ttk::button(n) Tk Themed Widget ttk::button(n)


ttk::button - Widget that issues a command when pressed

ttk::button pathName ?options?


A ttk::button widget displays a textual label and/or image, and evaluates a command when pressed.

-class	-compound	-cursor
-image	-state	-style
-takefocus	-text	-textvariable
-underline	-width

See the ttk_widget manual entry for details on the standard options.

[-command command] A script to evaluate when the widget is invoked. [-default default] May be set to one of normal, active, or disabled. In a dialog box, one button may be designated the “default” button (meaning, roughly, “the one that gets invoked when the user presses <Enter>”). active indicates that this is currently the default button; normal means that it may become the default button, and disabled means that it is not defaultable. The default is normal.

Depending on the theme, the default button may be displayed with an extra highlight ring, or with a different border color.

[-width width] If greater than zero, specifies how much space, in character widths, to allocate for the text label. If less than zero, specifies a minimum width. If zero or unspecified, the natural width of the text label is used. Note that some themes may specify a non-zero -width in the style.

In addition to the standard cget, configure, identify, instate, and state commands, buttons support the following additional widget commands:

Invokes the command associated with the button.

Ttk::button widgets support the Toolbutton style in all standard themes, which is useful for creating widgets for toolbars.

[-state state] May be set to normal or disabled to control the disabled state bit. This is a “write-only” option: setting it changes the widget state, but the state widget command does not affect the state option.

ttk::widget(n), button(n)

widget, button, default, command

8.5 Tk