98

I'm writing a program with Python's tkinter library.

My major problem is that I don't know how to create a timer or a clock like hh:mm:ss.

I need it to update itself (that's what I don't know how to do); when I use time.sleep() in a loop the whole GUI freezes.

1

8 Answers 8

149

Tkinter root windows have a method called after which can be used to schedule a function to be called after a given period of time. If that function itself calls after you've set up an automatically recurring event.

Here is a working example:

# for python 3.x use 'tkinter' rather than 'Tkinter'
import Tkinter as tk
import time

class App():
    def __init__(self):
        self.root = tk.Tk()
        self.label = tk.Label(text="")
        self.label.pack()
        self.update_clock()
        self.root.mainloop()

    def update_clock(self):
        now = time.strftime("%H:%M:%S")
        self.label.configure(text=now)
        self.root.after(1000, self.update_clock)

app=App()

Bear in mind that after doesn't guarantee the function will run exactly on time. It only schedules the job to be run after a given amount of time. It the app is busy there may be a delay before it is called since Tkinter is single-threaded. The delay is typically measured in microseconds.

10
  • 1
    Will not the recursive calls to itself cause the "maximum recursions for a python object reached" error? Dec 29, 2017 at 5:20
  • 6
    @SatwikPasani: no, because it's not a recursive call. It merely puts a job on a queue. Dec 29, 2017 at 12:20
  • how to run func only once with delay?
    – user924
    Apr 17, 2018 at 10:28
  • 2
    @user924: self.root.after(delay, func). Apr 17, 2018 at 10:55
  • Note @stochastic13 , trying to bypass .after (by hacking together some usage of threading.Timer()) will result in an increasing number of created threads. Suggest sticking with .after, especially in OOP python.
    – rdtsc
    Jul 22, 2022 at 0:25
12

Python3 clock example using the frame.after() rather than the top level application. Also shows updating the label with a StringVar()

#!/usr/bin/env python3

# Display UTC.
# started with https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/tkinter.html#module-tkinter

import tkinter as tk
import time

def current_iso8601():
    """Get current date and time in ISO8601"""
    # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
    # https://xkcd.com/1179/
    return time.strftime("%Y%m%dT%H%M%SZ", time.gmtime())

class Application(tk.Frame):
    def __init__(self, master=None):
        tk.Frame.__init__(self, master)
        self.pack()
        self.createWidgets()

    def createWidgets(self):
        self.now = tk.StringVar()
        self.time = tk.Label(self, font=('Helvetica', 24))
        self.time.pack(side="top")
        self.time["textvariable"] = self.now

        self.QUIT = tk.Button(self, text="QUIT", fg="red",
                                            command=root.destroy)
        self.QUIT.pack(side="bottom")

        # initial time display
        self.onUpdate()

    def onUpdate(self):
        # update displayed time
        self.now.set(current_iso8601())
        # schedule timer to call myself after 1 second
        self.after(1000, self.onUpdate)

root = tk.Tk()
app = Application(master=root)
root.mainloop()
5
  • 2
    This is a good answer, with one important thing - the time displayed is really the system time, and not some accumulated error time (if you wait "about 1000 ms" 60 times, you get "about a minute" not 60 senconds, and the error grows with time). However - your clock can skip seconds on display - you can accumulate sub-second errors, and then e.g. skip 2 s forward. I would suggest: self.after(1000 - int(1000 * (time.time() - int(time.time()))) or 1000, self.onUpdate). Probably better to save time.time() to a variable before this expression. Jun 12, 2017 at 18:19
  • 3
    I aspire to be awesome enough to embed xkcd's into my comments :)
    – bitsmack
    Jun 21, 2017 at 14:53
  • 2
    What is the benefit of using frame.after() instead of root.after()?
    – Kai Wang
    Sep 3, 2019 at 21:55
  • To avoid weird behavior on timezone changes (such as daylight saving time), you should even do time.monotonic() - start_time_monotonic. See stackoverflow.com/a/25251804/4288004 for nice and accurate scheduling.
    – xuiqzy
    Dec 2, 2023 at 2:42
  • @TomaszGandor Would it be better to just update more quickly to avoid the skipping seconds problem, like every 100ms or more often? like in this answer from Ravikiran D: stackoverflow.com/a/46427345/4288004
    – xuiqzy
    Dec 2, 2023 at 3:34
7
from tkinter import *
import time
tk=Tk()
def clock():
    t=time.strftime('%I:%M:%S',time.localtime())
    if t!='':
        label1.config(text=t,font='times 25')
    tk.after(100,clock)
label1=Label(tk,justify='center')
label1.pack()
clock()
tk.mainloop()
4
  • 5
    It would be helpful if you could add some description. Just copy/pasting code is rarely useful ;-) Sep 26, 2017 at 13:21
  • 4
    this code gives the the exact time of the locality.it also serves as a timer. Sep 26, 2017 at 16:27
  • It seems to me, it would be better to use "%H" instead of "%I", because "%I" shows only the hours from 0 till 12 and doesn't show whether the time is AM or PM. Or another way is to use both "%I" and "%p" ("%p" indicates AM/PM). Feb 19, 2020 at 0:18
  • Using a lower number than 1s to schedule the updates but then only printing the real time in seconds precision probably avoids some of the problems of other answers if you would slightly miss the second and then skip one, or am I missing something which makes scheduling the next call 1s in the future safe against that kind of bug in other answers? As long as 100 is reasonably high (updated with less than the fps you want in general, updated with 10fps here), I also cannot imagine that this answer has performance problems.
    – xuiqzy
    Dec 2, 2023 at 2:50
4

