48

I'd like to know how to create a system tray popup message with python. I have seen those in lots of softaware, but yet difficult to find resources to do it easily with any language. Anyone knows some library for doing this in Python?

0

7 Answers 7

55

With the help of the pywin32 library you can use the following example code I found here:

from win32api import *
from win32gui import *
import win32con
import sys, os
import struct
import time
 
class WindowsBalloonTip:
    def __init__(self, title, msg):
        message_map = {
                win32con.WM_DESTROY: self.OnDestroy,
        }
        # Register the Window class.
        wc = WNDCLASS()
        hinst = wc.hInstance = GetModuleHandle(None)
        wc.lpszClassName = "PythonTaskbar"
        wc.lpfnWndProc = message_map # could also specify a wndproc.
        classAtom = RegisterClass(wc)
        # Create the Window.
        style = win32con.WS_OVERLAPPED | win32con.WS_SYSMENU
        self.hwnd = CreateWindow( classAtom, "Taskbar", style, \
                0, 0, win32con.CW_USEDEFAULT, win32con.CW_USEDEFAULT, \
                0, 0, hinst, None)
        UpdateWindow(self.hwnd)
        iconPathName = os.path.abspath(os.path.join( sys.path[0], "balloontip.ico" ))
        icon_flags = win32con.LR_LOADFROMFILE | win32con.LR_DEFAULTSIZE
        try:
           hicon = LoadImage(hinst, iconPathName, \
                    win32con.IMAGE_ICON, 0, 0, icon_flags)
        except:
          hicon = LoadIcon(0, win32con.IDI_APPLICATION)
        flags = NIF_ICON | NIF_MESSAGE | NIF_TIP
        nid = (self.hwnd, 0, flags, win32con.WM_USER+20, hicon, "tooltip")
        Shell_NotifyIcon(NIM_ADD, nid)
        Shell_NotifyIcon(NIM_MODIFY, \
                         (self.hwnd, 0, NIF_INFO, win32con.WM_USER+20,\
                          hicon, "Balloon  tooltip",msg,200,title))
        # self.show_balloon(title, msg)
        time.sleep(10)
        DestroyWindow(self.hwnd)
    def OnDestroy(self, hwnd, msg, wparam, lparam):
        nid = (self.hwnd, 0)
        Shell_NotifyIcon(NIM_DELETE, nid)
        PostQuitMessage(0) # Terminate the app.

def balloon_tip(title, msg):
    w=WindowsBalloonTip(title, msg)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    balloon_tip("Title for popup", "This is the popup's message")
4
  • Works, but I'd like it to be more "modern", different look&feel. Being able to add an image into the popup for example. Is that possible with this apprach?
    – Roman Rdgz
    Apr 10, 2013 at 9:58
  • 1
    haven't tried, but maybe giving the path to icon in place of the iconPathName might work
    – otaku
    Dec 7, 2016 at 7:24
  • 2
    This works, but only if you assign a random classname to lpszClassName. If you run the example as is, it will only display one bubble help and then on the next try fail with pywintypes.error: (1410, 'RegisterClass', 'Class already exists'). As a quick hack, I used from uuid import uuid4 and added uuid4() to the name.
    – 576i
    Mar 30, 2020 at 9:00
  • I'm a newbie in programming, how do I link this to my GUI script? The basic test works, but I am struggling to see a function which, upon double-click on the system tray icon, will open the programme. I also tried to open it using pythonw, but it is still opening as a normal taskbar application.
    – ISquared
    Jul 31, 2020 at 8:44
42

I recently used the Plyer package to create cross-platform notifications without pain, using the Notification facade (it have many other interesting things that are worth to take a look at).

Pretty easy to use:

from plyer.utils import platform
from plyer import notification

notification.notify(
    title='Here is the title',
    message='Here is the message',
    app_name='Here is the application name',
    app_icon='path/to/the/icon.{}'.format(
        # On Windows, app_icon has to be a path to a file in .ICO format.
        'ico' if platform == 'win' else 'png'
    )
)
5
  • 1
    When I use this lib, I got an error from python27_x64\lib\site-packages\plyer\platforms\win\libs\balloontip.py", line 145, in balloon_tip, of method WindowsBalloonTip(**kwargs), the error message is: TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'ticker'. It is windows7 with python 2.7.
    – WesternGun
    Jan 8, 2018 at 10:14
  • 3
    ... and checking the repo, a similar issue is posted already and the author suggests to install the latest dev release directly from Github, and that solves the problem. Great! pip install -I https://github.com/kivy/plyer/zipball/master
    – WesternGun
    Jan 8, 2018 at 10:24
  • 1
    Got an issue, after running the my app several times I got the notifications running without any problem, however, later on it started throwing exception [ Exception: Shell_NotifyIconW failed. ]
    – alex_z
    Mar 5, 2019 at 14:10
  • According to comments in plyer notification.notifiy function implementation, the app_icon needs to be in .ICO format when called on Windows (instead of .png).
    – Thijs
    Jul 28, 2020 at 13:46
  • @Thijs Yes, it's mentioned in the docs as well: plyer.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#plyer.facades.Notification. Updated my example script.
    – Epoc
    Aug 3, 2020 at 9:40
20

Here is the simple way to show notifications on windows 10 using python: module win10toast.

