TclInterface {tcltk}R Documentation

Low-level Tcl/Tk Interface

Description

These functions and variables provide the basic glue between R and the Tcl interpreter and Tk GUI toolkit. Tk windows may be represented via R objects. Tcl variables can be accessed via objects of class tclVar and the C level interface to Tcl objects is accessed via objects of class tclObj.

Usage

.Tcl(...)
.Tcl.objv(objv)
.Tcl.args(...)
.Tcl.args.objv(...)
.Tcl.callback(...)
.Tk.ID(win)
.Tk.newwin(ID)
.Tk.subwin(parent)
.TkRoot

tkdestroy(win)
is.tkwin(x)

tclvalue(x)
tclvalue(x) <- value

tclVar(init="")
## S3 method for class 'tclVar':
as.character(x)
## S3 method for class 'tclVar':
tclvalue(x)
## S3 method for class 'tclVar':
tclvalue(x) <- value

tclArray()
## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
x[[...]]
## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
x[[...]] <- value
## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
x$i
## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
x$i <- value

## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
names(x)
## S3 method for class 'tclArray':
length(x)

tclObj(x)
tclObj(x) <- value
## S3 method for class 'tclVar':
tclObj(x)
## S3 method for class 'tclVar':
tclObj(x) <- value

as.tclObj(x, drop=FALSE)
is.tclObj(x)

## S3 method for class 'tclObj':
as.character(x)
## S3 method for class 'tclObj':
as.integer(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'tclObj':
as.double(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'tclObj':
tclvalue(x)

## Default S3 method:
tclvalue(x)
## Default S3 method:
tclvalue(x) <- value

addTclPath(path = ".")
tclRequire(package, warn = TRUE)

Arguments

objv a named vector of Tcl objects
win a window structure
x an object
i character or (unquoted) name
drop logical. Indicates whether a single-element vector should be made into a simple Tcl object or a list of length one
value For tclvalue assignments, a character string. For tclObj assignments, an object of class tclObj
ID a window ID
parent a window which becomes the parent of the resulting window
path path to a directory containing Tcl packages
package a Tcl package name
warn logical. Warn if not found?
... Additional arguments. See below.
init initialization value

Details

Many of these functions are not intended for general use but are used internally by the commands that create and manipulate Tk widgets and Tcl objects. At the lowest level .Tcl sends a command as a text string to the Tcl interpreter and returns the result as an object of class tclObj (see below). A newer variant .Tcl.objv accepts arguments in the form of a named list of tclObj objects.

.Tcl.args converts an R argument list of tag=value pairs to the Tcl -option value style, thus enabling a simple translation between the two languages. To send a value with no preceding option flag to Tcl, just use an untagged argument. In the rare case one needs an option with no subsequent value tag=NULL can be used. Most values are just converted to character mode and inserted in the command string, but window objects are passed using their ID string, and callbacks are passed via the result of .Tcl.callback. Tags are converted to option flags simply by prepending a -

.Tcl.args.objv serves a similar purpose as .Tcl.args but produces a list of tclObj objects suitable for passing to .Tcl.objv. The names of the list are converted to Tcl option style internally by .Tcl.objv.

Callbacks can be either atomic callbacks handled by .Tcl.callback or expressions. An expression is treated as a list of atomic callbacks, with the following exceptions: if an element is a name, it is first evaluated in the callers frame, and likewise if it is an explicit function definition; the break expression is translated directly to the Tcl counterpart. .Tcl.callback converts R functions and unevaluated calls to Tcl command strings. The argument must be either a function closure or an object of mode "call" followed by an environment. The return value in the first case is of the form R_call 0x408b94d4 in which the hexadecimal number is the memory address of the function. In the second case it will be of the form R_call_lang 0x8a95904 0x819bfd0. For expressions, a sequence of similar items is generated, separated by semicolons. .Tcl.args takes special precautions to ensure that functions or calls will continue to exist at the specified address by assigning the callback into the relevant window environment (see below).

