Provided by: tk8.6-doc_8.6.14-1build1_all bug

NAME

       text, tk_textCopy, tk_textCut, tk_textPaste - Create and manipulate 'text' hypertext editing widgets

SYNOPSIS

       text pathName ?options?
       tk_textCopy pathName
       tk_textCut pathName
       tk_textPaste pathName

STANDARD OPTIONS

       -background           -highlightthickness  -relief
       -borderwidth          -insertbackground    -selectbackground
       -cursor               -insertborderwidth   -selectborderwidth
       -exportselection      -insertofftime       -selectforeground
       -font                 -insertontime        -setgrid
       -foreground           -insertwidth         -takefocus
       -highlightbackground  -padx                -xscrollcommand
       -highlightcolor       -pady                -yscrollcommand

       See the options manual entry for details on the standard options.

WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS

       Command-Line Name:-autoseparators
       Database Name:  autoSeparators
       Database Class: AutoSeparators

              Specifies  a  boolean  that  says whether separators are automatically inserted in the undo stack.
              Only meaningful when the -undo option is true.

       Command-Line Name:-blockcursor
       Database Name:  blockCursor
       Database Class: BlockCursor

              Specifies a boolean that says  whether  the  blinking  insertion  cursor  should  be  drawn  as  a
              character-sized  rectangular  block.  If  false (the default) a thin vertical line is used for the
              insertion cursor.

       Command-Line Name:-endline
       Database Name:  endLine
       Database Class: EndLine

              Specifies an integer line index representing the line of the underlying textual  data  store  that
              should  be  just after the last line contained in the widget. This allows a text widget to reflect
              only a portion of a larger piece of text. Instead of an integer, the empty string can be  provided
              to  this configuration option, which will configure the widget to end at the very last line in the
              textual data store.

       Command-Line Name:-height
       Database Name:  height
       Database Class: Height

              Specifies the desired height for the window, in units of characters in the font given by the -font
              option. Must be at least one.

       Command-Line Name:-inactiveselectbackground
       Database Name:  inactiveSelectBackground
       Database Class: Foreground

              Specifies the colour to use for the selection (the sel tag) when the  window  does  not  have  the
              input focus. If empty, {}, then no selection is shown when the window does not have the focus.

       Command-Line Name:-insertunfocussed
       Database Name:  insertUnfocussed
       Database Class: InsertUnfocussed

              Specifies  how  to  display  the insertion cursor when the widget does not have the focus. Must be 2
              none (the default) which means to not display the cursor, hollow which means to display  a  hollow 2
              box,  or  solid  which  means  to display a solid box. Note that hollow and solid will appear very 2
              similar when the -blockcursor option is false.

       Command-Line Name:-maxundo
       Database Name:  maxUndo
       Database Class: MaxUndo

              Specifies the maximum number of compound undo actions on the undo stack.  A  zero  or  a  negative
              value imply an unlimited undo stack.

       Command-Line Name:-spacing1
       Database Name:  spacing1
       Database Class: Spacing1

              Requests  additional space above each text line in the widget, using any of the standard forms for
              screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies to the first line on the display. This
              option may be overridden with -spacing1 options in tags.

       Command-Line Name:-spacing2
       Database Name:  spacing2
       Database Class: Spacing2

              For lines that wrap (so that they cover more than one line on the display) this  option  specifies
              additional  space  to  provide between the display lines that represent a single line of text. The
              value may have any of the standard forms for screen distances. This option may be overridden  with
              -spacing2 options in tags.

       Command-Line Name:-spacing3
       Database Name:  spacing3
       Database Class: Spacing3

              Requests  additional space below each text line in the widget, using any of the standard forms for
              screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies to the last line on the display.  This
              option may be overridden with -spacing3 options in tags.

       Command-Line Name:-startline
       Database Name:  startLine
       Database Class: StartLine

              Specifies  an  integer line index representing the first line of the underlying textual data store
              that should be contained in the widget. This allows a text widget to reflect only a portion  of  a
              larger  piece  of  text.  Instead  of  an  integer,  the  empty  string  can  be  provided to this
              configuration option, which will configure the widget to start at  the  very  first  line  in  the
              textual data store.

       Command-Line Name:-state
       Database Name:  state
       Database Class: State

              Specifies  one  of  two  states  for  the  text:  normal or disabled. If the text is disabled then
              characters may not be inserted or deleted and no insertion cursor will be displayed, even  if  the
              input focus is in the widget.

       Command-Line Name:-tabs
       Database Name:  tabs
       Database Class: Tabs

              Specifies  a  set  of  tab  stops  for the window. The option's value consists of a list of screen
              distances giving the positions of the tab stops, each of which is a distance relative to the  left
              edge  of the widget (excluding borders, padding, etc). Each position may optionally be followed in
              the next list element by one of the keywords left, right, center, or numeric, which specifies  how
              to  justify  text relative to the tab stop.  Left is the default; it causes the text following the
              tab character to be positioned with its left edge at the tab position. Right means that the  right
              edge  of  the text following the tab character is positioned at the tab position, and center means
              that the text is centered at the tab position. Numeric means that the decimal point in the text is
              positioned at the tab position; if there is no decimal point then the least significant  digit  of
              the  number  is positioned just to the left of the tab position; if there is no number in the text
              then the text is right-justified at the tab position. For example, “-tabs {2c left 4c 6c  center}”
              creates  three tab stops at two-centimeter intervals; the first two use left justification and the
              third uses center justification.

              If the list of tab stops does not have enough elements to cover all of the tabs in  a  text  line,
              then  Tk  extrapolates new tab stops using the spacing and alignment from the last tab stop in the
              list. Tab distances must be strictly positive, and must always increase from one tab stop  to  the
              next  (if  not,  an  error  is  thrown).  The value of the -tabs option may be overridden by -tabs
              options in tags.

              If no -tabs option is specified, or if it is specified as an empty list, then Tk uses default tabs
              spaced every eight (average size) characters.   To  achieve  a  different  standard  spacing,  for
              example  every  4  characters,  simply  configure the widget with “-tabs "[expr {4 * [font measure
              $font 0]}] left" -tabstyle wordprocessor”.

       Command-Line Name:-tabstyle
       Database Name:  tabStyle
       Database Class: TabStyle

              Specifies how to interpret the relationship between tab stops on a line and tabs in  the  text  of
              that  line.  The  value  must  be  tabular  (the  default)  or  wordprocessor.  Note that tabs are
              interpreted as they are encountered in the text. If the tab style is tabular  then  the  n'th  tab
              character  in  the line's text will be associated with the n'th tab stop defined for that line. If
              the tab character's x coordinate falls to the right of the n'th tab stop, then a gap of  a  single
              space  will  be  inserted  as a fallback. If the tab style is wordprocessor then any tab character
              being laid out will use (and be defined by) the first tab stop  to  the  right  of  the  preceding
              characters  already  laid out on that line. The value of the -tabstyle option may be overridden by
              -tabstyle options in tags.

       Command-Line Name:-undo
       Database Name:  undo
       Database Class: Undo

              Specifies a boolean that says whether the undo mechanism is active or not.

       Command-Line Name:-width
       Database Name:  width
       Database Class: Width

              Specifies the desired width for the window in units of characters in the font given by  the  -font
              option.  If  the font does not have a uniform width then the width of the character “0” is used in
              translating from character units to screen units.

       Command-Line Name:-wrap
       Database Name:  wrap
       Database Class: Wrap

              Specifies how to handle lines in the text that are too long to be displayed in a  single  line  of
              the  text's  window.  The  value must be none or char or word. A wrap mode of none means that each
              line of text appears as exactly one line on the screen; extra characters that do not  fit  on  the
              screen  are  not  displayed.  In  the other modes each line of text will be broken up into several
              screen lines if necessary to keep all the characters visible.  In char mode a  screen  line  break
              may occur after any character; in word mode a line break will only be made at word boundaries.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  text  command creates a new window (given by the pathName argument) and makes it into a text widget.
       Additional options, described above, may be specified on the command line or in the  option  database  to
       configure  aspects of the text such as its default background color and relief.  The text command returns
       the path name of the new window.

       A text widget displays one or more lines of text and allows that text to be edited. Text widgets  support
       four different kinds of annotations on the text, called tags, marks, embedded windows or embedded images.
       Tags  allow  different portions of the text to be displayed with different fonts and colors. In addition,
       Tcl commands can be associated with tags so that scripts are invoked  when  particular  actions  such  as
       keystrokes  and  mouse  button  presses  occur  in particular ranges of the text. See TAGS below for more
       details.

       The second form of annotation consists of floating markers in the text called “marks”.  Marks are used to
       keep track of various interesting positions in the text as  it  is  edited.  See  MARKS  below  for  more
       details.

       The  third  form  of  annotation  allows  arbitrary windows to be embedded in a text widget. See EMBEDDED
       WINDOWS below for more details.

       The fourth form of annotation allows Tk images to be embedded in a text widget. See EMBEDDED IMAGES below
       for more details.

       The text widget also has a built-in undo/redo mechanism. See THE UNDO MECHANISM below for more details.

       The text widget allows for the creation of peer widgets. These are other text  widgets  which  share  the
       same underlying data (text, marks, tags, images, etc).  See PEER WIDGETS below for more details.

INDICES

       Many  of  the widget commands for texts take one or more indices as arguments.  An index is a string used
       to indicate a particular place within a text, such as a place to insert characters or one endpoint  of  a
       range of characters to delete. Indices have the syntax
              base modifier modifier modifier ...
       Where  base  gives a starting point and the modifiers adjust the index from the starting point (e.g. move
       forward or backward one character).  Every index must contain a base, but  the  modifiers  are  optional.
       Most  modifiers  (as  documented  below)  allow  an  optional submodifier. Valid submodifiers are any and
       display. If the submodifier is abbreviated, then it must be followed by whitespace, but  otherwise  there
       need  be  no space between the submodifier and the following modifier.  Typically the display submodifier
       adjusts the meaning of the following modifier to make it refer to visual or non-elided units rather  than
       logical units, but this is explained for each relevant case below. Lastly, where count is used as part of
       a  modifier,  it  can be positive or negative, so “base - -3 lines” is perfectly valid (and equivalent to
       “base +3lines”).

       The base for an index must have one of the following forms:

       line.char   Indicates char'th character on line line. Lines are numbered  from  1  for  consistency  with
                   other  UNIX  programs that use this numbering scheme.  Within a line, characters are numbered
                   from 0. If char is end then it refers to the newline character that ends the line.

       @x,y        Indicates the character that covers the pixel whose x and y  coordinates  within  the  text's
                   window are x and y.

       end         Indicates the end of the text (the character just after the last newline).

       mark        Indicates the character just after the mark whose name is mark (see MARKS for details).

       tag.first   Indicates the first character in the text that has been tagged with tag.  This form generates
                   an error if no characters are currently tagged with tag.

       tag.last    Indicates  the  character  just after the last one in the text that has been tagged with tag.
                   This form generates an error if no characters are currently tagged with tag.

       pathName    Indicates the position of the embedded window whose name is pathName.  This form generates an
                   error if there is no embedded window by the given name.

       imageName   Indicates the position of the embedded image whose name is imageName.  This form generates an
                   error if there is no embedded image by the given name.

