From: keithv on
I see in some internal tk scripts the idiom
toplevel .foo.top. How does this differ
from just toplevel .top?

Is there some window manager voodoo
going on?

Thanks,
Keith
From: Zarquon on
keithv wrote:
> I see in some internal tk scripts the idiom
> toplevel .foo.top. How does this differ
> from just toplevel .top?
>
> Is there some window manager voodoo
> going on?
>
> Thanks,
> Keith

As far as I know, there's no special voodoo going on.
From: Georgios Petasis on
στις 10/4/2010 09:23, O/H keithv έγραψε:
> I see in some internal tk scripts the idiom
> toplevel .foo.top. How does this differ
> from just toplevel .top?
>
> Is there some window manager voodoo
> going on?
>
> Thanks,
> Keith

Yes, there is some "voodoo" going on.

A toplevel named .x is the child of the "." window. If you close ".", .x
will also close.

This means that toplevel .x.y is a child of .x. If you close .x, .x.y
will also close.

George
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