NAME

Prima::X11 - usage guide for X11 environment

DESCRIPTION

This document describes subtle topics one must be aware when programming or using Prima programs under X11.

The document covers various aspects of the toolkit and their implementation details with guidelines of the expected use. Also, standard X11 user-level and programming techniques are visited.

Basic command-line switches

--help

Prints the command-line arguments available and exits.

--display

Sets X display address in Xlib notation. If not set, standard Xlib ( XOpenDisplay(null) ) behavior applies.

Example:

--display=:0.1
--visual

Sets X visual, to be used by default. Example:

--visual=0x23
--sync

Turn off X synchronization

--bg, --fg

Set default background and foreground colors. Example:

--bg=BlanchedAlmond
--font

Sets default font. Example:

--font='adobe-helvetica-medium-r-*-*--*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*'
--no-x11

Runs Prima without X11 display initialized. This switch can be used for programs that use only OS-independent parts of Prima, such as image subsystem or PostScript generator, in environments where X is not present, for example, a CGI script. Obviously, any attempt to create instance of Prima::Application or otherwise access X-depended code under such conditions causes the program to abort.

There are alternatives to use the command switch. First, there is module Prima::noX11 for the same purpose but more convenient to use as

perl -MPrima::noX11

construct. Second, there is a technique to continue execution even if connection to a X server failed:

use Prima::noX11;
use Prima;

my $error = Prima::XOpenDisplay();
if ( defined $error) {
     print "not connected to display: $error\n";
} else {
	print "connected to display\n";
}

The Prima::noX11 module exports a single function XOpenDisplay into Prima namespace, to connect to the X display explicitly. The display to be connected to is $ENV{DISPLAY}, unless started otherwise on command line ( with --display option) or with parameter to the XOpenDisplay function.

This technique may be useful to programs that use Prima imaging functionality and may or may not use windowing capabilites.

X resources database

X11 provides XRDB, the X resource database, a keyed list of arbitrary string values stored on the X server. Each key is a combination of names and classes of widgets, each in string form. The key is constructed so the leftmost substring ( name or class ) corresponds to the top-level item in the hierarchy, usually the application name or class. Although the XRDB can be changed via native X API, it is rarely done by applications. Instead, the user creates a file, usually named .Xdefaults, which contains the database in the string form.

The format of .Xdefaults directly reflects XRDB capabilities, one of the most important of which is globbing, manifested via * ( star ) character. Using globbing, the user can set up a property value that corresponds to multiple targets:

*.ListBox.backColor: yellow

The string above means that all widgets of ListBox class must have yellow background.

The application itself is responsible for parsing the strings and querying the XRDB. Also, both class names and widget names, as well as database values are fully defined in terms of the application. There are some guidelines though, for example, colors and fonts best described in terms, native to the X server. Also, classes and names are distinguished by the case: classes must begin with the upper register letter. Also, not every character can be stored in the XRDB database ( space, for example, cannot) , and therefore XRDB API automatically converts these to _ ( underscore ) characters.

Prima defines its all set of resources, divided in two parts: general toolkit settings and per-widget settings. The general settings functionality is partially overloaded by command-line arguments. Per-widget settings are fonts and colors, definable for each Prima widget.

All of the general settings are applicable to the top-level item of widget hierarchy, named after the application, and Prima class. Some of these, though, are needed to be initialized before the application instance itself is created, so these can be accessed via Prima class only, for example, Prima.Visual. Some, on the contrary, may occasionally overlap with per-widget syntax. In particular, one must vary not to mix

Prima.font: some-font

with

Prima*font: some-font

The former syntax is a general setting, and sets the default Prima font. The latter is a per-widget assignment, and explicitly sets font to all Prima widgets, effectively ruining the toolkit font inheritance scheme. The same is valid for an even more oppressive

*font: some-font

record.

The allowed per-widget settings are colors and font settings only ( see corresponding sections ). It is an arguably useful feature to map all widget properties onto XRDB, but Prima does not implement this, primarily because no one asked for it, and also because this creates unnecessary latency when enumeration of all properties for each widget takes place.

