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I have been working with several tkinter tutorials including one with Text window and a very helpful tutorial but with out text window. See here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oV68QJJUXTU

I have tried to add a Text window to this example but found the constant END was not defined and the Text window did not open or show up in the frame. I traced it down to a difference in the import. Using "from tkinter import *" the constant END was defined (it was 'end') but using the method of this tutorial, "import tkinter as tk" the constant END was not defined. I defined it to clear the error when I try to use Text window the window never opens (never shows up) in the example so I think either I have to rewrite to use the import * method or I need to understand how to over come the import as tk difference.

It seams that importing as tk is likely to be the more correct method rather than as * so that is the way I think I should be learning to do it.

Any suggestions out there?

This code works

from tkinter import *
.....

class set_window(Thread):

    def __init__(self, labelText):
        Thread.__init__(self)
        self.labelText = labelText
        self.labelText.set("Text Window Display")  

        self.T = Text(root, height=40, width=60, bd=10)
        self.T.grid(row=1, column=0)
        self.T.focus_set()
        self.T.insert(END, "Just a text Widget\nin two lines\n")

But this did not:

    import tkinter as tk

    class StartPage(tk.Frame):
    def __init__(self, parent, controller):
        tk.Frame.__init__(self, parent)
        label = tk.Label(self, text="Blast it!", font=XLARGE_FONT)
        label.pack(pady=10, padx=10)

        label_2 = tk.Label(self, text="Input Text Here", font=LARGE_FONT)
        label_2.pack(pady=10, padx=10)

        self.T = tk.Text(self, height=40, width=60, bd=10)        
#        print(type(END))
#        input ("Press Enter")
        self.T.insert(END, "Just a text Widget\nin two lines\n")
        self.T.insert('end', "Just a text Widget\nin two lines\n")
        self.T.focus_set()
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  • Use the string "end" instead of END or tk.END. There's no reason to use the constant. Oct 12, 2017 at 16:15
  • I think I have found some of my answer. I changed "END" to "tk.END" and I added the pack statement as follows.self.T.pack() Oct 12, 2017 at 16:29
  • Hello Bryan. Thanks for the clue on the "tk.END". The constant END seams to be what many programmers users and it is defined in the module. So I think that is reason to do so. I am groping in the dark here. Oct 12, 2017 at 16:33
  • 1
    there's nothing special going on here. tkinter provides constants such as END that are nothing more than the string "end". If you do import tkinter, then it's tkinter.END. if you do from tkinter import * then it's just END. This is simply how all python importing works. Oct 12, 2017 at 16:35

3 Answers 3

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If you want to access END which is available when you do from tkinter import *, you'd have to access it as tk.END when you do import tkinter as tk. Or, you can simply use 'end'. Another solution would be from tkinter.constants import END.

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  • I would say to always use the quoted method. This will prevent problems no mater how you are importing.
    – Mike - SMT
    Oct 12, 2017 at 18:17
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I found that I had to prefix the END constant as tk.END and that cleared on error.

I found I had to add a PACK statement after the Text window insert statement. The page code becomes:

class StartPage(tk.Frame):

def __init__(self, parent, controller):
    tk.Frame.__init__(self, parent)
    label = tk.Label(self, text="Blast it!", font=XLARGE_FONT)
    label.pack(pady=10, padx=10)

    label_2 = tk.Label(self, text="Input Text Here", font=LARGE_FONT)
    label_2.pack(pady=10, padx=10)

    self.T = tk.Text(self, height=40, width=60, bd=10)        
    self.T.insert(tk.END, "Just a text Widget\nin two lines\n")
    self.T.focus_set()
    self.T.pack()
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  • Please do not answer your own question when one was given that is accurate. You should delete this post and accept @mentalita as the correct answer. Also I do not think you need focus_set() here. It serves no useful purpose that I can see in your code.
    – Mike - SMT
    Oct 12, 2017 at 18:19
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use "end" instead of END

from tkinter import *
 self.T.insert("end", "Just a text Widget\nin two lines\n")

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