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NAME

       bind - Arrange for X events to invoke Tcl scripts

SYNOPSIS

       bind tag ?sequence? ?+??script?
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INTRODUCTION

       The  bind  command associates Tcl scripts with X events.  If all three arguments are specified, bind will
       arrange for script (a Tcl script called the “binding script”) to be evaluated whenever the event(s) given
       by sequence occur in the window(s) identified by tag.  If script is prefixed  with  a  “+”,  then  it  is
       appended  to  any  existing  binding  for  sequence;  otherwise script replaces any existing binding.  If
       script is an empty string then the current binding for sequence is destroyed, leaving  sequence  unbound.
       In all of the cases where a script argument is provided, bind returns an empty string.

       If sequence is specified without a script, then the script currently bound to sequence is returned, or an
       empty  string  is  returned  if  there  is  no  binding  for sequence.  If neither sequence nor script is
       specified, then the return value is a list whose elements are all the sequences  for  which  there  exist
       bindings for tag.

       The  tag  argument  determines  which  window(s) the binding applies to.  If tag begins with a dot, as in
       .a.b.c, then it must be the path name for a window; otherwise it may be an arbitrary string.  Each window
       has an associated list of tags, and a binding applies to a particular window if its tag  is  among  those
       specified  for  the  window.   Although  the  bindtags  command may be used to assign an arbitrary set of
       binding tags to a window, the default binding tags provide the following behavior:

       •  If a tag is the name of an internal window the binding applies to that window.

       •  If the tag is the name of a class of widgets, such as Button, the binding applies to  all  widgets  in
          that class.

       •  If  the  tag  is  the name of a toplevel window the binding applies to the toplevel window and all its
          internal windows.

       •  If tag has the value all, the binding applies to all windows in the application.

EVENT PATTERNS

       The sequence argument specifies a sequence of one or more  event  patterns,  with  optional  white  space
       between  the  patterns.   Each  event  pattern may take one of three forms.  In the simplest case it is a
       single printing ASCII character, such as a or [.  The character may not  be  a  space  character  or  the
       character  <.   This  form  of pattern matches a KeyPress event for the particular character.  The second
       form of pattern is longer but more general.  It has the following syntax:
              <modifier-modifier-type-detail>
       The entire event pattern is surrounded by angle brackets.  Inside the angle brackets  are  zero  or  more
       modifiers,  an  event type, and an extra piece of information (detail) identifying a particular button or
       keysym.  Any of the fields may be omitted, as long as at least one of type and detail  is  present.   The
       fields must be separated by white space or dashes.

       The  third  form of pattern is used to specify a user-defined, named virtual event.  It has the following
       syntax:
              <<name>>
       The entire virtual event pattern is surrounded by double angle brackets.  Inside the  angle  brackets  is
       the  user-defined  name  of  the virtual event.  Modifiers, such as Shift or Control, may not be combined
       with a virtual event to modify it.  Bindings on a virtual event may be created before the  virtual  event
       is  defined,  and  if  the  definition  of a virtual event changes dynamically, all windows bound to that
       virtual event will respond immediately to the new definition.

       Some widgets (e.g. menu and text) issue virtual events when their internal state is updated in some ways.
       Please see the manual page for each widget for details.

   MODIFIERS
       Modifiers consist of any of the following values:

              Control                 Mod1, M1, Command
              Alt                     Mod2, M2, Option
              Shift                   Mod3, M3
              Lock                    Mod4, M4
              Extended                Mod5, M5
              Button1, B1             Meta, M
              Button2, B2             Double
              Button3, B3             Triple
              Button4, B4             Quadruple
              Button5, B5

       Where more than one value is listed, separated by  commas,  the  values  are  equivalent.   Most  of  the
       modifiers have the obvious X meanings.  For example, Button1 requires that button 1 be depressed when the
       event occurs.  For a binding to match a given event, the modifiers in the event must include all of those
       specified  in  the  event  pattern.   An event may also contain additional modifiers not specified in the
       binding.  For example, if button 1 is pressed while the shift and control  keys  are  down,  the  pattern
       <Control-Button-1>  will  match  the event, but <Mod1-Button-1> will not.  If no modifiers are specified,
       then any combination of modifiers may be present in the event.

       Meta and M refer to whichever of the M1 through M5 modifiers is associated with the Meta  key(s)  on  the
       keyboard  (keysyms Meta_R and Meta_L).  If there are no Meta keys, or if they are not associated with any
       modifiers, then Meta and M will not match any events.  Similarly, the Alt modifier  refers  to  whichever
       modifier is associated with the alt key(s) on the keyboard (keysyms Alt_L and Alt_R).

