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I posted a question here and I was advised to restructure the code. It's now different enough that I feel it justifies asking a new question.

Anyway, I'm trying to add drag/drop functionality to a listbox, but I figured a good first step would be to get the event binding working in the first place. Currently, when I click on the list I get the following error upon clicking the listbox. The listbox window appears, but when I click it the error occurs.

 "AttributeError: make_list instance has no attribute 'nearest'.

Also, when I print listbox in the build_listbox method, the following decimal is printed .40720520L. Shouldn't this print the values in the listbox? Afterall, it's in the same method. Is the listbox not being created properly?

from Tkinter import *
import Tkinter

class make_list:

    def move_mouse(self, event):
        self.curIndex = event.nearest(event.y)
        print self.curIndex

    def click_button(self, event):
        w= event.widget
        self.curIndex = int(w.curselection()[0])
        #print self.curIndex
        value = w.get(self.curIndex)
        print value

    def build_main_window(self):
        self.build_listbox()

    def build_listbox(self):
        listbox = Listbox()
        listbox.bind('<<ListboxSelect>>', self.click_button)
        listbox.bind('<B1-Motion>', self.move_mouse)
        for item in ["one", "two", "three", "four"]:
            listbox.insert(END, item)    
        listbox.insert(END, "a list entry")
        listbox.pack()
        print listbox
        return

if __name__ == '__main__':
    start = make_list()
    start.build_main_window()
    mainloop()
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  • Can you post the full traceback so we know which line is generating the exception?
    – mgilson
    Jan 23, 2013 at 16:59
  • Actually you're getting an AttributeError: Event instance has no attribute 'nearest' on the first line in the move_mouse() definition. That's because the event object doesn't have a nearest method function attribute.
    – martineau
    Jan 23, 2013 at 16:59
  • 1
    BTW, the PEP 8 naming convention for classes is CapCase so make_list should be MakeList.
    – martineau
    Jan 23, 2013 at 17:03
  • 1
    ListBox objects have a curselection() method which returns the line numbers of the selected element(s) which is what you should be using. I suggest you spend some time reading one of the many Tkinter tutorials that exist on the web and in various books.
    – martineau
    Jan 23, 2013 at 17:19
  • 1
    Sorry, my mistake. listvariable is widget option not an attribute, so retrieving its current value is done with listbox.cget('listvariable') -- however, for unknown reasons, that returns an empty string. What does work is listbox.get(0, END) which returns the tuple ('one', 'two', 'three', 'four', 'a list entry'). BTW, the ListBox instance created in build_listbox() is stored in the local variable listbox and will automatically be deleted when the function returns -- so I suggest you instead (or also) assign the value to self.listbox to prevent that from happening.
    – martineau
    Jan 23, 2013 at 20:15

1 Answer 1

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The value you get when you do a print on a Tkinter widget is largely irrelevant to the user, it is merely the name of a Tcl variable that was created for you.

Now, since apparently your code is working (by quickly going through the comments in the question), I would suggest doing the drag & drop functionality in a different manner. For instance, if we had a list of values that was associated to the values in the Listbox, then it would be much easier to do the task if we could update this list and then it would reflect upon the Listbox display, right ? Too bad we don't have such thing in Python, but for the moment consider the following code:

import Tkinter

def list_click(event):
    w = event.widget
    index = w.nearest(event.y)
    w._selection = index

def list_motion(event):
    w = event.widget
    if w._selection is None:
        return
    index = w.curselection()[0]
    w._var.swap(index, w._selection)
    w._selection = index

def list_clear(event):
    event.widget._selection = None

root = Tkinter.Tk()

v = ListVar(values=('one', 'two', 'three', 'four'))
v.append('a list entry')

listbox = Tkinter.Listbox(listvar=v)
listbox.pack()

listbox._selection = None
listbox._var = v
listbox.bind('<1>', list_click)
listbox.bind('<B1-Motion>', list_motion)
listbox.bind('<ButtonRelease-1>', list_clear)

root.mainloop()

This code works in the following manner: when a mouse click happens in the listbox it marks the nearest item as "selected", when you move the mouse it swaps the items and update the selection, when you release the mouse button it clears the selection. What is missing is this ListVar thing then. Here it is:

class ListVar(Tkinter.Variable):
    def __init__(self, master=None, name=None, **kwargs):
        Tkinter.Variable.__init__(self, master, kwargs.get('values'), name)

    def set(self, values):
        self._tk.call('set', self._name, values)

    def set_index(self, index, value):
        self._tk.call('lset', self._name, index, value)

    def get_index(self, index):
        return self._tk.eval('lindex $%s %d' % (self._name, index))

    def get(self, start=None, end=None):
        if start is None and end is None:
            res = self._tk.eval('lrange $%s 0 end' % self._name)
        elif end is None:
            res = self._tk.eval('lrange $%s %d end' % (self._name, start))
        else:
            res = self._tk.eval('lrange $%s %d %d' % (self._name, start, end))
        return self._tk.splitlist(res)

    def swap(self, a, b):
        if a != b:
            tmp = self.get_index(a)
            self.set_index(a, self.get_index(b))
            self.set_index(b, tmp)

    def append(self, value):
        self._tk.eval('lappend %s {%s}' % (self._name, value))

It is very rough, will fail if you pass a value like "hello{", etc. This can be improved in many ways.

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