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David Scherer7aced172000-08-15 01:13:23 +00001Writing an IDLE extension
2
3An IDLE extension can define new key bindings and menu entries for IDLE
4edit windows. There is a simple mechanism to load extensions when IDLE
5starts up and to attach them to each edit window. (It is also possible
6to make other changes to IDLE, but this must be done by editing the IDLE
7source code.)
8
9The list of extensions loaded at startup time is configured by editing
Kurt B. Kaiser40610542001-07-14 05:18:59 +000010the file config.txt; see below for details.
David Scherer7aced172000-08-15 01:13:23 +000011
12An IDLE extension is defined by a class. Methods of the class define
13actions that are invoked by those bindings or menu entries. Class (or
14instance) variables define the bindings and menu additions; these are
15automatically applied by IDLE when the extension is linked to an edit
16window.
17
18An IDLE extension class is instantiated with a single argument,
19`editwin', an EditorWindow instance. The extension cannot assume much
20about this argument, but it is guarateed to have the following instance
21variables:
22
23 text a Text instance (a widget)
24 io an IOBinding instance (more about this later)
25 flist the FileList instance (shared by all edit windows)
26
27(There are a few more, but they are rarely useful.)
28
29The extension class must not bind key events. Rather, it must define
30one or more virtual events, e.g. <<zoom-height>>, and corresponding
31methods, e.g. zoom_height_event(), and have one or more class (or instance)
32variables that define mappings between virtual events and key sequences,
33e.g. <Alt-F2>. When the extension is loaded, these key sequences will
34be bound to the corresponding virtual events, and the virtual events
35will be bound to the corresponding methods. (This indirection is done
36so that the key bindings can easily be changed, and so that other
37sources of virtual events can exist, such as menu entries.)
38
39The following class or instance variables are used to define key
40bindings for virtual events:
41
42 keydefs for all platforms
43 mac_keydefs for Macintosh
44 windows_keydefs for Windows
45 unix_keydefs for Unix (and other platforms)
46
47Each of these variables, if it exists, must be a dictionary whose
48keys are virtual events, and whose values are lists of key sequences.
49
50An extension can define menu entries in a similar fashion. This is done
51with a class or instance variable named menudefs; it should be a list of
52pair, where each pair is a menu name (lowercase) and a list of menu
53entries. Each menu entry is either None (to insert a separator entry) or
54a pair of strings (menu_label, virtual_event). Here, menu_label is the
55label of the menu entry, and virtual_event is the virtual event to be
56generated when the entry is selected. An underscore in the menu label
57is removed; the character following the underscore is displayed
58underlined, to indicate the shortcut character (for Windows).
59
60At the moment, extensions cannot define whole new menus; they must
61define entries in existing menus. Some menus are not present on some
62windows; such entry definitions are then ignored, but the key bindings
63are still applied. (This should probably be refined in the future.)
64
65Here is a complete example example:
66
67class ZoomHeight:
68
69 menudefs = [
70 ('edit', [
71 None, # Separator
72 ('_Zoom Height', '<<zoom-height>>'),
73 ])
74 ]
75
76 windows_keydefs = {
77 '<<zoom-height>>': ['<Alt-F2>'],
78 }
79 unix_keydefs = {
80 '<<zoom-height>>': ['<Control-z><Control-z>'],
81 }
82
83 def __init__(self, editwin):
84 self.editwin = editwin
85
86 def zoom_height_event(self, event):
87 "...Do what you want here..."
88
Kurt B. Kaiser40610542001-07-14 05:18:59 +000089The final piece of the puzzle is the file "config.txt", which is used
90to to configure the loading of extensions. For each extension,
91you must include a section in config.txt (or in any of the other
92configuration files that are consulted at startup: config-unix.txt,
93config-win.txt, or ~/.idle). A section is headed by the module name
94in square brackets, e.g.
95
96 [ZoomHeight]
97
98The section may be empty, or it may define configuration options for
99the extension. (See ParenMatch.py for an example.) A special option
100is 'enable': including
101
102 enable = 0
103
104in a section disables that extension. More than one configuration
105file may specify options for the same extension, so a user may disable
106an extension that is loaded by default, or enable an extension that is
107disabled by default.
David Scherer7aced172000-08-15 01:13:23 +0000108
109Extensions can define key bindings and menu entries that reference
110events they don't implement (including standard events); however this is
111not recommended (and may be forbidden in the future).
112
113Extensions are not required to define menu entries for all events they
114implement.
115
116Note: in order to change key bindings, you must currently edit the file
117keydefs. It contains two dictionaries named and formatted like the
118keydefs dictionaries described above, one for the Unix bindings and one
119for the Windows bindings. In the future, a better mechanism will be
120provided.