On 02/03/2010 3:05 PM, Swingle David-QWHM86 wrote:
Yes, that indicates you are using an 8.4-based Tk.
We now ship with an 8.5-based Tk, where the 'tile' extension was added
to the core.
This added the native themed widgets, as well as combobox, notebook,
sizegrip and a few other new widgets.
I have new_ttk__combobox in my script, so does that mean I have more
than 8.4? How do I get the version? Perl -v or Perl -V doesn't show
the Tk version.
You must have the 'tile' package in use. We provide the tkkit version
details in the 'tkkit'
Something I just discovered that might help others. After going thru
the great tutorial at www.tkdocs.com/tutorial, I've been using g_grid()
instead of g_pack(). But, when I did this for my script, the scroll
bars didn't resize past the size that the window started at. In other
words, if I stretched the window, the scroll bars were left behind.
After comparing your script with what I have in mine, I realized that
you use g_pack when creating the new_ScrolledWindow ($sw in your
example). If I change your script example to have $sw->g_grid(-column
=> 0, -row => 0, -sticky => "nsew") instead of $sw->g_pack(....), it
doesn't work correctly. Is there a way to use g_grid throughout?
Yes, and I would recommend g_grid. You have to use grid
column/rowconfigure to get the fine-grained weighting (stretching)
control, e.g.:
Tkx::grid(rowconfigure => $mw, 1, -weight => 1);
Tkx::grid(columnconfigure => $mw, 0, -weight => 1);
Will stretch all items in row 1 vertically, and all items in col 0
horizontally.
Jeff