Requirements:

  • pypiwin32
  • setuptools

Installation:

>> pip install win10toast

Example:

from win10toast import ToastNotifier
toaster = ToastNotifier()
toaster.show_toast("Demo notification",
                   "Hello world",
                   duration=10)

Resultant of the code

5
  • Does this module support win8/7?
    – Exil
    Dec 17, 2018 at 6:28
  • 1
    @ExillustX I haven't tried on win8/7 I think PyQt5 package provides the similar behaviour on both win8/7. Do check that once. Dec 18, 2018 at 18:49
  • Can we give a time when this should pop up? Also can we save all notifications in a place? Like may be a file?
    – Anurag A S
    Apr 3, 2019 at 11:22
  • This made my program crash.
    – cslotty
    Oct 8, 2020 at 14:46
  • @ExillustX I ran it on Windows 7 and it worked fine.But it is different with Windows 10 notifications
    – Nima
    Nov 20, 2020 at 11:28
9

Windows

There's now an official way to achieve that using Python/Winrt, the github explains how to map UWP API to python ones.

By following the official UWP documentation I've managed to display a small notification that also appears in Windows notification center :

import winrt.windows.ui.notifications as notifications
import winrt.windows.data.xml.dom as dom

#create notifier
nManager = notifications.ToastNotificationManager
notifier = nManager.create_toast_notifier();

#define your notification as string
tString = """
<toast>
    <visual>
        <binding template='ToastGeneric'>
            <text>Sample toast</text>
            <text>Sample content</text>
        </binding>
    </visual>
</toast>
"""

#convert notification to an XmlDocument
xDoc = dom.XmlDocument()
xDoc.load_xml(tString)

#display notification
notifier.show(notifications.ToastNotification(xDoc))

The setup is limited to the installation of the library

pip install winrt

Requirements

Windows 10, October 2018 Update or later

Python for Windows, version 3.7 or later

pip, version 19 or later

Bonus macOS

I've also found a way to do it in macOS by using AppleScript, the goal of the following code is to build an AppleScript code that will be executed via python os.system

import os

def displayNotification(message,title=None,subtitle=None,soundname=None):
    """
        Display an OSX notification with message title an subtitle
        sounds are located in /System/Library/Sounds or ~/Library/Sounds
    """
    titlePart = ''
    if(not title is None):
        titlePart = 'with title "{0}"'.format(title)
    subtitlePart = ''
    if(not subtitle is None):
        subtitlePart = 'subtitle "{0}"'.format(subtitle)
    soundnamePart = ''
    if(not soundname is None):
        soundnamePart = 'sound name "{0}"'.format(soundname)

    appleScriptNotification = 'display notification "{0}" {1} {2} {3}'.format(message,titlePart,subtitlePart,soundnamePart)
    os.system("osascript -e '{0}'".format(appleScriptNotification))

Use asis :

displayNotification("message","title","subtitle","Pop")

Final notes

I've sum up all the previous code in two gists

Windows

macOS

5
  • 1
    From Microsoft with love?
    – ChipJust
    Oct 2, 2019 at 17:28
  • 1
    notifier = nManager.create_toast_notifier() # raises an exception Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> RuntimeError: Element not found.
    – ChipJust
    Oct 2, 2019 at 17:47
  • Indeed it seems that recent update of windows (or API/Configuration changes) breaks this code. (other developper reported the same behavior in the comment section of my gist)
    – Marc_Alx
    Oct 7, 2020 at 12:56
  • 1
    Is there any way to connect the buttons of the toast notification to an action? Or is there any way to get the inputs of the toast notification?
    – Andy_ye
    Jan 24, 2021 at 14:29
  • winrt does not seem to be installable with pip in 3.11, winrt does not seem to be maintained anymore. There is a community supported fork though, winsdk
    – BoZenKhaa
    Mar 6 at 12:34
6

You will need to use a 3rd party python GUI library or the pywin32 library. TkInter, the GUI toolkit that comes bundled with python does not support system tray pop ups.

Multiform neutral libraries that support working with the system tray:

  • wxPython
  • PyGTK
  • PyQT

Windows specific library that supports working with the system tray:

  • pywin32

Information/example of system tray pop ups using wxpython on windows:

2
5

in Linux system , You could use inbuilt command notify-send.

ntfy library can be used for sending push notifications.

click here for ntfy documentation

installation:

sudo pip install ntfy

examples:

ntfy send "your message!"
ntfy -t "your custom title" send "your message"
1
  • 1
    I would add that this is a python program called from the command line and not an internal Python command
    – tc88
    Oct 26, 2017 at 5:49
-1

The easiest way of that is by using win10toast

This is the Code:

from win10toast import ToastNotifier

Notifi = ToastNotifier()  
Notifi.show_toast("Title", "Description")

This will may help you!

1
  • 1
    How does this provide new value as compared to Ananth Kumar Vasamsetti's answer? Oct 5, 2021 at 8:11

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