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This question already has answers here:
ImportError: No module named 'Tkinter'
(27 answers)
Closed 6 months ago.
I am trying to import Tkinter. However, I get an error stating that Tkinter has not been installed:
ImportError: No module named _tkinter, please install the python-tk package
I could probably install it using synaptic manager (can I?), however, I would have to install it on every machine I program on. Would it be possible to add the Tkinter library into my workspace and reference it from there?
It is not very easy to install Tkinter locally to use with system-provided Python. You may build it from sources, but this is usually not the best idea with a binary package-based distro you're apparently running.
It's safer to apt-get install python-tk on your machine(s).
(Works on Debian-derived distributions like for Ubuntu; refer to your package manager and package list on other distributions.)
Actually, you just need to use the following to install the tkinter for python3:
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
In addition, for Fedora users, use the following command:
sudo dnf install python3-tkinter
If, like me, you don't have root privileges on your network because of your wonderful friends in I.S., and you are working in a local install you may have some problems with the above approaches.
I spent ages on Google - but in the end, it's easy.
Download the tcl and tk from http://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/download.html and install them locally too.
To install locally on Linux (I did it to my home directory), extract the .tar.gz files for tcl and tk. Then open up the readme files inside the ./unix directory. I ran
cd ~/tcl8.5.11/unix
./configure --prefix=/home/cnel711 --exec-prefix=/home/cnel711
make
make install
cd ~/tk8.5.11/unix
./configure --prefix=/home/cnel711 --exec-prefix=/home/cnel711 --with-tcl=/home/cnel711/tcl8.5.11/unix
make
make install
It may seem a pain, but the files are tiny and installation is very fast.
Then re-run python setup.py build and python setup.py install in your python installation directory - and it should work. It worked for me - and I can now import Tkinter etc to my heart's content - yipidy-yay. An entire afternoon spent on this - hope this note saves others from the pain.
If you are using Python 3 it might be because you are typing Tkinter not tkinter
For Arch Linux users, it goes a bit like
sudo pacman -S tk
you will need the package and its dependencies.
since you mentioned synaptic, you must be using a Debian based system. one way to get what you need:
sudo apt-get install python-tk
For Python 2.7:
As it says here,
You don't need to download Tkinter - it's an integral part of all Python distributions (except binary distributions for platforms that don't support Tcl/Tk).
In my case, on Windows, what helped was reinstalling the Python distribution. A long time ago, I had unchecked the "Tcl/Tk" installation feature. After reinstalling, all works fine and I can import _tkinter and import Tkinter.
If you're using RHEL, CentOS, Oracle Linux, etc. You can use yum to install tkinter module
yum install tkinter
For python 3.7 on ubuntu I had to use sudo apt-get install python3.7-tk to make it work
for python3 user, install python3-tk package by following command
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
tk-devel also needs to be installed in my case
yum install -y tkinter tk-devel
install these and rebuild python
Fedora release 25 (Twenty Five)
dnf install python3-tkinter
This worked for me.
There is _tkinter and Tkinter - both work on Py 3.x
But to be safe- Download Loopy and change your python root directory(if you're using an IDE like PyCharms) to Loopy's installation directory. You'll get this library and many more.
If you're using Python 3 then you must install as follows:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
Tkinter for Python 2 (python-tk) is different from Python 3's (python3-tk).
Tkinter is a GUI module for python. you can use it to make GUI based applications in python. Tkinter provides several GUI widgets like buttons,menu, canvas,text,frame,label etc. to develop desktop applications.Though Tkinter is very popular and is included with windows, macosx install of python, There are also alternative choices like pyQt, wxPython...
In this tutorial we will see how to install it on linux and use it with an example.
First, check if you have python installed and also check its version
Open up your terminal and type python. if its installed then it will show information like version, help... check your version (mine is python 2.7.9)
aman#vostro:~$ python
Python 2.7.9 (default, Apr 2 2015, 15:33:21)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
If you don't have python then install it
sudo apt-get install python
If you want to install python 3 then enter the following. If you are a newbie, I would recommend python 2 instead of python 3. Python 2 is still very popular and many apps are made on it. On ubuntu python2 is still the default
sudo apt-get install python3
Finally, Install Tkinter
sudo apt-get install python-tk
for python 3
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
How to Use it
Now, lets check if Tkinter is working well with this little example
open your terminal and enter into your python shell.
python
for python3
python3
if python was installed correctly you will get a >>> prompt.
aman#vostro:~$ python
Python 2.7.9 (default, Apr 2 2015, 15:33:21)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>
Now import Tkinter module. it wont show any error if it got imported correctly. NOTE: Make sure you type Tkinter (not tkinter) in python2 and tkinter (not Tkinter) in python3.
