@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ applications, the applications will not be truly stand-alone, as the application
4343will still need the Tcl and Tk libraries.
4444
4545One solution is to ship the application with the Tcl and Tk libraries, and point
46- to them at run-time using the :envvar: `TCL_LIBRARY ` and :envvar: `TK_LIBRARY `
46+ to them at run-time using the :envvar: `! TCL_LIBRARY ` and :envvar: `! TK_LIBRARY `
4747environment variables.
4848
4949To get truly stand-alone applications, the Tcl scripts that form the library
@@ -62,16 +62,17 @@ Can I have Tk events handled while waiting for I/O?
6262
6363On platforms other than Windows, yes, and you don't even
6464need threads! But you'll have to restructure your I/O
65- code a bit. Tk has the equivalent of Xt's :c:func: `XtAddInput() ` call, which allows you
65+ code a bit. Tk has the equivalent of Xt's :c:func: `! XtAddInput ` call, which allows you
6666to register a callback function which will be called from the Tk mainloop when
6767I/O is possible on a file descriptor. See :ref: `tkinter-file-handlers `.
6868
6969
7070I can't get key bindings to work in Tkinter: why?
7171-------------------------------------------------
7272
73- An often-heard complaint is that event handlers bound to events with the
74- :meth: `bind ` method don't get handled even when the appropriate key is pressed.
73+ An often-heard complaint is that event handlers :ref: `bound <bindings-and-events >`
74+ to events with the :meth: `!bind ` method
75+ don't get handled even when the appropriate key is pressed.
7576
7677The most common cause is that the widget to which the binding applies doesn't
7778have "keyboard focus". Check out the Tk documentation for the focus command.
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