tkinter grid alignment: Python 2.7 - python

I'm having a problem with the grid alignment when I add in a text box.
I've set up a simple GUI with a 3 column wide display. As part fo the GUI I have a text box for entering notes, and a spinbox for a defined number range.
If I remove the text box from the active code my spinbox aligns correctly with all other entries, but when I place the text box in the grid my spinbox is moved over to the right.
Doesn't seem to matter where the spinbox code is in relation to the text box, once the text box is present the spin box moves over to the right.
At this stage I just can't see what is causing the problem.
I'll admit I'm new to Tkinter (and stackoverflow).
This is the particular line of code that causes the problem:
self.newText.grid(row=display_row, column=0, columnspan=4, padx=10, pady=10).
Sample code below. If I comment out the above line the spin box aligns correctly, if its present then the spinbox is offset. Its only the spinbox that is affected, neither Label, Entry, RadioButton or Text widgets are affected, but Spinbox is. These are the only widgets needed for my GUI.
Any help appreciated.
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Name: MyGUI
# Purpose: Problem Sample
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
from Tkinter import *
#===============================
# GUI Class
#===============================
class GUIClass():
'''
GUI class
'''
def __init__(self):
self.displayframe = 0
self.NameVar = StringVar()
self.NumVar = StringVar() # shouldn't be but it works
self.ButtonVar = BooleanVar()
#===============================
# Function for standard button
def StandardEntry(self, display_row,labeltext,entryvar):
'''
Standard 'Entry' feature for GUI.
'''
Label(self.displayframe, text=labeltext).grid(row=display_row, column=0, sticky=W)
name = Entry(self.displayframe, textvariable=entryvar)
name.grid(row=display_row, column=1, sticky=W)
display_row+=1
def BooleanRadioButton(self, display_row, labeltext, entryvar):
'''
Boolean true/false radio button function
'''
Label(self.displayframe, text=labeltext).grid(row=display_row, column=0, sticky=W)
ButtonOn = Radiobutton(self.displayframe, text="Enabled", variable=entryvar, value=True)
ButtonOn.grid(row=display_row, column=1, sticky=W)
ButtonOn = Radiobutton(self.displayframe, text="Disabled", variable=entryvar, value=False)
ButtonOn.grid(row=display_row, column=2, sticky=W)
def StandardSpinBox(self, display_row, labeltext, min_value, max_value, variablename):
'''
Standard spinbox for this project.
'''
Label(self.displayframe, text=labeltext).grid(row=display_row, column=0, sticky=W)
spinboxwidget = Spinbox(self.displayframe, from_=min_value, to=max_value, textvariable=variablename)
spinboxwidget.grid(row=display_row, column=1)
def AddFreeTextForm(self, display_row, notes):
'''
Standard widget for free text entry
'''
self.newText = Text(self.displayframe, width=50, height=8, takefocus=0)
self.newText.grid(row=display_row, column=0, columnspan=4, padx=10, pady=10)
def movesettingstoclass(self, dataclass):
dataclass.NameVar = self.NameVar.get()
dataclass.NumVar = int(self.NumVar.get())
dataclass.ButtonVar = self.ButtonVar.get()
def populate(self, dataclass):
'''
Takes the data in the data structure and populates the GUI.
'''
self.NameVar.set(dataclass.NameVar)
self.NumVar.set(str(dataclass.NumVar))
self.ButtonVar.set(dataclass.ButtonVar)
#===============================
# Data Class
#===============================
class DataClass():
def __init__(self):
self.NameVar = 'SomeName'
self.NumVar = 11
self.ButtonVar = False
def showvalues(self):
'''
Debug function/method for checking values are set correctly.
'''
msg += 'NameVar : %s\n' %self.NameVar
msg += 'NumVar : %d\n' %self.NumVar
msg += 'KVVar : %d\n' %self.KVVar
if self.ButtonVar == True:
msg += 'ButtonVar: True\n'
else:
msg += 'ButtonVar: False\n'
print msg
#=============================================
# Main window
#=============================================
root = Tk()
MyData = DataClass()
mainGUI = GUIClass()
root.title('Problem Example')
menu = Menu(root)
root.config(menu=menu)
#==============================================================================
# text fields to be entered by the user...
display_row = 0
Notes = ''
mainGUI.displayframe = Frame(root)
#==============================================================================
# Some entry input parameter
mainGUI.StandardEntry(display_row, "Some Label", mainGUI.NameVar)
display_row+=1
#==============================================================================
# Some spinbox input parameter
mainGUI.StandardSpinBox(display_row, "Some Label", 3, 21, mainGUI.NumVar)
display_row+=1
#==============================================================================
# Some Radiobutton input parameter
SwitchOn = mainGUI.BooleanRadioButton(display_row, "Button Label", mainGUI.ButtonVar)
display_row+=1
Label(mainGUI.displayframe, text="Configuration Notes").grid(row=display_row, column=1, sticky=W)
display_row += 1
#notes = mainGUI.AddFreeTextForm(display_row, "Configuration Notes", MyData.Notes)
notes = mainGUI.AddFreeTextForm(display_row, Notes)
display_row+=1
mainGUI.displayframe.pack(anchor='w')
#==============================================================================
# and the magic all happens here
mainloop()

