fltk/documentation/Fl.html
Michael R Sweet a42ded75e2 Added the 2.0 Fl_Widget::copy_label() method to allow FLTK 1.x
applications to have their label strings managed by FLTK (STR
#630)

Added Fl::delete_widget() method to safely delete widgets in
callback methods (STR #629)


git-svn-id: file:///fltk/svn/fltk/branches/branch-1.1@3917 ea41ed52-d2ee-0310-a9c1-e6b18d33e121
2004-11-23 19:47:52 +00:00

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<H2><A name="Fl">class Fl</A></H2>
<HR>
<H3>Class Hierarchy</H3>
<UL><PRE>
<B>Fl</B>
</PRE></UL>
<H3>Include Files</H3>
<UL><PRE>
#include &lt;FL/Fl.H&gt;
</PRE></UL>
<H3>Description</H3>
<P>The <TT>Fl</TT> class is the FLTK global (static) class containing
state information and global methods for the current application.</P>
<H3>Methods</H3>
<UL>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.add_check">add_check</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.add_fd">add_fd</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.add_handler">add_handler</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.add_idle">add_idle</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.add_timeout">add_timeout</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.arg">arg</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.args">args</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.atclose">atclose</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.awake">awake</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.background">background</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.background2">background2</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.belowmouse">belowmouse</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.box_dh">box_dh</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.box_dw">box_dw</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.box_dx">box_dx</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.box_dy">box_dy</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.check">check</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.compose">compose</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.compose_reset">compose_reset</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.copy">copy</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.damage">damage</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.default_atclose">default_atclose</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.delete_widget">delete_widget</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.display">display</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.dnd">dnd</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.dnd_text_ops">dnd_text_ops</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.error">error</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event">event</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_alt">event_alt</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_button1">event_button1</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_button2">event_button2</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_button3">event_button3</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_button">event_button</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_buttons">event_buttons</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_clicks">event_clicks</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_ctrl">event_ctrl</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_dx">event_dx</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_dy">event_dx</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_inside">event_inside</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_is_click">event_is_click</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_key">event_key</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_length">event_length</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_shift">event_shift</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_state">event_state</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_text">event_text</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_x">event_x</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_x_root">event_x_root</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_y">event_y</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.event_y_root">event_y_root</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.fatal">fatal</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.first_window">first_window</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.flush">flush</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.focus">focus</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.foreground">foreground</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.free_color">free_color</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_boxtype">get_boxtype</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_color">get_color</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_font">get_font</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_font_name">get_font_name</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_font_sizes">get_font_sizes</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_key">get_key</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_mouse">get_mouse</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.get_system_colors">get_system_colors</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.gl_visual">gl_visual</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.grab">grab</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.h">h</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.handle">handle</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.has_check">has_check</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.has_idle">has_idle</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.has_timeout">has_timeout</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.lock">lock</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.modal">modal</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.next_window">next_window</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.own_colormap">own_colormap</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.paste">paste</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.pushed">pushed</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.readqueue">readqueue</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.ready">ready</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.redraw">redraw</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.release">release</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.remove_check">remove_check</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.remove_fd">remove_fd</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.remove_handler">remove_handler</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.remove_idle">remove_idle</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.remove_timeout">remove_timeout</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.repeat_timeout">repeat_timeout</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.run">run</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.scheme">scheme</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.selection">selection</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.selection_owner">selection_owner</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_abort">set_abort</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_atclose">set_atclose</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_boxtype">set_boxtype</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_color">set_color</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_font">set_font</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_fonts">set_fonts</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_idle">set_idle</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.set_labeltype">set_labeltype</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.test_shortcut">test_shortcut</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.thread_message">thread_message</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.unlock">unlock</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.version">version</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.visible_focus">visible_focus</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.visual">visual</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.wait">wait</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.warning">warning</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.w">w</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.x">x</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#Fl.y">y</A></LI>
</UL>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.add_check">void add_check(Fl_Timeout_Handler, void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK will call this callback just before it flushes the display and
waits for events. This is different than an idle callback because it
is only called once, then FLTK calls the system and tells it not to
return until an event happens.
<p>This can be used by code that wants to monitor the
application's state, such as to keep a display up to date. The
advantage of using a check callback is that it is called only when no
events are pending. If events are coming in quickly, whole blocks of
them will be processed before this is called once. This can save
significant time and avoid the application falling behind the events.
<p>Sample code:
<UL><PRE>
bool state_changed; // anything that changes the display turns this on
void callback(void*) {
if (!state_changed) return;
state_changed = false;
do_expensive_calculation();
widget->redraw();
}
main() {
Fl::add_check(callback);
return Fl::run();
}
</PRE></UL>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.add_fd">void add_fd(int fd, int when, void (*cb)(int,void*),void* =0);<BR>
void add_fd(int fd, void (*cb)(int, void*), void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Add file descriptor <tt>fd</tt> to listen to. When the <tt>fd</tt>
becomes ready for reading <tt>Fl::wait()</tt> will call the callback
and then return. The callback is
passed the <tt>fd</tt> and the arbitrary <tt>void*</tt> argument.</P>
<P>The second version takes a <tt>when</tt> bitfield, with the bits
<tt>FL_READ</tt>, <tt>FL_WRITE</tt>, and <tt>FL_EXCEPT</tt> defined,
to indicate when the callback should be done.
<P>There can only be one callback of each type for a file descriptor. <tt>
Fl::remove_fd()</tt> gets rid of <I>all</I> the callbacks for a given
file descriptor.
