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itkvars(n) [mojave man page]

itkvars(n)							     [incr Tk]								itkvars(n)

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NAME
itkvars - variables used by [incr Tk] _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The following global variables are created and managed automatically by the [incr Tk] library. Except where noted below, these variables should normally be treated as read-only by application-specific code and by users. itk::library When an interpreter is created, [incr Tk] initializes this variable to hold the name of a directory containing the system library of [incr Tk] scripts. The initial value of itk::library is set from the ITK_LIBRARY environment variable if it exists, or from a com- piled-in value otherwise. When [incr Tk] is added to an interpreter, it executes the script "init.itk" in this directory. This script, in turn, looks for other script files with the name "init.xxx". Mega-widget libraries will be automatically initialized if they install a script named "init.xxx" in this directory, where "xxx" is the name of the mega-widget library. For example, the [incr Widgets] library installs the script "init.iwidgets" in this directory. This script establishes the "iwidgets" namespace, and sets up autoloading for all [incr Widgets] commands. KEYWORDS
itcl, itk, variables itk 3.0 itkvars(n)

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itclvars(n)							    [incr Tcl]							       itclvars(n)

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NAME
itclvars - variables used by [incr Tcl] _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The following global variables are created and managed automatically by the [incr Tcl] library. Except where noted below, these variables should normally be treated as read-only by application-specific code and by users. itcl::library When an interpreter is created, [incr Tcl] initializes this variable to hold the name of a directory containing the system library of [incr Tcl] scripts. The initial value of itcl::library is set from the ITCL_LIBRARY environment variable if it exists, or from a compiled-in value otherwise. itcl::patchLevel When an interpreter is created, [incr Tcl] initializes this variable to hold the current patch level for [incr Tcl]. For example, the value "2.0p1" indicates [incr Tcl] version 2.0 with the first set of patches applied. itcl::purist When an interpreter is created containing Tcl/Tk and the [incr Tcl] namespace facility, this variable controls a "backward-compati- bility" mode for widget access. In vanilla Tcl/Tk, there is a single pool of commands, so the access command for a widget is the same as the window name. When a widget is created within a namespace, however, its access command is installed in that namespace, and should be accessed outside of the namespace using a qualified name. For example, namespace foo { namespace bar { button .b -text "Testing" } } foo::bar::.b configure -background red pack .b Note that the window name ".b" is still used in conjunction with commands like pack and destroy. However, the access command for the wid- get (i.e., name that appears as the first argument on a command line) must be more specific. The "winfo command" command can be used to query the fully-qualified access command for any widget, so one can write: [winfo command .b] configure -background red and this is good practice when writing library procedures. Also, in conjunction with the bind command, the "%q" field can be used in place of "%W" as the access command: bind Button <Key-Return> {%q flash; %q invoke} While this behavior makes sense from the standpoint of encapsulation, it causes problems with existing Tcl/Tk applications. Many existing applications are written with bindings that use "%W". Many library procedures assume that the window name is the access command. The itcl::purist variable controls a backward-compatibility mode. By default, this variable is "0", and the window name can be used as an access command in any context. Whenever the unknown procedure stumbles across a widget name, it simply uses "winfo command" to determine the appropriate command name. If this variable is set to "1", this backward-compatibility mode is disabled. This gives better encapsula- tion, but using the window name as the access command may lead to "invalid command" errors. itcl::version When an interpreter is created, [incr Tcl] initializes this variable to hold the version number of the form x.y. Changes to x rep- resent major changes with probable incompatibilities and changes to y represent small enhancements and bug fixes that retain back- ward compatibility. KEYWORDS
itcl, variables itcl 3.0 itclvars(n)
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