>>>import Tkinter
Now, just to check you can create an empty window using Tkinter.
>>>Tkinter.Tk()
The situation on macOS is still a bit complicated, but do-able:
Python.org strongly suggest downloading tkinter from ActiveState, but you should read their license first (hint: don't redistribute or want Support).
When the download is opened OS X 10.11 rejected it because it couldn't find my receipt: "ActiveTcl-8.6.pkg can’t be opened because it is from an unidentified developer".
I followed an OSXDaily fix from 2012 which suggested allowing from anywhere. But OS X has now added an "Open Anyway" option to allow (e.g.) Active-Tcl as a once off, and the "Anywhere" option has gained a timeout.
For Fedora >= 25 and python >= 3, we might need to include the dependencies for Tkinter
sudo dnf install python3-tkinter
To install the Tkinter on popular Linux distros:
Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt install python3-tk -y
Fedora:
sudo dnf install -y python3-tkinter
Arch:
sudo pacman -Syu tk --noconfirm
REHL/CentOS6/CentOS7:
sudo yum install -y python3-tkinter
OpenSUSE:
sudo zypper in -y python-tk
I think you have to install the tkinter onto your code repository directory.
For liunx (Ubuntu or debian), open the terminal.
Install the tkinter package by running this command on the terminal.
sudo apt-get install python-tk
After installing the python-tk package on the terminal, create a new python file. Call it filename.py.
On the first line of the filename.py, import tkinter into the python file.
import tkinter
To create a tkinter with different fields, you can use this tutorial.
https://www.delftstack.com/tutorial/tkinter-tutorial/
The documentation of tkinter can be found here:
https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/tkinter.html
Hope that helps. Do ask us if you are still stuck.
Remember to identify what you need in the GUI on tkinter before implementing it. Drawing wireframes of how the GUI will look like will help in coding the Tkinter GUI.
Use ntk for your desktop application, which work on top of tkinter to give you more functional and good looking ui in less codding.
install ntk by pip install ntk
proper Documentation in here: ntk.readthedocs.io
Happy codding.
Install python version 3.6+
and open you text editor
or ide
write sample code like this:
from tkinter import *
root = Tk()
root.title("Answer")
root.mainloop()
You only need to import it:
import tkinter as tk
then you will be use the phrase tk, which is shorter and easier.
Also, I prefer using messagebox too:
from tkinter import messagebox as msgbx
Here's some ways you will be able to use it.
# make a new window
window = tk.Tk()
# show popup
msgbx.showinfo("title", "This is a text")
Even after you've successfully imported python3 and python3-tk, it still might not work. I changed the first line of my script from:
#! /usr/bin/python
to:
#! /usr/bin/python3
It finally worked!
For Ubuntu users and Linux users in general, it's not a bad idea to read the tips I've found here:
0: Do NOT purge Python from your system otherwise it's very likely you go through hell to re-install the things you will miss, including the ubuntu-desktop.
1: Update your local software repository
sudo apt update
2: Install the stuff everybody needs:
sudo apt install software-properties-common
3: Add the Dead Snake to your repository list:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
4: Update the entire thing again because we installed stuff and added a new repo:
sudo apt update
5: Install the Python version you want:
sudo apt install python3.10
6: Check that the version you want was installed:
python3 --version
Finally, you might want to restart your PC.
You can simply install it by your package manager(pip). If you haven't installed pip yet you can download the latest version of it.
And to download tkinter
pip install tkinter
And if you are maybe using a few versions of python, you can install it in the specific version you are currently using. if it's 3.10, it is,
pip3.10 install tkinter
I get the following error when importing ctypes, but only inside my virtual environment (Python 3.4).