<P>Under UNIX <I>any</I> file descriptor can be monitored (files,
devices, pipes, sockets, etc.) Due to limitations in Microsoft Windows,
WIN32 applications can only monitor sockets.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.add_handler">void add_handler(int (*h)(int));</A></H4>
<P>Install a function to parse unrecognized events. If FLTK cannot
figure out what to do with an event, it calls each of these functions
(most recent first) until one of them returns non-zero. If none of
them returns non zero then the event is ignored. Events that cause
this to be called are:
<UL>
<LI><tt>FL_SHORTCUT</tt> events that are not recognized by any widget.
This lets you provide global shortcut keys. </LI>
<LI>System events that FLTK does not recognize. See <A href=osissues.html#fl_xevent>
<tt>fl_xevent</tt></A>. </LI>
<LI><I>Some</I> other events when the widget FLTK selected returns
zero from its <tt>handle()</tt> method. Exactly which ones may change
in future versions, however. </LI>
</UL>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.add_idle">void add_idle(void (*cb)(void*), void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Adds a callback function that is called every time by
<tt>Fl::wait()</tt> and also makes it act as though the timeout is
zero (this makes <tt>Fl::wait()</tt> return immediately, so if it is
in a loop it is called repeatedly, and thus the idle fucntion is
called repeatedly). The idle function can be used to get background
processing done.
<P>You can have multiple idle callbacks. To remove an idle callback use <A
href="#Fl.remove_idle"><tt>Fl::remove_idle()</tt></A>.
<P><tt>Fl::wait()</tt> and <tt>Fl::check()</tt> call idle callbacks,
but <tt>Fl::ready()</tt> does not.
<P>The idle callback can call any FLTK functions, including
<tt>Fl::wait()</tt>, <tt>Fl::check()</tt>, and <tt>Fl::ready()</tt>.
FLTK will not recursively call the idle callback.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.add_timeout">void add_timeout(double t, Fl_Timeout_Handler,void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Add a one-shot timeout callback. The function will be called by
<tt>Fl::wait()</tt> at <i>t</i> seconds after this function is called.
The optional <tt>void*</tt> argument is passed to the callback.
<P>You can have multiple timeout callbacks. To remove an timeout
callback use <A
href="#Fl.remove_timeout"><tt>Fl::remove_timeout()</tt></A>.
<p>If you need more accurate, repeated timeouts, use <a
href='#Fl.repeat_timeout'><tt>Fl::repeat_timeout()</tt></a> to
reschedule the subsequent timeouts.</p>
<p>The following code will print &quot;TICK&quot; each second on
<tt>stdout</tt> with a fair degree of accuracy:</p>
<PRE>
void callback(void*) {
puts("TICK");
Fl::repeat_timeout(1.0, callback);
}
int main() {
Fl::add_timeout(1.0, callback);
return Fl::run();
}
</PRE>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.arg">int arg(int, char**, int&amp;);</A></H4>
<P>Consume a single switch from <tt>argv</tt>, starting at word i.
Returns the number of words eaten (1 or 2, or 0 if it is not
recognized) and adds the same value to <tt>i</tt>. You can use this
function if you prefer to control the incrementing through the
arguments yourself.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.args">int args(int, char**, int&amp;, int (*)(int,char**,int&amp;) = 0);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK provides an <I>entirely optional</I> command-line switch parser.
You don't have to call it if you don't like them! Everything it can do
can be done with other calls to FLTK.
<P>To use the switch parser, call <tt>Fl::args(...)</tt> near the start
of your program. This does <I>not</I> open the display, instead
switches that need the display open are stashed into static variables.
Then you <I>must</I> display your first window by calling <A href=Fl_Window.html#Fl_Window.show>
window-&gt;show(argc,argv)</A>, which will do anything stored in the
static variables.
<P><tt>callback</tt> lets you define your own switches. It is called
with the same <tt>argc</tt> and <tt>argv</tt>, and with <tt>i</tt> the
index of each word. The callback should return zero if the switch is
unrecognized, and not change <tt>i</tt>. It should return non-zero if
the switch is recognized, and add at least 1 to <tt>i</tt> (it can add
more to consume words after the switch). This function is called
<i>before</i> any other tests, so <i>you can override any FLTK
switch</i> (this is why FLTK can use very short switches instead of
the long ones all other toolkits force you to use).
<P>On return <tt>i</tt> is set to the index of the first non-switch.
This is either:
<UL>
<LI>The first word that does not start with '-'. </LI>
<LI>The word '-' (used by many programs to name stdin as a file) </LI>
<LI>The first unrecognized switch (return value is 0). </LI>
<LI><tt>argc</tt></LI>
</UL>
<P>The return value is <tt>i</tt> unless an unrecognized switch is found,
in which case it is zero. If your program takes no arguments other
than switches you should produce an error if the return value is less
than <tt>argc</tt>.
<P>All switches except -bg2 may be abbreviated one letter and case is ignored:
<UL>
<LI><TT>-bg color</TT> or <TT>-background color</TT>
<P>Sets the background color using <A
HREF="#Fl.background"><TT>Fl::background()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-bg2 color</TT> or <TT>-background2 color</TT>
<P>Sets the secondary background color using <A
HREF="#Fl.background2"><TT>Fl::background2()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-display host:n.n</TT>
<P>Sets the X display to use; this option is silently
ignored under WIN32 and MacOS.</LI>
<LI><TT>-dnd</TT> and <TT>-nodnd</TT>
<P>Enables or disables drag and drop text operations
using <A
HREF="#Fl.dnd_text_ops"><TT>Fl::dnd_text_ops()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-fg color</TT> or <TT>-foreground color</TT>
<P>Sets the foreground color using <A
HREF="#Fl.foreground"><TT>Fl::foreground()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-geometry WxH+X+Y</TT>
<P>Sets the initial window position and size according
the the standard X geometry string.</LI>
<LI><TT>-iconic</TT>
<P>Iconifies the window using <A
HREF="Fl_Window.html#Fl_Window.iconize"><TT>Fl_Window::iconize()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-kbd</TT> and <TT>-nokbd</TT>
<P>Enables or disables visible keyboard focus for
non-text widgets using <A
HREF="#Fl.visible_focus"><TT>Fl::visible_focus()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-name string</TT>
<P>Sets the window class using <A
HREF="Fl_Window.html#Fl_Window.xclass"><TT>Fl_Window::xclass()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-scheme string</TT>
<P>Sets the widget scheme using <A
HREF="#Fl.scheme"><TT>Fl::scheme()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-title string</TT>
<P>Sets the window title using <A
HREF="Fl_Window.html#Fl_Window.label"><TT>Fl_Window::label()</TT></A>.</LI>
<LI><TT>-tooltips</TT> and <TT>-notooltips</TT>
<P>Enables or disables tooltips using <A
HREF="Fl_Tooltip.html#Fl_Tooltip.enable"><TT>Fl_Tooltip::enable()</TT></A>.</LI>
</UL>
<P>The second form of <tt>Fl::args()</tt> is useful if your program does
not have command line switches of its own. It parses all the switches,
and if any are not recognized it calls <tt>Fl::abort(Fl::help)</tt>.
