11

I'm working with the Text widget and I have an issue about old-school shortcuts that Tk uses.

Ie:

Select all: Ctrl + / vs Ctrl + a
Cut: Ctrl + w vs Ctrl + x
Copy: Meta + w vs Ctrl + c
Paste: Ctrl + y vs Ctrl + v

On Windows, all of them work except Ctrl+a.

1) Is it possible to redirect binds, so .bind('<Control-a>') calls already bound Ctrl + /?

2) I tried for "select all":

txt_text.bind('<Control-a>', self.ctext_selectall)

Where:

def ctext_selectall(self, callback):
    """Select all text in the text widget"""
    self.txt_text.tag_add('sel', '1.0', 'end')

But it does not work, since Ctrl+a works by default (cursor goes to the start). It function with some other, unbound, letter. Any chances of making this work if the solution under 1 is not possible?

2 Answers 2

15

The default bindings are applied to the widget class. When you do a bind, it affects a specific widget and that binding happens before the class binding. So what is happening is that your binding is happening and then the class binding is happening, which makes it seem as if your binding isn't working.

There are two ways to solve this. One, your ctext_selectall can return the string "break" which will prevent the class binding from firing. That should be good enough to solve your immediate problem.

The second solution involves changing the class binding so that your preferred binding applies to all text widgets. You would do this using the bind_class method.

Here's an example of rebinding the class:

def __init__(...):
    self.root.bind_class("Text","<Control-a>", self.selectall)

def selectall(self, event):
    event.widget.tag_add("sel","1.0","end")

effbot.org has a pretty decent writeup titled Events and Bindings. It goes into a little more detail about class and widget bindings and the order in which they occur.

Tk's binding mechanism is about the best of any GUI toolkit there is. Once you understand how it works (and it's remarkably simple) you'll find it's easy to augment or replace any or all of the default bindings.

0
4

Feel free to use the following code or at least check out how the select_all methods are implemented in the DiacriticalEntry and DiacriticalText classes. If you choose to use the classes as they are in place of whatever widget you are currently using, you will also gain that advantange that users will be able to easily type in certain characters that would otherwise be more difficult to enter.

## {{{ http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576950/ (r3)
from tkinter import *
from tkinter.scrolledtext import ScrolledText
from unicodedata import lookup
import os

class Diacritical:
    """Mix-in class that adds keyboard bindings for accented characters, plus
    other common functionality.

    An inheriting class must define a select_all method that will respond
    to Ctrl-A."""

    accents = (('acute', "'"), ('grave', '`'), ('circumflex', '^'),
               ('tilde', '='), ('diaeresis', '"'), ('cedilla', ','),
               ('stroke', '/'), ('ring above', ';'))

    def __init__(self):
        # Fix some key bindings
        self.bind("<Control-Key-a>", self.select_all)
        # We will need Ctrl-/ for the "stroke", but it cannot be unbound, so
        # let's prevent it from being passed to the standard handler
        self.bind("<Control-Key-/>", lambda event: "break")
        # Diacritical bindings
        for a, k in self.accents:
            # Little-known feature of Tk, it allows to bind an event to
            # multiple keystrokes
            self.bind("<Control-Key-%s><Key>" % k,
                      lambda event, a=a: self.insert_accented(event.char, a))

    def insert_accented(self, c, accent):
        if c.isalpha():
            if c.isupper():
                cap = 'capital'
            else:
                cap = 'small'
            try:
                c = lookup("latin %s letter %c with %s" % (cap, c, accent))
                self.insert(INSERT, c)
                # Prevent plain letter from being inserted too, tell Tk to
                # stop handling this event
                return "break"
            except KeyError as e:
                pass

class DiacriticalEntry(Entry, Diacritical):
    """Tkinter Entry widget with some extra key bindings for
    entering typical Unicode characters - with umlauts, accents, etc."""

    def __init__(self, master=None, **kwargs):
        Entry.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
        Diacritical.__init__(self)

    def select_all(self, event=None):
        self.selection_range(0, END)
        return "break"

class DiacriticalText(ScrolledText, Diacritical):
    """Tkinter ScrolledText widget with some extra key bindings for
    entering typical Unicode characters - with umlauts, accents, etc."""

    def __init__(self, master=None, **kwargs):
        ScrolledText.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
        Diacritical.__init__(self)

    def select_all(self, event=None):
        self.tag_add(SEL, "1.0", "end-1c")
        self.mark_set(INSERT, "1.0")
        self.see(INSERT)
        return "break"


def test():
    frame = Frame()
    frame.pack(fill=BOTH, expand=YES)
    if os.name == "nt":
        # Set default font for all widgets; use Windows typical default
        frame.option_add("*font", "Tahoma 8")
    # The editors
    entry = DiacriticalEntry(frame)
    entry.pack(fill=BOTH, expand=YES)
    text = DiacriticalText(frame, width=76, height=25, wrap=WORD)
    if os.name == "nt":
        # But this looks better than the default set above
        text.config(font="Arial 10")
    text.pack(fill=BOTH, expand=YES)
    text.focus()
    frame.master.title("Diacritical Editor")
    frame.mainloop()

if __name__ == "__main__":
    test()
## end of http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576950/ }}}
3
  • As was noted, the code solves more problems than just selecting all text; it also allows for easily entering characters with diacritical marks. The classes can be used as-is to enhance Tkinter, or marw can just reference the select_all methods to write his own. May 3, 2011 at 15:26
  • Thank you, I suspect I'll have to return to this one day :)
    – marw
    May 3, 2011 at 20:44
  • Thanks for bringing "<Control-Key-x><Key>" to my attention. :D
    – Honest Abe
    Feb 6, 2014 at 23:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.