Is there a possibility to change the background-color of a Button
after hovering on it? What is the code for this in Tkinter?
2 Answers
Sadly the activebackground
and activeforeground
options only seem to work when you are clicking on the button rather than when you hover over the button. Use the <Leave>
and <Enter>
events instead
import tkinter as tk
def on_enter(e):
myButton['background'] = 'green'
def on_leave(e):
myButton['background'] = 'SystemButtonFace'
root = tk.Tk()
myButton = tk.Button(root,text="Click Me")
myButton.grid()
myButton.bind("<Enter>", on_enter)
myButton.bind("<Leave>", on_leave)
root.mainloop()
As pointed out in the comments, if we want multiple buttons, we can bind the buttons to functions that use the event data for the click event to change the background of the button.
import tkinter as tk
def on_enter(e):
e.widget['background'] = 'green'
def on_leave(e):
e.widget['background'] = 'SystemButtonFace'
root = tk.Tk()
myButton = tk.Button(root,text="Click Me")
myButton.grid()
myButton.bind("<Enter>", on_enter)
myButton.bind("<Leave>", on_leave)
myButton2 = tk.Button(root,text="Click Me")
myButton2.grid()
myButton2.bind("<Enter>", on_enter)
myButton2.bind("<Leave>", on_leave)
root.mainloop()
A slicker way to do it for multiple buttons would be to create a new Button class that modifies the behaviour of the default button so that the activebackground
actually works when you hover.
import tkinter as tk
class HoverButton(tk.Button):
def __init__(self, master, **kw):
tk.Button.__init__(self,master=master,**kw)
self.defaultBackground = self["background"]
self.bind("<Enter>", self.on_enter)
self.bind("<Leave>", self.on_leave)
def on_enter(self, e):
self['background'] = self['activebackground']
def on_leave(self, e):
self['background'] = self.defaultBackground
root = tk.Tk()
classButton = HoverButton(root,text="Classy Button", activebackground='green')
classButton.grid()
root.mainloop()
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1What if I want to change the image in the button when I hover over it? Nov 2, 2018 at 18:52
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7
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3A simpler way to handle multiple
Button
s that does require defining a subclass would be by making the bound functions get the widget from the event argument they are passed — i.e. in functionon_enter():
usee.widget.config(background='green'))
instead ofmyButton['background'] = 'green'
. Dec 20, 2020 at 21:51 -
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1scotty3785: Yep, that's how to make the callbacks reusable, as I suggested — so now your answer's even more comprehensive.
;¬)
Jan 7, 2021 at 15:17
Plain and simple
Context: Unix based computers, might not work for Windows nor MACOSX
In your Button
object properties you have the tags: activebackground
& activeforeground
that are activated whenever there is interaction with the instace created. That is: the button object you've created.
e.g.
from tkinter import *
root = Tk()
button = Button(root, text="Click me", bg="#000", fg="#fff", activebackground="#f00", activeforeground="#fff")
button.pack()
root.mainloop()
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2I almost skipped trying this answer because of the comments above and the fact that it had no votes. This should be the accepted answer. It works perfectly on mouseover for me on Linux python3.– mp035Nov 24, 2021 at 3:18
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1One thing that must be brought to heed's the fact that, there is the Button and the ttk.Button objects. See the solution for the ttk.Button object -> stackoverflow.com/questions/27347981/… Nov 26, 2021 at 12:16
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I think it has been upvoted less due to the fact that it doesn't seem to work for hovering within Windows 10, where many GUI apps are distributed. Jan 27, 2022 at 17:07
Button
s have options you can pass when constructing one that control their color when the cursor is over them calledactivebackground
andactiveforeground
, try setting and using those. Here's some documentation.