<P>A usage string is displayed if <tt>Fl::args()</tt> detects an invalid
argument on the command-line. You can change the message by setting the
<TT>Fl::help</TT> pointer.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.atclose">void (*atclose)(Fl_Window*,void*);</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.awake">void awake(void *p);</A></H4>
<P>The <TT>awake()</TT> method sends a message pointer to the
main thread, causing any pending <TT>wait()</TT> call to
terminate so that the main thread can retrieve the message and
any pending redraws can be processed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.background2">void background2(uchar, uchar, uchar);</A></H4>
<P>Changes <tt>fl_color(FL_WHITE)</tt> and the same colors as <tt>
Fl::foreground()</tt>. This color is used as a background by <tt>
Fl_Input</tt> and other text widgets.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.background">void background(uchar, uchar, uchar);</A></H4>
<P>Changes <tt>fl_color(FL_GRAY)</tt> to the given color, and changes the
gray ramp from 32 to 56 to black to white. These are the colors used
as backgrounds by almost all widgets and used to draw the edges of all
the boxtypes.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.belowmouse">Fl_Widget* belowmouse();<BR>
void belowmouse(Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<P>Get or set the widget that is below the mouse. This is for
highlighting buttons. It is not used to send <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> or <tt>
FL_MOVE</tt> directly, for several obscure reasons, but those events
typically go to this widget. This is also the first widget tried for <tt>
FL_SHORTCUT</tt> events.
<P>If you change the belowmouse widget, the previous one and all
parents (that don't contain the new widget) are sent <tt>FL_LEAVE</tt>
events. Changing this does <I>not</I> send <tt>FL_ENTER</tt> to this
or any widget, because sending <tt>FL_ENTER</tt> is supposed to <I>test</I>
if the widget wants the mouse (by it returning non-zero from <tt>
handle()</tt>).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.box_dh">int box_dh(Fl_Boxtype);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the height offset for the given boxtype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.box_dw">int box_dw(Fl_Boxtype);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the width offset for the given boxtype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.box_dx">int box_dx(Fl_Boxtype);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the X offset for the given boxtype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.box_dy">int box_dy(Fl_Boxtype);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the Y offset for the given boxtype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.check">int check();</A></H4>
<P>Same as <tt>Fl::wait(0)</tt>. Calling this during a big calculation
will keep the screen up to date and the interface responsive:
<UL><PRE>
while (!calculation_done()) {
calculate();
Fl::check();
if (user_hit_abort_button()) break;
}
</PRE></UL>
<P>The returns non-zero if any windows are displayed, and 0 if no
windows are displayed (this is likely to change in future versions of
FLTK).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.compose">int compose(int &amp;del);</A></H4>
<p>Use of this function is very simple. Any text editing widget should
call this for each <tt>FL_KEYBOARD</tt> event.
<p>If <i>true</i> is returned, then it has modified the
Fl::event_text() and Fl::event_length() to a set of <i>bytes</i> to
insert (it may be of zero length!). In will also set the "del"
parameter to the number of <i>bytes</i> to the left of the cursor to
delete, this is used to delete the results of the previous call to
Fl::compose().
<p>If <i>false</i> is returned, the keys should be treated as function
keys, and del is set to zero. You could insert the text anyways, if
you don't know what else to do.
<p>Though the current implementation returns immediately, future
versions may take quite awhile, as they may pop up a window or do
other user-interface things to allow characters to be selected.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.compose_reset">void compose_reset();</A></H4>
<p>If the user moves the cursor, be sure to call Fl::compose_reset().
The next call to Fl::compose() will start out in an initial state. In
particular it will not set "del" to non-zero. This call is very fast
so it is ok to call it many times and in many places.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.copy">void copy(const char *stuff, int len, int clipboard);</A></H4>
<P>Copies the data pointed to by <TT>stuff</TT> to the selection
(0) or primary (1) clipboard. The selection clipboard is used
for middle-mouse pastes and for drag-and-drop selections. The
primary clipboard is used for traditional copy/cut/paste
operations.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.damage">int damage();<BR>
void damage(int x);</A></H4>
<P>If true then <A href="#Fl.flush"><tt>flush()</tt></A> will do something.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.default_atclose">void default_atclose(Fl_Window*,void*);</A></H4>
<p>This is the default callback for window widgets. It hides the
window and then calls the default widget callback.</p>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.delete_widget">void delete_widget(Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<p>Schedules a widget for deletion when it is safe to do so. Use
this method to delete a widget inside a callback function. When
deleting groups or windows, you must only delete the group or
window widget and not the individual child widgets.</p>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.display">void display(const char*);</A></H4>
<P>Sets the X display to use for all windows. Actually this just sets
the environment variable $DISPLAY to the passed string, so this only
works before you show() the first window or otherwise open the display,
and does nothing useful under WIN32.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.dnd">int dnd();</A></H4>
<P>Initiate a Drag And Drop operation. The clipboard should be
filled with relevant data before calling this method. FLTK will
then initiate the system wide drag and drop handling. Dropped data
will be marked as <i>text</i>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.dnd_text_ops">void dnd_text_ops(int d);<BR>
int dnd_text_ops();</A></H4>
<P>Gets or sets whether drag and drop text operations are
supported. This specifically affects whether selected text can
be dragged from text fields or dragged within a text field as a
cut/paste shortcut.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.error">void (*error)(const char*, ...);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK calls this to print a normal error message. You can
override the behavior by setting the function pointer to your
own routine.
