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ruby--ruby/ext/tk/sample/binstr_usage.rb
nagai 4c4631c2da * renewal Ruby/Tk
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@6237 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2004-05-01 16:09:54 +00:00

39 lines
1.3 KiB
Ruby

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require "tk"
TkMessage.new(:width=>360, :text=><<EOM).pack
This sample shows how to use a binary sequence between Ruby and Tk. \
This reads the image data from the file as the binary sequence.
To treat the difference of encodings between on Ruby and on Tk seamlessly, \
Ruby/Tk converts the encoding of string arguments automatically. \
I think it is comfortable for users on almost all situations. \
However, when treats a binary sequence, the convert process makes troubles.
Tk::BinaryString class (subclass of Tk::EncodedString class) is the class \
to avoid such troubles. Please see the source code of this sample. \
A Tk::BinaryString instance is used to create the image for the center button.
EOM
ImgFile=['images','tcllogo.gif'].join(File::Separator)
ph1 = TkPhotoImage.new(:file=>ImgFile)
p ph1.configinfo
b_str = Tk::BinaryString(IO.read(ImgFile))
p [b_str, b_str.encoding]
ph2 = TkPhotoImage.new(:data=>b_str)
p ph2.configinfo
p ph2.data(:grayscale=>true)
ph3 = TkPhotoImage.new()
ph3.put(ph2.data(:grayscale=>true))
f = TkFrame.new.pack
TkButton.new(:parent=>f, :image=>ph1, :command=>proc{exit}).pack(:side=>:left)
TkButton.new(:parent=>f, :image=>ph2, :command=>proc{exit}).pack(:side=>:left)
TkButton.new(:parent=>f, :image=>ph3, :command=>proc{exit}).pack(:side=>:left)
Tk.mainloop