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I am having trouble converting my PIL image into a Tkinter image, here is my class:

class GameText():
    def __init__(self, parent, xPos, yPos, text, tag="default"):
        global drawTex
        self.parent = parent
        self.xPos = xPos
        self.yPos = yPos
        self.text = str(text)
        self.tag = tag

        image = Image.new("RGBA", (400, 400), None)

        draw = ImageDraw.Draw(image)
        draw.text((0, 0), self.text, font=font, fill="white")
        del draw

        drawTex = ImageTk.PhotoImage(image)
        self.image = self.parent.create_image(self.xPos, self.yPos, image=drawTex, tag=self.tag)

No image is displayed at all if drawTex isn't global, and even when it is, only one image is displayed, if I were to create these two objects, only the last would appear.

self.test1 = GameText(self, 300, 300, "ab")
self.test2 = GameText(self, 300, 300, "hi")

Why does drawTex have to be global and why does only the last image get displayed?

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  • What is your question? Nov 17, 2014 at 1:45
  • Why does drawTex have to be global and why does only the last image get displayed? (Also edited it in) Nov 17, 2014 at 1:52
  • because without it, drawTex is a local variable that gets garbage-collected when the method returns. Nov 17, 2014 at 3:13
  • Yeah, I guess I didn't realise the variable well still required after the image was created, not too sure why the question is getting downvoted though :/ Nov 17, 2014 at 3:27

1 Answer 1

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Just resolved it myself, I have no idea why but adding self. to drawTex makes it work as intended.

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  • adding self to drawTex has the same (generally) effect as globalising drawTex.
    – W1ll1amvl
    Nov 17, 2014 at 2:19
  • 1
    ...because prepending self. to the drawTex variable saved the PhotoImage instance created as an attribute of the GameText object rather than in a local variable -- so it's no longer deleted as soon as the __init__() method returns.
    – martineau
    Nov 17, 2014 at 2:22

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