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Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Whether anything went wrong ? Post 302888590 by Neo on Saturday 15th of February 2014 01:05:08 PM
Old 02-15-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by Akshay Hegde
Yes Neo disabling the old color scheme will be the best in future point of view.
Yes, I agree.

Having an unsupported user choice is going to result in these types of discussions more often that I / we all would like to have

Thanks again; and keep up the great work in the forums.

You are doing a great job, BTW; and thanks for looking out for these kinds of issues.
 

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tk_setPalette(n)					       Tk Built-In Commands						  tk_setPalette(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
tk_setPalette, tk_bisque - Modify the Tk color palette SYNOPSIS
tk_setPalette background tk_setPalette name value ?name value ...? tk_bisque _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The tk_setPalette procedure changes the color scheme for Tk. It does this by modifying the colors of existing widgets and by changing the option database so that future widgets will use the new color scheme. If tk_setPalette is invoked with a single argument, the argument is the name of a color to use as the normal background color; tk_setPalette will compute a complete color palette from this background color. Alternatively, the arguments to tk_setPalette may consist of any number of name-value pairs, where the first argument of the pair is the name of an option in the Tk option database and the second argument is the new value to use for that option. The following database names are currently supported: activeBackground foregroundselectColor activeForeground highlightBackgroundselectBack- ground background highlightColor selectForeground disabledForeground insertBackgroundtroughColor tk_setPalette tries to compute reasonable defaults for any options that you do not specify. You can specify options other than the above ones and Tk will change those options on widgets as well. This feature may be useful if you are using custom widgets with additional color options. Once it has computed the new value to use for each of the color options, tk_setPalette scans the widget hierarchy to modify the options of all existing widgets. For each widget, it checks to see if any of the above options is defined for the widget. If so, and if the option's current value is the default, then the value is changed; if the option has a value other than the default, tk_setPalette will not change it. The default for an option is the one provided by the widget ([lindex [$w configure $option] 3]) unless tk_setPalette has been run pre- viously, in which case it is the value specified in the previous invocation of tk_setPalette. After modifying all the widgets in the application, tk_setPalette adds options to the option database to change the defaults for widgets created in the future. The new options are added at priority widgetDefault, so they will be overridden by options from the .Xdefaults file or options specified on the command-line that creates a widget. The procedure tk_bisque is provided for backward compatibility: it restores the application's colors to the light brown ("bisque") color scheme used in Tk 3.6 and earlier versions. KEYWORDS
bisque, color, palette Tk 4.0 tk_setPalette(n)
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