2007-08-15 11:28:01 -03:00
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:mod:`FrameWork` --- Interactive application framework
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======================================================
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.. module:: FrameWork
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:platform: Mac
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:synopsis: Interactive application framework.
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2008-05-12 18:42:13 -03:00
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:deprecated:
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2007-08-15 11:28:01 -03:00
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The :mod:`FrameWork` module contains classes that together provide a framework
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for an interactive Macintosh application. The programmer builds an application
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by creating subclasses that override various methods of the bases classes,
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thereby implementing the functionality wanted. Overriding functionality can
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often be done on various different levels, i.e. to handle clicks in a single
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dialog window in a non-standard way it is not necessary to override the complete
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event handling.
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2008-05-12 18:42:13 -03:00
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.. warning::
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This module is removed in 3.0.
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2007-08-15 11:28:01 -03:00
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Work on the :mod:`FrameWork` has pretty much stopped, now that :mod:`PyObjC` is
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available for full Cocoa access from Python, and the documentation describes
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only the most important functionality, and not in the most logical manner at
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that. Examine the source or the examples for more details. The following are
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some comments posted on the MacPython newsgroup about the strengths and
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limitations of :mod:`FrameWork`:
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.. epigraph::
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The strong point of :mod:`FrameWork` is that it allows you to break into the
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control-flow at many different places. :mod:`W`, for instance, uses a different
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way to enable/disable menus and that plugs right in leaving the rest intact.
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The weak points of :mod:`FrameWork` are that it has no abstract command
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interface (but that shouldn't be difficult), that its dialog support is minimal
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and that its control/toolbar support is non-existent.
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The :mod:`FrameWork` module defines the following functions:
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.. function:: Application()
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An object representing the complete application. See below for a description of
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the methods. The default :meth:`__init__` routine creates an empty window
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dictionary and a menu bar with an apple menu.
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.. function:: MenuBar()
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An object representing the menubar. This object is usually not created by the
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user.
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.. function:: Menu(bar, title[, after])
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An object representing a menu. Upon creation you pass the ``MenuBar`` the menu
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appears in, the *title* string and a position (1-based) *after* where the menu
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should appear (default: at the end).
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.. function:: MenuItem(menu, title[, shortcut, callback])
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Create a menu item object. The arguments are the menu to create, the item title
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string and optionally the keyboard shortcut and a callback routine. The callback
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is called with the arguments menu-id, item number within menu (1-based), current
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front window and the event record.
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Instead of a callable object the callback can also be a string. In this case
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menu selection causes the lookup of a method in the topmost window and the
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application. The method name is the callback string with ``'domenu_'``
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prepended.
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Calling the ``MenuBar`` :meth:`fixmenudimstate` method sets the correct dimming
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for all menu items based on the current front window.
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.. function:: Separator(menu)
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Add a separator to the end of a menu.
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.. function:: SubMenu(menu, label)
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Create a submenu named *label* under menu *menu*. The menu object is returned.
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.. function:: Window(parent)
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Creates a (modeless) window. *Parent* is the application object to which the
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window belongs. The window is not displayed until later.
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.. function:: DialogWindow(parent)
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Creates a modeless dialog window.
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.. function:: windowbounds(width, height)
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Return a ``(left, top, right, bottom)`` tuple suitable for creation of a window
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of given width and height. The window will be staggered with respect to previous
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windows, and an attempt is made to keep the whole window on-screen. However, the
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window will however always be the exact size given, so parts may be offscreen.
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.. function:: setwatchcursor()
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Set the mouse cursor to a watch.
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.. function:: setarrowcursor()
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Set the mouse cursor to an arrow.
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.. _application-objects:
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Application Objects
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-------------------
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Application objects have the following methods, among others:
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.. method:: Application.makeusermenus()
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Override this method if you need menus in your application. Append the menus to
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the attribute :attr:`menubar`.
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.. method:: Application.getabouttext()
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Override this method to return a text string describing your application.
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Alternatively, override the :meth:`do_about` method for more elaborate "about"
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messages.
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.. method:: Application.mainloop([mask[, wait]])
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This routine is the main event loop, call it to set your application rolling.
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*Mask* is the mask of events you want to handle, *wait* is the number of ticks
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you want to leave to other concurrent application (default 0, which is probably
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not a good idea). While raising *self* to exit the mainloop is still supported
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it is not recommended: call ``self._quit()`` instead.
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The event loop is split into many small parts, each of which can be overridden.
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The default methods take care of dispatching events to windows and dialogs,
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handling drags and resizes, Apple Events, events for non-FrameWork windows, etc.
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In general, all event handlers should return ``1`` if the event is fully handled
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and ``0`` otherwise (because the front window was not a FrameWork window, for
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instance). This is needed so that update events and such can be passed on to
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other windows like the Sioux console window. Calling :func:`MacOS.HandleEvent`
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is not allowed within *our_dispatch* or its callees, since this may result in an
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infinite loop if the code is called through the Python inner-loop event handler.
