Background
Hello everyone! I am currently working on a basic GUI text editor which can load and save text files. I want to use multiple frames for the toolbar and the textbox as I learned here. I am using OOP, and have set up my frames in the __init__
method, and the widgets in the widget
method. For some reason, the widgets are unable to be placed within their respective Frames.
Code
from Tkinter import *
class Application:
def __init__(self,parent): #initialize the grid and widgets
self.myParent = parent
#Init the toolbar
self.toolbar = Frame(parent)
self.toolbar.grid(row = 0)
#Init frame for the text box
self.mainframe = Frame(parent)
self.toolbar.grid(row = 1)
def widget(self):#Place widgets here
#Save Button
self.saveButton = Button (self, self.toolbar,
text = "Save", command = self.saveMe)
self.saveButton.grid(column = 0, row = 0, sticky = W)
#Open Button
self.openButton = Button (self, self.toolbar,
text = "Open", command = self.openMe)
self.openButton.grid(column = 0, row = 1, sticky = W)
#Area where you write
self.text = Text (self, self.mainframe,
width = (root.winfo_screenwidth() - 20),
height = (root.winfo_screenheight() - 10))
self.text.grid(row = 2)
Questions
Still using different methods, how can I make sure that each widget is placed in the correct Frame?
- If this is not possible, please just show me how to do it using OOP - I am most comfortable with Tkinter in that setting and have promised myself to improve.
Please explain your answer. I need to cognate - not simply nod my head at the computer and go right along.
Extra Credit: How would I initialize multiple windows (each window being a different class) using Tkinter in OOP? For instance, if this was my code:
class MainWindow(Frame): ---init stuff--- def widget(self): newWindow = Button(self, text = "click for a new window", command = self.window) newWindow.grid() def window(self): #What would I put in here to initialize the new window?? class theNextWindow(Frame):
What would I put in the
window.self
method to make thetheNextWindow
window visible?
Thanks for everyone's help!
EDIT 1
I added the line self.widget()
in the __init__
method, and I was rewarded with this "wonderful" error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "D:\Python Programs\Text Editor\MyTextv2.py", line 67, in <module>
app = Application(root)
File "D:\Python Programs\Text Editor\MyTextv2.py", line 14, in __init__
self.widget()
File "D:\Python Programs\Text Editor\MyTextv2.py", line 24, in widget
text = "Save", command = self.saveMe)
File "C:\Python27\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.py", line 2044, in __init__
Widget.__init__(self, master, 'button', cnf, kw)
File "C:\Python27\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.py", line 1965, in __init__
BaseWidget._setup(self, master, cnf)
File "C:\Python27\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.py", line 1943, in _setup
self.tk = master.tk
AttributeError: Application instance has no attribute 'tk'
As the error log clearly references my mainloop here: File "D:\Python Programs\Text Editor\MyTextv2.py", line 67, in <module>
app = Application(root)
I decided to add it:
root = Tk()
root.title("My Text Editor")
#This is wierd - it gets the computer windows dimensions
w, h = root.winfo_screenwidth(), root.winfo_screenheight()
root.overrideredirect(0)
#And then applies them here
root.geometry("%dx%d+0+0" % (w, h))
app = Application(root)
root.mainloop()
widget
is not a very good name for a method. Methods do things, a good method name indicates what the method does. A better name forwidget()
would besetUpWidgets()
orsetUpWindow()
..widget()
, so none of the code within that method gets executed. Where's the code to run all of this stuff?widget()
is not a great name? PS: This is a n00b question: how do I do the code-quotes on Windows 7?