Resource File:
TkCon will search for a resource file in
"
$env(HOME)/.tkconrc
" (Unix),
"
$env(HOME)/tkcon.cfg
" (Windows) or
"
$env(PREF_FOLDER)/tkcon.cfg
" (Macintosh). On DOS
machines, "
$env(HOME)
" usually refers to
"
C:\
". TkCon never sources the
"
~/.wishrc
" file. The resource file is sourced by each
new instance of the console. An example resource file is provided
below.
Command Line Arguments
Except for
-rcfile
, command line arguments are handled
after the TkCon resource file is sourced, but before the slave
interpreter or the TkCon user interface is initialized.
-rcfile
is handled right before it would be sourced,
allowing you to specify any alternate file. Command line arguments
are passed to each new console and will be evaluated by each. To
prevent this from happening, you have to say
tkcon main set
argv {}; tkcon main set argc 0
.
For these options, any unique substring is allowed.
-argv
(also --
)
- Causes TkCon to stop evaluating arguments and set the remaining
args to be argv/argc (with
--
prepended). This carries
over for any further consoles. This is meant only for wrapping
TkCon around programs that require their own arguments.
-color-<color>
color
- Sets the requested color type to the specified color for tkcon.
See the Variables section for the recognized
<color> names.
-eval
(also -main
or
-e
)
- A tcl script to eval in each main interpreter. This is
evaluated after the resource file is loaded and the slave
interpreter is created. Multiple
-eval
switches will
be recognized (in order).
-exec
slavename
- Sets the named slave that tkcon operates in. In general, this
is only useful to set to "" (empty), indicating to tkcon to avoid
the multi-interpreter model and operate in the main environment.
When this is empty, any further arguments will be only used in the
first tkcon console and not passed onto further new consoles. This
is useful when using tkcon as a console for extended wish
executables that don't load there commands into slave
interpreters.
-font
font
- Sets the font that tkcon uses for its text windows. If this
isn't a fixed width font, tkcon will override it.
-nontcl
TCL_BOOLEAN
- Sets
::tkcon::OPT(nontcl)
to TCL_BOOLEAN.
Needed when attaching to non-Tcl interpreters.
-package
package_name (also
-load
)
- Packages to automatically load into the slave interpreters (ie
- "Tk").
-rcfile
filename
- Specify an alternate tkcon resource file name.
-root
widgetname
- Makes the named widget the root name of all consoles (ie -
.tkcon).
-slave
tcl_script
- A tcl script to eval in each slave interpreter. This will
append the one specified in the tkcon resource file, if any.
Some examples of tkcon command line startup situations:
megawish tkcon.tcl -exec "" -root .tkcon
mainfile.tcl
- Use tkcon as a console for your megawish application. You can
avoid starting the line with
megawish
if that is the
default wish that tkcon would use. The -root
ensures
that tkcon will not conflict with the
tkcon.tcl -font "Courier 12" -load Tk
- Use the courier font for tkcon and always load Tk in slave
interpreters at startup.
tkcon.tcl -rcfile ~/.wishrc -color,bg white
- Use the
~/.wishrc
file as the resource file, and a
white background for tkcon's text widgets.
Variables:
Certain variables in TkCon can be modified to suit your needs. It's
easiest to do this in the resource file, but you can do it when
time the program is running (and some can be changed via the Prefs
menu). All these are part of the master interpreter's
::tkcon
namespace. The modifiable array variables are
::tkcon::COLOR
and
::tkcon::OPT
. You can
call '
tkcon set ::tkcon::COLOR
' when the program is
running to check its state. Here is an explanation of certain
variables you might change or use:
::tkcon::COLOR(bg)
- The background color for tkcon text widgets. Defaults to the
operating system default (determined at startup).
::tkcon::COLOR(blink)
- The background color of the electric brace highlighting, if on.
Defaults to yellow.
::tkcon::COLOR(cursor)
- The background color for the insertion cursor in tkcon.
Defaults to black.
::tkcon::COLOR(disabled)
- The foreground color for disabled menu items. Defaults to dark grey.
::tkcon::COLOR(proc)
- The foreground color of a recognized proc, if command
highlighting is on. Defaults to dark
green.
::tkcon::COLOR(var)
- The background color of a recognized var, if command
highlighting is on. Defaults to pink.
::tkcon::COLOR(prompt)
- The foreground color of the prompt as output in the console.
Defaults to brown.
::tkcon::COLOR(stdin)
- The foreground color of the stdin for the console. Defaults to
black.
::tkcon::COLOR(stdout)
- The foreground color of the stdout as output in the console.
Defaults to blue.
::tkcon::COLOR(stderr)
- The foreground color of stderr as output in the console.
Defaults to red.
::tkcon::OPT(autoload)
- Packages to automatically load into the slave interpreter (ie -
'Tk'). This is a list. Defaults to {} (none).