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.. method:: Application.asyncevents(onoff)
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Call this method with a nonzero parameter to enable asynchronous event handling.
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This will tell the inner interpreter loop to call the application event handler
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*async_dispatch* whenever events are available. This will cause FrameWork window
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updates and the user interface to remain working during long computations, but
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will slow the interpreter down and may cause surprising results in non-reentrant
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code (such as FrameWork itself). By default *async_dispatch* will immediately
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call *our_dispatch* but you may override this to handle only certain events
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asynchronously. Events you do not handle will be passed to Sioux and such.
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The old on/off value is returned.
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.. method:: Application._quit()
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Terminate the running :meth:`mainloop` call at the next convenient moment.
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.. method:: Application.do_char(c, event)
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The user typed character *c*. The complete details of the event can be found in
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the *event* structure. This method can also be provided in a ``Window`` object,
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which overrides the application-wide handler if the window is frontmost.
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.. method:: Application.do_dialogevent(event)
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Called early in the event loop to handle modeless dialog events. The default
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method simply dispatches the event to the relevant dialog (not through the
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``DialogWindow`` object involved). Override if you need special handling of
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dialog events (keyboard shortcuts, etc).
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.. method:: Application.idle(event)
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Called by the main event loop when no events are available. The null-event is
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passed (so you can look at mouse position, etc).
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.. _window-objects:
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Window Objects
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--------------
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Window objects have the following methods, among others:
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.. method:: Window.open()
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Override this method to open a window. Store the Mac OS window-id in
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:attr:`self.wid` and call the :meth:`do_postopen` method to register the window
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with the parent application.
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.. method:: Window.close()
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Override this method to do any special processing on window close. Call the
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:meth:`do_postclose` method to cleanup the parent state.
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.. method:: Window.do_postresize(width, height, macoswindowid)
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Called after the window is resized. Override if more needs to be done than
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calling ``InvalRect``.
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.. method:: Window.do_contentclick(local, modifiers, event)
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The user clicked in the content part of a window. The arguments are the
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coordinates (window-relative), the key modifiers and the raw event.
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.. method:: Window.do_update(macoswindowid, event)
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An update event for the window was received. Redraw the window.
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.. method:: Window.do_activate(activate, event)
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The window was activated (``activate == 1``) or deactivated (``activate == 0``).
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Handle things like focus highlighting, etc.
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.. _controlswindow-object:
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ControlsWindow Object
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---------------------
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ControlsWindow objects have the following methods besides those of ``Window``
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objects:
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.. method:: ControlsWindow.do_controlhit(window, control, pcode, event)
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Part *pcode* of control *control* was hit by the user. Tracking and such has
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already been taken care of.
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.. _scrolledwindow-object:
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ScrolledWindow Object
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---------------------
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ScrolledWindow objects are ControlsWindow objects with the following extra
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methods:
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.scrollbars([wantx[, wanty]])
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Create (or destroy) horizontal and vertical scrollbars. The arguments specify
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which you want (default: both). The scrollbars always have minimum ``0`` and
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maximum ``32767``.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.getscrollbarvalues()
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You must supply this method. It should return a tuple ``(x, y)`` giving the
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current position of the scrollbars (between ``0`` and ``32767``). You can return
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``None`` for either to indicate the whole document is visible in that direction.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.updatescrollbars()
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Call this method when the document has changed. It will call
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:meth:`getscrollbarvalues` and update the scrollbars.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.scrollbar_callback(which, what, value)
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Supplied by you and called after user interaction. *which* will be ``'x'`` or
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``'y'``, *what* will be ``'-'``, ``'--'``, ``'set'``, ``'++'`` or ``'+'``. For
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``'set'``, *value* will contain the new scrollbar position.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.scalebarvalues(absmin, absmax, curmin, curmax)
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Auxiliary method to help you calculate values to return from
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:meth:`getscrollbarvalues`. You pass document minimum and maximum value and
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topmost (leftmost) and bottommost (rightmost) visible values and it returns the
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correct number or ``None``.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.do_activate(onoff, event)
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Takes care of dimming/highlighting scrollbars when a window becomes frontmost.
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If you override this method, call this one at the end of your method.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.do_postresize(width, height, window)
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Moves scrollbars to the correct position. Call this method initially if you
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override it.
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.. method:: ScrolledWindow.do_controlhit(window, control, pcode, event)
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Handles scrollbar interaction. If you override it call this method first, a
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nonzero return value indicates the hit was in the scrollbars and has been
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handled.
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.. _dialogwindow-objects:
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DialogWindow Objects
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--------------------
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DialogWindow objects have the following methods besides those of ``Window``
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objects:
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.. method:: DialogWindow.open(resid)
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Create the dialog window, from the DLOG resource with id *resid*. The dialog
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object is stored in :attr:`self.wid`.
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.. method:: DialogWindow.do_itemhit(item, event)
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Item number *item* was hit. You are responsible for redrawing toggle buttons,
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etc.
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