       If the base could match more than one of the above forms, such as a mark and imageName  both  having  the
       same value, then the form earlier in the above list takes precedence. If modifiers follow the base index,
       each  one  of  them  must  have  one of the forms listed below. Keywords such as chars and wordend may be
       abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unambiguous.

       + count ?submodifier? chars
              Adjust the index forward by count characters, moving to later lines in the text if  necessary.  If
              there  are  fewer than count characters in the text after the current index, then set the index to
              the last index in the text.  Spaces  on  either  side  of  count  are  optional.  If  the  display
              submodifier  is  given, elided characters are skipped over without being counted. If any is given,
              then all characters are counted. For historical reasons, if neither modifier  is  given  then  the
              count  actually  takes place in units of index positions (see INDICES for details). This behaviour
              may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index count, you are encouraged to use
              indices instead wherever possible.

       - count ?submodifier? chars
              Adjust the index backward by count characters, moving to earlier lines in the text  if  necessary.
              If  there are fewer than count characters in the text before the current index, then set the index
              to the first index in the text (1.0). Spaces on either side of count are optional. If the  display
              submodifier  is  given, elided characters are skipped over without being counted. If any is given,
              then all characters are counted. For historical reasons, if neither modifier  is  given  then  the
              count  actually  takes  place in units of index positions (see INDICES for details). This behavior
              may be changed in a future major release, so if you need an index count, you are encouraged to use
              indices instead wherever possible.

       + count ?submodifier? indices
              Adjust the index forward by count index positions, moving to later lines in the text if necessary.
              If there are fewer than count index positions in the text after the current index,  then  set  the
              index  to  the  last index position in the text. Spaces on either side of count are optional. Note
              that an index position is either a single character or a single embedded image or embedded window.
              If the display submodifier is given, elided indices are skipped over without being counted. If any
              is given, then all indices are counted; this is also the  default  behaviour  if  no  modifier  is
              given.

       - count ?submodifier? indices
              Adjust  the  index  backward  by  count  index  positions,  moving to earlier lines in the text if
              necessary. If there are fewer than count index positions in the text  before  the  current  index,
              then  set  the index to the first index position (1.0) in the text. Spaces on either side of count
              are optional. If the display submodifier is given, elided indices are skipped over  without  being
              counted.  If  any is given, then all indices are counted; this is also the default behaviour if no
              modifier is given.

       + count ?submodifier? lines
              Adjust the index forward by count lines, retaining the same character position within the line. If
              there are fewer than count lines after the line containing the current index, then set  the  index
              to  refer  to  the  same character position on the last line of the text. Then, if the line is not
              long enough to contain a character at the  indicated  character  position,  adjust  the  character
              position to refer to the last character of the line (the newline).  Spaces on either side of count
              are  optional.  If  the  display  submodifier  is  given, then each visual display line is counted
              separately.  Otherwise, if any (or no modifier) is given, then each logical line  (no  matter  how
              many  times  it is visually wrapped) counts just once. If the relevant lines are not wrapped, then
              these two methods of counting are equivalent.

       - count ?submodifier? lines
              Adjust the index backward by count logical lines, retaining the same character position within the
              line. If there are fewer than count lines before the line containing the current index,  then  set
              the index to refer to the same character position on the first line of the text. Then, if the line
              is  not  long  enough  to  contain  a  character  at  the indicated character position, adjust the
              character position to refer to the last character of the line (the newline). Spaces on either side
              of count are optional. If the display submodifier is given,  then  each  visual  display  line  is
              counted separately. Otherwise, if any (or no modifier) is given, then each logical line (no matter
              how  many  times  it is visually wrapped) counts just once. If the relevant lines are not wrapped,
              then these two methods of counting are equivalent.

       ?submodifier? linestart
              Adjust the index to refer to the first index on the line. If the  display  submodifier  is  given,
              this is the first index on the display line, otherwise on the logical line.

       ?submodifier? lineend
              Adjust  the index to refer to the last index on the line (the newline). If the display submodifier
              is given, this is the last index on the display line, otherwise on the logical line.

       ?submodifier? wordstart
              Adjust the index to refer to the first character of the word containing the current index. A  word
              consists  of  any  number  of  adjacent  characters that are letters, digits, or underscores, or a
              single character that is not one of these. If the display submodifier is given, this only examines
              non-elided characters, otherwise all characters (elided or not) are examined.

       ?submodifier? wordend
              Adjust the index to refer to the character just after the last one  of  the  word  containing  the
              current  index.  If  the  current  index  refers  to the last character of the text then it is not
              modified. If the display submodifier is given, this only examines non-elided characters, otherwise
              all characters (elided or not) are examined.

       If more than one modifier is present then they are applied in left-to-right order. For example, the index
       “end - 1 chars” refers to the next-to-last character in the text and “insert wordstart - 1 c”  refers  to
       the  character  just  before  the  first  one  in the word containing the insertion cursor. Modifiers are
       applied one by one in this left to right order, and after each step the resulting index is constrained to
       be a valid index in the text widget. So, for example, the index “1.0 -1c +1c” refers to the index “2.0”.

       Where modifiers result in index changes by display lines, display chars or display indices, and the  base
       refers  to  an  index  inside  an elided tag, that base index is considered to be equivalent to the first
       following non-elided index.

TAGS

       The first form of annotation in text widgets is a tag. A tag is a textual string that is associated  with
       some of the characters in a text. Tags may contain arbitrary characters, but it is probably best to avoid
       using  the  characters  “  ”  (space), +, or -: these characters have special meaning in indices, so tags
       containing them cannot be used as indices. There may be any number of tags associated with characters  in
       a text. Each tag may refer to a single character, a range of characters, or several ranges of characters.
       An individual character may have any number of tags associated with it.

       A  priority  order  is defined among tags, and this order is used in implementing some of the tag-related
       functions described below. When a tag is defined (by  associating  it  with  characters  or  setting  its
       display  options  or  binding  commands  to it), it is given a priority higher than any existing tag. The
       priority order of tags may be redefined using the “pathName tag raise” and “pathName  tag  lower”  widget
       commands.

       Tags  serve  three  purposes in text widgets. First, they control the way information is displayed on the
       screen. By default, characters are displayed as determined by the  -background,  -font,  and  -foreground
       options  for  the  text widget. However, display options may be associated with individual tags using the
       “pathName tag configure” widget command. If a  character  has  been  tagged,  then  the  display  options
       associated with the tag override the default display style. The following options are currently supported
       for tags:

       -background color
              Color  specifies  the  background color to use for characters associated with the tag. It may have
              any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor.

       -bgstipple bitmap
              Bitmap specifies a bitmap that is used as a stipple pattern for the background. It may have any of
              the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If bitmap has not been specified, or if it is specified as  an
              empty string, then a solid fill will be used for the background.

       -borderwidth pixels
              Pixels  specifies  the width of a border to draw around the tag using any of the forms accepted by
              Tk_GetPixels. This option should be used in conjunction with the -relief  option  to  provide  the
              desired border.

       -elide boolean
              Elide  specifies  whether  the  data  should  be elided. Elided data (characters, images, embedded
              windows, etc.) is not displayed and takes no space on screen,  but  further  on  behaves  just  as
              normal data.

       -fgstipple bitmap
              Bitmap specifies a bitmap that is used as a stipple pattern when drawing text and other foreground
              information  such  as underlines. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetBitmap. If bitmap
              has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then a solid fill will be used.

       -font fontName
              FontName is the name of a font to use for drawing  characters.  It  may  have  any  of  the  forms
              accepted by Tk_GetFont.

       -foreground color
              Color  specifies  the  color  to  use  when  drawing text and other foreground information such as
              underlines. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor.

       -justify justify
              If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag  for  which  this  option  has  been
              specified,  then  justify  determines  how  to justify the line. It must be one of left, right, or
              center. If a line wraps, then the justification for each line on the display is determined by  the
              first non-elided character of that display line.

       -lmargin1 pixels
              If  the  first  non-elided  character  of  a  text  line  has a tag for which this option has been
              specified, then pixels specifies how much the line should be indented from the left  edge  of  the
              window.  Pixels  may have any of the standard forms for screen distances. If a line of text wraps,
              this option only applies to the first line on the  display;  the  -lmargin2  option  controls  the
              indentation for subsequent lines.

       -lmargin2 pixels
              If  the  first  non-elided  character  of  a display line has a tag for which this option has been
              specified, and if the display line is not the first for its text line (i.e.,  the  text  line  has
              wrapped),  then  pixels  specifies  how much the line should be indented from the left edge of the
              window.  Pixels may have any of the standard forms for screen distances. This option is only  used
              when  wrapping  is  enabled,  and it only applies to the second and later display lines for a text
              line.

       -lmargincolor color
              Color specifies the background color to use in regions that do not contain characters because they
              are indented by -lmargin1 or -lmargin2. It may have any of the forms accepted by  Tk_GetColor.  If
              color  has  not  been  specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then the color used is
              specified by the -background tag option (or, if this  is  also  unspecified,  by  the  -background
              widget option).

       -offset pixels
              Pixels  specifies  an  amount  by  which  the text's baseline should be offset vertically from the
              baseline of the overall line,  in  pixels.  For  example,  a  positive  offset  can  be  used  for
              superscripts and a negative offset can be used for subscripts. Pixels may have any of the standard
              forms for screen distances.

       -overstrike boolean
              Specifies  whether  or not to draw a horizontal rule through the middle of characters. Boolean may
              have any of the forms accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean.

       -overstrikefg color
              Color specifies the color to use when displaying the overstrike. It may  have  any  of  the  forms
              accepted  by  Tk_GetColor.  If  color  has  not  been specified, or if it is specified as an empty
              string, then the color specified by the -foreground tag option is used.

       -relief relief
              Relief specifies the relief style to use for drawing the border, in any of the forms  accepted  by
              Tk_GetRelief.  This  option  is  used in conjunction with the -borderwidth option to enable to the
              desired border appearance.

       -rmargin pixels
              If the first non-elided character of a display line has a tag  for  which  this  option  has  been
              specified,  then  pixels  specifies how wide a margin to leave between the end of the line and the
              right edge of the window.  Pixels may have any of the standard forms for  screen  distances.  This
              option is only used when wrapping is enabled. If a text line wraps, the right margin for each line
              on the display is determined by the first non-elided character of that display line.

       -rmargincolor color
              Color specifies the background color to use in regions that do not contain characters because they
              are  indented  by -rmargin. It may have any of the forms accepted by Tk_GetColor. If color has not
              been specified, or if it is specified as an empty string, then the color used is specified by  the
              -background tag option (or, if this is also unspecified, by the -background widget option).

       -selectbackground color
              Color specifies the background color to use when displaying selected items. It may have any of the
              forms  accepted by Tk_GetColor. If color has not been specified, or if it is specified as an empty
              string, then the color specified by the -background tag option is used.