>>> import ctypes
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3.4/ctypes/__init__.py", line 7, in <module>
from _ctypes import Union, Structure, Array
ImportError: /home/user/Code/Python/venvs/main/lib/python3.4/lib-dynload/_ctypes.cpython-34m-x86_64-linux-gnu.so: undefined symbol: _PyTraceback_Add
pip freeze of the virtualenv:
beautifulsoup4==4.4.0
blessings==1.6
Django==1.8.4
image==1.4.1
Pillow==2.9.0
wheel==0.24.0
How do I fix this? It works on the main python 3.4 interpreter...
As eryksun described, the issue seems to be related to a known bug in the 3.4.* versions of Python. I managed to solve it in Ubuntu 14.04 by upgrading to Python 3.5 following this answer:
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:fkrull/deadsnakes
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install python3.5 python3.5-dev python3.5-venv
# create a python3.5 virtualenv
python3.5 -m venv venv
. ./venv/bin/activate
python -c 'import ctypes' # throws no errors as opposed to before
The proper solution where you don't depend on 3rd party PPAs would be to upgrade to an OS version with a newer Python version :)
Try destroying and recreating your virtual environment. In my case, I had created the virtual environment before installing dependancies/minor upgrade and even though the virtual env had symlinks to the newer files, a copy of the older minor version interpreter was used.
Today I wanted to start working with Tkinter, but I have some problems.
Python 3.2 (r32:88445, Mar 28 2011, 04:14:07)
[GCC 4.4.5] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from tkinter import *
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.2/tkinter/__init__.py", line 39, in <module>
import _tkinter # If this fails your Python may not be configured for Tk
ImportError: No module named _tkinter
So how can I configure my Python 3.2 to work with Tkinter?
Under Arch/Manjaro just install the package tk:
sudo pacman -S tk
Solution for Linux, Windows (WSL/Ubuntu) and MacOS
After trying a bunch of things, this is how it finally worked:
$ brew install python-tk
Install tk-devel (or a similarly-named package) before building Python.
To get this to work with pyenv on Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04, I had to:
$ sudo apt-get install python-tk python3-tk tk-dev
Then install the version of Python I wanted:
$ pyenv install 3.6.2
Then I could import tkinter just fine:
import tkinter
According to http://wiki.python.org/moin/TkInter :
If it fails with "No module named _tkinter", your Python configuration needs to be modified to include this module (which is an extension module implemented in C). Do not edit Modules/Setup (it is out of date). You may have to install Tcl and Tk (when using RPM, install the -devel RPMs as well) and/or edit the setup.py script to point to the right locations where Tcl/Tk is installed. If you install Tcl/Tk in the default locations, simply rerunning "make" should build the _tkinter extension.
So appearantly many seems to have had this issue (me including) and I found the fault to be that Tkinter wasn't installed on my system when python was compiled.
This post describes how to solve the problem by:
Removing the virtual environment/python distribution
install Tkinter with sudo apt-get install tk-dev (for deb) or sudo pacman -S tk (for arch/manjaro)
Then proceed to compile python again.
This worked wonders for me.
I also faced similar problem. I resolved it by installing python-tk in my system.
Command for mac : brew install python-tk.
Had the same issue on Fedora with Python 2.7. Turns out some extra packages are required:
sudo dnf install tk-devel tkinter
After installing the packages, this hello-world example seems to be working fine on Python 2.7:
$ cat hello.py
from Tkinter import *
root = Tk()
w = Label(root, text="Hello, world!")
w.pack()
root.mainloop()
$ python --version
Python 2.7.8
$ python hello.py
And through X11 forwarding, it looks like this:
Note that in Python 3, the module name is lowercase, and other packages are probably required...
from tkinter import *
Oh I just have followed the solution Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams has suggest which is install tk-dev before building the python.
(Building the Python-3.6.1 from source on Ubuntu 16.04.)
There was pre-compiled objects and binaries I have had build yesterday though, I didn't clean up the objects and just build again on the same build path. And it works beautifully.
sudo apt install tk-dev
(On the python build path)
(No need to conduct 'make clean')
./configure
make
sudo make install
That's it!
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
I encountered this issue on python 2.7.9.
