NAME
CallingTk - what is Perl Tk interface doing when you call Tk functions.
This information is worse than useless for perlTk
users, but can of some help for people interested in using modified Tk source with perlTk
.
This document is under construction. The information is believed to be pertinent to the version of portableTk
available when it was created. All the details are subject to change.
DESCRIPTION
- PreCompiling
-
Before the actual compilation stage a script scans the source and extracts the subcommands of different commands. This information resides in the file
pTk/Methods.def
. - Compilation
-
During compilation the above file is included in the source of booting routine of dynamic (or static) library. More precisely, the booting code of module
Tk
calls the subroutine Boot_Glue() from the moduletkGlue.c
, and this subroutine includes the file (with appropriate macro definitions). - Inside
use Tk;
-
The module bootstraps the C code, then loads the Perl libraries. The heart of the Perl code is contained in the
Tk::Widget
library, all the widgets inherit from this module. Code for toplevels is loaded fromTk::MainWindow
.During bootstrap of the C glue code the
Xevent::?
codes and a handful ofTk::Widget
andTk::Image
routines are defined. (Much more XSUBs are created fromTk.xs
code.) The widget subcommands are glued to Perl basing on the list included frompTk/Methods.def
. In fact all the subcommands are glued to XSUBs that are related to the same C subroutine XStoWidget(), but have different data parts.During the Perl code bootstrap the method
Tk::Widget::import
is called. This call requires all the code from particular widget packages.Code from the widget packages calls an obscure command like
(bless \"Text")->WidgetClass;
This command (actually Tk::Widget::WidgetClass()) creates three routines: Tk::Widget::Text(), Tk::Widget::isText(), and Tk::Text::isText(). The first one is basically
new
ofTk::Text
, the other two return constants. It also puts the class into depository. - Inside
$top = MainWindow->new;
-
This is quite intuitive. This call goes direct to
Tk::MainWindow::new
, that calls XSUBTk::MainWindow::CreateMainWindow
, that calls C subroutine Tk_CreateMainWindow(). It is aTk
subroutine, so here black magic ends (almost).The only remaining black magic is that the
Tk
initialization routine creates a lot of commands, but the subroutine for creation is usurped by portableTk and the commands are created in the packageTk
. They are associated to XSUBs that are related to one of three C subroutines XStoSubCmd(), XStoBind(), or XStoTk(), but have different data parts.The result of the call is blessed into
Tk::MainWindow
, as it should. - Inside
$top->title('Text demo');
-
The package
Tk::Toplevel
defines a lot of subroutines on the fly on some list. All the commands from the list are converted to the corresponding subcommands ofwm
method of the widget. Here subcommand is a command with some particular second argument (in this case"title"
). Recall that the first argument is $self.Now
Tk::Toplevel
@ISATk::Widget
, that in turn @ISATk
. So a call to$top->wm('title','Text demo')
callsTk::wm
, that is defined during call to Tk_CreateMainWindow(). As it is described above, the XSUB associated to XStoSubCmd() is called.This C routine is defined in
tkGlue.c
. It gets the data part of XSUB, creates aSV
with the name of the command, and calls Call_Tk() with the XSUB data as the first argument, and with the name of XSUB stuffed into the Perl stack in the place theretk
expects it. (In fact it can also reorder the arguments if it thinks it is what you want).The latter procedure extracts name of
tk
procedure andclientData
from the first argument and makes a call, using Perl stack asargv
for the procedure. A lot of black magic is performed afterwards to convert result of the procedure to a Perl array return. - Inside
$text = $top->Text(background => $txtBg);
-
Above we discussed how the command
Tk::Widget::Text
is created. The above command calls it via inheritance. It is translated toTk::Text::new($top, background => $txtBg);
The package
Tk::Text
has no methodnew
, so theTk::Widget::new
is called. In turn it callsTk::Text->DoInit($top)
, that isTk::Widget::DoInit(Tk::Text,$top)
, that initializes the bindings if necessary. Then it creates the name for the widget of the form.text0
, and callsTk::text('.text0', background => $txtBg)
(note lowercase). The result of the call is blessed intoTk::Text
, and the methodbindtags
for this object is called.Now the only thing to discuss is who defines the methods
text
andbindtags
. The answer is that they are defined intkWindow.c
, and these commands are created in the packageTk
in the same sweep that created the commandTk::wm
discussed above.So the the same C code that corresponds to the processing of corresponding TCL commands is called here as well (this time via
XStoTk
interface). - Inside
$text->insert('insert','Hello, world!');
-
As we discussed above, the subcommands of widget procedures correspond to XSUB
XStoWidget
. This XSUB substitutes the first argument $text (that is a hash reference) to an appropriate value from this hash, adds the additional argument after the first one that contains the name of the subcommand extracted from the data part of XSUB, and calls the corresponding Tk C subroutine viaCall_Tk
.
Ilya Zakharevich <ilya@math.ohio-state.edu>