       -selectforeground color
              Color specifies the foreground color to use when displaying selected items. It may have any of the
              forms accepted by Tk_GetColor. If color has not been specified, or if it is specified as an  empty
              string, then the color specified by the -foreground tag option is used.

       -spacing1 pixels
              Pixels  specifies  how much additional space should be left above each text line, using any of the
              standard forms for screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies to the  first  line
              on the display.

       -spacing2 pixels
              For  lines that wrap, this option specifies how much additional space to leave between the display
              lines for a single text line. Pixels may have any of the standard forms for screen distances.

       -spacing3 pixels
              Pixels specifies how much additional space should be left below each text line, using any  of  the
              standard forms for screen distances. If a line wraps, this option only applies to the last line on
              the display.

       -tabs tabList
              TabList specifies a set of tab stops in the same form as for the -tabs option for the text widget.
              This option only applies to a display line if it applies to the first non-elided character on that
              display  line.  If  this option is specified as an empty string, it cancels the option, leaving it
              unspecified for the tag (the default). If the option is specified as a non-empty string that is an
              empty list, such as -tags { }, then it requests default 8-character  tabs  as  described  for  the
              -tags widget option.

       -tabstyle style
              Style  specifies  either the tabular or wordprocessor style of tabbing to use for the text widget.
              This option only applies to a display line if it applies to the first non-elided character on that
              display line. If this option is specified as an empty string, it cancels the  option,  leaving  it
              unspecified for the tag (the default).

       -underline boolean
              Boolean  specifies  whether  or not to draw an underline underneath characters. It may have any of
              the forms accepted by Tcl_GetBoolean.

       -underlinefg color
              Color specifies the color to use when displaying the underline. It  may  have  any  of  the  forms
              accepted  by  Tk_GetColor.  If  color  has  not  been specified, or if it is specified as an empty
              string, then the color specified by the -foreground tag option is used.

       -wrap mode
              Mode specifies how to handle lines that are wider than the text's window. This option only applies
              to a display line if it applies to the first non-elided character on that display line. It has the
              same legal values as the -wrap option for the text widget: none, char, or word. If this tag option
              is specified, it overrides the -wrap option for the text widget.

       If a character has several tags associated with it, and if  their  display  options  conflict,  then  the
       options of the highest priority tag are used. If a particular display option has not been specified for a
       particular  tag, or if it is specified as an empty string, then that option will never be used; the next-
       highest-priority tag's option will used instead. If no tag specifies a particular  display  option,  then
       the default style for the widget will be used.

       The second purpose for tags is event bindings. You can associate bindings with a tag in much the same way
       you can associate bindings with a widget class: whenever particular X events occur on characters with the
       given  tag, a given Tcl command will be executed. Tag bindings can be used to give behaviors to ranges of
       characters; among other things, this allows hypertext-like features to be implemented. For  details,  see
       the description of the “pathName tag bind” widget command below. Tag bindings are shared between all peer
       widgets (including any bindings for the special sel tag).

       The  third  use for tags is in managing the selection. See THE SELECTION below. With the exception of the
       special sel tag, all tags are shared between peer text widgets, and may be manipulated on an equal  basis
       from  any  such widget. The sel tag exists separately and independently in each peer text widget (but any
       tag bindings to sel are shared).

MARKS

       The second form of annotation in text widgets is a mark. Marks are used for remembering particular places
       in a text. They are something like tags, in that they have names and they refer to places  in  the  file,
       but  a  mark  is  not  associated  with particular characters. Instead, a mark is associated with the gap
       between two characters. Only a single position may be associated with a mark at any given  time.  If  the
       characters  around  a  mark  are  deleted  the  mark  will  still  remain; it will just have new neighbor
       characters. In contrast, if the characters containing a tag are deleted then the tag will no longer  have
       an  association  with  characters  in  the file. Marks may be manipulated with the “pathName mark” widget
       command, and their current locations may be determined by using the mark  name  as  an  index  in  widget
       commands.

       Each  mark  also  has  a  “gravity”, which is either left or right. The gravity for a mark specifies what
       happens to the mark when text is inserted at the point of the mark. If a mark has left gravity, then  the
       mark  is treated as if it were attached to the character on its left, so the mark will remain to the left
       of any text inserted at the mark position. If the mark has right gravity, new text inserted at  the  mark
       position will appear to the left of the mark (so that the mark remains rightmost). The gravity for a mark
       defaults to right.

       The name space for marks is different from that for tags: the same name may be used for both a mark and a
       tag, but they will refer to different things.

       Two  marks  have special significance. First, the mark insert is associated with the insertion cursor, as
       described under THE INSERTION CURSOR below. Second, the mark current is  associated  with  the  character
       closest  to  the  mouse  and is adjusted automatically to track the mouse position and any changes to the
       text in the widget (one exception: current is not updated in response to mouse motions if a mouse  button
       is  down;  the  update  will  be  deferred until all mouse buttons have been released).  Neither of these
       special marks may be deleted. With the exception of these two special marks, all marks are shared between
       peer text widgets, and may be manipulated on an equal basis from any peer.

EMBEDDED WINDOWS

       The third form of annotation in text widgets is an  embedded  window.  Each  embedded  window  annotation
       causes  a  window  to be displayed at a particular point in the text. There may be any number of embedded
       windows in a text widget, and any widget may be used as an embedded window (subject to  the  usual  rules
       for  geometry  management,  which  require  the  text window to be the parent of the embedded window or a
       descendant of its parent).

       The embedded window's position on the screen will be updated as the text is modified or scrolled, and  it
       will  be  mapped  and  unmapped  as  it  moves  into and out of the visible area of the text widget. Each
       embedded window occupies one unit's worth of index space in the text widget, and it may  be  referred  to
       either by the name of its embedded window or by its position in the widget's index space. If the range of
       text containing the embedded window is deleted then the window is destroyed. Similarly if the text widget
       as a whole is deleted, then the window is destroyed.

       Eliding  an embedded window immediately after scheduling it for creation via pathName window create index
       -create will prevent it from being effectively created. Uneliding an elided embedded window scheduled for
       creation via pathName window create index -create will  automatically  trigger  the  associated  creation
       script. After destroying an elided embedded window, the latter won't get automatically recreated.

       When an embedded window is added to a text widget with the pathName window create widget command, several
       configuration  options  may  be associated with it. These options may be modified later with the pathName
       window configure widget command. The following options are currently supported:

       -align where
              If the window is not as tall as the line in which it is displayed, this  option  determines  where
              the  window  is displayed in the line. Where must have one of the values top (align the top of the
              window with the top of the line), center (center the window within the range of the line),  bottom
              (align the bottom of the window with the bottom of the line's area), or baseline (align the bottom
              of the window with the baseline of the line).

       -create script
              Specifies  a  Tcl  script  that  may  be  evaluated to create the window for the annotation. If no
              -window option has been specified for the annotation  this  script  will  be  evaluated  when  the
              annotation  is about to be displayed on the screen. Script must create a window for the annotation
              and return the name of that window as its result. Two substitutions will be  performed  in  script
              before  evaluation.  %W  will be substituted by the name of the parent text widget, and %% will be
              substituted by a single %.  If the annotation's window should ever  be  deleted,  script  will  be
              evaluated again the next time the annotation is displayed.

       -padx pixels
              Pixels  specifies  the  amount of extra space to leave on each side of the embedded window. It may
              have any of the usual forms defined for a screen distance.

       -pady pixels
              Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on the top and on the bottom of  the  embedded
              window. It may have any of the usual forms defined for a screen distance.

       -stretch boolean
              If  the requested height of the embedded window is less than the height of the line in which it is
              displayed, this option can be used to specify whether the window should be stretched vertically to
              fill its line. If the -pady option has been specified as well, then the requested padding will  be
              retained even if the window is stretched.

       -window pathName
              Specifies the name of a window to display in the annotation. Note that if a pathName has been set,
              then  later  configuring  a window to the empty string will not delete the widget corresponding to
              the old pathName.  Rather it will remove the association between the old  pathName  and  the  text
              widget.  If  multiple  peer widgets are in use, it is usually simpler to use the -create option if
              embedded windows are desired in each peer.

EMBEDDED IMAGES

       The final form of annotation in text widgets is an embedded image. Each embedded image annotation  causes
       an image to be displayed at a particular point in the text. There may be any number of embedded images in
       a text widget, and a particular image may be embedded in multiple places in the same text widget.

       The  embedded  image's  position  on the screen will be updated as the text is modified or scrolled. Each
       embedded image occupies one unit's worth of index space in the text widget, and it  may  be  referred  to
       either by its position in the widget's index space, or the name it is assigned when the image is inserted
       into  the  text  widget with pathName image create. If the range of text containing the embedded image is
       deleted then that copy of the image is removed from the screen.

       Eliding an embedded image immediately after scheduling it for creation via pathName  image  create  index
       -create  will prevent it from being effectively created. Uneliding an elided embedded image scheduled for
       creation via pathName image create index -create  will  automatically  trigger  the  associated  creation
       script. After destroying an elided embedded image, the latter won't get automatically recreated.

       When  an  embedded  image is added to a text widget with the pathName image create widget command, a name
       unique to this instance of the image is returned. This name may then be  used  to  refer  to  this  image
       instance. The name is taken to be the value of the -name option (described below). If the -name option is
       not  provided,  the  -image name is used instead.  If the imageName is already in use in the text widget,
       then #nn is added to the end of the imageName, where  nn  is  an  arbitrary  integer.  This  insures  the
       imageName  is  unique. Once this name is assigned to this instance of the image, it does not change, even
       though the -image or -name values can be changed with pathName image configure.

       When an embedded image is added to a text widget with the pathName image create widget  command,  several
       configuration  options  may  be associated with it. These options may be modified later with the pathName
       image configure widget command. The following options are currently supported:

       -align where
              If the image is not as tall as the line in which it is displayed, this option determines where the
              image is displayed in the line. Where must have one of the values top (align the top of the  image
              with  the  top of the line), center (center the image within the range of the line), bottom (align
              the bottom of the image with the bottom of the line's area), or baseline (align the bottom of  the
              image with the baseline of the line).

       -image image
              Specifies the name of the Tk image to display in the annotation. If image is not a valid Tk image,
              then an error is returned.

       -name ImageName
              Specifies the name by which this image instance may be referenced in the text widget. If ImageName
              is  not  supplied,  then  the name of the Tk image is used instead. If the imageName is already in
              use, #nn is appended to the end of the name as described above.

       -padx pixels
              Pixels specifies the amount of extra space to leave on each side of the  embedded  image.  It  may
              have any of the usual forms defined for a screen distance.

       -pady pixels
              Pixels  specifies  the amount of extra space to leave on the top and on the bottom of the embedded
              image. It may have any of the usual forms defined for a screen distance.

THE SELECTION

       Selection support is implemented via tags. If the -exportselection option for the  text  widget  is  true
       then the sel tag will be associated with the selection:

       [1]    Whenever characters are tagged with sel the text widget will claim ownership of the selection.