       The Double, Triple and Quadruple modifiers are a convenience for specifying double mouse clicks and other
       repeated  events.  They cause a particular event pattern to be repeated 2, 3 or 4 times, and also place a
       time and space requirement on the sequence: for a sequence  of  events  to  match  a  Double,  Triple  or
       Quadruple  pattern,  all  of  the  events must occur close together in time and without substantial mouse
       motion in between.  For example, <Double-Button-1> is equivalent to <Button-1><Button-1> with  the  extra
       time and space requirement.

       The  Command  and  Option  modifiers  are  equivalents  of Mod1 resp. Mod2, they correspond to Macintosh-
       specific modifier keys.

       The Extended modifier is, at present, specific to Windows.  It appears on events that are associated with
       the keys on the “extended keyboard”.  On a US keyboard, the extended keys include  the  Alt  and  Control
       keys  at  the  right  of the keyboard, the cursor keys in the cluster to the left of the numeric pad, the
       NumLock key, the Break key, the PrintScreen key, and the / and Enter keys in the numeric keypad.

   EVENT TYPES
       The type field may be any of the standard X event types, with a few extra abbreviations.  The type  field
       will  also accept a couple non-standard X event types that were added to better support the Macintosh and
       Windows platforms.  Below is a list of all the valid types; where two names  appear  together,  they  are
       synonyms.

              Activate              Destroy         Map
              ButtonPress, Button   Enter           MapRequest
              ButtonRelease         Expose          Motion
              Circulate             FocusIn         MouseWheel
              CirculateRequest      FocusOut        Property
              Colormap              Gravity         Reparent
              Configure             KeyPress, Key   ResizeRequest
              ConfigureRequest      KeyRelease      Unmap
              Create                Leave           Visibility
              Deactivate

       Most of the above events have the same fields and behaviors as events in the X Windowing system.  You can
       find more detailed descriptions of these events in any X window programming book.  A couple of the events
       are  extensions  to the X event system to support features unique to the Macintosh and Windows platforms.
       We provide a little more detail on these events here.  These include:

       Activate, Deactivate
            These two events are sent to every sub-window of a toplevel when they change state.  In addition  to
            the  focus  Window,  the  Macintosh platform and Windows platforms have a notion of an active window
            (which often has but is not required to have the focus).  On the Macintosh, widgets  in  the  active
            window  have a different appearance than widgets in deactive windows.  The Activate event is sent to
            all the sub-windows in a toplevel when it changes from being  deactive  to  active.   Likewise,  the
            Deactive event is sent when the window's state changes from active to deactive.  There are no useful
            percent substitutions you would make when binding to these events.

       MouseWheel
            Many  contemporary  mice  support a mouse wheel, which is used for scrolling documents without using
            the scrollbars.  By rolling  the  wheel,  the  system  will  generate  MouseWheel  events  that  the
            application can use to scroll.  The event is routed to the window currently under the mouse pointer.
            When  the  event  is  received you can use the %D substitution to get the delta field for the event,
            which is an integer value describing how the mouse wheel has moved.  The smallest  value  for  which
            the  system will report is defined by the OS.  The sign of the value determines which direction your
            widget should scroll.  Positive values should scroll up and negative values should scroll down.

            Horizontal scrolling uses Shift-MouseWheel events, with positive %D  delta  substitution  indicating
            left  scrolling and negative right scrolling.  Only Windows and macOS Aqua typically fire MouseWheel
            and Shift-MouseWheel events.  On X11 vertical scrolling is rather  supported  through  Button-4  and
            Button-5  events,  and  horizontal  scrolling  through  Shift-Button-4  and  Shift-Button-5  events.
            Horizontal scrolling events may fire from many different hardware  units  such  as  tilt  wheels  or
            touchpads.  Horizontal scrolling can also be emulated by holding Shift and scrolling vertically.

       KeyPress, KeyRelease
            The  KeyPress  and  KeyRelease events are generated whenever a key is pressed or released.  KeyPress
            and KeyRelease events are sent to the window which currently has the keyboard focus.

       ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, Motion
            The ButtonPress and ButtonRelease events are generated when the user presses  or  releases  a  mouse
            button.  Motion events are generated whenever the pointer is moved.  ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, and
            Motion events are normally sent to the window containing the pointer.