<P><tt>Fl::error</tt> means there is a recoverable error such as
the inability to read an image file. The default implementation
prints the error message to <TT>stderr</TT> and returns.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_alt">int event_alt();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if the Alt key is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_button1">int event_button1();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if button 1 is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_button2">int event_button2();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if button 2 is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_button3">int event_button3();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if button 3 is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_button">int event_button();</A></H4>
<P>Returns which mouse button was pressed. This returns garbage if the
most recent event was not a <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> or <tt>FL_RELEASE</tt>
event.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_buttons">int event_buttons();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the button state bits; if non-zero, then at least one
button is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_clicks">int event_clicks();<BR>
void event_clicks(int i);</A></H4>
<P>The first form returns non-zero if the most recent <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> or
<tt>FL_KEYBOARD</tt> was a &quot;double click&quot;. Returns N-1 for
N clicks. A double click is counted if the same button is pressed
again while <tt>event_is_click()</tt> is true.
<P>The second form directly sets the number returned by <tt>
Fl::event_clicks()</tt>. This can be used to set it to zero so that
later code does not think an item was double-clicked.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_ctrl">int event_ctrl();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if the Control key is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event">int event();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the last event that was processed. This can be used
to determine if a callback is being done in response to a
keypress, mouse click, etc.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_inside">int event_inside(int,int,int,int);<BR>
int event_inside(const Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if the current <tt>event_x</tt> and <tt>event_y</tt>
put it inside the widget or inside an arbitrary bounding box. You
should always call this rather than doing your own comparison so you
are consistent about edge effects.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_is_click">int event_is_click();<BR>
void event_is_click(0);</A></H4>
<P>The first form returns non-zero if the mouse has not moved far enough
and not enough time has passed since the last <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> or <tt>
FL_KEYBOARD</tt> event for it to be considered a &quot;drag&quot; rather than a
&quot;click&quot;. You can test this on <tt>FL_DRAG</tt>, <tt>FL_RELEASE</tt>,
and <tt>FL_MOVE</tt> events. The second form clears the value returned
by <tt>Fl::event_is_click()</tt>. Useful to prevent the <I>next</I>
click from being counted as a double-click or to make a popup menu
pick an item with a single click. Don't pass non-zero to this.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_key">int event_key();<BR>
int event_key(int s);</A></H4>
<P><tt>Fl::event_key()</tt> returns which key on the keyboard was last
pushed. It returns zero if the last event was not a key press or release.
<P><tt>Fl::event_key(int)</tt> returns true if the given key was held
down (or pressed) <I>during</I> the last event. This is constant until
the next event is read from the server.
<P><tt>Fl::get_key(int)</tt> returns true if the given key is held down <I>
now</I>. Under X this requires a round-trip to the server and is <I>
much</I> slower than <tt>Fl::event_key(int)</tt>.
<P>Keys are identified by the <I>unshifted</I> values. FLTK defines a
set of symbols that should work on most modern machines for every key
on the keyboard:
<UL>
<LI>All keys on the main keyboard producing a printable ASCII
character use the value of that ASCII character (as though shift,
ctrl, and caps lock were not on). The space bar is 32. </LI>
<LI>All keys on the numeric keypad producing a printable ASCII
character use the value of that ASCII character plus <tt>FL_KP</tt>.
The highest possible value is <tt>FL_KP_Last</tt> so you can
range-check to see if something is on the keypad. </LI>
<LI>All numbered function keys use the number on the function key plus <tt>
FL_F</tt>. The highest possible number is <tt>FL_F_Last</tt>, so you
can range-check a value. </LI>
<LI>Buttons on the mouse are considered keys, and use the button
number (where the left button is 1) plus <tt>FL_Button</tt>. </LI>
<LI>All other keys on the keypad have a symbol: <tt>FL_Escape,
FL_BackSpace, FL_Tab, FL_Enter, FL_Print, FL_Scroll_Lock, FL_Pause,
FL_Insert, FL_Home, FL_Page_Up, FL_Delete, FL_End, FL_Page_Down,
FL_Left, FL_Up, FL_Right, FL_Down, FL_Shift_L, FL_Shift_R,
FL_Control_L, FL_Control_R, FL_Caps_Lock, FL_Alt_L, FL_Alt_R,
FL_Meta_L, FL_Meta_R, FL_Menu, FL_Num_Lock, FL_KP_Enter</tt>. Be
careful not to confuse these with the very similar, but all-caps,
symbols used by <a href="Fl.html#Fl.event_state"><tt>Fl::event_state()</tt>
</A>. </LI>
</UL>
<P>On X <tt>Fl::get_key(FL_Button+n)</tt> does not work.
