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TCL: GUI/widget needed for two customized buttons

User: "Kruger"
Altair Community Member
Updated by Kruger

Hello -  I am trying to create a macro, but I want to have customized buttons in a pop-up window rather than yes/no.  Here is how I create the yes/no pop-up:

tk_messageBox -title $version -type yesno -message "Ask question here...?"

Do I need a widget instead?

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    User: "Brett Ramsey_20633"
    New Altair Community Member
    Accepted Answer
    Updated by Brett Ramsey_20633
    <span class="ph Blue">I would personally always work with dialogs. <br /><br />An example of a dialog with custom button can be seen below. <br /><br />if {[winfo exists .d]} {destroy .d} <br /><br />set dlg [::hwtk::dialog .d -title "Custom Buttons"]<br /><br />set f [.d recess]<br /><br />::hwtk::button $f.b1 -text "Text Here" -help "Text only" -command Button1<br /><br />pack $f.b1<br /><br />$dlg buttonconfigure ok -command onOK<br /><br />proc Button1 {} {<br /><br /> puts "Button 1 Success"<br /><br />}<br />proc onOK {} {<br /><br /> .d unpost<br /> puts "Proceed"<br /> <br />}<br /><br />.d post<br /></span>
    <span class="ph Blue">Dialogs are very flexible and can contain many different types of base widgets. This should do what you are asking to do. <br /><br />Hope this helps <br /></span>
    User: "Kruger"
    Altair Community Member
    OP
    Updated by Kruger

    Hello -

      Thank you.  That worked.  How can I customize it to look like the attached pic?

    User: "Brett Ramsey_20633"
    New Altair Community Member
    Updated by Brett Ramsey_20633

    To match the look of the picture you attached you can do the following...

    change the -title option to your preference 

    change the -text option of the button command to read option 1

    add another button with the options you want (make sure to pack this one with the new path name you specify)

    Dialogs have the buttons apply, ok, and cancel built into them. You can remove them by using $dlg (variable name you assigned your pathname for the dialog) hide cancel (the button you want to hide) should look like this "$dlg hide cancel"

    Make sure you add the command for what you want the buttons to do. Without this the button press will not mean anything. 

    This should do what you want it to do. I will also point you to our online help https://2021.help.altair.com/2021.2/hwdesktop/altair_help/topics/reference/hwtk/hwtk_dialog.htm . It can be very helpful it is quite thorough. 

    Hope this helps

    User: "Kruger"
    Altair Community Member
    OP
    Updated by Kruger

    Thank you.  That worked well!