To fix it, I installed tk and tcl, and then rebuild python code and reinstall, and during configure, I set the path for tk and tcl explicitly, by:
./configure --with-tcltk-includes="-I/usr/include" --with-tcltk-libs="-L/usr/lib64 -ltcl8.5 -L/usr/lib64 -ltk8.5"
Also, a whole article for python install process: Building Python from Source
Installing Tkinter
python -m pip install tk-tools
or
sudo apt install python3-tk
Code
from tkinter import *
root = Tk()
root.title('My App')
# Code
root.mainloop()
now i figured out what's going on ubuntu,
Follow these step to solve the issue
check your python version python3 --version
Lets Imagine you have python 3.10
Then Install Python-tk for the python version by using bellow command
sudo apt install python3.10-tk
simple if you have python3.8 then sudo apt install python{"use your python version here"}-tk
since I can not comment yet, here's my answer to another post:
since I'm still using python 3.9, this code works for me:
brew install python-tk#3.9
if using brew install python-tk brew will install python-tk#3.10 which is key-only
I think the most complete answer to this is the accepted answer found here:
How to get tkinter working with Ubuntu's default Python 2.7 install?
I figured it out after way too much time spent on this problem, so
hopefully I can save someone else the hassle.
I found this old bug report deemed invalid that mentioned the exact
problem I was having, I had Tkinter.py, but it couldn't find the
module _tkinter: http://bugs.python.org/issue8555
I installed the tk-dev package with apt-get, and rebuilt Python using
./configure, make, and make install in the Python2.7.3 directory. And
now my Python2.7 can import Tkinter, yay!
I'm a little miffed that the tk-dev package isn't mentioned at all in
the Python installation documentation.... below is another helpful
resource on missing modules in Python if, like me, someone should
discover they are missing more than _tkinter.
To anyone using Windows and Windows Subsystem for Linux, make sure that when you run the python command from the command line, it's not accidentally running the python installation from WSL! This gave me quite a headache just now. A quick check you can do for this is just
which <python command you're using>
If that prints something like /usr/bin/python2 even though you're in powershell, that's probably what's going on.
If you're running on an AWS instance that is running Amazon Linux OS, the magic command to fix this for me was
sudo yum install tkinter
If you want to determine your Linux build, try cat /etc/*release
This symptom can also occur when a later version of python (2.7.13, for example) has been installed in /usr/local/bin "alongside of" the release python version, and then a subsequent operating system upgrade (say, Ubuntu 12.04 --> Ubuntu 14.04) fails to remove the updated python there.
To fix that imcompatibility, one must
a) remove the updated version of python in /usr/local/bin;
b) uninstall python-idle2.7; and
c) reinstall python-idle2.7.
Even after installing python-tk, python3-tk I was getting error your python is not configured for Tk.
So I additionally installed tk8.6-dev
Then I build my Python again, run following again:
make,
make install.
When I did this I saw messages on screen that it is building _tkinter and related modules. Once that is done, I tried 'import tkinter" and it worked.
If you are using Manjaro(Arch Linux) run below command in your terminal
sudo pacman -S tk
Today I wanted to start working with Tkinter, but I have some problems.
Python 3.2 (r32:88445, Mar 28 2011, 04:14:07)
[GCC 4.4.5] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from tkinter import *
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.2/tkinter/__init__.py", line 39, in <module>
import _tkinter # If this fails your Python may not be configured for Tk
ImportError: No module named _tkinter
So how can I configure my Python 3.2 to work with Tkinter?
Under Arch/Manjaro just install the package tk:
sudo pacman -S tk
Solution for Linux, Windows (WSL/Ubuntu) and MacOS
After trying a bunch of things, this is how it finally worked:
$ brew install python-tk
Install tk-devel (or a similarly-named package) before building Python.
To get this to work with pyenv on Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04, I had to:
$ sudo apt-get install python-tk python3-tk tk-dev
Then install the version of Python I wanted:
$ pyenv install 3.6.2
Then I could import tkinter just fine:
import tkinter
According to http://wiki.python.org/moin/TkInter :
If it fails with "No module named _tkinter", your Python configuration needs to be modified to include this module (which is an extension module implemented in C). Do not edit Modules/Setup (it is out of date). You may have to install Tcl and Tk (when using RPM, install the -devel RPMs as well) and/or edit the setup.py script to point to the right locations where Tcl/Tk is installed. If you install Tcl/Tk in the default locations, simply rerunning "make" should build the _tkinter extension.
