Tk_Name(3) Tk Tk_Name(3)
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NAME
Tk_Name, Tk_PathName, Tk_NameToWindow - convert between
names and window tokens
SYNOPSIS
#include <tk.h>
Tk_Uid
Tk_Name(tkwin)
char *
Tk_PathName(tkwin)
Tk_Window
Tk_NameToWindow(interp, pathName, tkwin)
ARGUMENTS
Tk_Window tkwin (in) Token for window.
Tcl_Interp *interp (out) Interpreter to use for
error reporting.
char *pathName (in) Character string
containing path name of
window.
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DESCRIPTION
Each window managed by Tk has two names, a short name that
identifies a window among children of the same parent, and a
path name that identifies the window uniquely among all the
windows belonging to the same main window. The path name is
used more often in Tk than the short name; many commands,
like bind, expect path names as arguments.
The Tk_Name macro returns a window's short name, which is
the same as the name argument passed to Tk_CreateWindow when
the window was created. The value is returned as a Tk_Uid,
which may be used just like a string pointer but also has
the properties of a unique identifier (see the manual entry
for Tk_GetUid for details).
The Tk_PathName macro returns a hierarchical name for tkwin.
Path names have a structure similar to file names in Unix
but with dots between elements instead of slashes: the main
window for an application has the path name ``.''; its
children have names like ``.a'' and ``.b''; their children
have names like ``.a.aa'' and ``.b.bb''; and so on. A
window is considered to be be a child of another window for
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Tk_Name(3) Tk Tk_Name(3)
naming purposes if the second window was named as the first
window's parent when the first window was created. This is
not always the same as the X window hierarchy. For example,
a pop-up is created as a child of the root window, but its
logical parent will usually be a window within the
application.
The procedure Tk_NameToWindow returns the token for a window
given its path name (the pathName argument) and another
window belonging to the same main window (tkwin). It
normally returns a token for the named window, but if no
such window exists Tk_NameToWindow leaves an error message
in interp->result and returns NULL. The tkwin argument to
Tk_NameToWindow is needed because path names are only unique
within a single application hierarchy. If, for example, a
single process has opened two main windows, each will have a
separate naming hierarchy and the same path name might
appear in each of the hierarchies. Normally tkwin is the
main window of the desired hierarchy, but this need not be
the case: any window in the desired hierarchy may be used.
KEYWORDS
name, path name, token, window
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