I am creating a gui with tkinter in python. I have created a scrollbar and this is what the section of code looks like:
beta_frame = Frame(width="500", height="680")
beta_frame.pack()
holder = ScrolledWindow(beta_frame, width=500, height=680)
holder.pack()
alpha_frame = holder.window
I would like to position this scrollbar at the very bottom every time something new is put on the screen (which would obviously be added to the bottom The only things I'm adding to the screen are labels and buttons), though I'm unsure how to do this and I've searched everywhere. All I came up with is the method see, which I am unsure if it is even applicable in this instance. Any help would be appreciated.
.see() is the normal way to get Tkinter to auto-scroll to a given position, but that method only exists on the widgets that have built-in support for scrolling - Listbox, Canvas, Text, and Entry. The Tix ScrolledWindow makes an ordinary Frame scrollable, so no such method will exist.
It appears that this line of code will do what you want:
holder.tk.eval(holder.vsb['command'] + " moveto 1.0")
vsb is the vertical scrollbar component of the ScrolledWindow, 'command' is the scrollbar configuration option that specifies a callback to invoke when the position is changed. This will refer to something deep inside Tix, but we don't care exactly what it is; we just invoke it with the same parameters that the scrollbar itself would, if being moved to the very end.
Related
Okay, so i am using tkinter to make a GUI, i feel like the top bar looks kinda ugly so that's why i was planning to remove it and put some nice icons. I used this line of code to remove the top bar gui.overrideredirect(True) and it worked :D, but you can't move the program around the screen (it sticks to the top-left corner of the screen). Is there any other way i can do this without sticking my program to the corner? Thanks.
import requests
import tkinter as tk
#GUI Config
gui = tk.Tk()
gui.geometry('970x569')
gui.title("Zombs Royale Tools v1")
gui.resizable(False, False)
#Code below is the one i used to do this[![enter image description here][1]][1]
gui.overrideredirect(True)
#Background-image
bgImage = tk.PhotoImage(file="width.png")
background_label = tk.Label(gui, image = bgImage)
background_label.place(x=0,y=0,relwidth=1, relheight=1)
#GUI Widgets#
#Exit Button
exit_image = tk.PhotoImage(file="close.gif")
exit_button = tk.Button(gui, image=exit_image, borderwidth=0, command=gui.destroy)
exit_button.place(rely=0.01, relx=0.01)
Removing the titlebar is done with override redirect. However, this removes every window function as well. That includes moving the window around and resizing it.
This means with overrideredirect you can skip the
gui.resizable(False, False)
One thing you can do is provide more info for the window’s geometry:
gui.geometry('970x569+600+500')
The 2 last numbers provide the info regarding the positioning of your window on the desktop, in case you don’t want it to be spawned on the top left corner.
If you want to make the window movable you will have to integrate your own code. It has been discussed here before.
Eg.
here
This question already has answers here:
Adding a scrollbar to a group of widgets in Tkinter
(3 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
My code is working well in itself, but doesn't scroll through the Labels (which is what i'm trying to achieve).
I don't want to use canvas or listbox or anything.
import tkinter as tk
master = tk.Tk()
scrollbar = tk.Scrollbar(master).pack(side=tk.RIGHT, fill=tk.Y,command=tk.yview)
label = tk.Label(text="llklkl")
label.place(x=100,y=500)
label2 = tk.Label(text="llklkl")
label2.place(x=1000,y=5000)
tk.mainloop()
Hello and welcome to SO.
The tkinter Scrollbar widget sadly can not be used on a _tkinter.tkapp object, i.e. your main window called master. From effbot.org:
This widget is used to implement scrolled listboxes, canvases, and text fields.
and
The Scrollbar widget is almost always used in conjunction with a Listbox, Canvas, or Text widget. Horizontal scrollbars can also be used with the Entry widget.
That means that you absolutely HAVE to create some widget inside your main window in order to be able to scroll anything, you can`t just scroll the window itself.
That being said, if you wanted to add a Scrollbar to, let's say, a Listbox, that's how you would do it (also taken from the above mentioned website, you should really check it out):
First of all, you have to set the widget’s yscrollcommand callbacks to the set method of the scrollbar.
