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I want to change a number from a matrix and then display it in the same tk window, but I find it hard to work with variables from an input. The r[][] should be the matrix formed with the user's input. And after all I have to display the matrix with the modification: r[0][1] += 5, in the same tk window.

from tkinter import *
import numpy as np

root = Tk()

def process():
    values = [e1.get(),e2.get(),e3.get(),e4.get()]

    a = np.zeros((2,2),dtype=np.int64)

    for i in range(2):
        for j in range(2):
                a[i][j] = values[i*2+j]
    print(a)

e1 = Entry(root)
e2 = Entry(root)
e3 = Entry(root)
e4 = Entry(root)

e1.grid(row=0,column=0,padx=10,pady=10)
e2.grid(row=0,column=1)
e3.grid(row=1,column=0,padx=10,pady=10)
e4.grid(row=1,column=1)

b = Button(root,text='Process',command=process)
b.grid(row=2,column=0,columnspan=4,sticky=E+W)

root.mainloop()

r=[[e1.get(),e2.get()],[e3.get(),e4.get()]]
r[0][1] += 5 
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  • So what is your question? Do you simply want to keep variable r without throwing an error after you destroy the gui?
    – Henry Yik
    Oct 25, 2021 at 18:43
  • You should start by learning about event driven programming Oct 25, 2021 at 18:57
  • 1
    Simply accepting an answer is not what should be done, you should take your time and properly read all the answer and choose one answer that suits you most. Oct 26, 2021 at 5:32

2 Answers 2

1

Tkinter GUI programs are event-driven which requires using a different programming paradigm than the one you're probably familiar with which is called imperative programming. In other words, just about everything that happens is done in response to something the user has done, like typing on the keyboard, clicking on a graphical button, moving the mouse, etc.

I think the code below will give you a good idea of how to do what you want in a framework like that. It creates a StringVar for each Entry widget, which has the advantage what's displayed in each Entry will automatically be updated whenever the corresponding StringVar is changed (make that more-or-less automatic).

To determine which StringVar is associated with a given Entry, a separate dictionary is created which maps the internal tkinter variable name to corresponding Python variable. The internal tkinter variable name is obtained by using the universal cget() widget method.

import tkinter as tk
from tkinter.constants import *

ROWS, COLS = 2, 2

def process(entry_widgets, row, col):
    var_name = entry_widgets[row][col].cget('textvariable')
    var = root.variables[var_name]
    try:
        value = float(var.get())
    except ValueError:  # Something invalid (or nothing) was entered.
        value = 0
    var.set(value+5)  # Update value.


root = tk.Tk()

# Create a grid of Entry widgets.
entries = []
root.variables = {}  # To track StringVars.

for x in range(COLS):
    row = []
    for y in range(ROWS):
        var = tk.StringVar(master=root)  # Create variable.
        root.variables[str(var)] = var  # Track them by name.
        entry = tk.Entry(root, textvariable=var)
        entry.grid(row=x, column=y)
        row.append(entry)
    entries.append(row)


btn = tk.Button(root, text='Process', command=lambda: process(entries, 0, 1))
btn.grid(row=2, column=0, columnspan=COLS, sticky=E+W)

root.mainloop()

2
-2

Would this be what you're looking for? I deleted a bunch of code that seems to do nothing in context -- you just want to replace the text in the corner box right?

from tkinter import *

def process():
    replace(e4)

def replace(entry_loc):
    temp = int(entry_loc.get())
    temp += 5
    entry_loc.delete(0,500)
    entry_loc.insert(0, temp)
    
root = Tk()

var_e1 = StringVar
var_e2 = StringVar
var_e3 = StringVar
var_e4 = StringVar
e1 = Entry(root, textvariable=var_e1)
e2 = Entry(root, textvariable=var_e2)
e3 = Entry(root, textvariable=var_e3)
e4 = Entry(root, textvariable=var_e4)

e1.grid(row=0, column=0, padx=10, pady=10)
e2.grid(row=0, column=1)
e3.grid(row=1, column=0, padx=10, pady=10)
e4.grid(row=1, column=1)

b = Button(root, text='Process', command=process)
b.grid(row=2, column=0, columnspan=4, sticky=E + W)

root.mainloop()
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  • 2
    var_e1 = StringVar doesn't do what you think it does. It needs to be var_e1 = StringVar(). Though, the use of StringVar is completely useless in this code. Oct 25, 2021 at 20:09

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