All global settings have identical class and name, varied in the case of the first letter. For example, to set Submenudelay value, one can do it either by

Prima.Submenudelay: 10

or

Prima.submenudelay: 10

syntax. Despite that these calls are different, in a way that one reaches for the whole class and another for the name, for the majority of these properties it does not matter. To avoid confusion, for all properties their names and class are given as PropetyClass.propertyname index.

Fonts

Default fonts

Prima::Application defines set of get_default_XXX_font functions, where each returns some user-selected font, to be displayed correspondingly in menu, message, window captions, all other widgets, and finally a default font. While in other OS'es these are indeed standard configurable user options, raw X11 doesn't define any. Nevertheless, as the high-level code relies on these, corresponding resources are defined. These are:

  • font - Application::get_default_font

  • caption_font - Application::get_caption_font. Used in Prima::MDI.

  • menu_font - Widget::get_default_menu_font. Default font for pull-down and pop-up menus.

  • msg_font - Application::get_message_font. Used in Prima::MsgBox.

  • widget_font - Widget::get_default_font.

All of the global font properties can only be set via Prima class, no application name is recognized. Also, these properties are identical to --font, --menu-font, --caption-font, --msg-font, and --widget-font command-line arguments. The per-widget properties are font and popupFont, of class Font, settable via XRDB only:

Prima*Dialog.font: my-fancy-dialog-font
Prima.FontDialog.font: some-conservative-font

By default, Prima font is 12.Helvetica .

X core fonts

The values of the font entries are standard XLFD strings, the default *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-* pattern, where each star character can be replaced by a particular font property, as name, size, charset, and so on. To interactively select an appropriate font, use standard xfontsel program from X11 distribution.

Note, that encoding part of the font is recommended to left unspecified, otherwise it may clash with LANG environment variable, which is used by Prima font subsystem to determine which font to select when no encoding is given. This advice, though, is correct only when both LANG and encoding part of a desired font match. In order to force a particular font encoding, the property Prima.font must contain one.

Alternatively, and/or to reduce X font traffic, one may set IgnoreEncodings.ignoreEncodings property, which is a semicolon- separated list of encodings Prima must not account. This feature has limited usability when for example fonts in Asian encodings result in large font requests. Another drastic measure to decrease font traffic is a boolean property Noscaledfonts.noscaledfonts, which, if set to 1, restricts the choice of fonts to the non-scalable fonts only.

Xft fonts

Prima can compile with Xft library, which contrary to core X font API, can make use of client-side fonts. Plus, Xft offers appealing features as font antialiasing, unicode, and arguably a better font syntax. The Xft font syntax is inherited from fontconfig library and to be consulted from man fonts-conf, but currently ( November 2003 ) basic font descriptions can be composed as follows:

Palatino-12

A font with name Palatino and size 12.

Arial-10:BI

A font with name Arial, size 10, bold, italic. The fontconfig syntax allows more than that, for example, arbitrary matrix transformations, but Prima can make use only of font name, size, and style flags.

The XFT library does internal memory management that is not necessary optimal for text with large amount of glyphs, f.ex. chinese. If display of these text is slow, try to increase memory for glyph caching by setting

Xft.maxglyphmemory: 10485760

(f.ex. for 10M per program cache) to the input for your xrdb.

--no-xft

--no-xft command-line argument, and boolean UseXFT.usexft XRDB property can be used to disable use of the Xft library.

--no-core-fonts

Disables all X11 core fonts, except fixed fonts. The fixed font is selected for the same reasons that X server is designed to provide at least one font, which usually is fixed.

It is valid to combine --no-core-fonts and --no-xft. Moreover, adding --noscaled to these gives Prima programs a 'classic' X look.

--font-priority

Can be set to either xft or core, to select a font provider mechanism to match unknown or incompletely specified fonts against.

Default value: xft ( if compiled in ), core otherwise.

--no-aa

If set, turns off Xft antialiasing.

Colors

XRDB conventions

X traditionally contains a color names database, usually a text file named rgb.txt. Check your X manual where exactly this file resides and what is its format. The idea behind it is that users can benefit from portable literal color names, with color values transparently adjustable to displays capabilities. Thus, it is customary to write

color: green

for many applications, and these in turn call XParseColor to convert strings into RGB values.

