ptksh - Perl/Tk script to provide a graphical user interface for testing Perl/Tk commands and scripts.
% ptksh ?scriptfile? ... version information ... ptksh> $b=$mw->Button(-text=>'Hi',-command=>sub{print 'Hi'}) ptksh> $b->pack ptksh> o $b ... list of options ... ptksh> help ... help information ... ptksh> exit %
ptksh is a perl/Tk shell to enter perl commands interactively. When one starts ptksh a MainWindow is automaticly created, along with a ptksh command window. One can access the main window by typing commands using the variable $mw at the 'ptksh> ' prompt of the command window.
ptksh supports command line editing and history. Just type "<Up>" at the command prompt to see a history list. The last 50 commands entered are saved, then reloaded into history list the next time you start ptksh.
ptksh supports some convenient commands for inspecting Tk widgets. See below.
To exit ptksh use: exit
.
ptksh is *not* a full symbolic debugger. To debug perl/Tk programs at a low level use the more powerful perl debugger. (Just enter ``O tk'' on debuggers command line to start the Tk eventloop.)
Press <Up> (the Up Arrow) in the perlwish window to obtain a gui-based history list. Press <Enter> on any history line to enter it into the perlwish window. Then hit return. So, for example, repeat last command is <Up><Enter><Enter>. You can quit the history window with <Escape>. NOTE: history is only saved if exit is "graceful" (i.e. by the "exit" command from the console or by quitting all main windows--NOT by interrupt).
ptksh provides some convenience function to make browsing in perl/Tk widget easier:
Dumps recursively arguments to stdout. (see Data::Dumper). You must have <Data::Dumper> installed to support this feature.
x was introduced for perl debugger compatibility.
If no argument is given it lists the modules loaded
by the commands you executed or since the last time you
called u
.
If argument is the empty string lists all modules that are loaded by ptksh.
If argument is a string, ``text'' it tries to do a ``use Tk::Text;''.
Ptksh compiles into package Tk::ptksh. Your code is eval'ed into package main. The coolness of this is that your eval code should not interfere with ptksh itself.
ptksh will accept multiline commands. Simply put a "\" character immediately before the newline, and ptksh will continue your command onto the next line.
If you have a perl/Tk script that you want to do debugging on, try running the command
ptksh> do 'myscript'; -- or (at shell command prompt) -- % ptksh myscript
Then use the perl/Tk commands to try out different operations on your script.
Looks for your .ptksh_history in the directory specified by the $HOME environment variable ($HOMEPATH on Win32 systems).
It is best not to use "my" in the commands you type into ptksh. For example "my $v" will make $v local just to the command or commands entered until <Return> is pressed. For a related reason, there are no file-scopy "my" variables in the ptksh code itself (else the user might trounce on them by accident).
Tk::MainLoop function interactively entered or sourced in a init or script file will block ptksh.
VERSION 2.03
Mike Beller <beller@penvision.com>, Achim Bohnet <ach@mpe.mpg.de>
Copyright (c) 1996 - 1998 Achim Bohnet and Mike Beller. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.