Commit d986563a authored by Terry Jan Reedy's avatar Terry Jan Reedy

Issue #22155: Add File Handlers subsection with createfilehandler to tkinter

doc.  Remove obsolete example from FAQ.  Patch by Martin Panter.
parent 0e8168c9
......@@ -139,30 +139,11 @@ might include the Tix libraries as well).
Can I have Tk events handled while waiting for I/O?
---------------------------------------------------
Yes, and you don't even need threads! But you'll have to restructure your I/O
On platforms other than Windows, yes, and you don't even
need threads! But you'll have to restructure your I/O
code a bit. Tk has the equivalent of Xt's :c:func:`XtAddInput()` call, which allows you
to register a callback function which will be called from the Tk mainloop when
I/O is possible on a file descriptor. Here's what you need::
from Tkinter import tkinter
tkinter.createfilehandler(file, mask, callback)
The file may be a Python file or socket object (actually, anything with a
fileno() method), or an integer file descriptor. The mask is one of the
constants tkinter.READABLE or tkinter.WRITABLE. The callback is called as
follows::
callback(file, mask)
You must unregister the callback when you're done, using ::
tkinter.deletefilehandler(file)
Note: since you don't know *how many bytes* are available for reading, you can't
use the Python file object's read or readline methods, since these will insist
on reading a predefined number of bytes. For sockets, the :meth:`recv` or
:meth:`recvfrom` methods will work fine; for other files, use
``os.read(file.fileno(), maxbytecount)``.
I/O is possible on a file descriptor. See :ref:`tkinter-file-handlers`.
I can't get key bindings to work in Tkinter: why?
......
......@@ -794,3 +794,53 @@ some widget (e.g. labels, buttons, menus). In these cases, Tk will not keep a
reference to the image. When the last Python reference to the image object is
deleted, the image data is deleted as well, and Tk will display an empty box
wherever the image was used.
.. _tkinter-file-handlers:
File Handlers
-------------
Tk allows you to register and unregister a callback function which will be
called from the Tk mainloop when I/O is possible on a file descriptor.
Only one handler may be registered per file descriptor. Example code::
import tkinter
widget = tkinter.Tk()
mask = tkinter.READABLE | tkinter.WRITABLE
widget.tk.createfilehandler(file, mask, callback)
...
widget.tk.deletefilehandler(file)
This feature is not available on Windows.
Since you don't know how many bytes are available for reading, you may not
want to use the :class:`~io.BufferedIOBase` or :class:`~io.TextIOBase`
:meth:`~io.BufferedIOBase.read` or :meth:`~io.IOBase.readline` methods,
since these will insist on reading a predefined number of bytes.
For sockets, the :meth:`~socket.socket.recv` or
:meth:`~socket.socket.recvfrom` methods will work fine; for other files,
use raw reads or ``os.read(file.fileno(), maxbytecount)``.
.. method:: Widget.tk.createfilehandler(file, mask, func)
Registers the file handler callback function *func*. The *file* argument
may either be an object with a :meth:`~io.IOBase.fileno` method (such as
a file or socket object), or an integer file descriptor. The *mask*
argument is an ORed combination of any of the three constants below.
The callback is called as follows::
callback(file, mask)
.. method:: Widget.tk.deletefilehandler(file)
Unregisters a file handler.
.. data:: READABLE
WRITABLE
EXCEPTION
Constants used in the *mask* arguments.
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