- NAME
- grid — Geometry manager that arranges widgets in a grid
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- grid window ?window ...? ?options?
- grid anchor window ?anchor?
- grid bbox window ?column row? ?column2 row2?
- grid columnconfigure window index ?-option value...?
- grid configure window ?window ...? ?options?
- -column n
- -columnspan n
- -in container
- -ipadx amount
- -ipady amount
- -padx amount
- -pady amount
- -row n
- -rowspan n
- -sticky style
- grid content window ?-option value?
- grid forget window ?window ...?
- grid info window
- grid location window x y
- grid propagate window ?boolean?
- grid rowconfigure window index ?-option value...?
- grid remove window ?window ...?
- grid size container
- grid slaves window ?-option value?
- RELATIVE PLACEMENT
- -
- x
- ^
- THE GRID ALGORITHM
- GEOMETRY PROPAGATION
- RESTRICTIONS ON CONTAINER WINDOWS
- STACKING ORDER
- CREDITS
- EXAMPLES
- SEE ALSO
- KEYWORDS
grid — Geometry manager that arranges widgets in a grid
grid option arg ?arg ...?
The grid command is used to communicate with the grid
geometry manager that arranges widgets in rows and columns inside
of another window, called the geometry container (or container window).
The grid command can have any of several forms, depending
on the option argument:
- grid window ?window ...? ?options?
-
If the first argument to grid is suitable as the first window
argument to grid configure, either a window name (any value
starting with .) or one of the characters x or ^
(see the RELATIVE PLACEMENT section below), then the command is
processed in the same way as grid configure.
- grid anchor window ?anchor?
-
The anchor value controls how to place the grid within the container window
when no row/column has any weight. See THE GRID ALGORITHM below
for further details. The default anchor is nw.
- grid bbox window ?column row? ?column2 row2?
-
With no arguments,
the bounding box (in pixels) of the grid is returned.
The return value consists of 4 integers. The first two are the pixel
offset from the container window (x then y) of the top-left corner of the
grid, and the second two integers are the width and height of the grid,
also in pixels. If a single column and row is specified on
the command line, then the bounding box for that cell is returned, where the
top left cell is numbered from zero. If both column and row
arguments are specified, then the bounding box spanning the rows and columns
indicated is returned.
- grid columnconfigure window index ?-option value...?
-
Query or set the column properties of the index column of the
geometry container, window.
The valid options are -minsize, -weight, -uniform
and -pad.
If one or more options are provided, then index may be given as
a list of column indices to which the configuration options will operate on.
Indices may be integers, window names or the keyword all. For all
the options apply to all columns currently occupied be content windows. For
a window name, that window must be a content of this container and the options
apply to all columns currently occupied be the content.
The -minsize option sets the minimum size, in screen units,
that will be permitted for this column.
The -weight option (an integer value)
sets the relative weight for apportioning
any extra spaces among
columns.
A weight of zero (0) indicates the column will not deviate from its requested
size. A column whose weight is two will grow at twice the rate as a column
of weight one when extra space is allocated to the layout.
The -uniform option, when a non-empty value is supplied, places
the column in a uniform group with other columns that have the
same value for -uniform. The space for columns belonging to a
uniform group is allocated so that their sizes are always in strict
proportion to their -weight values. See
THE GRID ALGORITHM below for further details.
The -pad option specifies the number of screen units that will be
added to the largest window contained completely in that column when the
grid geometry manager requests a size from the containing window.
If only an option is specified, with no value,
the current value of that option is returned.
If only the container window and index is specified, all the current settings
are returned in a list of
“-option value”
pairs.
- grid configure window ?window ...? ?options?
-
The arguments consist of the names of one or more content windows
followed by pairs of arguments that specify how
to manage the content.
The characters -, x and ^,
can be specified instead of a window name to alter the default
location of a window, as described in the RELATIVE PLACEMENT
section, below.
The following options are supported:
- -column n
-
Insert the window so that it occupies the nth column in the grid.
Column numbers start with 0. If this option is not supplied, then the
window is arranged just to the right of previous window specified on this
call to grid, or column
“0”
if it is the first window. For each
x that immediately precedes the window, the column position
is incremented by one. Thus the x represents a blank column
for this row in the grid.
- -columnspan n
-
Insert the window so that it occupies n columns in the grid.
The default is one column, unless the window name is followed by a
-, in which case the columnspan is incremented once for each immediately
following -.
- -in container
-
Insert the window(s) in the container
window given by container. The default is the first window's
parent window.
- -ipadx amount
-
The amount specifies how much horizontal internal padding to
leave on each side of the content. This is space is added
inside the content border.
The amount must be a valid screen distance, such as 2 or .5c.
It defaults to 0.
- -ipady amount
-
The amount specifies how much vertical internal padding to
leave on the top and bottom of the content.
This space is added inside the content border.
The amount defaults to 0.
- -padx amount
-
The amount specifies how much horizontal external padding to
leave on each side of the content, in screen units.
Amount may be a list
of two values to specify padding for left and right separately.
