Developer's Daily Unix by Example
  main | java | perl | unix | dev directory | web log
 
 
Main
Unix
Man Pages
   

Tk_Main

NAME
SYNOPSIS
ARGUMENTS
DESCRIPTION
KEYWORDS

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME

Tk_Main ? main program for Tk-based applications

SYNOPSIS

#include <tk.h>

Tk_Main(argc, argv, appInitProc)

ARGUMENTS

int argc (in)

Number of elements in argv.

char *argv[] (in)

Array of strings containing command-line arguments.

Tcl_AppInitProc *appInitProc (in)

Address of an application-specific initialization procedure. The value for this argument is usually Tcl_AppInit.

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

Tk_Main acts as the main program for most Tk-based applications. Starting with Tk 4.0 it is not called main anymore because it is part of the Tk library and having a function main in a library (particularly a shared library) causes problems on many systems. Having main in the Tk library would also make it hard to use Tk in C++ programs, since C++ programs must have special C++ main functions.

Normally each application contains a small main function that does nothing but invoke Tk_Main. Tk_Main then does all the work of creating and running a wish-like application.

When it is has finished its own initialization, but before it processes commands, Tk_Main calls the procedure given by the appInitProc argument. This procedure provides a ‘‘hook’’ for the application to perform its own initialization, such as defining application-specific commands. The procedure must have an interface that matches the type Tcl_AppInitProc:

typedef int Tcl_AppInitProc(Tcl_Interp *interp);

AppInitProc is almost always a pointer to Tcl_AppInit; for more details on this procedure, see the documentation for Tcl_AppInit.

KEYWORDS

application-specific initialization, command-line arguments, main program


copyright 1998-2007, devdaily.com, all rights reserved.
devdaily.com, an alvin j. alexander production.