       [2]    Attempts  to  retrieve  the  selection  will  be  serviced  by  the text widget, returning all the
              characters with the sel tag.

       [3]    If the selection is claimed  away  by  another  application  or  by  another  window  within  this
              application, then the sel tag will be removed from all characters in the text.

       [4]    Whenever  the  sel tag range changes a virtual event <<Selection>> is generated.  It might also be
              generated when selection is affected  but  not  actually  changed.   Further,  multiple  selection
              changes  could  happen  before  events  can  be processed leading to multiple events with the same
              visible selection.

       The sel tag is automatically defined when a text widget is created, and it may not be  deleted  with  the
       “pathName  tag  delete”  widget  command.  Furthermore,  the  -selectbackground,  -selectborderwidth, and
       -selectforeground options for the text widget are tied to the -background, -borderwidth, and  -foreground
       options  for  the  sel  tag:  changes  in  either  will automatically be reflected in the other. Also the
       -inactiveselectbackground option for the text widget is used instead of -selectbackground when  the  text
       widget  does  not  have the focus. This allows programmatic control over the visualization of the sel tag
       for foreground and background windows, or to have sel not shown at all (when -inactiveselectbackground is
       empty) for background windows. Each peer text widget  has  its  own  sel  tag  which  can  be  separately
       configured and set.

THE INSERTION CURSOR

       The  mark  named insert has special significance in text widgets. It is defined automatically when a text
       widget is created and it may not be unset with the “pathName mark unset” widget command. The insert  mark
       represents  the position of the insertion cursor, and the insertion cursor will automatically be drawn at
       this point whenever the text widget has the input focus.

THE MODIFIED FLAG

       The text widget can keep track of changes to the content of the widget by means  of  the  modified  flag.
       Inserting  or deleting text will set this flag. The flag can be queried, set and cleared programmatically
       as well. Whenever the flag changes state a <<Modified>> virtual event is generated. See the pathName edit
       modified widget command for more details.

THE UNDO MECHANISM

       The text widget has an unlimited undo and redo mechanism (when the -undo widget  option  is  true)  which
       records every insert and delete action on a stack.

       Boundaries (called “separators”) are inserted between edit actions. The purpose of these separators is to
       group  inserts,  deletes  and  replaces  into  one compound edit action. When undoing a change everything
       between two separators will be undone. The undone changes are then moved to the redo stack,  so  that  an
       undone edit can be redone again.  The redo stack is cleared whenever new edit actions are recorded on the
       undo stack. The undo and redo stacks can be cleared to keep their depth under control.

       Separators  are  inserted  automatically  when  the -autoseparators widget option is true. You can insert
       separators programmatically as well. If a separator is already present at the top of the  undo  stack  no
       other will be inserted. That means that two separators on the undo stack are always separated by at least
       one insert or delete action.

       The <<UndoStack>> virtual event is generated every time the undo stack or the redo stack becomes empty or
       unempty.

       The  undo  mechanism  is also linked to the modified flag. This means that undoing or redoing changes can
       take a modified text widget back to the unmodified state or vice versa. The modified  flag  will  be  set
       automatically  to the appropriate state. This automatic coupling does not work when the modified flag has
       been set by the user, until the flag has been reset again.

       See below for the pathName edit widget command that controls the undo mechanism.

PEER WIDGETS

       The text widget has a separate store of all its data concerning  each  line's  textual  contents,  marks,
       tags, images and windows, and the undo stack.

       While  this  data  store  cannot  be  accessed  directly (i.e. without a text widget as an intermediary),
       multiple text widgets can be created, each of which present different views on the same underlying  data.
       Such text widgets are known as peer text widgets.

       As  text  is  added,  deleted,  edited  and  coloured  in  any one widget, and as images, marks, tags are
       adjusted, all such changes will be reflected in all peers.

       All data and markup is shared, except for a few small  details.  First,  the  sel  tag  may  be  set  and
       configured  (in  its  display  style) differently for each peer. Second, each peer has its own insert and
       current mark positions (but all other marks are shared). Third, embedded  windows,  which  are  arbitrary
       other  widgets,  cannot  be  shared  between  peers. This means the -window option of embedded windows is
       independently set for each peer (it is advisable to use the -create script  capabilities  to  allow  each
       peer to create its own embedded windows as needed). Fourth, all of the configuration options of each peer
       (e.g.  -font, etc) can be set independently, with the exception of -undo, -maxundo, -autoseparators (i.e.
       all undo, redo and modified state issues are shared).

       Finally any single peer need not contain all lines from the underlying data store. When creating a  peer,
       a  contiguous  range  of  lines  (e.g. only lines 52 through 125) may be specified. This allows a peer to
       contain just a small portion of the overall text. The range of lines will expand and contract as text  is
       inserted  or  deleted. The peer will only ever display complete lines of text (one cannot share just part
       of a line). If the peer's contents contracts to nothing (i.e. all complete lines in the peer widget  have
       been  deleted  from  another  widget),  then it is impossible for new lines to be inserted. The peer will
       simply become an empty shell on which the background can be configured, but which  will  never  show  any
       content  (without  manual  reconfiguration  of  the start and end lines). Note that a peer which does not
       contain all of the underlying data store still has indices numbered from “1.0” to “end”.   It  is  simply
       that  those  indices  reflect  a  subset  of  the total data, and data outside the contained range is not
       accessible to the peer. This means that the command peerName index end may return quite different  values
       in  different  peers.  Similarly,  commands like peerName tag ranges will not return index ranges outside
       that which is meaningful to the peer. The configuration options -startline and -endline may  be  used  to
       control how much of the underlying data is contained in any given text widget.

       Note  that  peers are really peers. Deleting the “original” text widget will not cause any other peers to
       be deleted, or otherwise affected.

       See below for the pathName peer widget command that controls the creation of peer widgets.

ASYNCHRONOUS UPDATE OF LINE HEIGHTS

       In order to maintain a responsive user-experience, the text widget calculates lines metrics (line heights
       in pixels) asynchronously. Because of this, some commands of the text widget may return wrong results  if
       the  asynchronous  calculations  are  not finished at the time of calling. This applies to pathName count
       -ypixels and pathName yview.

       Again for performance reasons, it would not be appropriate to let these commands always wait for the  end
       of  the  update calculation each time they are called. In most use cases of these commands a more or less
       inaccurate result does not really matter compared to execution speed.

       In case accurate result is needed (and if the text widget is managed by  a  geometry  manager),  one  can
       resort  to  pathName  sync  and  pathName  pendingsync to control the synchronization of the view of text
       widgets.

       The <<WidgetViewSync>> virtual event fires when the line heights of the text widget become obsolete  (due
       to some editing command or configuration change), and again when the internal data of the text widget are
       back  in sync with the widget view. The detail field (%d substitution) is either true (when the widget is
       in sync) or false (when it is not).

       pathName sync, pathName pendingsync and <<WidgetViewSync>> apply to each text widget independently of its
       peers.

       Examples of use:
              ## Example 1:
              # immediately complete line metrics at any cost (GUI unresponsive)
              $w sync
              $w yview moveto $fraction

              ## Example 2:
              # synchronously wait for up-to-date line metrics (GUI responsive)
              # before executing the scheduled command, but don't block execution flow
              $w sync -command [list $w yview moveto $fraction]

              ## Example 3:
              # init
              set yud($w) 0
              proc updateaction w {
              set ::yud($w) 1
              # any other update action here...
              }
              # runtime, synchronously wait for up-to-date line metrics (GUI responsive)
              $w sync -command [list updateaction $w]
              vwait yud($w)
              $w yview moveto $fraction

              ## Example 4:
              # init
              set todo($w) {}
              proc updateaction w {
              foreach cmd $::todo($w) {uplevel #0 $cmd}
              set todo($w) {}
              }
              # runtime
              lappend todo($w) [list $w yview moveto $fraction]
              $w sync -command [list updateaction $w]

              ## Example 5:
              # init
              set todo($w) {}
              bind $w <<WidgetViewSync>> {
              if {%d} {
              foreach cmd $todo(%W) {eval $cmd}
              set todo(%W) {}
              }
              }
              # runtime
              if {![$w pendingsync]} {
              $w yview moveto $fraction
              } else {
              lappend todo($w) [list $w yview moveto $fraction]
              }

WIDGET COMMAND

       The text command creates a new Tcl command whose name is the same as the path name of the text's  window.
       This command may be used to invoke various operations on the widget. It has the following general form:
              pathName option ?arg arg ...?
       PathName  is  the  name  of the command, which is the same as the text widget's path name. Option and the
       args determine the exact behavior of the command. The following commands are possible for text widgets:

       pathName bbox index
              Returns a list of four elements describing the screen area of the character given  by  index.  The
              first  two  elements of the list give the x and y coordinates of the upper-left corner of the area
              occupied by the character, and the last two elements give the width and height of the area. If the
              character is only partially visible on the screen, then the return value reflects just the visible
              part. If the character is not visible on the screen then the return value is an empty list.

       pathName cget option
              Returns the current value of the configuration option given by option.  Option may have any of the
              values accepted by the text command.

       pathName compare index1 op index2
              Compares the indices given by index1 and index2 according to the relational operator given by  op,
              and returns 1 if the relationship is satisfied and 0 if it is not. Op must be one of the operators
              <,  <=,  ==,  >=,  >,  or  !=. If op is == then 1 is returned if the two indices refer to the same
              character, if op is < then 1 is returned if index1 refers to an earlier character in the text than
              index2, and so on.

       pathName configure ?option? ?value option value ...?
              Query or modify the configuration options of the widget. If no option is specified, returns a list
              describing all of the available options for pathName (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on  the
              format  of  this  list).  If  option  is  specified with no value, then the command returns a list
              describing the one named option (this list will be identical to the corresponding sublist  of  the
              value  returned  if no option is specified). If one or more option-value pairs are specified, then
              the command modifies the given widget option(s) to have the  given  value(s);  in  this  case  the
              command returns an empty string. Option may have any of the values accepted by the text command.

       pathName count ?options? index1 index2
              Counts  the  number  of  relevant  things  between the two indices. If index1 is after index2, the
              result will be a negative number (and this holds for each of the  possible  options).  The  actual
              items which are counted depend on the options given. The result is a list of integers, one for the
              result  of  each  counting  option  given.  Valid  counting  options  are  -chars,  -displaychars,
              -displayindices, -displaylines, -indices, -lines, -xpixels and -ypixels. The default value, if  no
              option  is  specified,  is  -indices.  There  is  an additional possible option -update which is a
              modifier. If given (and if the text widget is managed by a geometry manager), then all  subsequent
              options ensure that any possible out of date information is recalculated.  This currently only has
              any  effect  for  the  -ypixels  count (which, if -update is not given, will use the text widget's
              current cached value for each line). This -update option is obsoleted by pathName  sync,  pathName
              pendingsync and <<WidgetViewSync>>.  The count options are interpreted as follows:

              -chars count all characters, whether elided or not. Do not count embedded windows or images.

