Basically an entry box instance with a button to initiate gfile
.
gfile(
text = "",
type = c("open", "save", "selectdir"),
initial.filename = NULL,
initial.dir = getwd(),
filter = list(),
multi = FALSE,
...,
toolkit = guiToolkit()
).gfile(
toolkit,
text = "",
type = c("open", "save", "selectdir"),
initial.filename = NULL,
initial.dir = getwd(),
filter = list(),
multi = FALSE,
...
)
gfilebrowse(
text = "Select a file...",
type = c("open", "save", "selectdir"),
initial.filename = NULL,
initial.dir = getwd(),
filter = list(),
quote = TRUE,
handler = NULL,
action = NULL,
container = NULL,
...,
toolkit = guiToolkit()
)
.gfilebrowse(
toolkit,
text = "Select a file...",
type = c("open", "save", "selectdir"),
initial.filename = NULL,
initial.dir = getwd(),
filter = list(),
quote = TRUE,
handler = NULL,
action = NULL,
container = NULL,
...
)
initial text
type of browser: to open a file, to save a file or to select a directory
Suggested file name
initial directory. If a filename is given, and is not an absolute name, this will be prepended. If filename given initial directory will be taken from that.
A filter specifiation. This can be a named character vector of file extensions or something toolkit specific. Here are some examples:
characterc("csv"="csv","txt"="txt")
RGtk2 Something like
list("All files" = list(patterns = c("*")), "R files" = list(patterns = c("*.R", "*.Rdata")), "text files" = list(mime.types = c("text/plain")) )
tcltk
Qt
Logical. Allow multiple files to be selected?
These values are passed to the add
method of the
parent container. Examples of values are expand
,
fill
, and anchor
, although they're not always
supported by a given widget. For more details see add.
Occasionally the variable arguments feature has been used to sneak
in hidden arguments to toolkit implementations. For example, when
using a widget as a menubar object one can specify a parent
argument to pass in parent information, similar to how the
argument is used with gaction and the dialogs.
Each widget constructor is passed in the toolkit it
will use. This is typically done using the default, which will
lookup the toolkit through guiToolkit
.
quote output
A handler assigned to the default change
signal. Handlers are called when some event triggers a widget to
emit a signal. For each widget some default signal is assumed, and
handlers may be assigned to that through addHandlerChanged
or at construction time. Handlers are functions whose first
argument, h
in the documentation, is a list with atleast
two components obj
, referring to the object emitting the
signal and action
, which passes in user-specified data to
parameterize the function call.
Handlers may also be added via addHandlerXXX
methods for
the widgets, where XXX
indicates the signal, with a default
signal mapped to addHandlerChanged
(cf. addHandler
for a listing). These methods pass
back a handler ID that can be used with blockHandler
and
unblockHandler
to suppress temporarily the calling of the
handler.
User supplied data passed to the handler when it is called
A parent container. When a widget is created it can be incorporated into the widget heirarchy by passing in a parent container at construction time. (For some toolkits this is not optional, e.g. gWidgets2tcltk or gWidgets2WWW2.)
returns filename(s) or character(0)
if no selection.
Returns an object of class gFilebrowse
. This should
inherit the methods of gedit
instances.