n. If the selection mode is browse or extended then the
new active entry is also selected and all other entries are des‐
elected. In extended mode the new active entry becomes the
selection anchor.
[6] In extended mode, Shift-Up and Shift-Down move the location cur‐
sor (active entry) up or down one entry and also extend the
selection to that entry in a fashion similar to dragging with
mouse button 1.
[7] The Left and Right keys scroll the treeview widget view left and
right by the width of the character 0. Control-Left and Con‐
trol-Right scroll the treeview widget view left and right by the
width of the window.
[8] The Prior and Next keys scroll the treeview widget view up and
down by one page (the height of the window), as does Control-u
and Control-d.
[9] The Home and End keys scroll the treeview widget horizontally to
the left and right edges, respectively.
[10] Control-Home sets the location cursor to the first entry,
selects that entry, and deselects everything else in the widget.
[11] Control-End sets the location cursor to the last entry, selects
that entry, and deselects everything else in the widget.
[12] In extended mode, Control-Shift-Home extends the selection to
the first entry and Control-Shift-End extends the selection to
the last entry.
[13] In multiple mode, Control-Shift-Home moves the location cursor
to the first entry and Control-Shift-End moves the location cur‐
sor to the last entry.
[14] The space and Select keys make a selection at the location cur‐
sor (active entry) just as if mouse button 1 had been pressed
over this entry.
[15] In extended mode, Control-Shift-space and Shift-Select extend
the selection to the active entry just as if button 1 had been
pressed with the Shift key down.
[16] In extended mode, the Escape key cancels the most recent selec‐
tion and restores all the entries in the selected range to their
previous selection state.
[17] Control-slash selects everything in the widget, except in single
and browse modes, in which case it selects the active entry and
deselects everything else.
[18] Control-backslash deselects everything in the widget, except in
browse mode where it has no effect.
[19] The F16 key (labelled Copy on many Sun workstations) or Meta-w
copies the selection in the widget to the clipboard, if there is
a selection.
The behavior of treeview widgets can be changed by defining new bind‐
ings for individual widgets or by redefining the class bindings.
WIDGET BINDINGS
In addition to the above behavior, the following additional behavior is
defined by the default widget class (TreeView) bindings.
<ButtonPress-2>
Starts scanning.
<B2-Motion>
Adjusts the scan.
<ButtonRelease-2>
Stops scanning.
<B1-Leave>
Starts auto-scrolling.
<B1-Enter>
Starts auto-scrolling
<KeyPress-Up>
Moves the focus to the previous entry.
<KeyPress-Down>
Moves the focus to the next entry.
<Shift-KeyPress-Up>
Moves the focus to the previous sibling.
<Shift-KeyPress-Down>
Moves the focus to the next sibling.
<KeyPress-Prior>
Moves the focus to first entry. Closed or hidden entries are
ignored.
<KeyPress-Next>
Move the focus to the last entry. Closed or hidden entries are
ignored.
<KeyPress-Left>
Closes the entry. It is not an error if the entry has no chil‐
dren.
<KeyPress-Right>
Opens the entry, displaying its children. It is not an error if
the entry has no children.
<KeyPress-space>
In "single" select mode this selects the entry. In "multiple"
mode, it toggles the entry (if it was previous selected, it is
not deselected).
<KeyRelease-space>
Turns off select mode.
<KeyPress-Return>
Sets the focus to the current entry.
<KeyRelease-Return>
Turns off select mode.
<KeyPress>
Moves to the next entry whose label starts with the letter
typed.
<KeyPress-Home>
Moves the focus to first entry. Closed or hidden entries are
ignored.
<KeyPress-End>
Move the focus to the last entry. Closed or hidden entries are
ignored.
<Control-a>
Move to parent of current entry.
<Control-o>
Open current entry.
<Control-Shift-O>
Open current entry recursively.
<Double-ButtonRelease-1>
Edit cell.
<Alt-Double-ButtonRelease-1>
Edit cell.
<Control-KeyPress-minus>
Close parent of current entry.
<Control-F1>
Opens all tree nodes.
<Control-F2>
Closes all tree nodes (except root).
<Control-F3>
Toggle flat mode.
<Control-F4>
Reset all column widths back to 0 allowing autosizing.
<Control-Shift-O>
Open focus tree node recursively.
<Control-Shift-C>
Close focus tree node recursively.
BUTTON BINDINGS
Buttons have bindings. There are associated with the "all" bindtag
(see the entry's -bindtag option). You can use the bind operation to
change them.