Secondly, you have to set the scrollbar’s command to the yview method of the widget, much like you did already, but like name_of_object.yview, not tk.yview.
import tkinter as tk
master = tk.Tk()
scrollbar = tk.Scrollbar(master)
scrollbar.pack(side=tk.RIGHT, fill=tk.Y)
listbox = tk.Listbox(master, yscrollcommand=scrollbar.set)
for i in range(20):
listbox.insert(tk.END, str(i))
listbox.pack(side=tk.LEFT, fill=tk.BOTH)
scrollbar.config(command=listbox.yview)
master.mainloop()
Also, pack the scrollbar in a seperate line. This will produce a window with numbers from 1 to 50 in a scrollable Listbox widget. If i get you right, you want to be able to scroll between your labels? well, i guess you'll have to use some kind of wrapping widget for that, i would recommend a Canvas. But that's really up to you and i'm sure you'll figure it out yourself. If you need any more help, let me know - but please read the docs before asking ;-)
How do I remove the title bar from a Toplevel() window in Tkinter.
Right now I for my main I have
self.master.title("Subtest")
self.master.geometry("400x200")
self.alertwindow()
Label(self.master,textvariable=self.connected,height=4).grid(row=0,column=0)
Button(self.master,text="Monitor",command= lambda: self.startnewthread(1),width=10).grid(row=6,column=1)
Button(self.master,text="Quit",command=self.haltprogram).grid(row=6,column=0)
And for my alert window function I have
def alertwindow(self):
self.listbox=Listbox(Toplevel(self.master,width=150).overrideredirect(True),width=150).pack)
I was wanting the program to open up a root window, and then a toplevel listbox without a title bar; however, the only thing the program is doing right now is freezing, and when I remove the .overrideredirect(True), the program launches two listbox windows. How can I have the program open only one listbox without a title bar on windows? Thanks
Looking at this line
self.listbox=Listbox(Toplevel(self.master,width=150).overrideredirect(True),width=150).pack)
It's pretty clear you're trying to do WAY too much on 1 line. (Your parenthesis don't even match). Let's break it up, shall we?
new_top = Toplevel(self.master,width=150)
new_top.overrideredirect(True)
self.listbox = Listbox(new_top,width=150)
self.listbox.pack()
Also note that you seem to be using .grid and .pack -- Generally that's ill advised and Tkinter will happily spend all of eternity trying to negotiate a proper placement of a widget when you try to use them together.
My guess about what's happening:
your actual code has properly balanced parenthesis so there is no SyntaxError
Toplevel.overrideredirct returns None
Listbox sees None as the parent widget and substitutes the root widget (Tk)
Then you're using .grid and .pack both on the root widget which causes your program to hang.
I'm using Python and Tkinter to create a GUI for a program I'm writing, and I'm having a couple of problems.
I have three objects descended from LabelFrame in an object descended from Frame. One of the LabelFrame descendants is two columns of corresponding Label and Entry objects.
The problem is that there are a varying number of Label and Entry pairs, and there can be more than fit on the screen. I need a way to make a scrollbar for this LabelFrame so that everything fits on the screen. I've tried various ways of making a Scrollbar object, but nothing seems to work. How can I bind a scrollbar to this frame?
Also, I need to be able to refresh or reload this LabelFrame when the load_message() method is called, but it just redisplays the new pairs on top of the old ones (so when there are less pairs in the new set, the old set is still visible at the bottom). I've tried using grid_forget() but either nothing changes or the whole frame doesn't display. How can I forget this display and then redisplay it?
Here is the code for this class:
class freq_frame(LabelFrame):
def __init__(self, master = None, text = 'Substitutions'):
LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, text = text)
self.grid()
def load_message(self):
self.frequency = get_freq(message)
self.create_widgets()
def create_widgets(self):
self.label_list = [Label(self, text = get_label(char, self.frequency[char]), justify = LEFT) for char in self.frequency.keys()]
self.entry_list = [Entry(self, width = 1) for char in self.frequency.keys()]
for n in range(len(self.label_list)):
self.label_list[n].grid(column = 0, row = n)
for n in range(len(self.entry_list)):
self.entry_list[n].grid(column = 1, row = n)
If anyone can help with either of these problems, I'd appreciate it.
Also, this question seems like it might be a little thin, but I don't know what to add. Don't hesitate to ask for more information (but be specific).
Thanks!
Labelframes don't support scrolling. So the short answer to your question is "you can't". It sounds obvious, but if the documentation for a widget doesn't say it supports scrolling, it doesn't support scrolling.
However, there is a simple solution. First, add a canvas as a child to the labelframe and pack it so that it fills the labelframe. Attach scrollbars to the canvas and add them to the labelframe too. Then embed a frame within the canvas, add your widgets to that inner frame, and then adjust the scrollregion of the canvas to match the size of the frame after you've added all the inner labels and entries.
It sounds complicated, but it's really very straight-forward.
As for re-creating the widgets when you call load_message, calling grid_forget only removes them from view, it doesn't actually destroy the widgets. Over time you could potentially end up with hundreds of non-visible widgets which is almost certainly not what you want.
