Provided by: tklib_0.8~20230222-1_all bug

NAME

       ntextWordBreak - ntext Word Boundary Detection for the Text Widget

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.5

       package require Tk  8.5

       package require ntext  ?1.0?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The ntext package provides a binding tag named Ntext for use by text widgets in place of the default Text
       binding tag.

       Navigation  and selection in a text widget require the detection of words and their boundaries.  The word
       boundary detection facilities provided by Tcl/Tk through the Text binding tag are  limited  because  they
       define only one class of "word" characters and one class of "non-word" characters.  The Ntext binding tag
       uses more general rules for word boundary detection, that define two classes of "word" characters and one
       class of "non-word" characters.

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

       The  behaviour of Ntext may be configured application-wide by setting the values of a number of namespace
       variables.  One of these is relevant to word boundary detection:

       ::ntext::classicWordBreak0 - (default value) selects Ntext  behaviour,  i.e.  platform-independent,  two  classes  of  word
              characters and one class of non-word characters.

       •      1  - selects classic Text behaviour, i.e. platform-dependent, one class of word characters and one
              class of non-word characters

       •      After changing this value,  Ntext  's  regexp  matching  patterns  should  be  recalculated.   See
              FUNCTIONS for details and advanced configuration options.

ADVANCED USE

VARIABLES (ADVANCED USE)

       ::ntext::tcl_match_wordBreakAfter

       ::ntext::tcl_match_wordBreakBefore

       ::ntext::tcl_match_endOfWord

       ::ntext::tcl_match_startOfNextWord

       ::ntext::tcl_match_startOfPreviousWord

       These  variables  hold the regexp patterns that are used by Ntext to search for word boundaries.  If they
       are changed, subsequent searches are immediately altered.  In many situations, it it unnecessary to alter
       the   values    of    these    variables    directly:    instead    call    one    of    the    functions
       ::ntext::initializeMatchPatterns, ::ntext::createMatchPatterns.

       In  the  Text  binding tag one can change the search rules by changing the values of the global variables
       tcl_wordchars and tcl_nonwordchars.  The equivalent operation  in  the  Ntext  binding  tag  is  to  call
       ::ntext::createMatchPatterns with appropriate arguments.

FUNCTIONS (ADVANCED USE)

       If  a  simple  regexp  search should prove insufficient, the following functions (analogous to the Tcl/Tk
       core's tcl_wordBreakAfter etc) may be replaced by the developer:

       ntext::new_wordBreakAfter

       ntext::new_wordBreakBefore

       ntext::new_endOfWord

       ntext::new_startOfNextWord

       ntext::new_startOfPreviousWord

FUNCTIONS

       Each function calculates the five regexp search patterns that define the word boundary  searches.   These
       values are stored in the namespace variables listed above.

       ::ntext::initializeMatchPatterns

       •      This  function is called when Ntext is first used, and needs to be called again only if the script
              changes the value of either ::ntext::classicWordBreak or ::tcl_platform(platform).   The  function
              is  called  with  no  arguments.   It  is  useful when the desired search patterns are the default
              patterns for either the Ntext or Text binding tag, and so are implicitly specified by  the  values
              of ::ntext::classicWordBreak and ::tcl_platform(platform) alone.

       ::ntext::createMatchPatterns new_nonwordchars new_word1chars ?new_word2chars?

       •      This  function is useful in a wider range of situations than ::ntext::initializeMatchPatterns.  It
              calculates the regexp search patterns for any case with one class of "non-word" characters and one
              or two classes of "word" characters.

              Each argument should be a regexp expression defining a class  of  characters.   An  argument  will
              usually  be a bracket expression, but might alternatively be a class-shorthand escape, or a single
              character.  The third argument may be omitted, or supplied as the empty string, in which  case  it
              is unused.

              The  first  argument  is interpreted as the class of non-word characters; the second argument (and
              the third, if present) are classes of word characters.  The classes should  include  all  possible
              characters  and will normally be mutually exclusive: it is often convenient to define one class as
              the negation of the other two.

WORD BOUNDARY MATCHING

       The problem of word boundary selection is a vexed one, because text is used to represent  a  universe  of
       different  types  of information, and there are no simple rules that are useful for all data types or for
       all purposes.

       Ntext attempts to improve on the facilities available in classic Text by providing  facilities  for  more
       complex definitions of words (with three classes of characters instead of two).

       What is a word?  Why two classes of word?

       When  using  the  modified  cursor  keys  <Control-Left>  and <Control-Right> to navigate through a Ntext
       widget, the cursor is placed at the start of a word.  A word is defined as a  sequence  of  one  or  more
       characters  from  only  one of the two defined "word" classes; it may be preceded by a character from the
       other "word" class or from the "non-word" class.

       The double-click of mouse button 1 selects a word of text, where in this case a "word" may be as  defined
       above,  or  alternatively  may  be  a  sequence  of  one  or more characters from the "non-word" class of
       characters.

       Traditionally Tcl has defined only one word class and one non-word class: on Windows, the non-word  class
       is  whitespace,  and  so  alphanumerics  and  punctuation  belong to the same class.  On other platforms,
       punctuation is bundled with whitespace as "non-word" characters.  In  either  case,  the  navigation  and
       selection of text are unnecessarily coarse-grained, and sometimes give unhelpful results.

       The  use  of three classes of characters might make selection too fine-grained; but in this case, holding
       down the Shift key and double-clicking another word is an excellent way to select a longer range of  text
       (a useful binding that Tcl/Tk has long provided but which is missing in other systems).

       As  well  as  its  defaults, Ntext permits the developer to define their own classes of characters, or to
       revert to the classic Text definitions, or to specify their own regexp matching patterns.

BUGS

       This version of ntext is intended to be compatible with all releases of Tk 8.5  and  8.6,  and  with  the
       branches  core-8-5-branch,  core-8-6-branch,  and  trunk  in  the  source  code  repository  for Tk.  Any
       incompatibility with any of these versions, for any Tk windowing system, should be  reported  as  a  bug.
       Please report such in the category ntext of the Tklib Trackers [http://core.tcl.tk/tklib/reportlist].

EXAMPLE

       To use Ntext with Tcl/Tk's usual word-boundary detection rules:

              package require ntext
              text .t
              bindtags .t {.t Ntext . all}
              set ::ntext::classicWordBreak 1
              ::ntext::initializeMatchPatterns

       See bindtags for more information.

       To define a different set of word-boundary detection rules:

              package require ntext
              text .t
              bindtags .t {.t Ntext . all}
              ::ntext::createMatchPatterns  {[[:space:][:cntrl:]]} {[[:punct:]]} {[^[:punct:][:space:][:cntrl:]]}

       See regexp, re_syntax for more information.

SEE ALSO

       bindtags, ntext, re_syntax, regexp, text

KEYWORDS

       bindtags, re_syntax, regexp, text

tklib                                                  1.0                                   ntextWordBreak(3tk)