The amount defaults to 0.
This space is added outside the content border.
- -pady amount
-
The amount specifies how much vertical external padding to
leave on the top and bottom of the content, in screen units.
Amount may be a list
of two values to specify padding for top and bottom separately.
The amount defaults to 0.
This space is added outside the content border.
- -row n
-
Insert the content so that it occupies the nth row in the grid.
Row numbers start with 0. If this option is not supplied, then the
content is arranged on the same row as the previous content specified on this
call to grid, or the next row after the highest occupied row
if this is the first content.
- -rowspan n
-
Insert the content so that it occupies n rows in the grid.
The default is one row. If the next grid command contains
^ characters instead of content that line up with the columns
of this content, then the rowspan of this content is
extended by one.
- -sticky style
-
If a content's cell is larger than its requested dimensions, this
option may be used to position (or stretch) the content within its cell.
Style is a string that contains zero or more of the characters
n, s, e or w.
The string can optionally contain spaces or
commas, but they are ignored. Each letter refers to a side (north, south,
east, or west) that the content will
“stick”
to. If both n and s (or e and w) are
specified, the content will be stretched to fill the entire
height (or width) of its cavity. The -sticky option subsumes the
combination of -anchor and -fill that is used by pack.
The default is
“”,
which causes the content to be centered in its cavity, at its requested size.
If any of the content is already managed by the geometry manager
then any unspecified options for them retain their previous values rather
than receiving default values.
- grid content window ?-option value?
-
If no options are supplied, a list of all of the content in window
is returned, most recently managed first.
Option can be either -row or -column which
causes only the content in the row (or column) specified by value
to be returned.
- grid forget window ?window ...?
-
Removes each of the windows from grid for its
container and unmaps their windows.
The content will no longer be managed by the grid geometry manager.
The configuration options for that window are forgotten, so that if the
window is managed once more by the grid geometry manager, the initial
default settings are used.
If the last content window of the container becomes unmanaged, this will also
send the virtual event <<NoManagedChild>> to the container; the container
may choose to resize itself (or otherwise respond) to such a change.
- grid info window
-
Returns a list whose elements are the current configuration state of
the content given by window in the same option-value form that
might be specified to grid configure.
The first two elements of the list are
“-in container”
where container is the windows's container window.
- grid location window x y
-
Given x and y values in screen units relative to the container
window, the column and row number at that x and y location is
returned. For locations that are above or to the left of the grid, -1
is returned.
- grid propagate window ?boolean?
-
If boolean has a true boolean value such as 1 or on
then propagation is enabled for window, which must be a window
name (see GEOMETRY PROPAGATION below).
If boolean has a false boolean value then propagation is
disabled for window.
In either of these cases an empty string is returned.
If boolean is omitted then the command returns 0 or
1 to indicate whether propagation is currently enabled
for window.
Propagation is enabled by default.
- grid rowconfigure window index ?-option value...?
-
Query or set the row properties of the index row of the
geometry container, window.
The valid options are -minsize, -weight, -uniform
and -pad.
If one or more options are provided, then index may be given as
a list of row indices to which the configuration options will operate on.
Indices may be integers, window names or the keyword all. For all
the options apply to all rows currently occupied by content windows. For a
window name, that window must be a content window of this container and the
options apply to all rows currently occupied by the container window.
The -minsize option sets the minimum size, in screen units,
that will be permitted for this row.
The -weight option (an integer value)
sets the relative weight for apportioning
any extra spaces among
rows.
A weight of zero (0) indicates the row will not deviate from its requested
size. A row whose weight is two will grow at twice the rate as a row
of weight one when extra space is allocated to the layout.
The -uniform option, when a non-empty value is supplied, places
the row in a uniform group with other rows that have the
same value for -uniform. The space for rows belonging to a
uniform group is allocated so that their sizes are always in strict
proportion to their -weight values. See
THE GRID ALGORITHM below for further details.
The -pad option specifies the number of screen units that will be
added to the largest window contained completely in that row when the
grid geometry manager requests a size from the containing window.
If only an option is specified, with no value,
the current value of that option is returned.
If only the container window and index is specified, all the current settings
are returned in a list of
“-option value”
pairs.
- grid remove window ?window ...?
-
Removes each of the windows from grid for its
container and unmaps their windows.
The content will no longer be managed by the grid geometry manager.
However, the configuration options for that window are remembered,
so that if the content window is managed once more by the grid
geometry manager, the previous values are retained.
If the last content window of the container becomes unmanaged, this will also
send the virtual event <<NoManagedChild>> to the container; the
container may choose to resize itself (or otherwise respond) to such a change.
- grid size container
-
Returns the size of the grid (in columns then rows) for container.
The size is determined either by the content occupying the largest
row or column, or the largest column or row with a -minsize,
-weight, or -pad that is non-zero.
- grid slaves window ?-option value?
-
Synonym for grid content window ?-option value?.
