Tablelist supports interactive cell editing with the aid of the Tk core entry, text, spinbox, and checkbutton widgets. These widgets are automatically registered for cell editing, hence the only action needed for using one of them for editing the cells of a given column is as follows:
Use the tablelist widget's columnconfigure
subcommand to set the given column's -editable
option to true
and its -editwindow
option to
entry
, text
,
spinbox
, or checkbutton
,
respectively. (These options are supported at cell level, too, with the
aid of the cellconfigure
subcommand.) Since the default value of the
-editwindow
column configuration option is
entry
, it is not necessary to set it explicitly if the
editing should take place with the aid of an embedded entry widget.
tablelist::tablelist
command for details on the editing
process.-padx
and
-pady
options set to 2
, its
-wrap
option set to none
, and its
initial height set to the number of lines contained in it. There is,
however, an exception from this rule: If the -wrap
option of the cell's
column was set to true and Tk version 8.5 or higher is being used, then the
text widget's -wrap
option will be set to
word
and its initial height will equal the number of
display lines (taking into account the line wraps) contained in
it. You can use the script corresponding to the -editstartcommand
tablelist configuration option to override the initial settings according
to your needs.
-wrap
option was set to
word
or char
(either by Tablelist
or from within the above-mentioned script) and Tk version 8.5 or higher is
being used, then, whenever its width changes (e.g., due to interactive
column resizing), its height will be set automatically to the number of
display lines contained in it. (The number of display lines is
retrieved with the aid of the
count -displaylines
text widget subcommand,
introduced in Tk 8.5.)package require Wcb
or
package require wcb
) then the text widget's
height will be updated automatically whenever text is inserted into or
deleted from it, which makes the editing much more user-friendly.
This is achieved by using an appropriately defined
after-insert
and after-delete
callback for the edit window. You can use the script corresponding to
the -editstartcommand
tablelist configuration option to define further callbacks for the text
widget.  (The above-mentioned callback is created via
wcb::cbappend
, after returning from that
script.)Tab
key is reserved for navigation between the editable
cells, but the user can insert a tabulator character into the text widget
by pressing Control-i
.Return
and KP_Enter
keys insert a newline
character into the text widget. Control-j
can also be
used for inserting a newline. Control-Return
and
Control-KP_Enter
terminate the editing and destroy the edit
window.Control-Home
and Control-End
have their
well-known text widget-specific bindings, just like Meta-<
and Meta->
if tk_strictMotif
is
false. Again, this is different from the behavior of the other
widgets used for interactive cell editing. For jumping into the
first/last editable cell, the user can press
Alt-Home
/Alt-End
or
Meta-Home
/Meta-End
(Command-Home
/Command-End
on Mac OS Classic and
Mac OS X Aqua).-state
option set to
normal
, which makes the widget editable. You can
use the script corresponding to the -editstartcommand
tablelist configuration option to set the state of the spinbox to
readonly
or define validations for it, as well as for
setting its (range of) values and its -wrap
option.-borderwidth
,
-font
, -padx
,
-pady
, and -variable
options.
In an X11 environment it will be created with explicitly set values for its
-borderwidth
, -indicatoron
,
-image
, -selectimage
,
-selectcolor
, and -variable
options. You can use the script corresponding to the
-editstartcommand
tablelist configuration option to set any other configuration options, like
-offvalue
and -onvalue
, according
to the internal values of the cells. Since the default values
of the -offvalue
and -onvalue
checkbutton options are 0
and 1
, you don't need
to change these options if the cells have the same internal values
0
and 1
.