            When  a mouse button is pressed, the window containing the pointer automatically obtains a temporary
            pointer grab.  Subsequent ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, and Motion events will be sent to that window,
            regardless of which window contains the pointer, until all buttons have been released.

       Configure
            A Configure event is sent to a window whenever its size, position,  or  border  width  changes,  and
            sometimes when it has changed position in the stacking order.

       Map, Unmap
            The Map and Unmap events are generated whenever the mapping state of a window changes.

            Windows  are created in the unmapped state.  Top-level windows become mapped when they transition to
            the normal state, and are unmapped in the withdrawn and iconic states.  Other windows become  mapped
            when they are placed under control of a geometry manager (for example pack or grid).

            A  window  is  viewable only if it and all of its ancestors are mapped.  Note that geometry managers
            typically do not map their children until they have been mapped themselves, and unmap  all  children
            when  they  become  unmapped;  hence  in Tk Map and Unmap events indicate whether or not a window is
            viewable.

       Visibility
            A window is said to be obscured when another  window  above  it  in  the  stacking  order  fully  or
            partially overlaps it.  Visibility events are generated whenever a window's obscurity state changes;
            the state field (%s) specifies the new state.

       Expose
            An Expose event is generated whenever all or part of a window should be redrawn (for example, when a
            window  is  first  mapped  or  if  it  becomes unobscured).  It is normally not necessary for client
            applications to handle Expose events, since Tk handles them internally.

       Destroy
            A Destroy event is delivered to a window when it is destroyed.

            When the Destroy event is delivered to a widget, it is in a  “half-dead”  state:  the  widget  still
            exists, but operations that involve it may return invalid results, or return an error.

       FocusIn, FocusOut
            The FocusIn and FocusOut events are generated whenever the keyboard focus changes.  A FocusOut event
            is sent to the old focus window, and a FocusIn event is sent to the new one.

            In addition, if the old and new focus windows do not share a common parent, “virtual crossing” focus
            events  are  sent to the intermediate windows in the hierarchy.  Thus a FocusIn event indicates that
            the target window or one of its descendants has acquired the focus, and a FocusOut  event  indicates
            that the focus has been changed to a window outside the target window's hierarchy.

            The  keyboard  focus  may  be  changed  explicitly  by  a call to focus, or implicitly by the window
            manager.

       Enter, Leave
            An Enter event is sent to a window when the pointer enters that window, and a Leave  event  is  sent
            when the pointer leaves it.

            If there is a pointer grab in effect, Enter and Leave events are only delivered to the window owning
            the grab.

            In  addition,  when the pointer moves between two windows, Enter and Leave “virtual crossing” events
            are sent to intermediate windows in the hierarchy in the same manner as  for  FocusIn  and  FocusOut
            events.

       Property
            A  Property  event is sent to a window whenever an X property belonging to that window is changed or
            deleted.  Property events are not normally delivered to Tk applications as they are handled  by  the
            Tk core.

       Colormap
            A  Colormap  event  is  generated  whenever  the colormap associated with a window has been changed,
            installed, or uninstalled.

            Widgets may be assigned a private colormap by specifying a -colormap option; the window  manager  is
            responsible for installing and uninstalling colormaps as necessary.

            Note that Tk provides no useful details for this event type.

       MapRequest, CirculateRequest, ResizeRequest, ConfigureRequest, Create
            These  events are not normally delivered to Tk applications.  They are included for completeness, to
            make it possible to write X11 window managers in Tk.  (These events are only delivered when a client
            has selected SubstructureRedirectMask on a window; the Tk core does not use this mask.)

       Gravity, Reparent, Circulate
            The events Gravity and Reparent are not normally delivered to Tk applications.   They  are  included
            for completeness.

            A  Circulate  event  indicates that the window has moved to the top or to the bottom of the stacking
            order as a result of an XCirculateSubwindows protocol request.  Note that the stacking order may  be
            changed  for  other  reasons  which  do  not  generate  a  Circulate event, and that Tk does not use
            XCirculateSubwindows() internally.  This event type is included only for completeness; there  is  no
            reliable way to track changes to a window's position in the stacking order.

   EVENT DETAILS
       The  last  part  of  a long event specification is detail.  In the case of a ButtonPress or ButtonRelease
       event, it is the number of a button (1-5).  If a button number is given,  then  only  an  event  on  that
       particular  button  will  match;   if  no button number is given, then an event on any button will match.
       Note:  giving a specific button number is different than specifying a button modifier; in the first case,
       it refers to a button being pressed or released, while in the second it refers to some other button  that
       is  already  depressed  when  the  matching  event  occurs.  If a button number is given then type may be
       omitted:   if  will  default  to  ButtonPress.   For  example,  the  specifier  <1>  is   equivalent   to
       <ButtonPress-1>.