<Enter>
Highlights the button of the current entry.
<Leave>
Returns the button back to its normal state.
<ButtonRelease-1>
Adjust the view so that the current entry is visible.
ENTRY BINDINGS
Entries have default bindings. There are associated with the "all"
bindtag (see the entry's -bindtag option). You can use the bind opera‐
tion to modify them.
<Enter>
Highlights the current entry.
<Leave>
Returns the entry back to its normal state.
<ButtonPress-1>
Sets the selection anchor the current entry.
<Double-ButtonPress-1>
Toggles the selection of the current entry.
<B1-Motion>
For "multiple" mode only. Saves the current location of the
pointer for auto-scrolling. Resets the selection mark.
<ButtonRelease-1>
For "multiple" mode only. Sets the selection anchor to the cur‐
rent entry.
<Shift-ButtonPress-1>
For "multiple" mode only. Extends the selection.
<Shift-Double-ButtonPress-1>
Place holder. Does nothing.
<Shift-B1-Motion>
Place holder. Does nothing.
<Shift-ButtonRelease-1>
Stop auto-scrolling.
<Control-ButtonPress-1>
For "multiple" mode only. Toggles and extends the selection.
<Control-Double-ButtonPress-1>
Place holder. Does nothing.
<Control-B1-Motion>
Place holder. Does nothing.
<Control-ButtonRelease-1>
Stops auto-scrolling.
<Control-Shift-ButtonPress-1>
???
<Control-Shift-Double-ButtonPress-1>
Place holder. Does nothing.
<Control-Shift-B1-Motion>
Place holder. Does nothing.
COLUMN BINDINGS
Columns have bindings too. They are associated with the column's "all"
bindtag (see the column -bindtag option). You can use the column bind
operation to change them.
<Enter>
Highlights the current column title.
<Leave>
Returns the column back to its normal state.
<ButtonRelease-1>
Invokes the command (see the column's -command option) if one if
specified.
COLUMN RULE BINDINGS
These are bindings associated with the tag Rule.
<Enter>
Highlights the current and activates the ruler.
<Leave>
Returns the column back to its normal state. Deactivates the
ruler.
<ButtonPress-1>
Sets the resize anchor for the column.
<B1-Motion>
Sets the resize mark for the column.
<ButtonRelease-1>
Adjust the size of the column, based upon the resize anchor and
mark positions.
QUICKSTART
TreeFill is a utility function to simplify tree data loading from a
human-readable string. The string uses line indentation to indicate
tree depth. The indentation is in multiples of 4 spaces, relative to
the first line. eg.
pack [treeview .t]
.t column insert end X Y Z
blt::tv::TreeFill .t {
A 1 2 3
B 4 5 6
x 7 8 9
y 10 11 12
a 1 2 "Level a"
b 1 2 "Level b"
C 1 2 3
}
.t open -trees all
.t entry conf 0->B->y->a -state disabled
Any column names not defined are generated. To load a table instead of
a tree, simply set the -flat option first. eg.
pack [treeview .t -flat 1]
.t column conf #0 -hide 1
.t column insert end Name Age Sex
blt::tv::TreeFill .t {
"Tom Brown" 9 M
"Mike Small" 8 M
"Tina Baker" 7 F
}
EXAMPLE
The treeview command creates a new widget.
treeview .t -bg white
A new Tcl command .t is also created. This command can be used to
query and modify the treeview widget. For example, to change the back‐
ground color of the table to "green", you use the new command and the
widget's configure operation.
# Change the background color.
.t configure -background "green"
By default, the treeview widget will automatically create a new tree
object to contain the data. The name of the new tree is the pathname
of the widget. Above, the new tree object name is ".t". But you can
use the -tree option to specify the name of another tree.
# View the tree "myTree".
.t configure -tree "myTree"
When a new tree is created, it contains only a root node. The node is
automatically opened. The id of the root node is always 0 (you can use
also use the special id root). The insert operation lets you insert one
or more new entries into the tree. The last argument is the node's
pathname.
# Create a new entry named "myEntry"
set id [.t insert end "myEntry"]
This appends a new node named "myEntry". It will positioned as the
last child of the root of the tree (using the position "end"). You can
supply another position to order the node within its siblings.
# Prepend "fred".
set id [.t insert 0 "fred"]
Entry names do not need to be unique. By default, the node's label is
its name. To supply a different text label, add the -label option.
# Create a new node named "fred"
set id [.t insert end "fred" -label "Fred Flintstone"]
The insert operation returns the id of the new node. You can also use
the index operation to get this information.