Prima is no exception to the scheme. Each widget can be assigned eight color properties: color, hiliteBackColor, disabledColor, dark3DColor backColor, hiliteColor, disabledBackColor, light3DColor by their name:

Prima.backColor: #cccccc

Additionally, set of command-line arguments allows overriding default values for these:

  • --fg - color

  • --bg - backColor

  • --hilite-fg - hiliteColor

  • --hilite-bg - hiliteBackColor

  • --disabled-fg - disabledColor

  • --disabled-bg - disabledBackColor

  • --light - light3DColor

  • --dark - dark3DColor

Visuals

X protocol works with explicitly defined pixel values only. A pixel value, maximum 32-bit value, represents a color in a display. There are two different color coding schemes - direct color and indexed color. The direct color-coded pixel value can unambiguously be converted into a RGB-value, without any external information. The indexed-color scheme represents pixel value as an index in a palette, which resided on X server. Depending on the color cell value of the palette, RGB color representation can be computed. A X display can contain more than one palette, and allow ( or disallow ) modification of palette color cells depending on a visual, the palette is attributed to.

A visual is a X server resource, containing representation of color coding scheme, color bit depth, and modificability of the palette. X server can ( and usually does ) provide more than one visual, as well as different bit depths. There are six classes of visuals in X paradigm. In each, Prima behaves differently, also depending on display bit depth available. In particular, color dithering can be used on displays with less than 12-bit color depth. On displays with modifiable color palette, Prima can install its own values in palettes, which may result in an effect known as display flashing. To switch to a non-default visual, use Prima.Visual XRDB property or --visual command-line argument. List of visuals can be produced interactively by standard xdpyinfo command from X distribution, where each class of visual corresponds to one of six visual classes:

StaticGray

All color cells are read-only, and contain monochrome values only. A typical example is a two-color, black-and-white monochrome display. This visual is extremely rarely met.

GrayScale

Contains modifiable color palette, and capable of displaying monochrome values only. Theoretically, any paletted display on a monochrome monitor can be treated as a GrayScale visual. For both GrayScale and StaticGray visuals Prima resorts to dithering if it cannot get at least 32 evenly spaced gray values from black to white.

StaticColor

All color cells are read-only. A typical example is a PC display in a 16-color EGA mode. This visual is rarely met.

PseudoColor

All color cells are modifiable. Typically, 8-bit displays define this class for a default visual. For both StaticColor and PseudoColor visuals dithering is always used, although for PseudoColor Prima resorts to that only if X server cannot allocate another color.

On PseudoColor and GrayScale Prima allocates a small set of colors, not used in palette modifications. When a bitmap is to be exported via clipboard, or displayed in menu, or sent to a window manager as an icon to be displayed, it is downgraded to using these colors only, which are though guaranteedly to stay permanent through life of the application.

TrueColor

Each pixel value is explicitly coded as RGB. Typical example are 16, 24, or 32-bit display modes. This visual class is the best in terms of visual quality.

DirectColor

Same as TrueColor, but additionally each pixel value can be reprogrammed. Not all hardware support this visual, and usually by default it is not set. Prima supports this mode in exactly same way as TrueColor without additional features.

Images

As described in the previous section, X does not standardize pixel memory format for TrueColor and DirectColor visuals, so there is a chance that Prima wouldn't work on some bizarre hardware. Currently, Prima knows how to compose pixels of 15, 16, 24, and 32 bit depth, of contiguous ( not interspersed ) red-green-blue memory layout. Any other pixel memory layout causes Prima to fail.

Prima supports shared memory image X extension, which speeds up image display for X servers and clients running on same machine. The price for this is that if Prima program aborts, the shared memory will never be returned to the OS. To remove the leftover segments, use your OS facilities, for example, ipcrm on *BSD.

To disable shared memory with images, use --no-shmem switch in command-line arguments.

The clipboard exchange of images is incompletely implemented, since Prima does not accompany ( and neither reads ) COLORMAP, FOREGROUND, and BACKGROUND clipboard data, which contains pixel RGB values for a paletted image. As a palliative, the clipboard-bound images are downgraded to a safe set of colors, locked immutable either by X server or Prima core.