              -displaychars
                     count all non-elided characters.

              -displayindices
                     count all non-elided characters, windows and images.

              -displaylines
                     count all display lines (i.e. counting one for each time a line wraps) from the line of the
                     first  index  up  to,  but not including the display line of the second index. Therefore if
                     they are both on the same display line, zero will be returned. By  definition  displaylines
                     are visible and therefore this only counts portions of actual visible lines.

              -indices
                     count  all characters and embedded windows or images (i.e. everything which counts in text-
                     widget index space), whether they are elided or not.

              -lines count all logical lines (irrespective of wrapping) from the line of the first index up  to,
                     but  not  including  the  line  of the second index. Therefore if they are both on the same
                     line, zero will be returned. Logical lines are counted whether they are  currently  visible
                     (non-elided) or not.

              -xpixels
                     count  the  number of horizontal pixels from the first pixel of the first index to (but not
                     including) the first pixel of the second index. To count the total  desired  width  of  the
                     text  widget  (assuming  wrapping is not enabled), first find the longest line and then use
                     “.text count -xpixels "${line}.0" "${line}.0 lineend"”.

              -ypixels
                     count the number of vertical pixels from the first pixel of the first  index  to  (but  not
                     including)  the  first  pixel  of the second index. If both indices are on the same display
                     line, zero will be returned. To count the total number  of  vertical  pixels  in  the  text
                     widget,  use  “.text  count -ypixels 1.0 end”, and to ensure this is up to date, use “.text
                     count -update -ypixels 1.0 end”.

              The command returns a positive or negative integer corresponding to the number  of  items  counted
              between the two indices. One such integer is returned for each counting option given, so a list is
              returned if more than one option was supplied. For example “.text count -xpixels -ypixels 1.3 4.5”
              is perfectly valid and will return a list of two elements.

       pathName debug ?boolean?
              If  boolean  is  specified,  then  it  must  have  one  of  the  true  or false values accepted by
              Tcl_GetBoolean. If the value is a true one then internal consistency checks will be turned  on  in
              the  B-tree  code  associated  with  text widgets. If boolean has a false value then the debugging
              checks will be turned off. In either case the command returns an empty string. If boolean  is  not
              specified  then  the  command returns on or off to indicate whether or not debugging is turned on.
              There is a single debugging switch shared by all text widgets: turning debugging on or off in  any
              widget turns it on or off for all widgets. For widgets with large amounts of text, the consistency
              checks may cause a noticeable slow-down.

              When  debugging  is  turned  on,  the drawing routines of the text widget set the global variables
              tk_textRedraw and tk_textRelayout to the lists of indices that are redrawn. The  values  of  these
              variables are tested by Tk's test suite.

       pathName delete index1 ?index2 ...?
              Delete  a range of characters from the text.  If both index1 and index2 are specified, then delete
              all the characters starting with the one given by index1 and stopping just before index2 (i.e. the
              character at index2 is not deleted).  If index2 does not specify a position later in the text than
              index1 then no characters are deleted.  If index2 is not specified then the  single  character  at
              index1  is  deleted.   Attempts  to delete characters in a way that would leave the text without a
              newline as the last character will be tweaked by the text widget to  avoid  this.  In  particular,
              deletion  of  complete  lines  of  text  up  to  the  end of the text will also delete the newline
              character just before the deleted block so that it is replaced by the new  final  newline  of  the
              text  widget.  The command returns an empty string.  If more indices are given, multiple ranges of
              text will be deleted.  All indices are first checked for validity before any deletions  are  made.
              They  are  sorted  and  the text is removed from the last range to the first range so deleted text
              does not cause an undesired index shifting side-effects.  If multiple ranges with the  same  start
              index  are given, then the longest range is used.  If overlapping ranges are given, then they will
              be merged into spans that do not cause deletion of text outside  the  given  ranges  due  to  text
              shifted during deletion.

       pathName dlineinfo index
              Returns  a  list  with  five  elements describing the area occupied by the display line containing
              index. The first two elements of the list give the x and y coordinates of the upper-left corner of
              the area occupied by the line, the third and fourth elements give the  width  and  height  of  the
              area,  and  the  fifth element gives the position of the baseline for the line, measured down from
              the top of the area. All of this information is measured in pixels. If the current  wrap  mode  is
              none  and  the  line  extends  beyond the boundaries of the window, the area returned reflects the
              entire area of the line, including the portions that are out of the window. If the line is shorter
              than the full width of the window then the area returned reflects just the  portion  of  the  line
              that  is  occupied by characters and embedded windows. If the display line containing index is not
              visible on the screen then the return value is an empty list.

       pathName dump ?switches? index1 ?index2?
              Return the contents of the text widget from index1 up to, but not including index2, including  the
              text  and information about marks, tags, and embedded windows. If index2 is not specified, then it
              defaults to one character past index1. The information is returned in the following format:

              key1 value1 index1 key2 value2 index2 ...

              The possible key values are text, mark, tagon, tagoff, image, and window. The corresponding  value
              is  the  text, mark name, tag name, image name, or window name. The index information is the index
              of the start of the text, mark, tag transition, image or window. One  or  more  of  the  following
              switches (or abbreviations thereof) may be specified to control the dump:

              -all   Return  information about all elements: text, marks, tags, images and windows.  This is the
                     default.

              -command command
                     Instead of returning the information as the  result  of  the  dump  operation,  invoke  the
                     command  on  each  element  of  the  text  widget  within the range.  The command has three
                     arguments appended to it before it is evaluated: the key, value, and index.

              -image Include information about images in the dump results.

              -mark  Include information about marks in the dump results.

              -tag   Include information about tag transitions in the dump results. Tag information is  returned
                     as  tagon  and  tagoff  elements that indicate the begin and end of each range of each tag,
                     respectively.

              -text  Include information about text in the dump results. The value is the text up  to  the  next
                     element  or  the end of range indicated by index2. A text element does not span newlines. A
                     multi-line block of text that contains no marks or tag transitions will still be dumped  as
                     a set of text segments that each end with a newline. The newline is part of the value.

              -window
                     Include  information  about  embedded windows in the dump results. The value of a window is
                     its Tk pathname, unless the window has not  been  created  yet.  (It  must  have  a  create
                     script.)  In  this  case  an empty string is returned, and you must query the window by its
                     index position to get more information.

       pathName edit option ?arg arg ...?
              This command controls the undo mechanism and the modified flag. The exact behavior of the  command
              depends  on the option argument that follows the edit argument. The following forms of the command
              are currently supported:

              pathName edit canredo
                     Returns a boolean true if redo is  possible,  i.e.  when  the  redo  stack  is  not  empty.
                     Otherwise returns false.

              pathName edit canundo
                     Returns  a  boolean  true  if  undo  is  possible,  i.e.  when the undo stack is not empty.
                     Otherwise returns false.

              pathName edit modified ?boolean?
                     If boolean is not specified, returns the modified flag of the widget.  The insert,  delete,
                     edit undo and edit redo commands or the user can set or clear the modified flag. If boolean
                     is specified, sets the modified flag of the widget to boolean.

              pathName edit redo
                     When the -undo option is true, reapplies the last undone edits provided no other edits were
                     done  since  then.  Generates  an error when the redo stack is empty. Does nothing when the
                     -undo option is false.

              pathName edit reset
                     Clears the undo and redo stacks.

              pathName edit separator
                     Inserts a separator (boundary) on the undo stack. Does nothing when  the  -undo  option  is
                     false.

              pathName edit undo
                     Undoes the last edit action when the -undo option is true. An edit action is defined as all
                     the  insert  and  delete  commands  that  are  recorded  on  the  undo stack in between two
                     separators. Generates an error when the undo stack is empty. Does nothing  when  the  -undo
                     option is false.

       pathName get ?-displaychars? ?--? index1 ?index2 ...?
              Return  a  range  of  characters from the text. The return value will be all the characters in the
              text starting with the one whose index is index1 and ending just before the  one  whose  index  is
              index2  (the  character  at  index2  will  not  be returned). If index2 is omitted then the single
              character at index1 is returned. If there are no characters in the specified range (e.g. index1 is
              past the end of the file or index2 is less than or equal  to  index1)  then  an  empty  string  is
              returned.  If the specified range contains embedded windows, no information about them is included
              in the returned string. If multiple index pairs  are  given,  multiple  ranges  of  text  will  be
              returned  in  a  list.  Invalid ranges will not be represented with empty strings in the list. The
              ranges are returned in the order passed to pathName get. If the  -displaychars  option  is  given,
              then,  within  each  range,  only those characters which are not elided will be returned. This may
              have the effect that some of the returned ranges are empty strings.

       pathName image option ?arg arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate embedded images. The behavior of the  command  depends  on  the
              option  argument that follows the image argument. The following forms of the command are currently
              supported:

              pathName image cget index option
                     Returns the value of a configuration option for an embedded  image.  Index  identifies  the
                     embedded  image,  and option specifies a particular configuration option, which must be one
                     of the ones listed in the section EMBEDDED IMAGES.

              pathName image configure index ?option value ...?
                     Query or modify the configuration options for an embedded image. If no option is specified,
                     returns a list describing all of the available options for the embedded image at index (see
                     Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format of this list). If option is  specified  with
                     no  value,  then the command returns a list describing the one named option (this list will
                     be identical to the corresponding sublist of the value returned if no option is specified).
                     If one or more option-value pairs are  specified,  then  the  command  modifies  the  given
                     option(s) to have the given value(s); in this case the command returns an empty string. See
                     EMBEDDED IMAGES for information on the options that are supported.

              pathName image create index ?option value ...?
                     This  command creates a new image annotation, which will appear in the text at the position
                     given by index. Any number  of  option-value  pairs  may  be  specified  to  configure  the
                     annotation.  Returns  a  unique  identifier  that  may be used as an index to refer to this
                     image. See EMBEDDED IMAGES for information  on  the  options  that  are  supported,  and  a
                     description of the identifier returned.

              pathName image names
                     Returns  a  list  whose elements are the names of all image instances currently embedded in
                     window.

       pathName index index
              Returns the position corresponding to index in the form line.char where line is  the  line  number
              and char is the character number.  Index may have any of the forms described under INDICES above.

       pathName insert index chars ?tagList chars tagList ...?
              Inserts  all of the chars arguments just before the character at index. If index refers to the end
              of the text (the character after the last newline) then the new text is inserted just  before  the
              last  newline  instead. If there is a single chars argument and no tagList, then the new text will
              receive any tags that are present on both  the  character  before  and  the  character  after  the
              insertion  point;  if a tag is present on only one of these characters then it will not be applied
              to the new text. If tagList is specified then it  consists  of  a  list  of  tag  names;  the  new
              characters will receive all of the tags in this list and no others, regardless of the tags present
              around the insertion point. If multiple chars-tagList argument pairs are present, they produce the
              same  effect  as  if  a  separate pathName insert widget command had been issued for each pair, in
              order. The last tagList argument may be omitted.