# Get the id of "fred"
.t index "fred"
To insert a node somewhere other than root, use the -at switch. It
takes the id of the node where the new child will be added.
# Create a new node "barney" in "fred".
.t insert end "barney" -at $id
A pathname describes the path to an entry in the hierarchy. It's a
list of entry names that compose the path in the tree. Therefore, you
can also add "barney" to "fred" as follows.
# Create a new sub-entry of "fred"
.t insert end "fred barney"
Every name in the list is ancestor of the next. All ancestors must
already exist. That means that an entry "fred" is an ancestor of "bar‐
ney" and must already exist. But you can use the -autocreate configu‐
ration option to force the creation of ancestor nodes.
# Force the creation of ancestors.
.t configure -autocreate yes
.t insert end "fred barney wilma betty"
Sometimes the pathname is already separated by a character sequence
rather than formed as a list. A file name is a good example of this.
You can use the -separator option to specify a separator string to
split the path into its components. Each pathname inserted is automat‐
ically split using the separator string as a separator. Multiple sepa‐
rators are treated as one.
.t configure -separator /
.t insert end "/usr/local/tcl/bin"
If the path is prefixed by extraneous characters, you can automatically
trim it off using the -trim option. It removed the string from the
path before it is parsed.
.t configure -trim C:/windows -separator /
.t insert end "C:/window/system"
You can delete entries with the delete operation. It takes one or more
tags of ids as its argument. It deletes the entry and all its children.
.t delete $id
Entries have several configuration options. They control the appear‐
ance of the entry's icon and label. We have already seen the -label
option that sets the entry's text label. The entry configure opera‐
tion lets you set or modify an entry's configuration options.
.t entry configure $id -color red -font fixed
You can hide an entry and its children using the -hide option.
.t entry configure $id -hide yes
More that one entry can be configured at once. All entries specified
are configured with the same options.
.t entry configure $i1 $i2 $i3 $i4 -color brown
# or ...
.t entry configure [list $i1 $i2 $i3 $i4] -color brown
An icon is displayed for each entry. It's a Tk image drawn to the left
of the label. You can set the icon with the entry's -icons option. It
takes a list of two image names: one to represent the open entry,
another when it is closed.
set im1 [image create photo -file openfolder.gif]
set im2 [image create photo -file closefolder.gif]
.t entry configure $id -icons "$im1 $im2"
If -icons is set to the empty string, no icons are display.
If an entry has children, a button is displayed to the left of the
icon. Clicking the mouse on this button opens or closes the sub-hierar‐
chy. The button is normally a + or - symbol, but can be configured in
a variety of ways using the button configure operation. For example,
the + and - symbols can be replaced with Tk images.
set im1 [image create photo -file closefolder.gif]
set im2 [image create photo -file downarrow.gif]
.t button configure $id -images "$im1 $im2" \
-openrelief raised -closerelief raised
Entries can contain an arbitrary number of data fields. Data fields
are name-value pairs. Both the value and name are strings. The
entry's -data option lets you set data fields.
.t entry configure $id -data {mode 0666 group users}
The -data takes a list of name-value pairs.
You can display these data fields as columns in the treeview widget.
You can create and configure columns with the column operation. For
example, to add a new column to the widget, use the column insert oper‐
ation. The last argument is the name of the data field that you want
to display.
.t column insert end "mode"
The column title is displayed at the top of the column. By default,
it's is the field name. You can override this using the column's
-title option.
.t column insert end "mode" -title "File Permissions"
Columns have several configuration options. The column configure oper‐
ation lets you query or modify column options.
.t column configure "mode" -justify left
The -justify option says how the data is justified within in the col‐
umn. The -hide option indicates whether the column is displayed.
.t column configure "mode" -hide yes
Entries can be selected by clicking on the mouse. Selected entries are
drawn using the colors specified by the -selectforeground and -select‐
background configuration options. The selection itself is managed by
the selection operation.
# Clear all selections
.t selection clear 0 end
# Select the root node
.t selection set 0
The curselection operation returns a list of ids of all the selected
entries.
set ids [.t curselection]
You can use the get operation to convert the ids to their pathnames.
set names [eval .t get -full $ids]
If a treeview is exporting its selection (using the -exportselection
option), then it will observe the standard X11 protocols for handling
the selection. Treeview selections are available as type STRING; the
value of the selection will be the pathnames of the selected entries,
separated by newlines.
