bitmap
Section: BLT Built-In Commands (n)
Updated: 2.4
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NAME
bitmap - Define a new bitmap from a Tcl script
SYNOPSIS
bitmap define bitmapName data ?option value?...
bitmap compose bitmapName text ?option value?...
bitmap exists bitmapName
bitmap source bitmapName
bitmap data bitmapName
bitmap height bitmapName
bitmap width bitmapName
DESCRIPTION
The bitmap command lets you create new bitmaps directly from your
Tcl script. The bitmap can be specified as a list of data or a text string
which is converted into a bitmap. You can arbitrarily scale
or rotate the bitmap too.
INTRODUCTION
Bitmaps are commonly used within Tk. In label and button widgets, you
display bitmaps them instead of text strings and in the canvas and
text widgets, they're used for stippling. But Tk let's you can create
new bitmaps only by reading the bitmap data from a file. This makes
bitmaps cumbersome to manage, especially in packaging the program as a
wish script, since each bitmap must be its own file. It would
be nicer if you could create new bitmaps directly from your Tcl script.
The bitmap command lets you do just that. You can specify the
bitmap as in various formats (such as the X11 bitmap format). You can
also compose a bitmap from a text string. The bitmap command
also lets you and arbitrarily rotate or scale the bitmap. For example, you
could use this to create button widgets with the text label rotated 90
degrees.
EXAMPLE
<<<<<<< bitmap.mann
You can define a new bitmap with the define operation. For
example, let's say you are using the X11 bitmap "gray1". Normally to
use it, you would specify the location of the file.
-
label .l -bitmap @/usr/X11R6/include/X11/bitmaps/gray1
But you can simply cut and paste the contents of "gray1" into the
bitmap command.
-
bitmap define gray1 {
#define gray1_width 2
#define gray1_height 2
static char gray1_bits[] = {
0x01, 0x02};
}
label .l -bitmap gray1
Tk will recognize "gray1" as a bitmap which can now be used with any
widget that accepts bitmaps.
-
.barchart element configure elem1 -stipple gray1
The bitmap data can be specified in a multitude of forms.
The following commands are all equivalent.
-
bitmap define gray1 {
#define gray1_width 2
#define gray1_height 2
static char gray1_bits[] = {
0x01, 0x02};
}
bitmap define gray1 { { 2 2 } { 0x01, 0x02 } }
bitmap define gray1 { { 2 2 } { 0x01 0x02 } }
bitmap define gray1 { { 2 2 } { 1 2 } }
Either the data is in the standard X11 bitmap form, or it's a list of
two lists. The first list contains the height and width of the bitmap.
The second list is the bitmap source data. Each element of that list
is an hexadecimal number specifying which pixels are foreground (1)
and which are background (0) of the bitmap. Note that the format of
the source data is exactly that of the XBM format.
You can scale or rotate the bitmap as you create it, by using the
-scale or-rotate options.
-
bitmap define gray1 {
#define gray1_width 2
#define gray1_height 2
static char gray1_bits[] = {
0x01, 0x02};
} -scale 2.0 -rotate 90.0
In addition, you can compose bitmaps from text strings. This makes it
easy to create rotated buttons or labels. The text string can have
multi-line.
-
bitmap compose rot_text "This is rotated\ntext" \
-rotate 90.0 -font fixed
There are also a number of ways to query bitmaps. This isn't limited
to bitmaps that you create, but any bitmap.
-
bitmap exists rot_text
bitmap width rot_text
bitmap height rot_text
bitmap data rot_text
bitmap source rot_text
The exists operation indicates if a bitmap by that name is
defined. You can query the dimensions of the bitmap using the
width and height operations. The data operation
returns the list of the data used to create the bitmap.
For example, you could query the data of a bitmap and send
it across the network to another Tk application.
-
set data [bitmap data @/usr/X11R6/include/X11/bitmaps/ghost.xbm]
send {wish #2} bitmap define ghost $data
OPERATIONS
The following operations are available for bitmap:
- bitmap compose bitmapName text ?option value?...
-
Creates a bitmap bitmapName from the text string text.
A bitmap bitmapName can not already exist.
The following options are available.
-
- -font fontName
-
Specifies a font to use when drawing text into the bitmap.
If this option isn't specified then fontName defaults to
*-Helvetica-Bold-R-Normal-*-140-*.
- -rotate theta
-
Specifies the angle of rotation of the text in the bitmap.
Theta is a real number representing the angle in degrees.
It defaults to 0.0 degrees.
- -scale value
-
Specifies the scale of the bitmap.
Value is a real number representing the scale. A scale
of 1.0 indicates no scaling is necessary, while 2.0 would
double the size of the bitmap. There is no way to specify
different scales for the width and height of the bitmap.
The default scale is 1.0.
- bitmap data bitmapName
-
Returns a list of both the
dimensions of the bitmap bitmapName and its source data.
- bitmap define bitmapName data ?option value?...
-
Associates bitmapName with in-memory bitmap data so that
bitmapName can be used in later calls to Tk_GetBitmap.
The bitmapName argument is the name of the bitmap; it must not
previously have been defined in either a call to Tk_DefineBitmap or
bitmap. The argument data describes the bitmap to
be created. It is either the X11 bitmap format (a C structure) or
a list of two lists: the dimensions and source data. The dimensions
are a list of two numbers which are the width
and height of the bitmap. The source data is a list of hexadecimal
values in a format similar to the X11 or X10 bitmap format. The
values may be optionally separated by commas and do not need to be
prefixed with "0x". The following options are available.
-
- -rotate theta
-
Specifies how many degrees to rotate the bitmap.
Theta is a real number representing the angle.
The default is 0.0 degrees.
- -scale value
-
Specifies how to scale the bitmap.
Value is a real number representing the scale. A scale
of 1.0 indicates no scaling is necessary, while 2.0 would
double the size of the bitmap. There is no way to specify
different scales for the width and height of the bitmap.
The default scale is 1.0.
- bitmap exists bitmapName
-
Returns 1 if a bitmap bitmapName exists, otherwise 0.
- bitmap height bitmapName
-
Returns the height in pixels of the bitmap bitmapName.
- bitmap source bitmapName
-
Returns the source data of the bitmap bitmapName. The source data is a
list of the hexadecimal values.
- bitmap width bitmapName
-
Returns the width in pixels of the bitmap bitmapName.
LIMITATIONS
Tk currently offers no way of destroying bitmaps. Once a bitmap is
created, it exists until the application terminates.
KEYWORDS
bitmap
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- EXAMPLE
-
- OPERATIONS
-
- LIMITATIONS
-
- KEYWORDS
-
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Time: 19:49:20 GMT, April 27, 2011