The grid command contains a limited set of capabilities that
permit layouts to be created without specifying the row and column
information for each content. This permits content to be rearranged,
added, or removed without the need to explicitly specify row and
column information.
When no column or row information is specified for a content,
default values are chosen for
-column, -row, -columnspan and -rowspan
at the time the content is managed. The values are chosen
based upon the current layout of the grid, the position of the content
relative to other contents in the same grid command, and the presence
of the characters -, x, and ^ in grid
command where content names are normally expected.
- -
-
This increases the -columnspan of the content to the left. Several
-'s in a row will successively increase the number of columns spanned.
A - may not follow a ^ or a x, nor may it be the first
content argument to grid configure.
- x
-
This leaves an empty column between the content on the left and
the content on the right.
- ^
-
This extends the -rowspan of the content above the ^'s
in the grid. The number of ^'s in a row must match the number of
columns spanned by the content above it.
The grid geometry manager lays out its content in three steps.
In the first step, the minimum size needed to fit all of the content
is computed, then (if propagation is turned on), a request is made
of the container window to become that size.
In the second step, the requested size is compared against the actual size
of the container. If the sizes are different, then spaces is added to or taken
away from the layout as needed.
For the final step, each content is positioned in its row(s) and column(s)
based on the setting of its sticky flag.
To compute the minimum size of a layout, the grid geometry manager first looks
at all content whose -columnspan and -rowspan values are one,
and computes the nominal size of each row or column to be either the
minsize for that row or column, or the sum of the padding
plus the size of the largest content, whichever is greater. After that
the rows or columns in each uniform group adapt to each other. Then
the content whose row-spans or column-spans are greater than one are
examined. If a group of rows or columns need to be increased in size
in order to accommodate these content, then extra space is added to each
row or column in the group according to its weight. For each
group whose weights are all zero, the additional space is apportioned
equally.
When multiple rows or columns belong to a uniform group, the space
allocated to them is always in proportion to their weights. (A weight
of zero is considered to be 1.) In other words, a row or column
configured with -weight 1 -uniform a will have exactly the same
size as any other row or column configured with -weight 1 -uniform
a. A row or column configured with -weight 2 -uniform b will
be exactly twice as large as one that is configured with -weight 1
-uniform b.
More technically, each row or column in the group will have a size
equal to k*weight for some constant k. The constant
k is chosen so that no row or column becomes smaller than its
minimum size. For example, if all rows or columns in a group have the
same weight, then each row or column will have the same size as the
largest row or column in the group.
For containers whose size is larger than the requested layout, the additional
space is apportioned according to the row and column weights. If all of
the weights are zero, the layout is placed within its container according to
the anchor value.
For containers whose size is smaller than the requested layout, space is taken
away from columns and rows according to their weights. However, once a
column or row shrinks to its minsize, its weight is taken to be zero.
If more space needs to be removed from a layout than would be permitted, as
when all the rows or columns are at their minimum sizes, the layout is
placed and clipped according to the anchor value.
The grid geometry manager normally computes how large a container must be to
just exactly meet the needs of its content, and it sets the
requested width and height of the container to these dimensions.
This causes geometry information to propagate up through a
window hierarchy to a top-level window so that the entire
sub-tree sizes itself to fit the needs of the leaf windows.
However, the grid propagate command may be used to
turn off propagation for one or more containers.
If propagation is disabled then grid will not set
the requested width and height of the container window.
This may be useful if, for example, you wish for a container
window to have a fixed size that you specify.
The container for each content must either be the content's parent
(the default) or a descendant of the content's parent.
This restriction is necessary to guarantee that the
content can be placed over any part of its container that is
visible without danger of the content being clipped by its parent.
In addition, all content in one call to grid must have the same container.
If the container for a content is not its parent then you must make sure
that the content is higher in the stacking order than the container.
Otherwise the container will obscure the content and it will appear as
if the content has not been managed correctly.
The easiest way to make sure the content is higher than the container is
to create the container window first: the most recently created window
will be highest in the stacking order.
The grid command is based on ideas taken from the GridBag
geometry manager written by Doug. Stein, and the blt_table geometry
manager, written by George Howlett.
A toplevel window containing a text widget and two scrollbars:
# Make the widgets
toplevel .t
text .t.txt -wrap none -xscroll {.t.h set} -yscroll {.t.v set}
scrollbar .t.v -orient vertical -command {.t.txt yview}
scrollbar .t.h -orient horizontal -command {.t.txt xview}
# Lay them out
grid .t.txt .t.v -sticky nsew
grid .t.h -sticky nsew
# Tell the text widget to take all the extra room
grid rowconfigure .t .t.txt -weight 1
grid columnconfigure .t .t.txt -weight 1
Three widgets of equal width, despite their different
“natural”
widths:
button .b -text "Foo"
entry .e -textvariable foo ; set foo "Hello World!"
label .l -text "This is a fairly long piece of text"
grid .b .e .l -sticky ew
grid columnconfigure . "all" -uniform allTheSame
pack, place
geometry manager, location, grid, cell, propagation, size, pack
Copyright © 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.