<P>On WIN32 <tt>Fl::get_key(FL_KP_Enter)</tt> and <tt>
Fl::event_key(FL_KP_Enter)</tt> do not work.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_length">int event_length();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the length of the text in <tt>Fl::event_text()</tt>. There
will always be a nul at this position in the text. However there may
be a nul before that if the keystroke translates to a nul character or
you paste a nul character.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_shift">int event_shift();</A></H4>
<P>Returns non-zero if the Shift key is pressed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_state">int event_state();<BR>
int event_state(int i);</A></H4>
<P>This is a bitfield of what shift states were on and what mouse buttons
were held down during the most recent event. The second version
returns non-zero if any of the passed bits are turned on. The legal
bits are:
<UL>
<LI><tt>FL_SHIFT</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_CAPS_LOCK</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_CTRL</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_ALT</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_NUM_LOCK</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_META</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_SCROLL_LOCK</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_BUTTON1</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_BUTTON2</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>FL_BUTTON3</tt></LI>
</UL>
<P>X servers do not agree on shift states, and FL_NUM_LOCK, FL_META, and
FL_SCROLL_LOCK may not work. The values were selected to match the
XFree86 server on Linux. In addition there is a bug in the way X works
so that the shift state is not correctly reported until the first event <I>
after</I> the shift key is pressed or released.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_x">int event_x();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the mouse position of the event relative to the <tt>Fl_Window</tt>
it was passed to.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_x_root">int event_x_root();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the mouse position on the screen of the event. To find the
absolute position of an <tt>Fl_Window</tt> on the screen, use the
difference between <tt>event_x_root(),event_y_root()</tt> and <tt>
event_x(),event_y()</tt>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_y">int event_y();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the mouse position of the event relative to the <tt>Fl_Window</tt>
it was passed to.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_y_root">int event_y_root();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the mouse position on the screen of the event. To find the
absolute position of an <tt>Fl_Window</tt> on the screen, use the
difference between <tt>event_x_root(),event_y_root()</tt> and <tt>
event_x(),event_y()</tt>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.fatal">void (*fatal)(const char*, ...);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK calls this to print a fatal error message. You can
override the behavior by setting the function pointer to your
own routine.
<P><tt>Fl::fatal</tt> must not return, as FLTK is in an unusable
state, however your version may be able to use <tt>longjmp</tt>
or an exception to continue, as long as it does not call FLTK
again. The default implementation prints the error message to
<TT>stderr</TT> and exits with status 1.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.first_window">Fl_Window* first_window();<BR>
void first_window(Fl_Window*);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the first top-level window in the list of shown() windows. If
a modal() window is shown this is the top-most modal window, otherwise
it is the most recent window to get an event.
<P>The second form sets the window that is returned by
first_window. The window is removed from wherever it is in the
list and inserted at the top. This is not done if Fl::modal()
is on or if the window is not shown(). Because the first window
is used to set the "parent" of modal windows, this is often
useful.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.flush">void flush();</A></H4>
<P>Causes all the windows that need it to be redrawn and graphics forced
out through the pipes. This is what <tt>wait()</tt> does before
looking for events.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.focus">Fl_Widget* focus();<BR>
void focus(Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<P>Get or set the widget that will receive <tt>FL_KEYBOARD</tt> events.
<P>If you change <tt>Fl::focus()</tt>, the previous widget and all
parents (that don't contain the new widget) are sent <tt>FL_UNFOCUS</tt>
events. Changing the focus does <I>not</I> send <tt>FL_FOCUS</tt> to
this or any widget, because sending <tt>FL_FOCUS</tt> is supposed to <I>
test</I> if the widget wants the focus (by it returning non-zero from
<tt>handle()</tt>).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.foreground">void foreground(uchar, uchar, uchar);</A></H4>
<P>Changes <tt>fl_color(FL_BLACK)</tt>. Also changes <tt>
FL_INACTIVE_COLOR</tt> and <tt>FL_SELECTION_COLOR</tt> to be a ramp
between this and <tt>FL_WHITE</tt>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.free_color">void free_color(Fl_Color c, int overlay = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Frees the specified color from the colormap, if applicable.
If <tt>overlay</tt> is non-zero then the color is freed from the
overlay colormap.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_boxtype">Fl_Box_Draw_F *get_boxtype(Fl_Boxtype);</A></H4>
<P>Gets the current box drawing function for the specified box type.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_color">unsigned get_color(Fl_Color c);<BR>
void get_color(Fl_Color c, uchar&amp;r, uchar&amp;g, uchar&amp;b);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the RGB value(s) for the given FLTK color index. The
first form returns the RGB values packed in a 32-bit unsigned
integer with the red value in the upper 8 bits, the green value
in the next 8 bits, and the blue value in bits 8-15. The lower
8 bits will always be 0.
<P>The second form returns the red, green, and blue values
separately in referenced variables.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_font">const char* get_font(Fl_Font);</A></H4>
<P>Get the string for this face. This string is different for each
face. Under X this value is passed to XListFonts to get all the sizes
of this face.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_font_name">const char* get_font_name(Fl_Font, int* attributes = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Get a human-readable string describing the family of this face. This
is useful if you are presenting a choice to the user. There is no
guarantee that each face has a different name. The return value points
to a static buffer that is overwritten each call.
