From 54ec1c4fe81672ca66f327ef6ae170f458cd79e5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: shyouhei Date: Wed, 15 Aug 2007 20:57:30 +0000 Subject: sorry. I made wrong tags. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/tags/v1_8_5_54@13009 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e --- .../ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl | 152 --------------------- 1 file changed, 152 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 ruby_1_8_5/ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl (limited to 'ruby_1_8_5/ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl') diff --git a/ruby_1_8_5/ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl b/ruby_1_8_5/ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl deleted file mode 100644 index 63b805d98b..0000000000 --- a/ruby_1_8_5/ext/tk/sample/tkextlib/tile/toolbutton.tcl +++ /dev/null @@ -1,152 +0,0 @@ -# -# $Id: toolbutton.tcl,v 1.1.2.1 2005/04/09 09:27:28 nagai Exp $ -# -# Demonstration of custom widget styles. -# - -# -# ~ BACKGROUND -# -# Checkbuttons in toolbars have a very different appearance -# than regular checkbuttons: there's no indicator, they -# "pop up" when the mouse is over them, and they appear sunken -# when selected. -# -# Tk added partial support for toolbar-style buttons in 8.4 -# with the "-overrelief" option, and TIP #82 added further -# support with the "-offrelief" option. So to get a toolbar-style -# checkbutton, you can configure it with: -# -# checkbutton .cb \ -# -indicatoron false -selectcolor {} -relief flat -overrelief raised -# -# Behind the scenes, Tk has a lot of rather complicated logic -# to implement this checkbutton style; see library/button.tcl, -# generic/tkButton.c, and the platform-specific files unix/tkUnixButton.c -# et al. for the full details. -# -# The tile widget set has a better way: custom styles. -# Since the appearance is completely controlled by the theme engine, -# we can define a new "Toolbutton" style and just use: -# -# checkbutton .cb -style Toolbutton -# -# -# ~ DEMONSTRATION -# -# The tile built-in themes (default, "alt", windows, and XP) -# already include Toolbutton styles. This script will add -# them to the "step" and "blue" themes as a demonstration. -# -# (Note: Pushbuttons and radiobuttons can also use the "Toolbutton" -# style; see demo.tcl.) -# - -style theme settings "step" { - -# -# First, we use [style layout] to define what elements to -# use and how they're arranged. Toolbuttons are pretty -# simple, consisting of a border, some internal padding, -# and a label. (See also the TScrollbar layout definition -# in demos/blue.tcl for a more complicated layout spec.) -# - style layout Toolbutton { - Toolbutton.background - Toolbutton.border -children { - Toolbutton.padding -children { - Toolbutton.label - } - } - } - -# (Actually the above isn't strictly necessary, since the same layout -# is defined in the default theme; we could have inherited it -# instead.) -# -# Next, specify default values for element options. -# For many options (like -background), the defaults -# inherited from the parent style are sufficient. -# - style default Toolbutton -width 0 -padding 1 -relief flat -borderwidth 2 - -# -# Finally, use [style map] to specify state-specific -# resource values. We want a flat relief if the widget is -# disabled, sunken if it's selected (on) or pressed, -# and raised when it's active (the mouse pointer is -# over the widget). Each state-value pair is checked -# in order, and the first matching state takes precedence. -# - style map Toolbutton -relief { - disabled flat - selected sunken - pressed sunken - active raised - } -} - -# -# Now for the "blue" theme. (Since the purpose of this -# theme is to show what *can* be done, not necessarily what -# *should* be done, the following makes some questionable -# design decisions from an aesthetic standpoint.) -# -if {![catch {package require tile::theme::blue}]} { -style theme settings "blue" { - - # - # Default values: - # - style default Toolbutton \ - -width 0 -relief flat -borderwidth 2 \ - -background #6699CC -foreground #000000 ; - - # - # Configure state-specific values for -relief, as before: - # - style map Toolbutton -relief { - disabled flat - selected sunken - pressed sunken - active raised - } - - # - # Adjust the -padding at the same time, to enhance - # the raised/sunken illusion: - # - style default Toolbutton -padding 4 - style map Toolbutton -padding { - disabled {4} - selected {6 6 2 2} - pressed {6 6 2 2} - active {2 2 6 6} - } - - # - # ... and change the foreground and background colors - # when the mouse cursor is over the widget: - # - style map Toolbutton -background { - active #008800 - } -foreground { - active #FFFFFF - } -} - -} - -# -# ~ A final note: -# -# TIP #82 also says: "When -indicatoron is off and the button itself -# is on, the relief continues to be hard-coded to sunken. For symmetry, -# we might consider adding another -onrelief option to cover this -# case. But it is difficult to imagine ever wanting to change the -# value of -onrelief so it has been omitted from this TIP. -# If there as strong desire to have -onrelief, it can be added later." -# ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -# -# The Tile project aims to make sure that this never needs to happen. -# -- cgit v1.2.3