So appearantly many seems to have had this issue (me including) and I found the fault to be that Tkinter wasn't installed on my system when python was compiled.
This post describes how to solve the problem by:
Removing the virtual environment/python distribution
install Tkinter with sudo apt-get install tk-dev (for deb) or sudo pacman -S tk (for arch/manjaro)
Then proceed to compile python again.
This worked wonders for me.
I also faced similar problem. I resolved it by installing python-tk in my system.
Command for mac : brew install python-tk.
Had the same issue on Fedora with Python 2.7. Turns out some extra packages are required:
sudo dnf install tk-devel tkinter
After installing the packages, this hello-world example seems to be working fine on Python 2.7:
$ cat hello.py
from Tkinter import *
root = Tk()
w = Label(root, text="Hello, world!")
w.pack()
root.mainloop()
$ python --version
Python 2.7.8
$ python hello.py
And through X11 forwarding, it looks like this:
Note that in Python 3, the module name is lowercase, and other packages are probably required...
from tkinter import *
Oh I just have followed the solution Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams has suggest which is install tk-dev before building the python.
(Building the Python-3.6.1 from source on Ubuntu 16.04.)
There was pre-compiled objects and binaries I have had build yesterday though, I didn't clean up the objects and just build again on the same build path. And it works beautifully.
sudo apt install tk-dev
(On the python build path)
(No need to conduct 'make clean')
./configure
make
sudo make install
That's it!
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
I encountered this issue on python 2.7.9.
To fix it, I installed tk and tcl, and then rebuild python code and reinstall, and during configure, I set the path for tk and tcl explicitly, by:
./configure --with-tcltk-includes="-I/usr/include" --with-tcltk-libs="-L/usr/lib64 -ltcl8.5 -L/usr/lib64 -ltk8.5"
Also, a whole article for python install process: Building Python from Source
Installing Tkinter
python -m pip install tk-tools
or
sudo apt install python3-tk
Code
from tkinter import *
root = Tk()
root.title('My App')
# Code
root.mainloop()
now i figured out what's going on ubuntu,
Follow these step to solve the issue
check your python version python3 --version
Lets Imagine you have python 3.10
Then Install Python-tk for the python version by using bellow command
sudo apt install python3.10-tk
simple if you have python3.8 then sudo apt install python{"use your python version here"}-tk
since I can not comment yet, here's my answer to another post:
since I'm still using python 3.9, this code works for me:
brew install python-tk#3.9
if using brew install python-tk brew will install python-tk#3.10 which is key-only
I think the most complete answer to this is the accepted answer found here:
How to get tkinter working with Ubuntu's default Python 2.7 install?
I figured it out after way too much time spent on this problem, so
hopefully I can save someone else the hassle.
I found this old bug report deemed invalid that mentioned the exact
problem I was having, I had Tkinter.py, but it couldn't find the
module _tkinter: http://bugs.python.org/issue8555
I installed the tk-dev package with apt-get, and rebuilt Python using
./configure, make, and make install in the Python2.7.3 directory. And
now my Python2.7 can import Tkinter, yay!
I'm a little miffed that the tk-dev package isn't mentioned at all in
the Python installation documentation.... below is another helpful
resource on missing modules in Python if, like me, someone should
discover they are missing more than _tkinter.
To anyone using Windows and Windows Subsystem for Linux, make sure that when you run the python command from the command line, it's not accidentally running the python installation from WSL! This gave me quite a headache just now. A quick check you can do for this is just
which <python command you're using>
If that prints something like /usr/bin/python2 even though you're in powershell, that's probably what's going on.
If you're running on an AWS instance that is running Amazon Linux OS, the magic command to fix this for me was
sudo yum install tkinter
If you want to determine your Linux build, try cat /etc/*release
This symptom can also occur when a later version of python (2.7.13, for example) has been installed in /usr/local/bin "alongside of" the release python version, and then a subsequent operating system upgrade (say, Ubuntu 12.04 --> Ubuntu 14.04) fails to remove the updated python there.
To fix that imcompatibility, one must
a) remove the updated version of python in /usr/local/bin;
b) uninstall python-idle2.7; and
c) reinstall python-idle2.7.
Even after installing python-tk, python3-tk I was getting error your python is not configured for Tk.
So I additionally installed tk8.6-dev
Then I build my Python again, run following again:
make,
make install.