<P>The integer pointed to by <tt>attributes</tt> (if the pointer is not
zero) is set to zero, <tt>FL_BOLD</tt> or <tt>FL_ITALIC</tt> or <tt>
FL_BOLD | FL_ITALIC</tt>. To locate a &quot;family&quot; of fonts, search
forward and back for a set with non-zero attributes, these faces along
with the face with a zero attribute before them constitute a family.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_font_sizes">int get_font_sizes(Fl_Font, int*&amp; sizep);</A></H4>
<P>Return an array of sizes in <tt>sizep</tt>. The return value is the
length of this array. The sizes are sorted from smallest to largest
and indicate what sizes can be given to <tt>fl_font()</tt> that will
be matched exactly (<tt>fl_font()</tt> will pick the closest size for
other sizes). A zero in the first location of the array indicates a
scalable font, where any size works, although the array may list sizes
that work &quot;better&quot; than others. Warning: the returned array
points at a static buffer that is overwritten each call. Under X this
will open the display.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_key">int get_key(int);</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_mouse">void get_mouse(int &amp;x,int &amp;y);</A></H4>
<P>Return where the mouse is on the screen by doing a round-trip query to
the server. You should use <tt>Fl::event_x_root()</tt> and <tt>
Fl::event_y_root()</tt> if possible, but this is necessary if you are
not sure if a mouse event has been processed recently (such as to
position your first window). If the display is not open, this will
open it.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.get_system_colors">void get_system_colors();</A></H4>
<P>Read the user preference colors from the system and use them to call
<tt> Fl::foreground()</tt>, <tt>Fl::background()</tt>, and <tt>
Fl::background2()</tt>. This is done by
<tt>Fl_Window::show(argc,argv)</tt> before applying the -fg and -bg
switches.
<P>On X this reads some common values from the Xdefaults database.
KDE users can set these values by running the "krdb" program, and
newer versions of KDE set this automatically if you check the "apply
style to other X programs" switch in their control panel.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.gl_visual">int gl_visual(int, int *alist=0);</A></H4>
<P>This does the same thing as
<A href="#Fl.visual"><tt>Fl::visual(int)</tt></A> but also
requires OpenGL drawing to work. This <I>must</I> be done if
you want to draw in normal windows with OpenGL with <A
href=opengl.html#gl_start> <tt>gl_start()</tt></A> and
<tt>gl_end()</tt>. It may be useful to call this so your X
windows use the same visual as an
<A href="Fl_Gl_Window.html"><tt>Fl_Gl_Window</tt></A>, which on
some servers will reduce colormap flashing.
<P>See <A href="Fl_Gl_Window.html#Fl_Gl_Window.mode"><tt>Fl_Gl_Window</tt></A>
for a list of additional values for the argument.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.grab">Fl_Window* grab();<BR>
void grab(Fl_Window&amp;w) {grab(&amp;w);}</A></H4>
<P>This is used when pop-up menu systems are active. Send all events to
the passed window no matter where the pointer or focus is (including
in other programs). The window <I>does not have to be
<tt>shown()</tt></I> , this lets the <tt>handle()</tt> method of a
&quot;dummy&quot; window override all event handling and allows you to
map and unmap a complex set of windows (under both X and WIN32
<I>some</I> window must be mapped because the system interface needs a
window id).
<P>If <tt>grab()</tt> is on it will also affect show() of windows by
doing system-specific operations (on X it turns on
override-redirect). These are designed to make menus popup reliably
and faster on the system.
<P>To turn off grabbing do <tt>Fl::grab(0)</tt>.
<P><I>Be careful that your program does not enter an infinite loop
while <tt>grab()</tt> is on. On X this will lock up your screen!</I>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.h">int h();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the height of the screen in pixels.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.handle">int handle(int, Fl_Window*);</A></H4>
<P>Sends the event to a window for processing. Returns non-zero if any
widget uses the event.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.has_check">int has_check(Fl_Timeout_Handler, void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Returns true if the check exists and has not been called yet.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.has_idle">int has_idle(void (*cb)(void*), void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Returns true if the specified idle callback is currently installed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.has_timeout">int has_timeout(Fl_Timeout_Handler, void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Returns true if the timeout exists and has not been called yet.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.lock">void lock();</A></H4>
<P>The <TT>lock()</TT> method blocks the current thread until it
can safely access FLTK widgets and data. Child threads should
call this method prior to updating any widgets or accessing
data. The main thread must call <TT>lock()</TT> to initialize
the threading support in FLTK.
<P>Child threads must call <A
HREF="#Fl.unlock"><TT>unlock()</TT></A> when they are done
accessing FLTK.
<P>When the <A HREF="#Fl.wait"><TT>wait()</TT></A> method is waiting
for input or timeouts, child threads are given access to FLTK.
Similarly, when the main thread needs to do processing, it will
wait until all child threads have called <A
HREF="#Fl.unlock"><TT>unlock()</TT></A> before processing
additional data.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.modal">Fl_Window* modal();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the top-most <tt>modal()</tt> window currently shown.
This is the most recently <tt>
shown()</tt> window with <A href=Fl_Window.html#Fl_Window.modal><tt>
modal()</tt></A> true, or <tt>NULL</tt> if there are no <tt>modal()</tt>
windows <tt>shown()</tt>.
The <tt>modal()</tt> window has its <tt>handle()</tt> method called
for all events, and no other windows will have <tt>handle()</tt>
called (<A href="#Fl.grab"><tt>grab()</tt></A> overrides this).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.next_window">Fl_Window* next_window(const Fl_Window*);</A></H4>
<P>Returns the next top-level window in the list of shown() windows. You can
use this call to iterate through all the windows that are shown().
<H4><A NAME="Fl.own_colormap">void own_colormap();</A></H4>
<P>Makes FLTK use its own colormap. This may make FLTK display better
and will reduce conflicts with other programs that want lots of colors.
However the colors may flash as you move the cursor between windows.
<P>This does nothing if the current visual is not colormapped.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.paste">void paste(Fl_Widget &amp;receiver);</A></H4>
<P>Set things up so the receiver widget will be called with an <A href="enumerations.html#events">
<tt>FL_PASTE</tt></A> event some time in the future. The reciever
should be prepared to be called <I>directly</I> by this, or for it to
happen <I>later</I>, or possibly <I>not at all</I>. This allows the
window system to take as long as necessary to retrieve the paste buffer
(or even to screw up completely) without complex and error-prone
synchronization code in FLTK.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.pushed">Fl_Widget* pushed();<BR>
void pushed(Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<P>Get or set the widget that is being pushed. <tt>FL_DRAG</tt> or <tt>
FL_RELEASE</tt> (and any more <tt>FL_PUSH</tt>) events will be sent to
this widget.
