| Writing an IDLE extension |
| ========================= |
| |
| An IDLE extension can define new key bindings and menu entries for IDLE |
| edit windows. There is a simple mechanism to load extensions when IDLE |
| starts up and to attach them to each edit window. (It is also possible |
| to make other changes to IDLE, but this must be done by editing the IDLE |
| source code.) |
| |
| The list of extensions loaded at startup time is configured by editing |
| the file config-extensions.def. See below for details. |
| |
| An IDLE extension is defined by a class. Methods of the class define |
| actions that are invoked by event bindings or menu entries. Class (or |
| instance) variables define the bindings and menu additions; these are |
| automatically applied by IDLE when the extension is linked to an edit |
| window. |
| |
| An IDLE extension class is instantiated with a single argument, |
| `editwin', an EditorWindow instance. The extension cannot assume much |
| about this argument, but it is guaranteed to have the following instance |
| variables: |
| |
| text a Text instance (a widget) |
| io an IOBinding instance (more about this later) |
| flist the FileList instance (shared by all edit windows) |
| |
| (There are a few more, but they are rarely useful.) |
| |
| The extension class must not directly bind Window Manager (e.g. X) events. |
| Rather, it must define one or more virtual events, e.g. <<zoom-height>>, and |
| corresponding methods, e.g. zoom_height_event(). The virtual events will be |
| bound to the corresponding methods, and Window Manager events can then be bound |
| to the virtual events. (This indirection is done so that the key bindings can |
| easily be changed, and so that other sources of virtual events can exist, such |
| as menu entries.) |
| |
| An extension can define menu entries. This is done with a class or instance |
| variable named menudefs; it should be a list of pairs, where each pair is a |
| menu name (lowercase) and a list of menu entries. Each menu entry is either |
| None (to insert a separator entry) or a pair of strings (menu_label, |
| virtual_event). Here, menu_label is the label of the menu entry, and |
| virtual_event is the virtual event to be generated when the entry is selected. |
| An underscore in the menu label is removed; the character following the |
| underscore is displayed underlined, to indicate the shortcut character (for |
| Windows). |
| |
| At the moment, extensions cannot define whole new menus; they must define |
| entries in existing menus. Some menus are not present on some windows; such |
| entry definitions are then ignored, but key bindings are still applied. (This |
| should probably be refined in the future.) |
| |
| Extensions are not required to define menu entries for all the events they |
| implement. (They are also not required to create keybindings, but in that |
| case there must be empty bindings in cofig-extensions.def) |
| |
| Here is a complete example: |
| |
| class ZoomHeight: |
| |
| menudefs = [ |
| ('edit', [ |
| None, # Separator |
| ('_Zoom Height', '<<zoom-height>>'), |
| ]) |
| ] |
| |
| def __init__(self, editwin): |
| self.editwin = editwin |
| |
| def zoom_height_event(self, event): |
| "...Do what you want here..." |
| |
| The final piece of the puzzle is the file "config-extensions.def", which is |
| used to configure the loading of extensions and to establish key (or, more |
| generally, event) bindings to the virtual events defined in the extensions. |
| |
| See the comments at the top of config-extensions.def for information. It's |
| currently necessary to manually modify that file to change IDLE's extension |
| loading or extension key bindings. |
| |
| For further information on binding refer to the Tkinter Resources web page at |
| python.org and to the Tk Command "bind" man page. |