       If  the  event  type  is KeyPress or KeyRelease, then detail may be specified in the form of an X keysym.
       Keysyms are textual specifications for particular keys on the keyboard; they include all the alphanumeric
       ASCII characters (e.g.  “a” is the keysym for the  ASCII  character  “a”),  plus  descriptions  for  non-
       alphanumeric  characters  (“comma”is  the  keysym for the comma character), plus descriptions for all the
       non-ASCII keys on the keyboard (e.g.  “Shift_L” is the keysym for the left shift key,  and  “F1”  is  the
       keysym  for  the F1 function key, if it exists).  The complete list of keysyms is not presented here;  it
       is available in other X documentation and may vary from system to system.  If necessary, you can use  the
       %K  notation  described  below  to print out the keysym name for a particular key.  If a keysym detail is
       given, then the type field may be omitted;  it will default to KeyPress.  For example, <Control-comma> is
       equivalent to <Control-KeyPress-comma>.

BINDING SCRIPTS AND SUBSTITUTIONS

       The script argument to bind is a Tcl script, called the “binding script”, which will be executed whenever
       the given event sequence occurs.  Command will be executed in the same interpreter that the bind  command
       was  executed  in, and it will run at global level (only global variables will be accessible).  If script
       contains any % characters, then the script will not be executed directly.  Instead, a new script will  be
       generated  by  replacing each %, and the character following it, with information from the current event.
       The replacement depends on the character following the %, as defined in the list below.  Unless otherwise
       indicated, the replacement string is the decimal value of the given field from the current  event.   Some
       of  the  substitutions  are  only valid for certain types of events;  if they are used for other types of
       events the value substituted is undefined.

       %%   Replaced with a single percent.

       %#   The number of the last client request processed by the server (the serial  field  from  the  event).
            Valid for all event types.

       %a   The above field from the event, formatted as a hexadecimal number.  Valid only for Configure events.
            Indicates  the  sibling window immediately below the receiving window in the stacking order, or 0 if
            the receiving window is at the bottom.

       %b   The number of the button that was pressed or released.  Valid only for ButtonPress and ButtonRelease
            events.

       %c   The count field from the event.  Valid only for Expose  events.   Indicates  that  there  are  count
            pending Expose events which have not yet been delivered to the window.

       %d   The  detail  or  user_data  field  from  the  event.  The %d is replaced by a string identifying the
            detail.  For Enter, Leave, FocusIn, and FocusOut events, the string will be one of the following:

                   NotifyAncestor          NotifyNonlinearVirtual
                   NotifyDetailNone        NotifyPointer
                   NotifyInferior          NotifyPointerRoot
                   NotifyNonlinear         NotifyVirtual

            For ConfigureRequest events, the string will be one of:

                   Above                   Opposite
                   Below                   None
                   BottomIf                TopIf

            For virtual events, the string will be whatever value is stored in  the  user_data  field  when  the
            event  was  created  (typically  with  event  generate),  or  the empty string if the field is NULL.
            Virtual events corresponding to key sequence presses (see event add for details) set  the  user_data
            to NULL.  For events other than these, the substituted string is undefined.

       %f   The focus field from the event (0 or 1).  Valid only for Enter and Leave events.  1 if the receiving
            window is the focus window or a descendant of the focus window, 0 otherwise.

       %h   The  height field from the event.  Valid for the Configure, ConfigureRequest, Create, ResizeRequest,
            and Expose events.  Indicates the new or requested height of the window.

       %i   The window field from the event, represented as a hexadecimal integer.  Valid for all event types.

       %k   The keycode field from the event.  Valid only for KeyPress and KeyRelease events.

       %m   The mode field from  the  event.   The  substituted  string  is  one  of  NotifyNormal,  NotifyGrab,
            NotifyUngrab, or NotifyWhileGrabbed.  Valid only for Enter, FocusIn, FocusOut, and Leave events.

       %o   The override_redirect field from the event.  Valid only for Map, Reparent, and Configure events.

       %p   The  place  field  from  the  event,  substituted as one of the strings PlaceOnTop or PlaceOnBottom.
            Valid only for Circulate and CirculateRequest events.