The treeview supports two modes of selection: single and multiple. In
single select mode, only one entry can be selected at a time, while
multiple select mode allows several entries to be selected. The mode
is set by the widget's -selectmode option.
.t configure -selectmode "multiple"
You can be notified when the list of selected entries changes. The
widget's -selectcommand specifies a Tcl procedure that is called when‐
ever the selection changes.
proc SelectNotify { widget } {
set ids [$widget curselection]
}
.t configure -selectcommand "SelectNotify .t"
The widget supports the standard Tk scrolling and scanning operations.
The treeview can be both horizontally and vertically. You can attach
scrollbars to the treeview the same way as the listbox or canvas wid‐
gets.
scrollbar .xbar -orient horizontal -command ".t xview"
scrollbar .ybar -orient vertical -command ".t yview"
.t configure -xscrollcommand ".xbar set" \
-yscrollcommand ".ybar set"
Entries can be programmatically opened or closed using the open and
close operations respectively.
.t open $id
.t close $id
When an entry is opened, a Tcl procedure can be automatically invoked.
The -opencommand option specifies this procedure. This procedure can
lazily insert entries as needed.
proc AddEntries { dir } {
eval .t insert end [glob -nocomplain $dir/*]
}
.t configure -opencommand "AddEntries %P"
Now when an entry is opened, the procedure AddEntries is called and
adds children to the entry. Before the command is invoked, special "%"
substitutions (like bind) are performed. Above, %P is translated to the
pathname of the entry.
The same feature exists when an entry is closed. The -closecommand
option specifies the procedure.
proc DeleteEntries { id } {
.t entry delete $id 0 end
}
.t configure -closecommand "DeleteEntries %#"
When an entry is closed, the procedure DeleteEntries is called and
deletes the entry's children using the entry delete operation (%# is
the id of entry).
OLD TREEVIEW EDITS
NOTE: This section is OBSOLETE. Native Tk widgets are now used for
editing..
When editing the subwidget .edit is available.
pathName.edit operation ?args?
This operation is used to provide text editing for cells (data
fields in a column) or entry labels. It has several forms,
depending on operation:
pathName.edit apply
Applies the edited buffer, replacing the entry label or
data field. The edit window is hidden.
pathName.edit cancel
Cancels the editing operation, reverting the entry label
or data value back to the previous value. The edit window
is hidden.
pathName.edit cget value
Returns the current value of the configuration option
given by option. Option may have any of the values
accepted by the configure operation described below.
pathName.edit configure ?option value?
Query or modify the configuration options of the edit
window. If no option is specified, returns a list
describing all of the available options (see Tk_Config‐
ureInfo for information on the format of this list). If
option is specified with no value, then the command
returns a list describing the one named option (this list
will be identical to the corresponding sublist of the
value returned if no option is specified). If one or
more option-value pairs are specified, then the command
modifies the given widget option(s) to have the given
value(s); in this case the command returns an empty
string. Option and value are described in the section
TEXT EDITING OPTIONS below.
pathName.edit delete first last
Deletes the characters in the edit buffer between the two given
character positions.
pathName.edit get ?-root? x y
pathName.edit icursor index
pathName.edit index index
Returns the text index of given index.
pathName.edit insert index string
Insert the text string string into the edit buffer at the index
index. For example, the index 0 will prepend the buffer.
pathName.edit selection args
This operation controls the selection of the editing window.
Note that this differs from the selection of entries. It has
the following forms:
pathName.edit selection adjust index
Adjusts either the first or last index of the selection.
pathName.edit selection clear
Clears the selection.
pathName.edit selection from index
Sets the anchor of the selection.
pathName.edit selection present
Indicates if a selection is present.
pathName.edit selection range start end
Sets both the anchor and mark of the selection.
pathName.edit selection to index
Sets the unanchored end (mark) of the selection.
LABEL ISSUES
Entries take a -label option that can be used to specify the text to
display. This is not the same thing as the node label.
By default labels are checked for duplicates by insert, which can slow
down large (10k+) inserts. Setting -allowduplicates to 1 disables this
checking.
An entries label can be changed either by by setting -allowduplicates
to 1 and using treeviews entry relabel or by using trees label command.
Instead of lists, a separator can be specified with -separator. Thus
for managing files we might use:
treeview .t -separator / -autocreate 1
.t insert end mann/text.n mann/canvas.n
.t insert end Help Search Close -at root->mann->text.n
pack .t
NOTES
Text cells in display height can be at most 64K pixels high per row.
KEYWORDS
treeview, widget
BLT 2.5 treeview(n)