<P>If you change the pushed widget, the previous one and all parents
(that don't contain the new widget) are sent <tt>FL_RELEASE</tt>
events. Changing this does <I>not</I> send <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> to this
or any widget, because sending <tt>FL_PUSH</tt> is supposed to <I>test</I>
if the widget wants the mouse (by it returning non-zero from <tt>
handle()</tt>).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.readqueue">Fl_Widget* readqueue();</A></H4>
<P>All <tt>Fl_Widgets</tt> that don't have a callback defined use a
default callback that puts a pointer to the widget in this queue, and
this method reads the oldest widget out of this queue.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.ready">int ready();</A></H4>
<P>This is similar to <tt>Fl::check()</tt> except this does <I>not</I>
call <tt>Fl::flush()</tt> or any callbacks, which is useful if your
program is in a state where such callbacks are illegal. This returns
true if <tt>Fl::check()</tt> would do anything (it will continue to
return true until you call <tt>Fl::check()</tt> or <tt>Fl::wait()</tt>).
<UL><PRE>
while (!calculation_done()) {
calculate();
if (Fl::ready()) {
do_expensive_cleanup();
Fl::check();
if (user_hit_abort_button()) break;
}
}
</PRE></UL>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.redraw">void redraw();</A></H4>
<P>Redraws all widgets.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.release">void release();</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.remove_check">void remove_check(Fl_Timeout_Handler, void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Removes a check callback. It is harmless to remove a check
callback that no longer exists.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.remove_fd">void remove_fd(int, int when);<BR>
void remove_fd(int);</A></H4>
<P>Removes a file descriptor handler.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.remove_handler">void remove_handler(int (*h)(int));</A></H4>
<P>Removes a previously added event handler.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.remove_idle">void remove_idle(void (*cb)(void*), void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Removes the specified idle callback, if it is installed.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.remove_timeout">void remove_timeout(Fl_Timeout_Handler, void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>Removes a timeout callback. It is harmless to remove a timeout
callback that no longer exists.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.repeat_timeout">void repeat_timeout(double t, Fl_Timeout_Handler,void* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>This method repeats a timeout callback from the expiration of the
previous timeout, allowing for more accurate timing. You may only call
this method inside a timeout callback.
<p>The following code will print &quot;TICK&quot; each second on
<tt>stdout</tt> with a fair degree of accuracy:</p>
<PRE>
void callback(void*) {
puts("TICK");
Fl::repeat_timeout(1.0, callback);
}
int main() {
Fl::add_timeout(1.0, callback);
return Fl::run();
}
</PRE>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.run">int run();</A></H4>
<P>As long as any windows are displayed this calls <tt>Fl::wait()</tt>
repeatedly. When all the windows are closed it returns zero
(supposedly it would return non-zero on any errors, but FLTK calls
exit directly for these). A normal program will end <tt>main()</tt>
with <tt>return Fl::run();</tt>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.scheme">void scheme(const char *name);
<BR>const char *scheme();</A></H4>
<P>Gets or sets the current widget scheme. Currently only "none"
and "plastic" are recognized, and <TT>NULL</TT> will use the
scheme defined in the <TT>FLTK_SCHEME</TT> environment variable
or the <TT>scheme</TT> resource under X11.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.selection">void selection(Fl_Widget &amp;owner, const char* stuff, int len);</A></H4>
<P>Changes the current selection. The block of text is
copied to an internal buffer by FLTK (be careful if doing this in
response to an <tt>FL_PASTE</tt> as this <I>may</I> be the same buffer
returned by <tt>event_text()</tt>). The <tt>selection_owner()</tt>
widget is set to the passed owner.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.selection_owner">Fl_Widget* selection_owner();<BR>
void selection_owner(Fl_Widget*);</A></H4>
<P>The single-argument <tt>selection_owner(x)</tt> call can be used to
move the selection to another widget or to set the owner to
<tt>NULL</tt>, without changing the actual text of the
selection. <tt>FL_SELECTIONCLEAR</tt> is sent to the previous
selection owner, if any.
<P><I>Copying the buffer every time the selection is changed is
obviously wasteful, especially for large selections. An interface will
probably be added in a future version to allow the selection to be made
by a callback function. The current interface will be emulated on top
of this.</I>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_abort">void set_abort(void (*f)(const char*,...));</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_atclose">void set_atclose(void (*f)(Fl_Window*,void*));</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_boxtype">void set_boxtype(Fl_Boxtype, Fl_Box_Draw_F*,uchar,uchar,uchar,uchar);<BR>
void set_boxtype(Fl_Boxtype, Fl_Boxtype from);</A></H4>
<P>The first form sets the function to call to draw a specific boxtype.
<P>The second form copies the <tt>from</tt> boxtype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_color">void set_color(Fl_Color, uchar, uchar, uchar);<BR>
void set_color(Fl_Color, unsigned);</A></H4>
<P>Sets an entry in the <tt>fl_color</tt> index table. You can set it to
any 8-bit RGB color. The color is not allocated until <tt>fl_color(i)</tt>
is used.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_font">void set_font(Fl_Font, const char*);<BR>
void set_font(Fl_Font, Fl_Font);</A></H4>
<P>The first form changes a face. The string pointer is simply stored,
the string is not copied, so the string must be in static memory.
<P>The second form copies one face to another.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_fonts">Fl_Font set_fonts(const char* = 0);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK will open the display, and add every font on the server to the
face table. It will attempt to put &quot;families&quot; of faces together, so
that the normal one is first, followed by bold, italic, and bold
italic.
