Introduction
The keyboard widget allows ActionWidgets to be triggered by specific key combinations. There is also a shorthand for generating Messages via the message
and param
attributes.
Content and Attributes
The content of the <$keyboard>
widget is rendered normally. The keyboard shortcuts only take effect when the focus is within the contained content.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
actions | A string containing ActionWidgets to be triggered when the key combination is detected Introduced in v5.2.0 The variables: event-key, event-code and modifier are available for the actions |
message | The title of the WidgetMessage to generate |
param | The parameter to be passed with the WidgetMessage |
key | Key string identifying the key(s) to be trapped (see below) |
class | A CSS class to be assigned to the generated HTML DIV element |
tag | Introduced in v5.1.14 The html element the widget creates to capture the keyboard event, defaults to: » span when parsed in inline-mode» div when parsed in block-mode |
Variables
Introduced in v5.2.0 The following variables are made available to the actions:
Variables | Description |
---|---|
event-key | The event-key variable contains the character, if possible. eg: 1 . You can experiment with some settings at: Key Codes (Example) |
event-code | The event-code variable contains a character description. eg: Digit1 instead of 1 . Or Space instead of an empty string , which is hard to see |
event-key-descriptor | The event-key-descriptor variable is available if the keyboard event captured was configured using a keyboard shortcut descriptor of the form ((my-shortcut)) which references a configuration tiddler. |
modifier | The modifier Variable contains the Modifier Key held during the event (can be normal, ctrl, shift, alt or combinations thereof) |
Key Strings
Key strings are made up of one or more key specifiers separated by spaces. Each key specifier is zero or more of the modifiers alt, shift, ctrl or meta followed by the name of a key, all joined with "+" plus or "-" minus symbols. Key names are either the letter or digit printed on the key (eg "a" or "1"), or one of the special keys backspace, tab, enter or escape.
For example:
A
shift+A
shift+escape
ctrl+enter
ctrl+shift+alt+A