       pathName mark option ?arg arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate marks. The exact behavior of the command depends on the  option
              argument  that  follows  the  mark  argument.  The  following  forms  of the command are currently
              supported:

              pathName mark gravity markName ?direction?
                     If direction is not specified, returns left or right to  indicate  which  of  its  adjacent
                     characters  markName  is  attached to. If direction is specified, it must be left or right;
                     the gravity of markName is set to the given value.

              pathName mark names
                     Returns a list whose elements are the names of all the marks that are currently set.

              pathName mark next index
                     Returns the name of the next mark at or after index. If index  is  specified  in  numerical
                     form,  then  the  search  for the next mark begins at that index. If index is the name of a
                     mark, then the search for the next mark begins immediately after that mark. This can  still
                     return  a  mark  at  the same position if there are multiple marks at the same index. These
                     semantics mean that the mark next operation can be used to step through all the marks in  a
                     text  widget  in  the  same  order  as  the  mark information returned by the pathName dump
                     operation. If a mark has been set to the special end index, then it appears to be after end
                     with respect to the pathName mark next operation. An empty string is returned if there  are
                     no marks after index.

              pathName mark previous index
                     Returns  the  name of the mark at or before index. If index is specified in numerical form,
                     then the search for the previous mark begins with the character just before that index.  If
                     index  is  the  name of a mark, then the search for the next mark begins immediately before
                     that mark. This can still return a mark at the same position if there are multiple marks at
                     the same index. These semantics mean that the pathName mark previous operation can be  used
                     to step through all the marks in a text widget in the reverse order as the mark information
                     returned  by the pathName dump operation. An empty string is returned if there are no marks
                     before index.

              pathName mark set markName index
                     Sets the mark named markName to a position just before the character at index. If  markName
                     already  exists,  it  is  moved  from its old position; if it does not exist, a new mark is
                     created. This command returns an empty string.

              pathName mark unset markName ?markName markName ...?
                     Remove the mark corresponding to each of the markName arguments. The removed marks will not
                     be usable in indices and will not be returned by future calls  to  “pathName  mark  names”.
                     This command returns an empty string.

       pathName peer option args
              This command is used to create and query widget peers. It has two forms, depending on option:

              pathName peer create newPathName ?options?
                     Creates  a  peer  text  widget  with  the  given  newPathName,  and  any  optional standard
                     configuration options (as for the text command). By default the peer  will  have  the  same
                     start  and  end  line  as  the parent widget, but these can be overridden with the standard
                     configuration options.

              pathName peer names
                     Returns a list of peers of this widget (this does not include the widget itself). The order
                     within this list is undefined.

       pathName pendingsync
              Returns 1 if the line heights calculations are not up-to-date, 0 otherwise.

       pathName replace index1 index2 chars ?tagList chars tagList ...?
              Replaces the range of characters between index1 and index2 with the  given  characters  and  tags.
              See  the  section  on  pathName  insert  for  an  explanation  of  the  handling of the tagList...
              arguments, and the section on pathName delete for an explanation of the handling of  the  indices.
              If index2 corresponds to an index earlier in the text than index1, an error will be generated.

              The deletion and insertion are arranged so that no unnecessary scrolling of the window or movement
              of  insertion  cursor  occurs.  In  addition  the  undo/redo stack are correctly modified, if undo
              operations are active in the text widget. The command returns an empty string.

       pathName scan option args
              This command is used to implement scanning on texts. It has two forms, depending on option:

              pathName scan mark x y
                     Records x and y and the current view in the text window, for use in conjunction with  later
                     pathName  scan  dragto  commands.  Typically this command is associated with a mouse button
                     press in the widget. It returns an empty string.

              pathName scan dragto x y
                     This command computes the difference between its  x  and  y  arguments  and  the  x  and  y
                     arguments  to  the last pathName scan mark command for the widget. It then adjusts the view
                     by 10 times the difference in coordinates. This command is typically associated with  mouse
                     motion  events  in  the  widget,  to  produce the effect of dragging the text at high speed
                     through the window. The return value is an empty string.

       pathName search ?switches? pattern index ?stopIndex?
              Searches the text in pathName starting at index for a range of characters that matches pattern. If
              a match is found, the index of the first character in the match is returned as  result;  otherwise
              an  empty string is returned. One or more of the following switches (or abbreviations thereof) may
              be specified to control the search:

              -forwards
                     The search will proceed forward through the text, finding the first matching range starting
                     at or after the position given by index. This is the default.

              -backwards
                     The search will proceed backward through the text, finding the matching  range  closest  to
                     index  whose first character is before index (it is not allowed to be at index). Note that,
                     for a variety of reasons, backwards searches can  be  substantially  slower  than  forwards
                     searches  (particularly when using -regexp), so it is recommended that performance-critical
                     code use forward searches.

              -exact Use exact matching: the characters in the matching range must  be  identical  to  those  in
                     pattern. This is the default.

              -regexp
                     Treat  pattern  as  a  regular expression and match it against the text using the rules for
                     regular expressions (see the regexp command  and  the  re_syntax  page  for  details).  The
                     default  matching  automatically  passes  both the -lineanchor and -linestop options to the
                     regexp engine (unless -nolinestop is used), so that ^$ match beginning and end of line, and
                     ., [^ sequences will never match the newline character \n.

              -nolinestop
                     This allows . and [^ sequences to match the newline character \n, which they will otherwise
                     not do (see the regexp command for details). This option is only meaningful if  -regexp  is
                     also  given,  and an error will be thrown otherwise. For example, to match the entire text,
                     use “pathName search -nolinestop -regexp ".*" 1.0”.

              -nocase
                     Ignore case differences between the pattern and the text.

              -count varName
                     The argument following -count gives the name of a variable; if a match is found, the number
                     of index positions between beginning and end of the matching range will be  stored  in  the
                     variable.  If  there are no embedded images or windows in the matching range (and there are
                     no elided characters if -elide  is  not  given),  this  is  equivalent  to  the  number  of
                     characters  matched.  In  either  case,  the range matchIdx to matchIdx + $count chars will
                     return the entire matched text.

              -all   Find all matches in the given range and return a list of the indices of the first character
                     of each match. If a -count varName switch is given, then varName is  also  set  to  a  list
                     containing  one  element for each successful match. Note that, even for exact searches, the
                     elements of this list may be different, if there are embedded  images,  windows  or  hidden
                     text.   Searches  with  -all  behave very similarly to the Tcl command regexp -all, in that
                     overlapping matches are not normally returned. For example, applying an -all search of  the
                     pattern “\w+” against “hello there” will just match twice, once for each word, and matching
                     “Z[a-z]+Z” against “ZooZooZoo” will just match once.

              -overlap
                     When  performing  -all  searches,  the  normal  behaviour  is that matches which overlap an
                     already-found match will not be returned. This switch changes that behaviour  so  that  all
                     matches  which  are  not  totally  enclosed within another match are returned. For example,
                     applying an -overlap search of the pattern “\w+” against  “hello  there”  will  just  match
                     twice  (i.e.  no  different to just -all), but matching “Z[a-z]+Z” against “ZooZooZoo” will
                     now match twice. An error will be thrown if this switch is used without -all.

              -strictlimits
                     When performing any search, the normal behaviour is that the  start  and  stop  limits  are
                     checked  with  respect  to the start of the matching text. With the -strictlimits flag, the
                     entire matching range must lie inside the start and stop limits specified for the match  to
                     be valid.

              -elide Find elided (hidden) text as well. By default only displayed text is searched.

              --     This  switch has no effect except to terminate the list of switches: the next argument will
                     be treated as pattern even if it starts with -.

              The matching range may be within a single line of text, or run across multiple lines (if parts  of
              the  pattern  can  match  a  new-line).  For  regular  expression matching one can use the various
              newline-matching features such as $ to match the end of a line, ^ to  match  the  beginning  of  a
              line,  and  to  control  whether  . is allowed to match a new-line. If stopIndex is specified, the
              search stops at that index: for  forward  searches,  no  match  at  or  after  stopIndex  will  be
              considered; for backward searches, no match earlier in the text than stopIndex will be considered.
              If  stopIndex  is omitted, the entire text will be searched: when the beginning or end of the text
              is reached, the search continues at the other end until the starting location is reached again; if
              stopIndex is specified, no wrap-around will occur. This means that, for example, if the search  is
              -forwards  but  stopIndex  is earlier in the text than startIndex, nothing will ever be found. See
              KNOWN BUGS below for a number of minor limitations of the pathName search command.

       pathName see index
              Adjusts the view in the window so that the character given by  index  is  completely  visible.  If
              index  is already visible then the command does nothing. If index is a short distance out of view,
              the command adjusts the view just enough to make index visible at the  edge  of  the  window.   If
              index is far out of view, then the command centers index in the window.

       pathName sync ?-command command?
              Controls the synchronization of the view of the text widget.

              pathName sync
                     Immediately  brings the line metrics up-to-date by forcing computation of any outdated line
                     heights. The command returns immediately  if  there  is  no  such  outdated  line  heights,
                     otherwise  it  returns  only  at  the end of the computation.  The command returns an empty
                     string.

              pathName sync -command command
                     Schedules command to be executed (by the event loop) exactly  once  as  soon  as  all  line
                     heights  are  up-to-date. If there are no pending line metrics calculations, the scheduling
                     is immediate. The command returns the empty string. bgerror is called on command failure.

       pathName tag option ?arg arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate tags. The exact behavior of the command depends on  the  option
              argument  that  follows  the  tag  argument.  The  following  forms  of  the command are currently
              supported:

              pathName tag add tagName index1 ?index2 index1 index2 ...?
                     Associate the tag tagName with all of the characters starting with index1 and  ending  just
                     before  index2  (the  character  at index2 is not tagged). A single command may contain any
                     number of index1-index2 pairs. If the last index2 is omitted then the single  character  at
                     index1  is  tagged.  If there are no characters in the specified range (e.g. index1 is past
                     the end of the file or index2 is less than or equal to index1)  then  the  command  has  no
                     effect.

              pathName tag bind tagName ?sequence? ?script?
                     This  command associates script with the tag given by tagName.  Whenever the event sequence
                     given by sequence occurs for a character that has been tagged with tagName, the script will
                     be invoked. This widget command is similar to the bind command except that it  operates  on
                     characters  in  a  text  rather than entire widgets. See the bind manual entry for complete
                     details on the syntax of sequence and the substitutions performed on script before invoking
                     it. If all arguments are specified then a new binding is created,  replacing  any  existing
                     binding  for  the  same  sequence and tagName (if the first character of script is “+” then
                     script augments an existing binding rather than replacing it).  In  this  case  the  return
                     value  is  an  empty  string.  If  script  is  omitted  then the command returns the script
                     associated with tagName and sequence (an error occurs if there is no such binding). If both
                     script and sequence are omitted then the command returns a list of all  the  sequences  for
                     which bindings have been defined for tagName.