On images in the clipboard: contrary to the text in the clipboard, which can be used several times, images seemingly cannot. The Bitmap or Pixmap descriptor, stored in the clipboard, is rendered invalid after it has been read once.

Window managers

The original design of X protocol did not include the notion of a window manager, and latter is was implemented as an ad-hoc patch, which results in race conditions when configuring widgets. The extreme situation may well happen when even a non-top level widget may be influenced by a window manager, when for example a top-level widget was reparented into another widget, but the window manager is not aware or this yet.

The consequences of this, as well as programming guidances are described in Prima::Window. Here, we describe other aspects of interactions with WMs, as WM protocols, hints, and properties.

Prima was tested with alternating success under the following window managers: mwm, kwin, wmaker, fvwm, fvwm2, enlightment, sawfish, blackbox, 9wm, olvm, twm, and in no-WM environment.

Protocols

Prima makes use of WM_DELETE_WINDOW and WM_TAKE_FOCUS protocols. While WM_DELETE_WINDOW use is straightforward and needs no further attention, WM_TAKE_FOCUS can be tricky, since X defines several of input modes for a widget, which behave differently for each WM. In particular, 'focus follows pointer' gives pains under twm and mwm, where navigation of drop-down combo boxes is greatly hindered by window manager. The drop-down list is programmed so it is dismissed as soon its focus is gone; these window managers withdraw focus even if the pointer is over the focused widget's border.

Hints

Size, position, icons, and other standard X hints are passed to WM in a standard way, and, as inter-client communication manual ( ICCCM ) allows, repeatedly misinterpreted by window managers. Many ( wmaker, for example ) apply the coordinates given from the program not to the top-level widget itself, but to its decoration. mwm defines list of accepted icon sizes so these can be absurdly high, which adds confusion to a client who can create icon of any size, but unable to determine the best one.

Non-standard properties

Prima tries to use WM-specific hints, known for two window managers: mwm and kwin. For mwm ( Motif window manager ) Prima sets hints of decoration border width and icons only. For kwin ( and probably to others, who wish to conform to specifications of http://www.freedesktop.org/ ) Prima uses NET_WM_STATE property, in particular its maximization and task-bar visibility hints.

Use of these explicitly contradicts ICCCM, and definitely may lead to bugs in future ( at least with NET_WM_STATE, since Motif interface can hardly expected to be changed ). To disable the use of non-standard WM properties, --icccm command-line argument can be set.

Unicode

X does not support unicode, and number of patches were applied to X servers and clients to make the situation change. Currently ( 2003 ) standard unicode practices are not emerged yet, so Prima copes up with what ( in author's opinion ) is most promising: Xft and iconv libraries.

Fonts

X11 supports 8-bit and 16-bit text string display, and neither can be used effectively to display unicode strings. A XCreateFontSet technique, which combines several fonts under one descriptor, or a similarly implemented technique is the only way to provide correct unicode display.

Also, core font transfer protocol suffers from ineffective memory representation, which creates latency when fonts with large span of glyphs is loaded. Such fonts, in still uncommon though standard iso10646 encoding, are the only media to display multi-encoding text without falling back to hacks similar to XCreateFontSet.

These, and some other problems are efficiently solved by Xft library, a superset of X core font functionality. Xft features Level 1 ( November 2003 ) unicode display and supports 32-bit text strings as well as UTF8-coded strings. Xft does not operate with charset encodings, and these are implemented in Prima using iconv charset convertor library.

Input

Prima does not support extended input methods ( XIM etc ), primarily because the authors are not acquainted with CIJK problem domain. Volunteers are welcome.

Clipboard

Prima supports UTF8 text in clipboard via UTF8_STRING transparently, although not by default.

Prima::Application-> wantUnicodeInput(1)

is the easiest ( see Prima::Application ) way to initiate UTF8 clipboard text exchange.

Due to the fact that any application can take ownership over the clipboard at any time, open/close brackets are not strictly respected in X11 implementation. Practically, this means that when modern X11 clipboard daemons ( KDE klipper, for example ) interfere with Prima clipboard, the results may not be consistent from the programmer's view, for example, clipboard contains data after clear call, and the like. It must be noted though that this behavior is expected by the users.

