Constraint widgets
maintain additional state data for each child. For example,
client-defined constraints on the child's geometry may be specified.
When a constrained composite widget defines constraint resources, all of that
widget's children inherit all of those resources as their own. These
constraint resources are set and read just the same as any other resources
defined for the child. This resource inheritance extends exactly one
generation down, which means only the first-generation children of a
constrained composite widget inherit the parent widget's constraint
resources.
Because constraint resources are defined by the parent widgets and not
the children, the child widgets never directly use the constraint resource
data. Instead, the parents use constraint resource data to
attach child-specific data to children.
Classes
Constraint inherits behavior and resources from Composite
and Core.
The class pointer is constraintWidgetClass.
The class name is Constraint.
New resources
Constraint defines no new resources.
Inherited resources
Constraint inherits behavior and resources from Composite and
Core.
The following table defines a set of widget resources used by the programmer
to specify data. The programmer can also set the resource values for the
inherited classes to set attributes for this widget. To reference a
resource by name or by class in a .Xdefaults file,
remove the ``XmN'' or ``XmC'' prefix and use the remaining letters. To specify
one of the defined values for a resource in a .Xdefaults file,
remove the ``Xm'' prefix and use
the remaining letters (in either lowercase or uppercase, but include any
underscores between words).
The codes in the access column indicate if the given resource can be
set at creation time (C),
set by using XtSetValues (S),
retrieved by using XtGetValues (G), or is not applicable
(N/A).