                     The  only  events  for  which  bindings may be specified are those related to the mouse and
                     keyboard (such as Enter, Leave, ButtonPress, Motion, and KeyPress) or virtual events. Mouse
                     and keyboard event bindings for a text widget respectively use the current and insert marks
                     described under MARKS above. An Enter event triggers for a tag when the tag  first  becomes
                     present on the current character, and a Leave event triggers for a tag when it ceases to be
                     present  on  the  current  character.  Enter and Leave events can happen either because the
                     current mark moved or because the character at  that  position  changed.  Note  that  these
                     events  are different than Enter and Leave events for windows. Mouse events are directed to
                     the current character, while keyboard events are directed to the insert  character.   If  a
                     virtual  event  is used in a binding, that binding can trigger only if the virtual event is
                     defined by an underlying mouse-related or keyboard-related event.

                     It is possible for the current character to have multiple tags, and for  each  of  them  to
                     have  a  binding  for a particular event sequence. When this occurs, one binding is invoked
                     for each tag, in order from lowest-priority to highest  priority.  If  there  are  multiple
                     matching  bindings  for  a  single  tag,  then the most specific binding is chosen (see the
                     manual entry for the bind command for details). continue and break commands within  binding
                     scripts are processed in the same way as for bindings created with the bind command.

                     If  bindings  are  created  for  the  widget  as a whole using the bind command, then those
                     bindings will supplement the tag bindings. The tag bindings will be invoked first, followed
                     by bindings for the window as a whole.

              pathName tag cget tagName option
                     This command returns the current value of the option named option associated with  the  tag
                     given  by tagName. Option may have any of the values accepted by the pathName tag configure
                     widget command.

              pathName tag configure tagName ?option? ?value? ?option value ...?
                     This command is similar to the pathName configure widget command except  that  it  modifies
                     options  associated  with  the  tag  given  by tagName instead of modifying options for the
                     overall text widget. If no option is specified, the command returns a list  describing  all
                     of the available options for tagName (see Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format of
                     this  list).  If  option  is  specified  with  no  value,  then  the command returns a list
                     describing the one named option (this list will be identical to the  corresponding  sublist
                     of  the  value  returned  if no option is specified). If one or more option-value pairs are
                     specified, then the command modifies the given option(s) to  have  the  given  value(s)  in
                     tagName;  in  this case the command returns an empty string.  See TAGS above for details on
                     the options available for tags.

              pathName tag delete tagName ?tagName ...?
                     Deletes all tag information for each of the tagName arguments. The command removes the tags
                     from all characters in the file and also deletes any other information associated with  the
                     tags, such as bindings and display information. The command returns an empty string.

              pathName tag lower tagName ?belowThis?
                     Changes the priority of tag tagName so that it is just lower in priority than the tag whose
                     name  is  belowThis. If belowThis is omitted, then tagName's priority is changed to make it
                     lowest priority of all tags.

              pathName tag names ?index?
                     Returns a list whose elements are the names  of  all  the  tags  that  are  active  at  the
                     character position given by index. If index is omitted, then the return value will describe
                     all  of  the tags that exist for the text (this includes all tags that have been named in a
                     “pathName tag” widget command but have not been deleted by a “pathName tag  delete”  widget
                     command,  even if no characters are currently marked with the tag). The list will be sorted
                     in order from lowest priority to highest priority.

              pathName tag nextrange tagName index1 ?index2?
                     This command searches the text for a range of characters  tagged  with  tagName  where  the
                     first  character  of the range is no earlier than the character at index1 and no later than
                     the character just before index2 (a range starting at index2 will not  be  considered).  If
                     several  matching  ranges  exist,  the first one is chosen. The command's return value is a
                     list containing two elements, which are the index of the first character of the  range  and
                     the  index  of  the character just after the last one in the range. If no matching range is
                     found then the return value is an empty string. If index2 is not given then it defaults  to
                     the end of the text.

              pathName tag prevrange tagName index1 ?index2?
                     This  command  searches  the  text  for a range of characters tagged with tagName where the
                     first character of the range is before the character at index1  and  no  earlier  than  the
                     character  at  index2  (a range starting at index2 will be considered). If several matching
                     ranges exist, the one closest to index1 is chosen. The command's return  value  is  a  list
                     containing  two  elements,  which are the index of the first character of the range and the
                     index of the character just after the last one in the range. If no matching range is  found
                     then  the  return value is an empty string.  If index2 is not given then it defaults to the
                     beginning of the text.

              pathName tag raise tagName ?aboveThis?
                     Changes the priority of tag tagName so that it is just higher  in  priority  than  the  tag
                     whose  name  is  aboveThis.  If aboveThis is omitted, then tagName's priority is changed to
                     make it highest priority of all tags.

              pathName tag ranges tagName
                     Returns a list describing all of the ranges of text that have been tagged with tagName. The
                     first two elements of the list describe the first tagged range in the text,  the  next  two
                     elements describe the second range, and so on.  The first element of each pair contains the
                     index  of the first character of the range, and the second element of the pair contains the
                     index of the character just after the last one in the range. If  there  are  no  characters
                     tagged with tag then an empty string is returned.

              pathName tag remove tagName index1 ?index2 index1 index2 ...?
                     Remove the tag tagName from all of the characters starting at index1 and ending just before
                     index2  (the  character at index2 is not affected). A single command may contain any number
                     of index1-index2 pairs. If the last index2 is omitted then the  tag  is  removed  from  the
                     single  character at index1. If there are no characters in the specified range (e.g. index1
                     is past the end of the file or index2 is less than or equal to index1) then the command has
                     no effect. This command returns an empty string.

       pathName window option ?arg arg ...?
              This command is used to manipulate embedded windows. The behavior of the command  depends  on  the
              option argument that follows the window argument. The following forms of the command are currently
              supported:

              pathName window cget index option
                     Returns  the  value of a configuration option for an embedded window.  Index identifies the
                     embedded window, and option specifies a particular configuration option, which must be  one
                     of the ones listed in the section EMBEDDED WINDOWS.

              pathName window configure index ?option value ...?
                     Query  or  modify  the  configuration  options  for  an  embedded  window.  If no option is
                     specified, returns a list describing all of the available options for the  embedded  window
                     at  index  (see  Tk_ConfigureInfo for information on the format of this list). If option is
                     specified with no value, then the command returns a list describing the  one  named  option
                     (this  list  will  be  identical  to  the corresponding sublist of the value returned if no
                     option is specified). If one or more option-value pairs are  specified,  then  the  command
                     modifies  the  given option(s) to have the given value(s); in this case the command returns
                     an empty string. See EMBEDDED WINDOWS for information on the options that are supported.

              pathName window create index ?option value ...?
                     This command creates a new window annotation, which will appear in the text at the position
                     given by index. Any number  of  option-value  pairs  may  be  specified  to  configure  the
                     annotation. See EMBEDDED WINDOWS for information on the options that are supported. Returns
                     an empty string.

              pathName window names
                     Returns a list whose elements are the names of all windows currently embedded in window.

       pathName xview option args
              This  command  is  used  to  query  and change the horizontal position of the text in the widget's
              window. It can take any of the following forms:

              pathName xview
                     Returns a list containing two elements. Each element is a real fraction between  0  and  1;
                     together they describe the portion of the document's horizontal span that is visible in the
                     window.  For  example,  if the first element is .2 and the second element is .6, 20% of the
                     text is off-screen to the left, the middle 40% is visible in the window,  and  40%  of  the
                     text  is  off-screen  to the right. The fractions refer only to the lines that are actually
                     visible in the window: if the lines in the window are all very  short,  so  that  they  are
                     entirely  visible, the returned fractions will be 0 and 1, even if there are other lines in
                     the text that are much wider than  the  window.   These  are  the  same  values  passed  to
                     scrollbars via the -xscrollcommand option.

              pathName xview moveto fraction
                     Adjusts  the view in the window so that fraction of the horizontal span of the text is off-
                     screen to the left. Fraction is a fraction between 0 and 1.

              pathName xview scroll number what
                     This command shifts the view in the window left or right according to number and what. What
                     must be units, pages or pixels. If what is units or pages then number must be  an  integer,
                     otherwise  number  may be specified in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels, such as
                     “2.0c” or “1i” (the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are  given,
                     pixels  are  assumed).  If what is units, the view adjusts left or right by number average-
                     width characters on the display; if it is pages then the view adjusts by number screenfuls;
                     if it is pixels then the view  adjusts  by  number  pixels.  If  number  is  negative  then
                     characters farther to the left become visible; if it is positive then characters farther to
                     the right become visible.

       pathName yview ?args?
              This command is used to query and change the vertical position of the text in the widget's window.
              It can take any of the following forms:

              pathName yview
                     Returns  a  list containing two elements, both of which are real fractions between 0 and 1.
                     The first element gives the position of the first visible pixel of the first character  (or
                     image, etc) in the top line in the window, relative to the text as a whole (0.5 means it is
                     halfway  through the text, for example). The second element gives the position of the first
                     pixel just after the last visible one in the bottom line of the  window,  relative  to  the
                     text  as  a  whole.  These are the same values passed to scrollbars via the -yscrollcommand
                     option.

              pathName yview moveto fraction
                     Adjusts the view in the window so that the pixel given by fraction appears at  the  top  of
                     the  top  line of the window. Fraction is a fraction between 0 and 1; 0 indicates the first
                     pixel of the first character in the text, 0.33 indicates the pixel that  is  one-third  the
                     way  through  the text; and so on. Values close to 1 will indicate values close to the last
                     pixel in the text (1 actually refers to one pixel beyond the last pixel), but in such cases
                     the widget will never scroll beyond the last pixel, and so a value of 1 will effectively be
                     rounded back to whatever fraction ensures the last pixel is at the bottom  of  the  window,
                     and some other pixel is at the top.

              pathName yview scroll number what
                     This  command  adjust  the view in the window up or down according to number and what. What
                     must be units, pages or pixels. If what is units or pages then number must be  an  integer,
                     otherwise  number  may be specified in any of the forms acceptable to Tk_GetPixels, such as
                     “2.0c” or “1i” (the result is rounded to the nearest integer value. If no units are  given,
                     pixels  are  assumed). If what is units, the view adjusts up or down by number lines on the
                     display; if it is pages then the view adjusts by number screenfuls; if it  is  pixels  then
                     the view adjusts by number pixels. If number is negative then earlier positions in the text
                     become visible; if it is positive then later positions in the text become visible.

              pathName yview ?-pickplace? index
                     Changes  the view in the widget's window to make index visible. If the -pickplace option is
                     not specified then index will appear at the top of the window. If -pickplace  is  specified
                     then the widget chooses where index appears in the window:

                     [1]    If index is already visible somewhere in the window then the command does nothing.

                     [2]    If  index is only a few lines off-screen above the window then it will be positioned
                            at the top of the window.

                     [3]    If index is only a few lines off-screen below the window then it will be  positioned
                            at the bottom of the window.

                     [4]    Otherwise, index will be centered in the window.