Instead, you want to first destroy all the existing widgets. That's pretty easy if they all are in the same parent, since you can ask the parent for a list of all its children. Just iterate over that list to delete each child, then add any new children. An even easier solution is to destroy and recreate that inner frame that contains the labels and entries. When you delete a widget, all child widgets get automatically destroyed. So, delete that inner frame, create a new one, and add your labels and entries again.
Is it possible to create a multi-line label with word wrap that resizes in sync with the width of its parent? In other words the wordwrap behavior of Notepad as you change the width of the NotePad window.
The use case is a dialog that needs to present a block of multi-line text (instructions) in its entirety without having the text clipped or resorting to scrollbars. The parent container will have enough vertical space to accomodate narrow widths.
I've been experimenting with Tkinter Label and Message widgets and the ttk Label widget without success. It seems that I need to hard code a pixel wraplength value vs. have these controls auto wordwrap when their text reaches the right edge of their containers. Certainly Tkinters geometry managers can help me auto-resize my labels and update their wraplength values accordingly?
Should I be looking at the Text widget instead? If so, is it possible to hide the border of a Text widget so I can use it as a multi-line label with wordwrap?
Here's a prototype of how one might do what I described above. It was inspired by Bryan Oakley's tip to use the Text widget and the following post on Stackoverflow:
In python's tkinter, how can I make a Label such that you can select the text with the mouse?
from Tkinter import *
master = Tk()
text = """
If tkinter is 8.5 or above you'll want the selection background to appear like it does when the widget is activated. Comment this out for older versions of Tkinter.
This is even more text.
The final line of our auto-wrapping label that supports clipboard copy.
""".strip()
frameLabel = Frame( master, padx=20, pady=20 )
frameLabel.pack()
w = Text( frameLabel, wrap='word', font='Arial 12 italic' )
w.insert( 1.0, text )
w.pack()
# - have selection background appear like it does when the widget is activated (Tkinter 8.5+)
# - have label background color match its parent background color via .cget('bg')
# - set relief='flat' to hide Text control borders
# - set state='disabled' to block changes to text (while still allowing selection/clipboard copy)
w.configure( bg=master.cget('bg'), relief='flat', state='disabled' )
mainloop()
Use Message widget:
The Message widget is a variant of the Label, designed to display multiline messages. The message widget can wrap text, and adjust its width to maintain a given aspect ratio.
No, there is no feature built-in to Tk to auto-word-wrap labels. However, it's doable by binding to the <Configure> event of the label and adjusting the wrap length then. This binding will fire every time the label widget is resized.
The other option, as you suggest, is to use a text widget. It is possible to entirely turn off the border if you so desire. This has always been my choice when I want word-wrapped instructional text.
Here is the code:
entry = Label(self, text=text,
anchor=NW, justify=LEFT,
relief=RIDGE, bd=2)
def y(event, entry=entry):
# FIXME: make this a global method, to prevent function object creation
# for every label.
pad = 0
pad += int(str(entry['bd']))
pad += int(str(entry['padx']))
pad *= 2
entry.configure(wraplength = event.width - pad)
entry.bind("<Configure>", y )
The tkinter.Message widget suggested by some people does NOT use TTK styling, which means that it's gonna look like garbage inside a TTK (themed) interface.
You could manually apply the background and foreground colors from your TTK theme to the tkinter.Message (by instantiating ttk.Style() and requesting the active themes' TLabel foreground and background colors from that style object), but it's not worth it... because the ancient Message widget has ZERO advantages over TTK's regular ttk.Label.
The tkinter.Message widget has an "aspect ratio" property that defines how many pixels until it wraps.
The ttk.Label instead has a wraplength= property which determines how many pixels until the words wrap. You should also use its anchor= and justify= properties to customize it to your exact desires. With these properties you can make your Label behave as the old Message widget did.
Example: ttk.Label(root, text="foo", wraplength=220, anchor=tkinter.NW, justify=tkinter.LEFT). Creates a beautifully styled label which permanently wraps its text after 220 pixels wide.
As for automatically updating the wraplength? Well, you should attach to the <Configure> event as people have said... However, if you have a completely fluid window (which resizes itself to fit all content), or a grid/frame that is fluid and contains the label, then you can't automatically calculate it that way, because the parent WINDOW/CONTAINER itself will EXPAND whenever the label grows too wide. Which means that the label will always resize itself to the maximum width it would need to fit all text. So, updating wraplength automatically is only possible if the label itself has some constraints on how wide it can grow (either via its parent container being a fixed size/maxsize, or itself being a fixed size/maxsize). In that case, sure, you can use configure to calculate new wrapping numbers to make sure the text always wraps... However, the example code by t7ko is broken and not valid anymore, just fyi.