You should call .after_idle(callback) before the mainloop and .after(ms, callback) at the end of the callback function.

Example:

import tkinter as tk
import time


def refresh_clock():
    clock_label.config(
        text=time.strftime("%H:%M:%S", time.localtime())
    )
    root.after(1000, refresh_clock)  # <--


root = tk.Tk()

clock_label = tk.Label(root, font="Times 25", justify="center")
clock_label.pack()

root.after_idle(refresh_clock)  # <--
root.mainloop()
1
  • 2
    ... just a side note, after is a universal widget method, so it could be called on timer_label as well.
    – Wolf
    May 4, 2021 at 9:49
1

I just created a simple timer using the MVP pattern (however it may be overkill for that simple project). It has quit, start/pause and a stop button. Time is displayed in HH:MM:SS format. Time counting is implemented using a thread that is running several times a second and the difference between the time the timer has started and the current time.

Source code on github

1

I have a simple answer to this problem. I created a thread to update the time. In the thread i run a while loop which gets the time and update it. Check the below code and do not forget to mark it as right answer.

from tkinter import *
from tkinter import *
import _thread
import time


def update():
    while True:
      t=time.strftime('%I:%M:%S',time.localtime())
      time_label['text'] = t



win = Tk()
win.geometry('200x200')

time_label = Label(win, text='0:0:0', font=('',15))
time_label.pack()


_thread.start_new_thread(update,())

win.mainloop()
3
  • 1
    This code has multitude of problems. The while loop in the update() function is a busy loop. To access the global variable time_label from multiple threads is not great. Sep 30, 2019 at 21:23
  • but i feel , this is the best way to do it. because this do not reduce the performance of the application. Oct 12, 2019 at 6:34
  • tkinter is not threadsafe and you might have weird bugs later with this pattern, see stackoverflow.com/questions/14168346/… Better use scheduling funtcions such as .after().
    – xuiqzy
    Dec 2, 2023 at 2:46
0
from tkinter import *

from tkinter import messagebox

root = Tk()

root.geometry("400x400")

root.resizable(0, 0)

root.title("Timer")

seconds = 21

def timer():

    global seconds
    if seconds > 0:
        seconds = seconds - 1
        mins = seconds // 60
        m = str(mins)

        if mins < 10:
            m = '0' + str(mins)
        se = seconds - (mins * 60)
        s = str(se)

        if se < 10:
            s = '0' + str(se)
        time.set(m + ':' + s)
        timer_display.config(textvariable=time)
        # call this function again in 1,000 milliseconds
        root.after(1000, timer)

    elif seconds == 0:
        messagebox.showinfo('Message', 'Time is completed')
        root.quit()


frames = Frame(root, width=500, height=500)

frames.pack()

time = StringVar()

timer_display = Label(root, font=('Trebuchet MS', 30, 'bold'))

timer_display.place(x=145, y=100)

timer()  # start the timer

root.mainloop()
0

You can emulate time.sleep with tksleep and call the function after a given amount of time. This may adds readability to your code, but has its limitations:

def tick():
    while True:
        clock.configure(text=time.strftime("%H:%M:%S"))
        tksleep(0.25) #sleep for 0.25 seconds
    

root = tk.Tk()
clock = tk.Label(root,text='5')
clock.pack(fill=tk.BOTH,expand=True)
tick()
root.mainloop()

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