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I'm trying to do a GUI to do a plot. The idea is that when I click "Submit" the plot will pop up, if I then click "Submit" again, the plot should close and open again.

However, When I click "Submit" the plot shows up correctly, but I need to close the plot window manually for the button to release again?

I've cleaned up my code to only contain the essentials:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt  # import plot functions
from mpl_toolkits.mplot3d import Axes3D
from Tkinter import *

################################ TKINTER GUI ##################################

root = Tk()

label_1 = Label(root, text="File name:")
entry_1 = Entry(root)
entry_1.insert(0,"Input")
label_1.grid(sticky=E)
entry_1.grid(row=0, column=1, columnspan=3)

def saveentry():
    plt.close()
    name1 = entry_1.get()

################################### PLOTTING ##################################

    fig = plt.figure()
    ax = fig.gca(projection='3d') 

    plt.show(fig)

Button_1 = Button(root, text="Submit", command=saveentry)
Button_1.grid(row=7,column=0, sticky=E)

root.mainloop()

# END OF SCRIPT

What am I doing wrong?

1 Answer 1

2

You need to switch the backend from Qt4 to Tk. What you're currently doing is you open a Qt based plot window from a Tkinter based application. This work but isn't interoperable.

Insert the following line somewhere at the top (not in the saveentryfunction):

plt.switch_backend('TkAgg')  # TkAgg (instead Qt4Agg)
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  • It works like an absolute charm when I run the Python script, however, when I export the script into an exe file the same problem persists. It's as if the line with the backend switch is not recognized?
    – Martin
    Apr 13, 2018 at 10:43
  • @Martin What do you freeze your Python script with? cxfreeze? Py2Exe? I guess you need to add all the Qt library stuff to the exclude list. This should also make your exe smaller. Apr 13, 2018 at 10:47
  • @Günter sorry, I'm brand new to Python, but I assume that "freeze" means the py to exe converter? In that case, I'm using "Auto Py to Exe".
    – Martin
    Apr 13, 2018 at 11:14
  • @Martin Yes, "freezing" is the act of packaging Python scripts and dependencies into a executable that doesn't need the Python runtime installed. Your GUI program uses PyInstaller under the hood, it effectively just constructs a lengthy command line (see "advanced" button). I'd ditch it completely to be honest and just work with the command line. Then you can refer to stackoverflow.com/a/17595149/8137043 to edit the packaged libraries. Apr 13, 2018 at 11:41
  • @ Günther I've tried just using the pyinstaller command line and manipulated the .spec file to exclude the PyQt4 package. However, now the program won't run at all? I'm not really sure how to get an overview of what to exclude and what not to exclude?
    – Martin
    Apr 15, 2018 at 10:48

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