2

My scroll bar is supposed to be a child of Canvas_2 and controlling the y-value of Canvas_3. However it is not working as intended. The scroll bar doesn't move up or down, and there is also a blue region that shouldn't be visible. Any ideas on what I'm missing here? I really appreciate your time.

import tkinter as tk
from PIL import ImageTk, Image

# To initialize tkinter, we have to create a Tk root widget,
# which is a window with a title bar and other decoration
# provided by the window manager.
# The root widget has to be created before any other widgets
# and there can only be one root widget.
root = tk.Tk()

# The weight of a row or column determines how much of the
# available space a row or column should occupy relative to
# the other rows or columns. For example, a column with a
# weight of 2 will be twice as wide as a column with a
# weight of 1, assuming there's space for the widgets to fit.
root.grid_rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
root.grid_columnconfigure(0, weight=1)

load1 = Image.open("example.jpg")
render1 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(load1)

# Creating a class for filling each row
def makeRow(top, img, row):
    r = row
    if row == 0:
        c1 = "#75dce1"
        c2 = "#75dce1"
        e7 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c2).grid(row=r, column=6, sticky="news")
        e8 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c2).grid(row=r, column=7, sticky="news")
    else:
        c1 = "#a9d08e"
        c2 = "#8dd1bf"
        img = tk.Label(top, image=render1, bg="green").grid(row=r, column=6, sticky="news")
    e1 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c1).grid(row=r, column=0, sticky="news")
    e2 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c1).grid(row=r, column=1, sticky="news")
    e3 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c1).grid(row=r, column=2, sticky="news")
    e4 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c1).grid(row=r, column=3, sticky="news")
    e5 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c2).grid(row=r, column=4, sticky="news")
    e6 = tk.Entry(top, bg=c2).grid(row=r, column=5, sticky="news")
    # load1 = Image.open(img)
    # render1 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(load1)


# The canv_1 is a child of the parent "root"
# canv_1 contains: canv_2 (frozen top row) and canv_3 (bottom rows with a vertical scroll)
canv_1 = tk.Canvas(root, bg="blue")
canv_1.grid_rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
canv_1.grid_rowconfigure(1, weight=10)
canv_1.grid_columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
canv_1.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky = "news")
canv_1.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky = "news")

# The canv_2 is a child of the parent "canv_1"
canv_2 = tk.Canvas(canv_1, bg="blue")
canv_2.grid_rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
canv_2.grid_rowconfigure(1, weight=1)
canv_2.grid_columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
canv_2.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky = "news")
canv_2.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky = "news")

# The canv_3 is a child of the parent "canv_2"
canv_3 = tk.Canvas(canv_2, bg="blue")
canv_3.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky="news")
# canv_3.grid_rowconfigure((1,2,3,4,5), weight=1)
# canv_3.grid_columnconfigure((1,2,3,4,5), weight=1)

slides = []
for i in range(10):
    slides.append(i)
    if i==0:
        slides[i] = makeRow(canv_3,"", 0)
    else:
        slides[i] = makeRow(canv_3, "example.jpg", i)

# Create Scrollbar
vsb = tk.Scrollbar(canv_2, orient="vertical", command=canv_3.yview)
vsb.grid(row=1, column=1, sticky='ns')
canv_2.configure(yscrollcommand=vsb.set)
canv_2.config(scrollregion=canv_3.bbox("all"))
canv_2.configure(scrollregion=(0, 0, 5000, 5000))

root.mainloop()

This is the actual output:

enter image description here

This is the desired design & output:

enter image description here

1
  • FWIW, this comment is false: "The weight of a row or column determines how much of the available space a row or column should occupy relative to the other rows or columns.". It does not determine how much of the available space to give, but how much of the extra unallocated space to give to each row or column. If there is no extra space, the setting has no effect. Jun 29, 2020 at 21:11

1 Answer 1

1

There are at least three fundamental problems with the code. The biggest problem is that you are adding widgets to canv_3 using grid. A canvas can't scroll items added to a canvas with grid. It will only scroll items added with the "create" methods of the canvas (create_window, create_text, etc).

The second problem is that you never define a proper scrollregion for canv_3, so even if you added the items with create_window, tkinter wouldn't know what the scrollable region is.

The third problem is that scrollbars require a two-way configuration. The scrollbar command needs to call the yview method of the widget, and the widget's yscrollcommand option needs to call the set method of the scrollbar.

2
  • Thank you Bryan, what do you think is the best way to scroll through a grid of widgets? Could this be accomplished with frame?
    – Wes Tomer
    Jun 30, 2020 at 16:36
  • @WesTomer: frames don't support scrolling. You have to start with something that supports scrolling, and the Canvas widget is arguably the best candidate. Jun 30, 2020 at 16:56

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.