A tree view is a pane that displays a hierarchical list of items. Each item may optionally have an image and a checkbox.
A list of the root items.
Returns the children of an item and hence defines the hierarchy in the tree.
Optional function which determines whether an item is a leaf item (that is, has no children). This is useful if it can be computed faster than the children-function .
Specifies if the tree view remembers whether hidden nodes were expanded.
A designator for a function of one argument, or nil
.
A boolean. The default value is nil
.
A function designator for a function of two arguments.
Controls the area within which selection by the mouse right button occurs. Default t
.
Controls whether the line and expanding boxes of the root items are drawn. Default t
.
Initargs for handling check boxes. Note that these do not work on Cocoa:
Controls whether the tree has checkboxes, except on Cocoa. If non-nil, the value should be a non-negative integer less than the length of the image-list, or t
.
An integer specifies the default initial status, and t
means the same as 2 (that is, by default the checkboxes are checked initially).
The default is nil
, meaning no checkboxes.
Controls the change in status when the user clicks on a checkbox. Can be an array, a function or an integer. Default #(2 2 0)
.
Controls the changes in the ancestors when the status of an item is changed.
Controls the changes in the descendants when the status of an item is changed.
A function called when the status of an item is changed interactively.
Specifies the initial status of specific items.
Returns a state image for an item.
A plist of keywords and image-list objects.
Flag to specify whether items have images. Defaults to t
.
Flag to specify whether items have state images. Defaults to nil
.
Defaults to 16.
Defaults to 16.
tree-view-roots
tree-view-children-function
tree-view-image-function
tree-view-state-image-function
tree-view-leaf-node-p-function
tree-view-retain-expanded-nodes
tree-view-expandp-function
tree-view-action-callback-expand-p
tree-view-right-click-extended-match
tree-view-has-root-line
tree-view-checkbox-next-map
tree-view-checkbox-parent-function
tree-view-checkbox-status
tree-view-checkbox-child-function
tree-view-checkbox-change-callback
tree-view-checkbox-initial-status
The tree view pane allows the user to select between items displayed in a hierarchical list. Although it is a choice, only :single-selection
interaction
is supported. Use extended-selection-tree-view if you need other selection interaction styles.
The hierarchy of items in the tree is defined by the children-function , which must be a function taking a single argument (an item) and returning a list of child items. When an item is expanded, whether programmatically, automatically, or in response to a user gesture, the system calculates what children this item has by calling the children-function on it.
Both the
roots
and what children the
children-function
returns for an item can be any object. However, the list must not include an object which is cl:eql
to another object in the tree. To work sensibly it also needs to be consistent over time, that is return the same objects each time it is called, unless the state of the entity that the tree represents changes. It should also be reasonably fast, as the user will be waiting to see the items.
If the tree is supposed to display items that are "the same" in different parts of the tree, you can define a "wrapper", typically cl:defstruct
with a few slots, and return a list of these wrappers (each pointing to the actual object). This wrapping is also useful for keeping other information related to the display in the tree, for example the string or the image to display, and maybe cache the children.
If leaf-node-p-function is not supplied, the children-function is also used to decide whether unexpanded nodes are leaf items or not (and hence whether to display the expanding box). If the children-function is slow, this may slow significantly the display of large trees. If it is possible to check for the existence of children faster, you should supply leaf-node-p-function to avoid this slow down.
The default value of
children-function
is (constantly false)
, that is no children, and hence only the roots are displayed.
expandp-function
controls automatic expansion of nodes (items) in the tree-view
. By default, initially only the items specified by the
roots
argument are displayed. This initial display can be altered by supplying a function
expandp-function
which allows further items to be displayed. If supplied,
expandp-function
should be a function which is called on the
roots
and is called recursively on the children if it returns true. When the user expands a node,
expandp-function
is called on each newly created child node, which is expanded if this call returns true, and so on recursively. The default value of
expandp-function
is nil
so that there is no automatic expansion and only the root nodes are visible initially.
The default value of
retain-expanded-nodes
is t
.
Any item which has children has a small expansion button next to it to indicate that it can be expanded. When the user clicks on this button, the children items (as determined by the children function) are displayed.
If action-callback-expand-p is true, then the activate gesture expands a collapsed node, and collapses an expanded node. This expansion and contraction of the node is additional to any supplied action-callback .
delete-item-callback
is called when the user presses the
Delete
key. Two arguments are passed: the tree-view
and the selected item
item
. Note that, apart from calling the callback, the system does nothing in response to the
Delete
key. In particular, if you want to remove the selected
item
,
delete-item-callback
needs to do it by changing what the
children-function
returns when called on the parent of
item
. Normally you also need to to call tree-view-update-item with
in-parent
= t
to actually update the tree on the screen.
Note also that in extended-selection-tree-view (a subclass of tree-view
), if the
interaction
was not explicitly changed to :single-selection
, the second argument to
delete-item-callback
is a list of the selected items (even when only one item is selected).
The image-function is called on an item to return an image associated with the item. It can return one of the following:
This specifies the filename of a file suitable for loading with load-image. Currently this must be a bitmap file.
The symbol must have been previously registered by means of a call to register-image-translation. It can also one of the following symbols, which map to standard images: :std-cut
, :std-copy
, :std-paste
, :std-undo
, :std-redo
, :std-delete
, :std-file-new
, :std-file-open
, :std-file-save
, :std-print
, :std-print-pre
, :std-properties
, :std-help
, :std-find
and :std-replace
.