       %s   The state field from the event.  For ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, Enter, KeyPress, KeyRelease, Leave,
            and  Motion  events,  a  decimal  string  is  substituted.   For  Visibility,  one  of  the  strings
            VisibilityUnobscured,  VisibilityPartiallyObscured, and VisibilityFullyObscured is substituted.  For
            Property events, substituted with either the string NewValue (indicating that the property has  been
            created or modified) or Delete (indicating that the property has been removed).

       %t   The  time  field  from the event.  This is the X server timestamp (typically the time since the last
            server reset) in milliseconds, when the event occurred.  Valid for most events.

       %w   The width field from the event.  Indicates the new or requested width of the window.  Valid only for
            Configure, ConfigureRequest, Create, ResizeRequest, and Expose events.

       %x, %y
            The x and y fields from the event.  For ButtonPress, ButtonRelease,  Motion,  KeyPress,  KeyRelease,
            and  MouseWheel  events,  %x  and  %y  indicate  the  position  of the mouse pointer relative to the
            receiving window.  For key events on the Macintosh these are the coordinates of  the  mouse  at  the
            moment  when  an  X11  KeyEvent  is  sent  to Tk, which could be slightly later than the time of the
            physical press or release.  For Enter and Leave events, the position where the mouse pointer crossed
            the window, relative to the receiving window.  For Configure  and  Create  requests,  the  x  and  y
            coordinates of the window relative to its parent window.

       %A   Substitutes  the UNICODE character corresponding to the event, or the empty string if the event does
            not correspond to a UNICODE character (e.g. the shift key was pressed). On X11, XmbLookupString  (or
            XLookupString  when  input  method  support is turned off) does all the work of translating from the
            event to a UNICODE character.  On X11, valid only for KeyPress event.  On  Windows  and  macOS/aqua,
            valid only for KeyPress and KeyRelease events.

       %B   The  border_width  field  from  the  event.   Valid only for Configure, ConfigureRequest, and Create
            events.

       %D   This reports the delta value of a MouseWheel event.  The delta value represents the  rotation  units
            the  mouse  wheel has been moved. The sign of the value represents the direction the mouse wheel was
            scrolled.

       %E   The send_event field from the event.  Valid for all  event  types.   0  indicates  that  this  is  a
            “normal” event, 1 indicates that it is a “synthetic” event generated by SendEvent.

       %K   The keysym corresponding to the event, substituted as a textual string.  Valid only for KeyPress and
            KeyRelease events.

       %M   The  number  of  script-based  binding  patterns  matched so far for the event.  Valid for all event
            types.

       %N   The keysym corresponding to the event, substituted as a decimal number.  Valid only for KeyPress and
            KeyRelease events.

       %P   The name of the property being updated or deleted (which may be converted to an  XAtom  using  winfo
            atom.) Valid only for Property events.

       %R   The root window identifier from the event.  Valid only for events containing a root field.

       %S   The  subwindow  window identifier from the event, formatted as a hexadecimal number.  Valid only for
            events containing a subwindow field.

       %T   The type field from the event.  Valid for all event types.

       %W   The path name of the window to which the event was reported  (the  window  field  from  the  event).
            Valid for all event types.

       %X, %Y
            The  x_root  and  y_root fields from the event.  If a virtual-root window manager is being used then
            the substituted values are the corresponding x-coordinate and  y-coordinate  in  the  virtual  root.
            Valid  only  for  ButtonPress,  ButtonRelease, Enter, KeyPress, KeyRelease, Leave and Motion events.
            Same meaning as %x and %y, except relative to the (virtual) root window.

       The replacement string for a %-replacement is formatted as a proper Tcl list element.   This  means  that
       spaces  or  special  characters such as $ and { may be preceded by backslashes.  This guarantees that the
       string will be passed through the Tcl parser when the binding script is evaluated.  Most replacements are
       numbers or well-defined strings such as Above;  for these replacements  no  special  formatting  is  ever
       necessary.   The  most common case where reformatting occurs is for the %A substitution.  For example, if
       script is
              insert %A
       and the character typed is an open square bracket, then the script actually executed will be
              insert \[
       This will cause the insert to receive the original replacement string (open square bracket) as its  first
       argument.   If  the  extra backslash had not been added, Tcl would not have been able to parse the script
       correctly.

MULTIPLE MATCHES

       It is possible for several bindings to match a given X  event.   If  the  bindings  are  associated  with
       different  tag's,  then  each  of the bindings will be executed, in order.  By default, a binding for the
       widget will be executed first, followed by a class binding, a  binding  for  its  toplevel,  and  an  all
       binding.   The  bindtags command may be used to change this order for a particular window or to associate
       additional binding tags with the window.

