markup cleanups

This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2006-07-29 23:34:57 +00:00
parent 2d5c8e3bb1
commit d457a97beb
2 changed files with 11 additions and 11 deletions

View file

@ -103,14 +103,14 @@ of an application. Each instance has its own associated Tcl interpreter.
\end{classdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{Tcl}{screenName=None, baseName=None, className='Tk', useTk=0}
The \function{Tcl} function is a factory function which creates an object
much like that created by the \class{Tk} class, except that it does not
initialize the Tk subsystem. This is most often useful when driving the Tcl
interpreter in an environment where one doesn't want to create extraneous
toplevel windows, or where one cannot (i.e. Unix/Linux systems without an X
server). An object created by the \function{Tcl} object can have a Toplevel
window created (and the Tk subsystem initialized) by calling its
\method{loadtk} method.
The \function{Tcl} function is a factory function which creates an
object much like that created by the \class{Tk} class, except that it
does not initialize the Tk subsystem. This is most often useful when
driving the Tcl interpreter in an environment where one doesn't want
to create extraneous toplevel windows, or where one cannot (such as
\UNIX/Linux systems without an X server). An object created by the
\function{Tcl} object can have a Toplevel window created (and the Tk
subsystem initialized) by calling its \method{loadtk} method.
\versionadded{2.4}
\end{funcdesc}
@ -316,10 +316,10 @@ is called \code{.} (period) and children are delimited by more
periods. For example, \code{.myApp.controlPanel.okButton} might be
the name of a widget.
\item[\var{options} ]
\item[\var{options}]
configure the widget's appearance and in some cases, its
behavior. The options come in the form of a list of flags and values.
Flags are proceeded by a `-', like Unix shell command flags, and
Flags are proceeded by a `-', like \UNIX{} shell command flags, and
values are put in quotes if they are more than one word.
\end{description}