                     The  -pickplace  option has been obsoleted by the pathName see widget command (pathName see
                     handles both x- and y-motion to make a location visible, whereas the -pickplace  mode  only
                     handles motion in y).

              pathName yview number
                     This command makes the first character on the line after the one given by number visible at
                     the  top  of  the  window.  Number  must  be  an  integer. This command used to be used for
                     scrolling, but now it is obsolete.

BINDINGS

       Tk automatically creates class bindings for texts that give them the following default behavior.  In  the
       descriptions below, “word” is dependent on the value of the tcl_wordchars variable.  See tclvars(3tcl).

       [1]    Clicking  mouse  button  1  positions  the  insertion  cursor at the closest edge of the character
              underneath the mouse cursor, sets the input focus to this widget, and clears any selection in  the
              widget.  Dragging with mouse button 1 strokes out a selection between the insertion cursor and the
              character under the mouse.

       [2]    Double-clicking with mouse button 1 selects the word under the mouse and positions  the  insertion
              cursor  at  the  start  of  the  word.  Dragging  after a double click will stroke out a selection
              consisting of whole words.

       [3]    Triple-clicking with mouse button 1 selects the line under the mouse and positions  the  insertion
              cursor  at  the  start  of  the  line.  Dragging  after a triple click will stroke out a selection
              consisting of whole lines.

       [4]    The ends of the selection can be adjusted by dragging with mouse button 1 while the Shift  key  is
              down; this will adjust the end of the selection that was nearest to the mouse cursor when button 1
              was  pressed.  If the button is double-clicked before dragging then the selection will be adjusted
              in units of whole words; if it is triple-clicked then the selection will be adjusted in  units  of
              whole lines.

       [5]    Clicking  mouse  button  1  with the Control key down will reposition the insertion cursor without
              affecting the selection.

       [6]    If any normal printing characters are typed, they are inserted  at  the  point  of  the  insertion
              cursor.

       [7]    The  view  in  the  widget  can be adjusted by dragging with the middle mouse button (button 2, or
              button 3 in TkAqua). If the middle mouse button is clicked without moving the mouse, the selection
              is copied into the text at the position of the mouse cursor.  The  Insert  key  also  inserts  the
              selection, but at the position of the insertion cursor.

       [8]    If  the mouse is dragged out of the widget while button 1 is pressed, the entry will automatically
              scroll to make more text visible (if there is more text off-screen on the  side  where  the  mouse
              left the window).

       [9]    The  Left  and  Right keys move the insertion cursor one character to the left or right; they also
              clear any selection in the text. If Left or Right is typed with  the  Shift  key  down,  then  the
              insertion  cursor  moves  and the selection is extended to include the new character. Control-Left
              and Control-Right move the insertion cursor by words, and  Control-Shift-Left  and  Control-Shift-
              Right  move  the  insertion cursor by words and also extend the selection. Control-b and Control-f
              behave the same as Left and Right, respectively. Meta-b and Meta-f behave the same as Control-Left
              and Control-Right, respectively.

       [10]   The Up and Down keys move the insertion cursor one line up or down and clear any selection in  the
              text.  If  Up  or  Right is typed with the Shift key down, then the insertion cursor moves and the
              selection is extended to include the new character. Control-Up and Control-Down move the insertion
              cursor by paragraphs (groups of lines separated by blank lines), and Control-Shift-Up and Control-
              Shift-Down move the insertion cursor by paragraphs and also extend the  selection.  Control-p  and
              Control-n behave the same as Up and Down, respectively.

       [11]   The  Next and Prior keys move the insertion cursor forward or backwards by one screenful and clear
              any selection in the text. If the Shift key is held down while Next or Prior is  typed,  then  the
              selection is extended to include the new character.

       [12]   Control-Next  and  Control-Prior  scroll  the  view  right  or left by one page without moving the
              insertion cursor or affecting the selection.

       [13]   Home and Control-a move the insertion cursor to the beginning of its display line  and  clear  any
              selection  in  the  widget.  Shift-Home moves the insertion cursor to the beginning of the display
              line and also extends the selection to that point.

       [14]   End and Control-e move the insertion cursor to the end of the display line and clear any selection
              in the widget. Shift-End moves the cursor to the end of the display line and extends the selection
              to that point.

       [15]   Control-Home and Meta-< move the insertion cursor to the beginning  of  the  text  and  clear  any
              selection  in  the  widget.  Control-Shift-Home moves the insertion cursor to the beginning of the
              text and also extends the selection to that point.

       [16]   Control-End and Meta-> move the insertion cursor to the end of the text and clear any selection in
              the widget. Control-Shift-End moves the cursor to the end of the text and extends the selection to
              that point.

       [17]   The Select key and Control-Space set the selection anchor to the position of the insertion cursor.
              They do not  affect  the  current  selection.  Shift-Select  and  Control-Shift-Space  adjust  the
              selection  to  the  current  position  of  the  insertion cursor, selecting from the anchor to the
              insertion cursor if there was not any selection previously.

       [18]   Control-/ selects the entire contents of the widget.

       [19]   Control-\ clears any selection in the widget.

       [20]   The F16 key (labelled Copy on many Sun workstations) or Meta-w copies the selection in the  widget
              to the clipboard, if there is a selection. This action is carried out by the command tk_textCopy.

       [21]   The  F20  key  (labelled  Cut  on  many Sun workstations) or Control-w copies the selection in the
              widget to the clipboard and deletes the selection. This action  is  carried  out  by  the  command
              tk_textCut. If there is no selection in the widget then these keys have no effect.

       [22]   The  F18  key  (labelled  Paste on many Sun workstations) or Control-y inserts the contents of the
              clipboard at the position of the insertion cursor. This action  is  carried  out  by  the  command
              tk_textPaste.

       [23]   The  Delete key deletes the selection, if there is one in the widget. If there is no selection, it
              deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [24]   Backspace and Control-h delete the selection, if there is one in  the  widget.   If  there  is  no
              selection, they delete the character to the left of the insertion cursor.

       [25]   Control-d deletes the character to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [26]   Meta-d deletes the word to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [27]   Control-k  deletes  from  the  insertion cursor to the end of its line; if the insertion cursor is
              already at the end of a line, then Control-k deletes the newline character.

       [28]   Control-o opens a new line by inserting a newline character  in  front  of  the  insertion  cursor
              without moving the insertion cursor.

       [29]   Meta-backspace and Meta-Delete delete the word to the left of the insertion cursor.

       [30]   Control-x deletes whatever is selected in the text widget after copying it to the clipboard.

       [31]   Control-t reverses the order of the two characters to the right of the insertion cursor.

       [32]   Control-z undoes the last edit action if the -undo option is true.  Does nothing otherwise.

       [33]   Control-Z  (or  Control-y on Windows) reapplies the last undone edit action if the -undo option is
              true. Does nothing otherwise.

       If the widget is disabled using the -state option, then its view can still be adjusted and text can still
       be selected, but no insertion cursor will be displayed and no text modifications will take place.

       The behavior of texts can be changed by defining new bindings for individual widgets or by redefining the
       class bindings.

KNOWN ISSUES

   ISSUES CONCERNING CHARS AND INDICES
       Before Tk 8.5, the widget used the string “chars” to refer to index positions (which included characters,
       embedded windows and embedded images). As of Tk 8.5 the text widget deals separately and  correctly  with
       “chars”  and  “indices”.   For  backwards  compatibility, however, the index modifiers “+N chars” and “-N
       chars” continue to refer to indices. One must use any of the full forms “+N any chars” or “-N any  chars”
       etc.  to refer to actual character indices. This confusion may be fixed in a future release by making the
       widget correctly interpret “+N chars” as a synonym for “+N any chars”.

   PERFORMANCE ISSUES
       Text widgets should run efficiently under a variety of conditions. The text widget uses about  2-3  bytes
       of  main memory for each byte of text, so texts containing a megabyte or more should be practical on most
       workstations. Text is represented internally with a  modified  B-tree  structure  that  makes  operations
       relatively  efficient  even  with  large  texts.  Tags are included in the B-tree structure in a way that
       allows tags to span large ranges or have many disjoint smaller ranges without loss of  efficiency.  Marks
       are  also implemented in a way that allows large numbers of marks. In most cases it is fine to have large
       numbers of unique tags, or a tag that has many distinct ranges.

       One performance problem can arise if you have hundreds or thousands of different tags that all  have  the
       following  characteristics:  the  first and last ranges of each tag are near the beginning and end of the
       text, respectively, or a single tag range covers most of the text widget. The cost of adding and deleting
       tags like this is proportional to the number of other tags with the same properties. In  contrast,  there
       is  no  problem  with  having thousands of distinct tags if their overall ranges are localized and spread
       uniformly throughout the text.

       Very long text lines can be expensive, especially if they have many marks and tags within them.

       The display line with the insert cursor is redrawn each time the cursor blinks,  which  causes  a  steady
       stream of graphics traffic. Set the -insertofftime attribute to 0 avoid this.

   KNOWN BUGS
       The pathName search -regexp sub-command attempts to perform sophisticated regexp matching across multiple
       lines  in an efficient fashion (since Tk 8.5), examining each line individually, and then in small groups
       of lines, whether searching forwards or backwards. Under  certain  conditions  the  search  result  might
       differ  from  that obtained by applying the same regexp to the entire text from the widget in one go. For
       example, when searching with a greedy regexp, the widget will continue to attempt to add extra  lines  to
       the  match  as  long  as  one  of  two conditions are true: either Tcl's regexp library returns a code to
       indicate a longer match is possible (but there are known bugs in Tcl which mean this code is  not  always
       correctly  returned);  or  if each extra line added results in at least a partial match with the pattern.
       This means in the case where the first extra line added results in  no  match  and  Tcl's  regexp  system
       returns  the  incorrect  code  and  adding a second extra line would actually match, the text widget will
       return the wrong result. In practice this is a rare problem, but it can occur, for example:
              pack [text .t]
              .t insert 1.0 "aaaa\nbbbb\ncccc\nbbbb\naaaa\n"
              .t search -regexp -- {(a+|b+\nc+\nb+)+\na+} 1.0
       will not find a match when one exists of 19 characters starting from the first “b”.

       Whenever one possible match is fully enclosed in another, the search command will attempt to ensure  only
       the  larger match is returned. When performing backwards regexp searches it is possible that Tcl will not
       always achieve this, in the case where a match is preceded by one or more short, non-overlapping matches,
       all of which are preceded by a large match which actually encompasses all of them. The  search  algorithm
       used  by  the  widget  does  not  look  back arbitrarily far for a possible match which might cover large
       portions of the widget. For example:
              pack [text .t]
              .t insert 1.0 "aaaa\nbbbb\nbbbb\nbbbb\nbbbb\n"
              .t search -regexp -backward -- {b+\n|a+\n(b+\n)+} end
       matches at “5.0” when a true greedy match would match at “1.0”.  Similarly if we add -all to  this  case,
       it  matches at all of “5.0”, “4.0”, “3.0” and “1.0”, when really it should only match at “1.0” since that
       match encloses all the others.

SEE ALSO

       entry(3tk), scrollbar(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       text, widget, tkvars

Tk                                                     8.5                                             text(3tk)