You forgot to set the sticky parameter when calling the spinbox' grid method.
spinboxwidget.grid(row=display_row, column=1, sticky=W)

Related

how to print the contents of the Text widget in python [duplicate]

How to get Tkinter input from the Text widget?
EDIT
I asked this question to help others with the same problem - that is the reason why there is no example code. This issue had been troubling me for hours and I used this question to teach others. Please do not rate it as if it was a real question - the answer is the thing that matters.
To get Tkinter input from the text box, you must add a few more attributes to the normal .get() function. If we have a text box myText_Box, then this is the method for retrieving its input.
def retrieve_input():
input = self.myText_Box.get("1.0",END)
The first part, "1.0" means that the input should be read from line one, character zero (ie: the very first character). END is an imported constant which is set to the string "end". The END part means to read until the end of the text box is reached. The only issue with this is that it actually adds a newline to our input. So, in order to fix it we should change END to end-1c(Thanks Bryan Oakley) The -1c deletes 1 character, while -2c would mean delete two characters, and so on.
def retrieve_input():
input = self.myText_Box.get("1.0",'end-1c')
Here is how I did it with python 3.5.2:
from tkinter import *
root=Tk()
def retrieve_input():
inputValue=textBox.get("1.0","end-1c")
print(inputValue)
textBox=Text(root, height=2, width=10)
textBox.pack()
buttonCommit=Button(root, height=1, width=10, text="Commit",
command=lambda: retrieve_input())
#command=lambda: retrieve_input() >>> just means do this when i press the button
buttonCommit.pack()
mainloop()
with that, when i typed "blah blah" in the text widget and pressed the button, whatever i typed got printed out. So i think that is the answer for storing user input from Text widget to variable.
To get Tkinter input from the text box in python 3 the complete student level program used by me is as under:
#Imports all (*) classes,
#atributes, and methods of tkinter into the
#current workspace
from tkinter import *
#***********************************
#Creates an instance of the class tkinter.Tk.
#This creates what is called the "root" window. By conventon,
#the root window in Tkinter is usually called "root",
#but you are free to call it by any other name.
root = Tk()
root.title('how to get text from textbox')
#**********************************
mystring = StringVar()
####define the function that the signup button will do
def getvalue():
## print(mystring.get())
#*************************************
Label(root, text="Text to get").grid(row=0, sticky=W) #label
Entry(root, textvariable = mystring).grid(row=0, column=1, sticky=E) #entry textbox
WSignUp = Button(root, text="print text", command=getvalue).grid(row=3, column=0, sticky=W) #button
############################################
# executes the mainloop (that is, the event loop) method of the root
# object. The mainloop method is what keeps the root window visible.
# If you remove the line, the window created will disappear
# immediately as the script stops running. This will happen so fast
# that you will not even see the window appearing on your screen.
# Keeping the mainloop running also lets you keep the
# program running until you press the close buton
root.mainloop()
In order to obtain the string in a Text widget one can simply use get method defined for Text which accepts 1 to 2 arguments as start and end positions of characters, text_widget_object.get(start, end=None). If only start is passed and end isn't passed it returns only the single character positioned at start, if end is passed as well, it returns all characters in between positions start and end as string.
There are also special strings, that are variables to the underlying Tk. One of them would be "end" or tk.END which represents the variable position of the very last char in the Text widget. An example would be to returning all text in the widget, with text_widget_object.get('1.0', 'end') or text_widget_object.get('1.0', 'end-1c') if you don't want the last newline character.
Demo
See below demonstration that selects the characters in between the given positions with sliders:
try:
import tkinter as tk
except:
import Tkinter as tk
class Demo(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabeFrame that in order to demonstrate the string returned by the
get method of Text widget, selects the characters in between the
given arguments that are set with Scales.
"""
def __init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self.start_arg = ''
self.end_arg = None
self.position_frames = dict()
self._create_widgets()
self._layout()
self.update()
def _create_widgets(self):
self._is_two_args = tk.Checkbutton(self,
text="Use 2 positional arguments...")
self.position_frames['start'] = PositionFrame(self,
text="start='{}.{}'.format(line, column)")
self.position_frames['end'] = PositionFrame( self,
text="end='{}.{}'.format(line, column)")
self.text = TextWithStats(self, wrap='none')
self._widget_configs()
def _widget_configs(self):
self.text.update_callback = self.update
self._is_two_args.var = tk.BooleanVar(self, value=False)
self._is_two_args.config(variable=self._is_two_args.var,
onvalue=True, offvalue=False)
self._is_two_args['command'] = self._is_two_args_handle
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['command'] = self.update
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['command'] = self.update
def _layout(self):
self._is_two_args.grid(sticky='nsw', row=0, column=1)
self.position_frames['start'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=0)