When I did this I saw messages on screen that it is building _tkinter and related modules. Once that is done, I tried 'import tkinter" and it worked.
If you are using Manjaro(Arch Linux) run below command in your terminal
sudo pacman -S tk
This question already has answers here:
ImportError: No module named 'Tkinter'
(27 answers)
Closed 6 months ago.
I am trying to import Tkinter. However, I get an error stating that Tkinter has not been installed:
ImportError: No module named _tkinter, please install the python-tk package
I could probably install it using synaptic manager (can I?), however, I would have to install it on every machine I program on. Would it be possible to add the Tkinter library into my workspace and reference it from there?
It is not very easy to install Tkinter locally to use with system-provided Python. You may build it from sources, but this is usually not the best idea with a binary package-based distro you're apparently running.
It's safer to apt-get install python-tk on your machine(s).
(Works on Debian-derived distributions like for Ubuntu; refer to your package manager and package list on other distributions.)
Actually, you just need to use the following to install the tkinter for python3:
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
In addition, for Fedora users, use the following command:
sudo dnf install python3-tkinter
If, like me, you don't have root privileges on your network because of your wonderful friends in I.S., and you are working in a local install you may have some problems with the above approaches.
I spent ages on Google - but in the end, it's easy.
Download the tcl and tk from http://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/download.html and install them locally too.
To install locally on Linux (I did it to my home directory), extract the .tar.gz files for tcl and tk. Then open up the readme files inside the ./unix directory. I ran
cd ~/tcl8.5.11/unix
./configure --prefix=/home/cnel711 --exec-prefix=/home/cnel711
make
make install
cd ~/tk8.5.11/unix
./configure --prefix=/home/cnel711 --exec-prefix=/home/cnel711 --with-tcl=/home/cnel711/tcl8.5.11/unix
make
make install
It may seem a pain, but the files are tiny and installation is very fast.
Then re-run python setup.py build and python setup.py install in your python installation directory - and it should work. It worked for me - and I can now import Tkinter etc to my heart's content - yipidy-yay. An entire afternoon spent on this - hope this note saves others from the pain.
If you are using Python 3 it might be because you are typing Tkinter not tkinter
For Arch Linux users, it goes a bit like
sudo pacman -S tk
you will need the package and its dependencies.
since you mentioned synaptic, you must be using a Debian based system. one way to get what you need:
sudo apt-get install python-tk
For Python 2.7:
As it says here,
You don't need to download Tkinter - it's an integral part of all Python distributions (except binary distributions for platforms that don't support Tcl/Tk).
In my case, on Windows, what helped was reinstalling the Python distribution. A long time ago, I had unchecked the "Tcl/Tk" installation feature. After reinstalling, all works fine and I can import _tkinter and import Tkinter.
If you're using RHEL, CentOS, Oracle Linux, etc. You can use yum to install tkinter module
yum install tkinter
For python 3.7 on ubuntu I had to use sudo apt-get install python3.7-tk to make it work
for python3 user, install python3-tk package by following command
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
tk-devel also needs to be installed in my case
yum install -y tkinter tk-devel
install these and rebuild python
Fedora release 25 (Twenty Five)
dnf install python3-tkinter
This worked for me.
There is _tkinter and Tkinter - both work on Py 3.x
But to be safe- Download Loopy and change your python root directory(if you're using an IDE like PyCharms) to Loopy's installation directory. You'll get this library and many more.
If you're using Python 3 then you must install as follows:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
Tkinter for Python 2 (python-tk) is different from Python 3's (python3-tk).
Tkinter is a GUI module for python. you can use it to make GUI based applications in python. Tkinter provides several GUI widgets like buttons,menu, canvas,text,frame,label etc. to develop desktop applications.Though Tkinter is very popular and is included with windows, macosx install of python, There are also alternative choices like pyQt, wxPython...
In this tutorial we will see how to install it on linux and use it with an example.
