Developer's Daily | Unix by Example |
main | java | perl | unix | dev directory | web log |
______________________________________________________________________________
Tk_GetRelief, Tk_NameOfRelief ? translate between strings and relief values |
#include <tk.h> int Tk_GetRelief(interp, name, reliefPtr) char * Tk_NameOfRelief(relief) |
Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
Interpreter to use for error reporting.
char *name (in)
String containing relief name (one of ‘‘flat’’, ‘‘groove’’, ‘‘raised’’, ‘‘ridge’’, ‘‘solid’’, or ‘‘sunken’’).
int *reliefPtr (out)
Pointer to location in which to store relief value corresponding to name.
int relief (in)
Relief value (one of TK_RELIEF_FLAT, TK_RELIEF_RAISED, TK_RELIEF_SUNKEN, TK_RELIEF_GROOVE, TK_RELIEF_SOLID, or TK_RELIEF_RIDGE).
_________________________________________________________________ |
Tk_GetRelief places in *reliefPtr the relief value corresponding to name. This value will be one of TK_RELIEF_FLAT, TK_RELIEF_RAISED, TK_RELIEF_SUNKEN, TK_RELIEF_GROOVE, TK_RELIEF_SOLID, or TK_RELIEF_RIDGE. Under normal circumstances the return value is TCL_OK and interp is unused. If name doesn’t contain one of the valid relief names or an abbreviation of one of them, then an error message is stored in interp->result, TCL_ERROR is returned, and *reliefPtr is unmodified. Tk_NameOfRelief is the logical inverse of Tk_GetRelief. Given a relief value it returns the corresponding string (‘‘flat’’, ‘‘raised’’, ‘‘sunken’’, ‘‘groove’’, ‘‘solid’’, or ‘‘ridge’’). If relief isn’t a legal relief value, then ‘‘unknown relief’’ is returned. |
name, relief, string |