ruby/ext/tk/sample/remote-ip_sample.rb
nagai 41b74c6e20 * ext/tk/extconf.rb: New strategy for searching Tcl/Tk libraries.
* ext/tk/*: Support new features of Tcl/Tk8.6b1 and minor bug fixes.
     ( [KNOWN BUG] Ruby/Tk on Ruby 1.9 will not work on Cygwin. )
* ext/tk/*: Unify sources between Ruby 1.8 & 1.9.
            Improve default_widget_set handling.
* ext/tk/*: Multi-TkInterpreter (multi-tk.rb) works on Ruby 1.8 & 1.9.
     ( [KNOWN BUG] On Ruby 1.8, join to a long term Thread on Tk
       callbacks may freeze. On Ruby 1.9, cannot create a second 
       master interpreter (creating slaves are OK); supported master
       interpreter is the default master interpreter only. )
* ext/tk/lib/tkextlib/*: Update supported versions of Tk extensions.
         Tcllib 1.8/Tklib 0.4.1  ==>  Tcllib 1.11.1/Tklib 0.5
         BWidgets 1.7            ==>  BWidgets 1.8
         TkTable 2.9             ==>  TkTable 2.10
         TkTreeCtrl 2005-12-02   ==>  TkTreeCtrl 2.2.9
         Tile 0.8.0/8.5.1        ==>  Tile 0.8.3/8.6b1
         IncrTcl 2005-02-14      ==>  IncrTcl 2008-12-15
         TclX 2005-02-07         ==>  TclX 2008-12-15
         Trofs 0.4.3             ==>  Trofs 0.4.4


git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/branches/ruby_1_8@24064 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2009-07-12 23:09:52 +00:00

33 lines
1.3 KiB
Ruby

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'remote-tk'
puts <<EOM
This sample controls the other Tk interpreter (Ruby/Tk, Tcl/Tk, and so on)
which running on the other process. For this purpose, Ruby/Tk uses Tcl/Tk's
'send' command. Availability of the command depends on your GUI environment.
If this script doesn't work, please check your environment (see Tcl/Tk FAQ).
EOM
#'
unless (wish = TkWinfo.interps.find{|ip| ip =~ /^wish/})
puts ''
puts 'Please start "wish" (Tcl/Tk shell) before running this sample script.'
exit 1
end
ip = RemoteTkIp.new(wish)
ip.eval_proc{TkButton.new(:command=>proc{puts 'This procesure is on the controller-ip (Ruby/Tk)'}, :text=>'print on Ruby/Tk (controller-ip)').pack(:fill=>:x)}
ip.eval_proc{TkButton.new(:command=>'puts {This procesure is on the remote-ip (wish)}', :text=>'print on wish (remote-ip)').pack(:fill=>:x)}
# If your remote-ip is Ruby/Tk, you can control the remote Ruby by
# 'ruby' or 'ruby_eval' or 'ruby_cmd' on the Tk interpreter.
if ip.is_rubytk?
ip.eval_proc{TkButton.new(:command=>'ruby {p 111; p Array.new(3,"ruby")}', :text=>'ruby cmd on the remote-ip').pack(:fill=>:x)}
end
ip.eval_proc{TkButton.new(:command=>'exit', :text=>'QUIT').pack(:fill=>:x)}
TkButton.new(:command=>proc{exit}, :text=>'QUIT',
:padx=>10, :pady=>7).pack(:padx=>10, :pady=>7)
Tk.mainloop