NAME
ptksh - Simple perl/Tk shell with cmd line editing and a persistent history
SYNOPSIS
% ptksh ?I<scriptfile>?
... version informations ...
ptksh> $b=$mw->Button(-text=>'Hi',-command=>sub{print 'Hi'})
ptksh> $b->grid
ptksh> o $b
... list of options ...
ptksh> ...
ptksh> ^D
%
DESCRIPTION
ptksh is a simple perl/Tk shell to enter perl commands interactively. When one starts ptksh a MainWindow is automaticly created. One can access it with $mw on the command line.
ptksh supports command line editing and history via ReadLine interface (see Term::ReadLine). The last 50 commands entered are saved on exit to ~/.ptksh_history. The history file is loaded into history cache the next time you start ptksh.
To exit ptksh use: ^D, exit,
or quit
.
The primary target of ptksh is to experiment with perl/Tk widgets. To debug perl/Tk programs use the more powerful the perl debugger. Just enter ``O tk'' on debuggers command line to start the Tk eventloop. The only advantage ptksh has is that history file support and that a MainWindow is automaticly created.
DEBUGGING SUPPORT
ptksh provides some convenience function to make browsing in perl/Tk widget easier:
- ?
-
displays a short help summary.
- d ?args, ...?
-
Dumps recursicely arguments to stdout. (see Data::Dumper).
- p ?arg, ...?
-
appends "|\n" to each of it's arguments and prints it. If value is undef, '(undef)' is printed to stdout.
- o $widget ?-option ...?
-
prints the option(s) of $widget one on each line. If no options are given all options of the widget are listed. See Tk::options for more details on the format and contents of the returned list.
- o $widget /regexp/
-
Lists options of $widget matching the regular expression regexp.
- u ?class?
-
If no argument is given it lists the modules loaded by the commands you executed or since the last time you called
u
.If argument is the empty string lists all modules that are loaded by ptksh.
If argument is a string, ``text'' it tried does a ``use Tk::Text''.
ENVIRONMENT
Same as for Term::ReadLine and perl. See Term::ReadLine and "ENVIRONMENT" in perlrun for further details.
FILES
- .ptksh_init
-
If found in current directory it is read in an evaluated after the mainwindow $mw is created. .ptksh_init can contain any valid perl code.
- ~/.ptksh_history
-
Contains the last 50 lines entered in ptksh session(s).
BUGS
Term::Readline::Perl command line history is broken when used in conjunction with perl/Tk. Term::ReadLine::Gnu has no problems.
Tk::MainLoop function interactively entered or sourced in a init or script file will block ptksh.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Achim Bohnet <ach@mpe.mpg.de>
Copyright (c) 1996-1998 Achim Bohnet. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.