::tkcon::OPT(blinktime)
- The amount of time (in millisecs) that braced sections should
blink for. Defaults to 500 (.5 secs), must be at least
100.
::tkcon::OPT(blinkrange)
- Whether to blink the entire range for electric brace matching
or to just blink the actual matching braces (respectively 1 or 0,
defaults to 1).
::tkcon::OPT(buffer)
- The size of the console scroll buffer (in lines). Defaults to
512.
::tkcon::OPT(calcmode)
- Whether to allow
expr
commands to be run at the
command line without prefixing them with expr
(just a
convenience).
::tkcon::OPT(cols)
- Number of columns for the console to start out with. Defaults
to 80.
::tkcon::OPT(dead)
- What to do with dead connected interpreters. If
dead
is leave, TkCon automatically exits the
dead interpreter. If dead
is ignore then it
remains attached waiting for the interpreter to reappear. Otherwise
TkCon will prompt you.
::tkcon::OPT(exec)
- This corresponds to the
-exec
option above
::tkcon::OPT(font)
- Font to use for tkcon text widgets (also specified with -font).
Defaults to the system default, or a fixed width equivalent.
::tkcon::OPT(gets)
- Controls whether tkcon will overload the gets command to work
with tkcon. The valid values are:
congets
(the
default), which will redirect stdin
requests to the
tkcon window; gets
, which will pop up a dialog to get
input; and {} (empty string) which tells tkcon not to overload
gets. This value must be set at startup to alter tkcon's
behavior.
::tkcon::OPT(history)
- The size of the history list to keep. Defaults to 48.
::tkcon::OPT(hoterrors)
- Whether hot errors are enabled or not. When enabled, errors
that are returned to the console are marked with a link to the
error info that will pop up in an minimal editor. This requires
more memory because each error that occurs will maintain bindings
for this feature, as long as the error is in the text widget.
Defaults to on.
::tkcon::OPT(library)
- The path to any tcl library directories (these are appended to
the auto_path when the after the resource file is loaded in).
::tkcon::OPT(lightbrace)
- Whether to use the brace highlighting feature or not
(respectively 1 or 0, defaults to 1).
::tkcon::OPT(lightcmd)
- Whether to use the command highlighting feature or not
(respectively 1 or 0, defaults to 1).
::tkcon::OPT(maineval)
- A tcl script to execute in the main interpreter after the slave
interpreter is created and the user interface is initialized.
::tkcon::OPT(maxlinelen)
- A number that specifies the limit of long result lines. True
result is still captured in $_ (and 'puts $_' works). Defaults to 0
(unlimited).
::tkcon::OPT(maxmenu)
- A number that specifies the maximum number of packages to show
vertically in the Interp->Packages menu before breaking into
another column. Defaults to 15.
::tkcon::OPT(nontcl)
- For those who might be using non-Tcl based Tk attachments, set
this to 1. It prevents TkCon from trying to evaluate its own Tcl
code in an attached interpreter. Also see my notes for non-Tcl based Tk interpreters.
::tkcon::OPT(prompt1)
- Like tcl_prompt1, except it doesn't require you use
'
puts
'. No equivalent for tcl_prompt2 is available
(it's unnecessary IMHO).
Defaults to {([file tail [pwd]]) [history nextid] % }.
::tkcon::OPT(rows)
- Number of rows for the console to start out with. Defaults to
20.
::tkcon::OPT(scollypos)
- Y scrollbar position. Valid values are
left
or
right
. Defaults to left
.
::tkcon::OPT(showmenu)
- Show the menubar on startup (1 or 0, defaults to 1).
::tkcon::OPT(showmultiple)
- Show multiple matches for path/proc/var name expansion (1 or 0,
defaults to 1).
::tkcon::OPT(slaveeval)
- A tcl script to execute in each slave interpreter right after
it's created. This allows the user to have user defined info always
available in a slave. Example:
set ::tkcon::OPT(slaveeval) {
proc foo args { puts $args }
lappend auto_path .
}
::tkcon::OPT(slaveexit)
- Allows the prevention of
exit
in slaves from
exitting the entire application. If it is equal to
exit
, exit will exit as usual, otherwise it will just
close down that interpreter (and any children). Defaults to
close.
::tkcon::OPT(subhistory)
- Allow history substitution to occur (0 or 1, defaults to 1).
The history list is maintained in a single interpreter per TkCon
console instance. Thus you have history which can range over a
series of attached interpreters.
An example TkCon resource file might look like:
######################################################
## My TkCon Resource File
# Use a fixed default font
#tkcon font fixed; # valid on unix
#tkcon font systemfixed; # valid on win
tkcon font Courier 12; # valid everywhere
# Keep 50 commands in history
set ::tkcon::OPT(history) 50
# Use a pink prompt
set ::tkcon::COLOR(prompt) pink
######################################################