On Microsoft Windows, the following symbols are also recognized. They map to view images: :view-large-icons
, :view-small-icons
, :view-list
, :view-details
, :view-sort-name
, :view-sort-size
, :view-sort-date
, :view-sort-type
, :view-parent-folder
, :view-net-connect
, :view-net-disconnect
and :view-new-folder
.
Also on Microsoft Windows, these symbols are recognized. They map to history images: :hist-back
, :hist-forward
, :hist-favorites
, :hist-addtofavorites
and :hist-viewtree
.
An image object, as returned by load-image.
This allowing a single bitmap to be created which contains several button images side by side. See make-image-locator for more information. On Microsoft Windows, it also allows access to bitmaps stored as resources in a DLL.
This is a zero-based index into the tree-view's image lists. This is generally only useful if the image list is created explicitly. See image-list for more details.
The
state-image-function
is called on an item to determine the state image: an additional optional image used to indicate the state of an item. It can return one of the objects listed above, just as for
image-function
, or nil
to indicate that there is no state image. See also
checkbox-status
, which overrides the
state-image-function
.
If image-lists is specified, it should be a plist containing the following keywords as keys. The corresponding values should be image-list objects.
Specifies an image-list
object that contains the item images. The
image-function
should return a numeric index into this image-list
.
Specifies an image-list
object that contains the state images. The
state-image-function
should return a numeric index into this image-list
.
If
right-click-extended-match
is nil
, the mouse right button gesture within the tree view selects an item only when the cursor is on the item. Otherwise, this gesture also selects an item to the left or right of the cursor. The default for
right-click-extended-match
is t
.
If
has-root-line
is nil
, the vertical root line and expanding boxes of the root items are not drawn. This is useful in two cases:
(setf tree-view-expanded-p)
.(setf tree-view-roots)
or by passing :roots
to make-instance
. In a typical choice, you would do (setf collection-items)
or pass :items
to make-instance
.
The default for
has-root-line
is t
.
If the checkbox-status is non-nil then the tree view provides an automatic way of using the state images as checkboxes (except on Cocoa where check boxes are not supported). The state-image is defaulted to a set of images containing checkboxes and the state-image-function is ignored, but each item has a status that is a non-negative integer no greater than the number of images in state-image-list . The status specifies which image is displayed alongside item .
When item is expanded in the tree for the first time, the status of each child is set to item 's status. The status can be changed interactively by the user:
The status can also be read and set programmatically (see tree-view-item-checkbox-status).
When the status of an item changes:
By default checkboxes have three statuses indicated by images: un-checked(0), gray-checked(1) and checked(2). If an item is checked or un-checked, then all its descendants have the same status. If an item is gray-checked, then its descendants have various statuses. When the status of an item changes, all the descendants of that item change to the same status, and all its ancestors change to gray-checked.
For non-default status-changing behavior, specify checkbox-next-map . The value can be
When the status of an item is changed, the statuses of items above and below it in the tree may also be changed: the system recurses up and down the tree using checkbox-parent-function and checkbox-child-function respectively.
To recurse upwards, checkbox-parent-function is called on the parent with five arguments: the parent, the parent's status, the item, the item's status and an flag which is non-nil if all the items at the same level as the item now have the same status:
checkbox-parent-function parent parent-status item item-status all-items-same-p => new-parent-status , recurse-up , recurse-down
If
new-parent-status
differs from
parent-status
, then the status of
parent
is set to
new-parent-status
. If
recurse-up
is non-nil, then the system recurses up from parent, and if
recurse-down
is non-nil, the system recurses down. The default
checkbox-parent-function
returns (values
new-item-status
t nil)
where
new-item-status
is
item-status
if
all-items-same-p
is non-nil and 1
otherwise.
To recurse downwards, checkbox-child-function is called on each child with four arguments and the results are used similarly to those of checkbox-parent-function :
checkbox-child-function child child-status item item-status => new-child-status , recurse-up , recurse-down
The default
checkbox-child-function
returns (values
parent-status
nil t)
.
Note: if an item has never been expanded, then it has no children. If an item has been collapsed, then it has children even though they are not currently visible.
checkbox-parent-function and checkbox-child-function should not modify the tree in any way.
checkbox-change-callback takes three arguments: the tree, a list of items and their new status:
checkbox-change-callback tree items new-status
This is called after the new statuses of items and their ancestors and descendants have been resolved.
checkbox-initial-status
is used the first time that each specified item, which can be anywhere in the tree, appears. The value is a list of conses of items and their initial statuses, for example ((item1. 2) (item2. 0))
. When
item
is displayed, its status is set from this list or, if item is not specified, from
checkbox-status
. Items are removed from the list when they are displayed and setting the list does not affect the checkbox status of items that have already been displayed. Note that check boxes are not supported on Cocoa.
:selected-item
has no effect. See the examples in interface-display for a way to set the selected item in a tree view.tree-view
is a subclass of collection, it does its own items handling and you must not access its
items
and related slots directly. In particular for tree-view
do not pass :items
, :items-count-function
, :items-get-function
or :items-map-function
, and do not use the corresponding accessors.tree-view
after its
selection-callback
returns. If you need this callback to set the focus elsewhere, call set-pane-focus outside the callback, like this:(mp:process-send process
(list 'capi:set-pane-focus pane ))
This example shows how to combine an XML parser with tree-view
to display an RSS file.
(example-edit-file "capi/applications/rss-reader")
There are further examples in Self-contained examples.
choice
extended-selection-tree-view
tree-view-ensure-visible
tree-view-expanded-p
tree-view-item-checkbox-status
tree-view-item-children-checkbox-status
tree-view-update-item
CAPI elements
Choices - panes with items
Working with images
Drag and Drop
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Unix version) - 3 Aug 2017