       The continue and break commands may be used inside a binding script to control the processing of matching
       scripts.  If continue is invoked within a binding script, then this binding script, including  all  other
       “+” appended scripts, is terminated but Tk will continue processing binding scripts associated with other
       tag's.  If the break command is invoked within a binding script, then that script terminates and no other
       scripts will be invoked for the event.

       Within  a  script  called  from  the  binding  script, return -code ok may be used to continue processing
       (including “+” appended scripts), or return -code break may be used to stop processing all other  binding
       scripts.

       If  more  than  one binding matches a particular event and they have the same tag, then the most specific
       binding is chosen and its script is evaluated.  The following tests are applied, in order,  to  determine
       which of several matching sequences is more specific:

              (a)    an  event  pattern  that  specifies a specific button or key is more specific than one that
                     does not;

              (b)    a longer sequence (in terms of number of events matched) is more specific  than  a  shorter
                     sequence;

              (c)    if the modifiers specified in one pattern are a subset of the modifiers in another pattern,
                     then the pattern with more modifiers is more specific;

              (d)    a  virtual event whose physical pattern matches the sequence is less specific than the same
                     physical pattern that is not associated with a virtual event;

              (e)    given a sequence that matches two or more virtual events, one of the virtual events will be
                     chosen, but the order is undefined.

       If the matching sequences contain more than one event, then tests (c)-(e) are applied in order  from  the
       most recent event to the least recent event in the sequences.  If these tests fail to determine a winner,
       then the most recently registered sequence is the winner.

       If there are two (or more) virtual events that are both triggered by the same sequence, and both of those
       virtual  events  are bound to the same window tag, then only one of the virtual events will be triggered,
       and it will be picked at random:
              event add <<Paste>> <Control-y>
              event add <<Paste>> <Button-2>
              event add <<Scroll>> <Button-2>
              bind Entry <<Paste>> {puts Paste}
              bind Entry <<Scroll>> {puts Scroll}
       If the user types Control-y, the <<Paste>> binding will be invoked, but if the user presses button 2 then
       one of either the <<Paste>> or the <<Scroll>> bindings will  be  invoked,  but  exactly  which  one  gets
       invoked is undefined.

       If  an  X event does not match any of the existing bindings, then the event is ignored.  An unbound event
       is not considered to be an error.

MULTI-EVENT SEQUENCES AND IGNORED EVENTS

       When a sequence specified in a bind command contains more than one event  pattern,  then  its  script  is
       executed  whenever  the  recent  events  (leading  up to and including the current event) match the given
       sequence.   This  means,  for  example,  that  if  button  1   is   clicked   repeatedly   the   sequence
       <Double-ButtonPress-1>  will  match  each  button  press  but the first.  If extraneous events that would
       prevent a match occur in the middle of an event sequence then the extraneous events  are  ignored  unless
       they  are  KeyPress  or ButtonPress events.  For example, <Double-ButtonPress-1> will match a sequence of
       presses of button 1, even though there will be ButtonRelease events (and possibly Motion events)  between
       the  ButtonPress  events.   Furthermore, a KeyPress event may be preceded by any number of other KeyPress
       events for modifier keys without the modifier keys preventing a match.  For example, the  event  sequence
       aB  will match a press of the a key, a release of the a key, a press of the Shift key, and a press of the
       b key:  the press of Shift is ignored because it is a modifier key.  Finally, if  several  Motion  events
       occur in a row, only the last one is used for purposes of matching binding sequences.

ERRORS

       If an error occurs in executing the script for a binding then the bgerror mechanism is used to report the
       error.  The bgerror command will be executed at global level (outside the context of any Tcl procedure).

EXAMPLES

       Arrange  for  a  string  describing  the  motion of the mouse to be printed out when the mouse is double-
       clicked:
              bind . <Double-1> {
                  puts "hi from (%x,%y)"
              }

       A little GUI that displays what the keysym name of the last key pressed is:
              set keysym "Press any key"
              pack [label .l -textvariable keysym -padx 2m -pady 1m]
              bind . <Key> {
                  set keysym "You pressed %K"
              }

SEE ALSO

       bgerror(3tcl), bindtags(3tk), event(3tk), focus(3tk), grab(3tk), keysyms(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       binding, event

Tk                                                     8.0                                             bind(3tk)