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How to make a simple pop-up balloon message on mac. I don't want to use NSUserNotification. Using python-2.7 and osx 10.8.5. POP-UP should not have any button. POP-UP should come, display message and go automatically. It should be packaged properly with py2app also.

import objc
import Foundation
import AppKit

def notify(title, subtitle, info_text, delay=0, sound=False, userInfo={}):
    NSUserNotification = objc.lookUpClass('NSUserNotification')
    NSUserNotificationCenter = objc.lookUpClass('NSUserNotificationCenter')
    notification = NSUserNotification.alloc().init()
    notification.setTitle_(title)
    notification.setSubtitle_(subtitle)
    notification.setInformativeText_(info_text)
    notification.setUserInfo_(userInfo)
    if sound:
        notification.setSoundName_("NSUserNotificationDefaultSoundName")
    notification.setDeliveryDate_(Foundation.NSDate.dateWithTimeInterval_sinceDate_(delay, Foundation.NSDate.date()))
    NSUserNotificationCenter.defaultUserNotificationCenter().scheduleNotification_(notification)


def notificationBalloon(title,msg):
    notify(title1, msg1,"", sound=False) 
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    What have you tried so far? Also, I love the "It should be packaged properly with py2app also" part. Surely you would want to do some of the work yourself? Nov 19, 2013 at 7:06
  • @vape I am trying a lot from last 8 days. NSUserNotification has issues with delegate setting in python for overriding the frontmost application. I also looked into wiki.python.org/moin/GuiProgramming but didn't found any helpful thing.
    – imp
    Nov 19, 2013 at 7:13
  • Do you not want to use NSUserNotification because you can't figure out how to set a delegate?
    – Glyph
    May 12, 2017 at 6:03

1 Answer 1

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You can use the display dialog statement in AppleScript and call the script with the subprocess module's call function.

It may seems a bit 'hackish', but since you needed a Mac only solution, I guess this is the easiest and the lightest solution you can get since you don't have to use any kind of external library or framework when you pack your project into a .app file.

enter image description here

import subprocess

applescript = """
display dialog "Some message goes here..." ¬
with title "This is a pop-up window" ¬
with icon caution ¬
buttons {"OK"}
"""

subprocess.call("osascript -e '{}'".format(applescript), shell=True)
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  • POP-UP should come, display message and go automatically. So no need for button. Moreover it is showing error 0:1: syntax error: A ‚Äú/‚Äù can‚Äôt go here. (-2740)
    – imp
    Nov 19, 2013 at 9:06
  • I'm in Mac OS X 10.9 and using Python 3 and works for me -- try to remove the ¬ symbols and make a long one line string and try to run that.
    – Peter Varo
    Nov 19, 2013 at 9:08
  • how about trying to import os and then use: os.system("osascript -e '{}'".format(applescript)) instead of subprocess?
    – Peter Varo
    Nov 19, 2013 at 9:16
  • applescript = """display dialog "Some message goes here..." with title "This is a pop-up window" with icon caution buttons {"OK"}""" os.system("osascript -e '{}'".format(applescript)) same 0:112: execution error: No user interaction allowed. (-1713) error.
    – imp
    Nov 19, 2013 at 9:21
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    okay, let's try something else: open your terminal.app, and copy-paste this line, and then press enter: osascript -e 'display dialog "Some message goes here..." with title "This is a pop-up window" with icon caution buttons {"OK"}'
    – Peter Varo
    Nov 19, 2013 at 9:24

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