First, check if you have python installed and also check its version
Open up your terminal and type python. if its installed then it will show information like version, help... check your version (mine is python 2.7.9)
aman#vostro:~$ python
Python 2.7.9 (default, Apr 2 2015, 15:33:21)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
If you don't have python then install it
sudo apt-get install python
If you want to install python 3 then enter the following. If you are a newbie, I would recommend python 2 instead of python 3. Python 2 is still very popular and many apps are made on it. On ubuntu python2 is still the default
sudo apt-get install python3
Finally, Install Tkinter
sudo apt-get install python-tk
for python 3
sudo apt-get install python3-tk
How to Use it
Now, lets check if Tkinter is working well with this little example
open your terminal and enter into your python shell.
python
for python3
python3
if python was installed correctly you will get a >>> prompt.
aman#vostro:~$ python
Python 2.7.9 (default, Apr 2 2015, 15:33:21)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>
Now import Tkinter module. it wont show any error if it got imported correctly. NOTE: Make sure you type Tkinter (not tkinter) in python2 and tkinter (not Tkinter) in python3.
>>>import Tkinter
Now, just to check you can create an empty window using Tkinter.
>>>Tkinter.Tk()
The situation on macOS is still a bit complicated, but do-able:
Python.org strongly suggest downloading tkinter from ActiveState, but you should read their license first (hint: don't redistribute or want Support).
When the download is opened OS X 10.11 rejected it because it couldn't find my receipt: "ActiveTcl-8.6.pkg can’t be opened because it is from an unidentified developer".
I followed an OSXDaily fix from 2012 which suggested allowing from anywhere. But OS X has now added an "Open Anyway" option to allow (e.g.) Active-Tcl as a once off, and the "Anywhere" option has gained a timeout.
For Fedora >= 25 and python >= 3, we might need to include the dependencies for Tkinter
sudo dnf install python3-tkinter
To install the Tkinter on popular Linux distros:
Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt install python3-tk -y
Fedora:
sudo dnf install -y python3-tkinter
Arch:
sudo pacman -Syu tk --noconfirm
REHL/CentOS6/CentOS7:
sudo yum install -y python3-tkinter
OpenSUSE:
sudo zypper in -y python-tk
I think you have to install the tkinter onto your code repository directory.
For liunx (Ubuntu or debian), open the terminal.
Install the tkinter package by running this command on the terminal.
sudo apt-get install python-tk
After installing the python-tk package on the terminal, create a new python file. Call it filename.py.
On the first line of the filename.py, import tkinter into the python file.
import tkinter
To create a tkinter with different fields, you can use this tutorial.
https://www.delftstack.com/tutorial/tkinter-tutorial/
The documentation of tkinter can be found here:
https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/tkinter.html
Hope that helps. Do ask us if you are still stuck.
Remember to identify what you need in the GUI on tkinter before implementing it. Drawing wireframes of how the GUI will look like will help in coding the Tkinter GUI.
Use ntk for your desktop application, which work on top of tkinter to give you more functional and good looking ui in less codding.
install ntk by pip install ntk
proper Documentation in here: ntk.readthedocs.io
Happy codding.
Install python version 3.6+
and open you text editor
or ide
write sample code like this:
from tkinter import *
root = Tk()
root.title("Answer")
root.mainloop()
You only need to import it:
import tkinter as tk
then you will be use the phrase tk, which is shorter and easier.
Also, I prefer using messagebox too:
from tkinter import messagebox as msgbx
Here's some ways you will be able to use it.
# make a new window
window = tk.Tk()
# show popup
msgbx.showinfo("title", "This is a text")
Even after you've successfully imported python3 and python3-tk, it still might not work. I changed the first line of my script from:
#! /usr/bin/python
to:
#! /usr/bin/python3
It finally worked!
For Ubuntu users and Linux users in general, it's not a bad idea to read the tips I've found here:
0: Do NOT purge Python from your system otherwise it's very likely you go through hell to re-install the things you will miss, including the ubuntu-desktop.
1: Update your local software repository
sudo apt update
2: Install the stuff everybody needs:
sudo apt install software-properties-common
3: Add the Dead Snake to your repository list:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
4: Update the entire thing again because we installed stuff and added a new repo:
sudo apt update
5: Install the Python version you want:
sudo apt install python3.10
6: Check that the version you want was installed:
python3 --version
Finally, you might want to restart your PC.
You can simply install it by your package manager(pip). If you haven't installed pip yet you can download the latest version of it.
And to download tkinter
pip install tkinter
And if you are maybe using a few versions of python, you can install it in the specific version you are currently using. if it's 3.10, it is,
pip3.10 install tkinter