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I'm making a program which gets database records with the PyMySQL module and then I want to display those records in Tkinter Entries. I already have the code to do that, but I want to add a functionality.

I want to give the user the functionality to doubleclick on an Entry of a row and get all Entry text of that row and parse them into the textboxes I declared before the For loop (UserID, First_Name etc). Say I have 5 Entries per row. If the user doubleclicks on (for example) Entry number 2 of Row 1, I want to get the text from all Entries in Row 1 and parse them into the textboxes respectively.

This is the code I currently have:

window = tk.Tk()
window.title("Flexbase") #Give window a name
window.update_idletasks()
width = 640
height = 480
x = (window.winfo_screenwidth() // 2) - (width // 2)
y = (window.winfo_screenheight() // 2) - (height // 2)
window.geometry('+{}+{}'.format(x, y))

GetRows_StringVariable = "SELECT * FROM SEC_USER"
cursor.execute(GetRows_StringVariable)
results = cursor.fetchall()

RowCounter = 1
ColumnCounter = -1
ListCounter = 0
RowListCounter = 0

rows = []

id_list = []
firstname_list = []
surname_list = []
username_list = []
email_list = []
password_list = []

tk.Label(window, text="Testing").grid(row=0, column=0, sticky=NSEW)
UserID_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, width=20, bg="white") #Create text box
UserID_TextBox.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky=W) #Give the text box a position in the window
FirstName_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, width=60, bg="white")
FirstName_TextBox.grid(row=2, column=0, sticky=W)
Surname_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, width=60, bg="white")
Surname_TextBox.grid(row=3, column=0, sticky=W)
Email_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, width=60, bg="white")
Email_TextBox.grid(row=4, column=0, sticky=W)
Username_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, width=20, bg="white")
Username_TextBox.grid(row=5, column=0, sticky=W)
Password_TextBox = tk.Entry(window, show="*", width=20, bg="white")
Password_TextBox.grid(row=6, column=0, sticky=W)

notebook = ttk.Notebook(window)
notebook.grid(row=7, column=0, sticky=NSEW)

page1 = ttk.Frame(notebook)
notebook.add(page1, text="Mass Editing Mode")
tk.Label(page1, text=SQL_ID, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold").grid(row=0, column=0, sticky=W)
tk.Label(page1, text=SQL_FIRSTNAME, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold").grid(row=0, column=1, sticky=W)
tk.Label(page1, text=SQL_SURNAME, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold").grid(row=0, column=2, sticky=W)
tk.Label(page1, text=SQL_USERNAME, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold").grid(row=0, column=3, sticky=W)
tk.Label(page1, text=SQL_EMAIL, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold").grid(row=0, column=4, sticky=W)


for row in results: # Page 1 TAB
    ColumnCounter += 1
    id_list.append(row[SQL_ID])
    a = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold")
    a.grid(row=RowCounter, column=ColumnCounter, sticky=W)
    a.insert(0, row[SQL_ID])
    ColumnCounter += 1
    firstname_list.append(row[SQL_FIRSTNAME])
    b = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold")
    b.grid(row=RowCounter,column=ColumnCounter,sticky=W)
    b.insert(0, row[SQL_FIRSTNAME])
    ColumnCounter += 1
    surname_list.append(row[SQL_SURNAME])
    c = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold")
    c.grid(row=RowCounter,column=ColumnCounter,sticky=W)
    c.insert(0, row[SQL_SURNAME])
    ColumnCounter += 1
    username_list.append(row[SQL_USERNAME])
    d = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold")
    d.grid(row=RowCounter, column=ColumnCounter, sticky=W)
    d.insert(0, row[SQL_USERNAME])
    ColumnCounter += 1
    email_list.append(row[SQL_EMAIL])
    e = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font="Arial 8 bold")
    e.grid(row=RowCounter, column=ColumnCounter, sticky=W)
    e.insert(0, row[SQL_EMAIL])

    RowCounter += 1
    ColumnCounter = -1
    ListCounter += 1
    RowListCounter += 1

This code produces a window with 5 Entries per row.

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2 Answers 2

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As @Florian Weimer already explained, you need to define one or more callback functions and attach it/them to each Entry.

Beyond that, I think you could (and should) eliminate as much of the redundant code you have, which will make it much smaller as well as easier to work on and enhance. In software development, this is called the DRY, for "don't repeat yourself", principle.

Since I don't have your database, I had to add this line:

db_keys = results[0].keys()  # Get list of keys from the first result.

to obtain a needed list of the keys in each record/row. You may already have such list in your database schema or wish to create it in a different manner.

import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import ttk
from tkinter.constants import *


window = tk.Tk()
window.title("Flexbase") #Give window entry name
window.update_idletasks()
width = 640
height = 480
x = (window.winfo_screenwidth() // 2) - (width // 2)
y = (window.winfo_screenheight() // 2) - (height // 2)
window.geometry('+{}+{}'.format(x, y))

GetRows_StringVariable = "SELECT * FROM SEC_USER"
#cursor.execute(GetRows_StringVariable)
#results = cursor.fetchall()

db_keys = results[0].keys()  # Get list of keys from the first result.

tk.Label(window, text="Testing").grid(row=0, column=0, sticky=NSEW)

# Create textbox Entry widgets.
textbox_ids = list(db_keys) + ['Password']
textbox_widths = 20, 60, 60, 60, 20, 20
textbox_shows  = '', '', '', '', '', '*'
textboxes = {}
for i, (id, width, show) in enumerate(zip(textbox_ids, textbox_widths, textbox_shows), 1):
    textboxes[id] = tk.Entry(window, width=width, show=show, bg="white")
    textboxes[id].grid(row=i, column=0, sticky=W)

# Double-click callback function for items in result rows.
def double_click_cb(ev, row):
    # Replace current values in textboxes with those from the selected row.
    for key, value in row.items():
        textboxes[key].delete(0, END)
        textboxes[key].insert(0, value)

notebook = ttk.Notebook(window)
notebook.grid(row=7, column=0, sticky=NSEW)

page1 = ttk.Frame(notebook)
notebook.add(page1, text="Mass Editing Mode")
nb_font = "Arial 8 bold"

# Create header row.
for i, key in enumerate(db_keys):
    tk.Label(page1, text=key, fg="black", font=nb_font).grid(row=0, column=i, sticky=W)

# Display results.
id_list = []
RowCounter = 1
for row in results:
    for ColumnCounter, key in enumerate(db_keys):
        id_list.append(row[key])
        entry = tk.Entry(page1, fg="black", font=nb_font)
        entry.grid(row=RowCounter, column=ColumnCounter, sticky=W)
        entry.insert(0, row[key])
        entry.bind("<Double-Button>", lambda e, r=row: double_click_cb(e, r))
    RowCounter += 1

window.mainloop()
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You can add this after creating the tk.Entry objects:

    for obj in (a, b, c, d):
        def double_click(ev, RowCounter=RowCounter):
            print("selected row:", RowCounter)
        obj.bind("<Double-Button>", double_click)

(RowCounter=RowCounter is needed to capture the current row value.)

With the row number, you should be able to get what you need from the results object.

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  • Do I add this after the for loop, outside the end of it? Jan 26, 2019 at 10:14
  • No, this has to be called for each row (so that all entry widgets are affected). You need to call bind before incrementing RowCounter, so that the row number value is correct. Jan 26, 2019 at 10:20
  • And how can I parse the row data into the textboxes? (I edited my question). Jan 26, 2019 at 10:24
  • The answer to that depends on the format of the text you are trying to parse. Jan 26, 2019 at 10:26

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