Tk windows are represented as objects of class tkwin which are lists containing a ID field and an env field which is an R environments, enclosed in the global environment. The value of the ID field is identical to the Tk window name. The env environment contains a parent variable and a num.subwin variable. If the window obtains subwindows and callbacks, they are added as variables to the environment. .TkRoot is the top window with ID "."; this window is not displayed in order to avoid ill effects of closing it via window manager controls. The parent variable is undefined for .TkRoot.

.Tk.ID extracts the ID of a window, .Tk.newwin creates a new window environment with a given ID and .Tk.subwin creates a new window which is a subwindow of a given parent window.

tkdestroy destroys a window and also removes the reference to a window from its parent.

is.tkwin can be used to test whether a given object is a window environment.

tclVar creates a new Tcl variable and initializes it to init. An R object of class tclVar is created to represent it. Using as.character on the object returns the Tcl variable name. Accessing the Tcl variable from R is done using the tclvalue function, which can also occur on the left sie of assignments. If tclvalue is passed an argument which is not a tclVar object, then it will assume that it is a character string explicitly naming global Tcl variable. Tcl variables created by tclVar are uniquely named and automatically unset by the garbage collector when the representing object is no longer in use.

tclArray creates a new Tcl array and initalizes it to the empty array. An R object of class tclArray and inheriting from class tclVar is created to represent it. You can access elements of the Tcl array using indexing with [[ or $, which also allow replacement forms. Notice that Tcl arrays are associative by nature and hence unordered; indexing with a numeric index i refers to the element with the name as.character(i). Multiple indices are pasted together separated by commas to form a single name. You can query the length and the set of names in an array using methods for length and names, respectively; these cannot meaningfully be set so assignment forms exist only to print an error message.

It is possible to access Tcl's ‘dual-ported’ objects directly, thus avoiding parsing and deparsing of their string representation. This works by using objects of class tclObj. The string representation of such objects can be extracted (but not set) using tclvalue and conversion to vectors of mode "character", "double", or "integer". Conversely, such vectors can be converted using as.tclObj. There is an ambiguity as to what should happen for length one vectors, controlled by the drop argument; there are cases where the distiction matters to Tcl, although mostly it treats them equivalently. Notice that tclvalue and as.character differ on an object whose string representation has embedded spaces, the former is sometimes to be preferred, in particular when applied to the result of tclread, tkgetOpenFile, and similar functions.

The object behind a tclVar object is extracted using tclObj(x) which also allows an assignment form, in which the right hand side of the assignment is automatically converted using as.tclObj. There is a print method for tclObj objects; it prints <Tcl> followed by the string representation of the object. Notice that as.character on a tclVar object is the name of the corresponding Tcl variable and not the value.

Tcl packages can be loaded with tclRequire; it may be necessary to add the directory where they are found to the Tcl search path with addTclPath.

Note

Strings containing unbalanced braces are currently not handled well in many circumstances.

See Also

TkWidgets, TkCommands, TkWidgetcmds.

capabilities("tcltk") to see if Tcl/Tk support was compiled into this build of R. (It is possible to build with Tcl/Tk support but not be able to run it, if the DLLs are not available or TCL_LIBRARY is not set.)

Examples

## Not run: 
## These cannot be run by example() but should be OK when pasted
## into an interactive R session with the tcltk package loaded
.Tcl("format \"%s\n\" \"Hello, World!\"")
f <- function()cat("HI!\n")
.Tcl.callback(f)
.Tcl.args(text="Push!", command=f) # NB: Different address

xyzzy <- tclVar(7913)
tclvalue(xyzzy)
tclvalue(xyzzy) <- "foo"
as.character(xyzzy)
tcl("set", as.character(xyzzy))

top <- tktoplevel() # a Tk widget, see Tk-widgets
ls(envir=top$env, all=TRUE)
ls(envir=.TkRoot$env, all=TRUE)# .Tcl.args put a callback ref in here
## End(Not run)

[Package tcltk version 2.4.1 Index]