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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

Tk::Trace (3)

Name

Tk::Trace - emulate Tcl/Tk trace functions.

Synopsis

use Tk::Trace

$mw->traceVariable(\$v, 'wru' => [\&update_meter, $scale]);
%vinfo = $mw->traceVinfo(\$v);
print "Trace info  :\n  ", join("\n  ", @{$vinfo{-legible}}), "\n";
$mw->traceVdelete(\$v);

Description

Tk::Trace(3)                 perl/Tk Documentation                Tk::Trace(3)



NAME
       Tk::Trace - emulate Tcl/Tk trace functions.

SYNOPSIS
        use Tk::Trace

        $mw->traceVariable(\$v, 'wru' => [\&update_meter, $scale]);
        %vinfo = $mw->traceVinfo(\$v);
        print "Trace info  :\n  ", join("\n  ", @{$vinfo{-legible}}), "\n";
        $mw->traceVdelete(\$v);

DESCRIPTION
       This class module emulates the Tcl/Tk trace family of commands by
       binding subroutines of your devising to Perl variables using simple
       Tie::Watch features.

       Callback format is patterned after the Perl/Tk scheme: supply either a
       code reference, or, supply an array reference and pass the callback
       code reference in the first element of the array, followed by callback
       arguments.

       User callbacks are passed these arguments:

        $_[0]        = undef for a scalar, index/key for array/hash
        $_[1]        = variable's current (read), new (write), final (undef) value
        $_[2]        = operation (r, w, or u)
        $_[3 .. $#_] = optional user callback arguments

       As a Trace user, you have an important responsibility when writing your
       callback, since you control the final value assigned to the variable.
       A typical callback might look like:

        sub callback {
           my($index, $value, $op, @args) = @_;
           return if $op eq 'u';
           # .... code which uses $value ...
           return $value;     # variable's final value
        }

       Note that the callback's return value becomes the variable's final
       value, for either read or write traces.

       For write operations, the variable is updated with its new value before
       the callback is invoked.

       Multiple read, write and undef callbacks can be attached to a variable,
       which are invoked in reverse order of creation.

METHODS
       $mw->traceVariable(varRef, op => callback);
           varRef is a reference to the scalar, array or hash variable you
           wish to trace.  op is the trace operation, and can be any
           combination of r for read, w for write, and u for undef.  callback
           is a standard Perl/Tk callback, and is invoked, depending upon the
           value of op, whenever the variable is read, written, or destroyed.

       %vinfo = $mw->traceVinfo(varRef);
           Returns a hash detailing the internals of the Trace object, with
           these keys:

            %vinfo = (
                -variable =>  varRef
                -debug    =>  '0'
                -shadow   =>  '1'
                -value    =>  'HELLO SCALAR'
                -destroy  =>  callback
                -fetch    =>  callback
                -store    =>  callback
                -legible  =>  above data formatted as a list of string, for printing
            );

           For array and hash Trace objects, the -value key is replaced with a
           -ptr key which is a reference to the parallel array or hash.
           Additionally, for an array or hash, there are key/value pairs for
           all the variable specific callbacks.

       $mw->traceVdelete(\$v);
           Stop tracing the variable.

EXAMPLES
        # Trace a Scale's variable and move a meter in unison.

        use Tk;
        use Tk::widgets qw/Trace/;

        $pi = 3.1415926;
        $mw = MainWindow->new;
        $c = $mw->Canvas( qw/-width 200 -height 110 -bd 2 -relief sunken/ )->grid;
        $c->createLine( qw/100 100 10 100 -tag meter -arrow last -width 5/ );
        $s = $mw->Scale( qw/-orient h -from 0 -to 100 -variable/ => \$v )->grid;
        $mw->Label( -text => 'Slide Me for 5 Seconds' )->grid;

        $mw->traceVariable( \$v, 'w' => [ \&update_meter, $s ] );

        $mw->after( 5000 => sub {
            print "Untrace time ...\n";
            %vinfo = $s->traceVinfo( \$v );
            print "Watch info  :\n  ", join("\n  ", @{$vinfo{-legible}}), "\n";
            $c->traceVdelete( \$v );
        });

        MainLoop;

        sub update_meter {
            my( $index, $value, $op, @args ) = @_;
            return if $op eq 'u';
            $min = $s->cget( -from );
            $max = $s->cget( -to );
            $pos = $value / abs( $max - $min );
            $x = 100.0 - 90.0 * ( cos( $pos * $pi ) );
            $y = 100.0 - 90.0 * ( sin( $pos * $pi ) );
            $c->coords( qw/meter 100 100/, $x, $y );
            return $value;
        }

        # Predictive text entry.

        use Tk;
        use Tk::widgets qw/ LabEntry Trace /;
        use strict;

        my @words =  qw/radio television telephone turntable microphone/;

        my $mw = MainWindow->new;

        my $e = $mw->LabEntry(
            qw/ -label Thing -width 40 /,
            -labelPack    => [ qw/ -side left / ],
            -textvariable => \my $thing,
        );
        my $t = $mw->Text( qw/ -height 10 -width 50 / );;

        $t->pack( $e, qw/ -side top / );

        $e->focus;
        $e->traceVariable( \$thing, 'w', [ \&trace_thing, $e, $t ] );

        foreach my $k ( 1 .. 12 ) {
            $e->bind( "<F${k}>" => [ \&ins, $t, Ev('K') ] );
        }
        $e->bind( '<Return>' =>
                  sub {
                      print "$thing\n";
                      $_[0]->delete( 0, 'end' );
                  }
        );

        MainLoop;

        sub trace_thing {

            my( $index, $value, $op, $e, $t ) = @_;

            return unless $value;

            $t->delete( qw/ 1.0 end / );
            foreach my $w ( @words ) {
                if ( $w =~ /^$value/ ) {
                    $t->insert( 'end', "$w\n" );
                }
            }

            return $value;

        } # end trace_thing

        sub ins {

            my( $e, $t, $K ) = @_;

            my( $index ) = $K =~ /^F(\d+)$/;

            $e->delete( 0, 'end' );
            $e->insert( 'end', $t->get( "$index.0", "$index.0 lineend" ) );
            $t->delete( qw/ 1.0 end / );

        } # end ins

HISTORY
        Stephen.O.Lidie@Lehigh.EDU, Lehigh University Computing Center, 2000/08/01
        . Version 1.0, for Tk800.022.

        sol0@Lehigh.EDU, Lehigh University Computing Center, 2003/09/22
        . Version 1.1, for Tk804.025, add support for multiple traces of the same
          type on the same variable.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2000 - 2003 Stephen O. Lidie. All rights reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.



ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+----------------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE |      ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
       +---------------+----------------------------+
       |Availability   | library/perl-5/perl-tk-532 |
       +---------------+----------------------------+
       |Stability      | Volatile                   |
       +---------------+----------------------------+

NOTES
       Source code for open source software components in Oracle Solaris can
       be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
       code-downloads.html.

       This software was built from source available at
       https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland.  The original community
       source was downloaded from
       http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/S/SR/SREZIC/Tk-804.036.tar.gz.

       Further information about this software can be found on the open source
       community website at http://search.cpan.org/~srezic/Tk.



Tk804.036                         2021-02-07                      Tk::Trace(3)