Other XRDB resources

Timeouts

Raw X11 provides no such GUI helpers as double-click event, cursor, or menu. Neither does it provide the related time how often, for example, a cursor would blink. Therefore Prima emulates these, but allows the user to reprogram the corresponding timeouts. Prima recognizes the following properties, accessible either via application name or Prima class key. All timeouts are integer values, representing number of milliseconds for the corresponding timeout property.

Blinkinvisibletime.blinkinvisibletime: MSEC

Cursor stays invisible MSEC milliseconds.

Default value: 500

Blinkvisibletime.blinkvisibletime: MSEC

Cursor stays visible MSEC milliseconds.

Default value: 500

Clicktimeframe.clicktimeframe MSEC

If 'mouse down' and 'mouse up' events are follow in MSEC, 'mouse click' event is synthesized.

Default value: 200

Doubleclicktimeframe.doubleclicktimeframe MSEC

If 'mouse click' and 'mouse down' events are follow in MSEC, 'mouse double click' event is synthesized.

Default value: 200

When the used clicks on a menu item, which points to a lower-level menu window, the latter is displayed after MSEC milliseconds.

Default value: 200

Scrollfirst.scrollfirst MSEC

When an auto-repetitive action, similar to keystroke events resulting from a long key press on the keyboard, is to be simulated, two timeout values are used - 'first' and 'next' delay. These actions are not simulated within Prima core, and the corresponding timeouts are merely advisable to the programmer. Prima widgets use it for automatic scrolling, either by a scrollbar or by any other means. Also, Prima::Button in autoRepeat mode uses these timeouts for emulation of a key press.

Scrollfirst is a 'first' timeout.

Default value: 200

Scrollnext.scrollnext MSEC

A timeout used for same reasons as Scrollfirst, but after it is expired.

Default value: 50

Miscellaneous

Visual.visual: VISUAL_ID

Selects display visual by VISUAL_ID, which is usually has a form of 0x??. Various visuals provide different color depth and access scheme. Some X stations have badly chosen default visuals (for example, default IRIX workstation setup has 8-bit default visual selected), so this property can be used to fix things. List of visuals, supported by a X display can be produced interactively by standard xdpyinfo command from X distribution.

Identical to --visual command-line argument.

See Color for more information.

Wheeldown.wheeldown BUTTON

BUTTON is a number of X mouse button event, treated as 'mouse wheel down' event.

Default value: 5 ( default values for wheeldown and wheelup are current de-facto most popular settings ).

Wheelup.wheelup BUTTON

BUTTON is a number of X mouse button event, treated as 'mouse wheel up' event.

Default value: 4

Debugging

The famous 'use the source' call is highly actual with Prima. However, some debug information comes compiled in, and can be activated by --debug command-line key. Combination of letters to the key activates debug printouts of different subsystems:

  • C - clipboard

  • E - events subsystem

  • F - fonts

  • M - miscellaneous debug info

  • P - palettes and colors

  • X - XRDB

  • A - all of the above

Example:

--debug=xf

Also, the built-in X API XSynchronize call, which enables X protocol synchronization ( at expense of operation slowdown though ) is activated with --sync command-line argument, and can be used to ease the debugging.

GTK

Prima can be compiled with GTK, and can use its colos and font scheme, and GTK file dialogs. This can be disabled with --no-gtk command line switch.

On MacOSX, GTK usually comes with Quartz implementation, which means that Prima will get into problems with remote X11 connections. Prima tries to detect this condition, but if trouble persists, please use --no-gtk switch (and please file a bug report so this can be fixed, too).

Quartz

Prima can be compiled with Cocoa library on MacOSX, that gives access to screen scraping functionality of Application.get_image, that is otherwise is non-functional with XQuartz. To disable it, use --no-quartz runtime switch.

AUTHOR

Dmitry Karasik, <dmitry@karasik.eu.org>.

SEE ALSO

Prima, Prima::gp-problems, Prima::Widget, Nye A, Xlib programming manual. O'Reilly & Associates, 1995.