<P>The optional argument is a string to describe the set of fonts to
add. Passing <tt>NULL</tt> will select only fonts that have the
ISO8859-1 character set (and are thus usable by normal text). Passing
&quot;-*&quot; will select all fonts with any encoding as long as they have
normal X font names with dashes in them. Passing &quot;*&quot; will list every
font that exists (on X this may produce some strange output). Other
values may be useful but are system dependent. With WIN32 <tt>NULL</tt>
selects fonts with ISO8859-1 encoding and non-<tt>NULL</tt> selects
all fonts.
<P>The return value is how many faces are in the table after this is
done.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_idle">void set_idle(void (*cb)());</A></H4>
<P>Sets an idle callback.
<P>This method is obsolete - use the <A
HREF="#Fl.add_idle"><TT>add_idle()</TT></A> method instead.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.set_labeltype">void set_labeltype(Fl_Labeltype,Fl_Label_Draw_F*,Fl_Label_Measure_F*);<BR>
void set_labeltype(Fl_Labeltype, Fl_Labeltype from);</A></H4>
<P>The first form sets the functions to call to draw and measure a
specific labeltype.
<P>The second form copies the <tt>from</tt> labeltype.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.test_shortcut">int test_shortcut(int);</A></H4>
<P>Test the current event, which must be an <tt>FL_KEYBOARD</tt> or <tt>
FL_SHORTCUT</tt>, against a shortcut value (described in <A href=Fl_Button.html#Fl_Button.shortcut>
<tt>Fl_Button</tt></A>). Returns non-zero if there is a match. Not to
be confused with <A href="subclassing.html#test_shortcut"><tt>
Fl_Widget::test_shortcut()</tt></A>.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.thread_message">void *thread_message();</A></H4>
<P>The <TT>thread_message()</TT> method returns the last message
that was sent from a child by the <A
HREF="#Fl.awake"><TT>awake()</TT></A> method.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.unlock">void unlock();</A></H4>
<P>The <TT>unlock()</TT> method releases the lock that was set
using the <A HREF="#Fl.lock"><TT>lock()</TT></A> method. Child
threads should call this method as soon as they are finished
accessing FLTK.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.version">double version();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the compiled-in value of the FL_VERSION constant. This
is useful for checking the version of a shared library.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.visible_focus">void visible_focus(int v);<BR>
int visible_focus();</A></H4>
<P>Gets or sets the visible keyboard focus on buttons and other
non-text widgets. The default mode is to enable keyboard focus
for all widgets.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.visual">int visual(int);</A></H4>
<P>Selects a visual so that your graphics are drawn correctly. This is
only allowed before you call show() on any windows. This does nothing
if the default visual satisfies the capabilities, or if no visual
satisfies the capabilities, or on systems that don't have such
brain-dead notions.
<P>Only the following combinations do anything useful:
<UL>
<LI><tt>Fl::visual(FL_RGB)</tt>
<BR>Full/true color (if there are several depths FLTK chooses the
largest). Do this if you use <A href="drawing.html#fl_draw_image"><tt>fl_draw_image</tt>
</A> for much better (non-dithered) output.
<BR>&nbsp; </LI>
<LI><tt>Fl::visual(FL_RGB8)</tt>
<BR>Full color with at least 24 bits of color. <tt>FL_RGB</tt> will
always pick this if available, but if not it will happily return a
less-than-24 bit deep visual. This call fails if 24 bits are not
available.
<BR>&nbsp; </LI>
<LI><tt>Fl::visual(FL_DOUBLE|FL_INDEX)</tt>
<BR>Hardware double buffering. Call this if you are going to use <A href=Fl_Double_Window.html#Fl_Double_Window>
<tt>Fl_Double_Window</tt></A>.
<BR>&nbsp; </LI>
<LI><tt>Fl::visual(FL_DOUBLE|FL_RGB)</tt></LI>
<LI><tt>Fl::visual(FL_DOUBLE|FL_RGB8)</tt>
<BR>Hardware double buffering and full color.
</UL>
<P>This returns true if the system has the capabilities by default or
FLTK suceeded in turing them on. Your program will still work even if
this returns false (it just won't look as good).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.w">int w();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the width of the screen in pixels.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.wait">int wait();<BR>
double wait(double time);</A></H4>
<P>Waits until "something happens" and then returns. Call this
repeatedly to "run" your program. You can also check what happened
each time after this returns, which is quite useful for managing
program state.
<P>What this really does is call all idle callbacks, all elapsed
timeouts, call <tt>Fl::flush()</tt> to get the screen to update, and
then wait some time (zero if there are idle callbacks, the shortest of
all pending timeouts, or infinity), for any events from the user or
any <tt>Fl::add_fd()</tt> callbacks. It then handles the events and
calls the callbacks and then returns.
<P>The return value of the first form is non-zero if there are
any visible windows - this may change in future versions of
FLTK.
<P>The second form waits a maximum of <i>time</i>
seconds. <i>It can return much sooner if something happens.</i>
<P>The return value is positive if an event or fd happens before the
time elapsed. It is zero if nothing happens (on Win32 this will only
return zero if <i>time</i> is zero). It is negative if an error
occurs (this will happen on UNIX if a signal happens).
<H4><A NAME="Fl.warning">void (*warning)(const char*, ...);</A></H4>
<P>FLTK calls this to print a warning message. You can
override the behavior by setting the function pointer to your
own routine.
<P><tt>Fl::warning</tt> means that there was a recoverable
problem, the display may be messed up but the user can probably
keep working - all X protocol errors call this, for example.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.x">int x();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the origin of the current screen, where 0 indicates
the left side of the screen.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.y">int y();</A></H4>
<P>Returns the origin of the current screen, where 0 indicates
the top edge of the screen.
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_dx">int event_dx();</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_dy">int event_dy();</A></H4>
<H4><A NAME="Fl.event_text">const char* event_text();</A></H4>
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