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I'm not familiar with python and specially with GUI issues. I'm trying to add image from other class, I found a way to add other object but not images. This code work fine:

from Tkinter import *
from PIL import Image, ImageTk

class Application(Frame):
    def __init__(self, master=None):
        Frame.__init__(self, master)
        self.parent = master
        self.initUI()

    def initUI(self):
        self.outputBox = Text(self.parent, bg='black', height= 10, fg='green', relief=SUNKEN, yscrollcommand='TRUE')
        self.outputBox.pack(fill='both', expand=True)



def main():
    root = Tk()
    app = Application(root)
    app.parent.geometry('800x500')
    app.parent.configure(background = 'red')
    path = "../img/Stalin.jpeg"
    img = ImageTk.PhotoImage(Image.open(path))
    panel = Label(app.parent, image = img)
    panel.pack(side = "bottom", fill = "both", expand = "yes")  
    app.mainloop()

main()

But when I try to add image from class it's open the window but without the image:

from Tkinter import *
from PIL import Image, ImageTk

class Application(Frame):
    def __init__(self, master=None):
        Frame.__init__(self, master)
        self.parent = master
        self.initUI()

    def initUI(self):
        self.outputBox = Text(self.parent, bg='black', height= 10, fg='green', relief=SUNKEN, yscrollcommand='TRUE')
        self.outputBox.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
        path = "../img/Stalin.jpeg"
        img = ImageTk.PhotoImage(Image.open(path))
        panel = Label(self.parent, image = img)
        panel.pack(side = "bottom", fill = "both", expand = "yes")  

def main():
    root = Tk()
    app = Application(root)
    app.parent.geometry('800x500')
    app.parent.configure(background = 'red')
    app.mainloop()

main()

working with python 2.7 on eclipse.

1 Answer 1

2

As given here -

You can use the label to display PhotoImage and BitmapImage objects. When doing this, make sure you keep a reference to the image object, to prevent it from being garbage collected by Python’s memory allocator. You can use a global variable or an instance attribute.

(Emphasis mine)

But in your second example, the image object img is a local variable in initUI() method, hence when the method ends the image gets garbage collected (especially in CPython, since it uses reference counting) . You should store the image as an instance attribute -

def initUI(self):
    self.outputBox = Text(self.parent, bg='black', height= 10, fg='green', relief=SUNKEN, yscrollcommand='TRUE')
    self.outputBox.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
    path = "../img/Stalin.jpeg"
    self.img = ImageTk.PhotoImage(Image.open(path))
    panel = Label(self.parent, image = self.img)
    panel.pack(side = "bottom", fill = "both", expand = "yes")  

It works in your first case, because you enter the mainloop from main() method, hence the main() method does not end until the mainloop() ends, and hence the image does not get garbage collected until the application quits.

1
  • Thank you! I wouldn't have thought of garbage collection being an issue. Nov 21, 2015 at 14:48

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