#self.position_frames['end'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
self.text.grid(sticky='nsew', row=2, column=0,
rowspan=2, columnspan=2)
_grid_size = self.grid_size()
for _col in range(_grid_size[0]):
self.grid_columnconfigure(_col, weight=1)
for _row in range(_grid_size[1] - 1):
self.grid_rowconfigure(_row + 1, weight=1)
def _is_two_args_handle(self):
self.update_arguments()
if self._is_two_args.var.get():
self.position_frames['end'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
else:
self.position_frames['end'].grid_remove()
def update(self, event=None):
"""
Updates slider limits, argument values, labels representing the
get method call.
"""
self.update_sliders()
self.update_arguments()
def update_sliders(self):
"""
Updates slider limits based on what's written in the text and
which line is selected.
"""
self._update_line_sliders()
self._update_column_sliders()
def _update_line_sliders(self):
if self.text.lines_length:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['state'] = 'normal'
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['from_'] = 1
_no_of_lines = self.text.line_count
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['to'] = _no_of_lines
else:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['state'] = 'disabled'
def _update_column_sliders(self):
if self.text.lines_length:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['state'] = 'normal'
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['from_'] = 0
_line_no = int(self.position_frames[_key].line.slider.get())-1
_max_line_len = self.text.lines_length[_line_no]
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['to'] = _max_line_len
else:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['state'] = 'disabled'
def update_arguments(self):
"""
Updates the values representing the arguments passed to the get
method, based on whether or not the 2nd positional argument is
active and the slider positions.
"""
_start_line_no = self.position_frames['start'].line.slider.get()
_start_col_no = self.position_frames['start'].column.slider.get()
self.start_arg = "{}.{}".format(_start_line_no, _start_col_no)
if self._is_two_args.var.get():
_end_line_no = self.position_frames['end'].line.slider.get()
_end_col_no = self.position_frames['end'].column.slider.get()
self.end_arg = "{}.{}".format(_end_line_no, _end_col_no)
else:
self.end_arg = None
self._update_method_labels()
self._select()
def _update_method_labels(self):
if self.end_arg:
for _key in self.position_frames:
_string = "text.get('{}', '{}')".format(
self.start_arg, self.end_arg)
self.position_frames[_key].label['text'] = _string
else:
_string = "text.get('{}')".format(self.start_arg)
self.position_frames['start'].label['text'] = _string
def _select(self):
self.text.focus_set()
self.text.tag_remove('sel', '1.0', 'end')
self.text.tag_add('sel', self.start_arg, self.end_arg)
if self.end_arg:
self.text.mark_set('insert', self.end_arg)
else:
self.text.mark_set('insert', self.start_arg)
class TextWithStats(tk.Text):
"""
Text widget that stores stats of its content:
self.line_count: the total number of lines
self.lines_length: the total number of characters per line
self.update_callback: can be set as the reference to the callback
to be called with each update
"""
def __init__(self, master, update_callback=None, *args, **kwargs):
tk.Text.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self._events = ('<KeyPress>',
'<KeyRelease>',
'<ButtonRelease-1>',
'<ButtonRelease-2>',
'<ButtonRelease-3>',
'<Delete>',
'<<Cut>>',
'<<Paste>>',
'<<Undo>>',
'<<Redo>>')
self.line_count = None
self.lines_length = list()
self.update_callback = update_callback
self.update_stats()
self.bind_events_on_widget_to_callback( self._events,
self,
self.update_stats)
#staticmethod
def bind_events_on_widget_to_callback(events, widget, callback):
"""
Bind events on widget to callback.
"""
for _event in events:
widget.bind(_event, callback)
def update_stats(self, event=None):
"""
Update self.line_count, self.lines_length stats and call
self.update_callback.
"""
_string = self.get('1.0', 'end-1c')
_string_lines = _string.splitlines()
self.line_count = len(_string_lines)
del self.lines_length[:]
for _line in _string_lines:
self.lines_length.append(len(_line))
if self.update_callback:
self.update_callback()
class PositionFrame(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabelFrame that has two LabelFrames which has Scales.
"""
def __init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self._create_widgets()
self._layout()
def _create_widgets(self):
self.line = SliderFrame(self, orient='vertical', text="line=")
self.column = SliderFrame(self, orient='horizontal', text="column=")
self.label = tk.Label(self, text="Label")
def _layout(self):
self.line.grid(sticky='ns', row=0, column=0, rowspan=2)
self.column.grid(sticky='ew', row=0, column=1, columnspan=2)
self.label.grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
self.grid_rowconfigure(1, weight=1)
self.grid_columnconfigure(1, weight=1)
class SliderFrame(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabelFrame that encapsulates a Scale.
"""
def __init__(self, master, orient, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self.slider = tk.Scale(self, orient=orient)
self.slider.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
if __name__ == '__main__':
root = tk.Tk()
demo = Demo(root, text="text.get(start, end=None)")
with open(__file__) as f:
demo.text.insert('1.0', f.read())
demo.text.update_stats()
demo.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
root.mainloop()
I think this is a better way-
variable1=StringVar() # Value saved here
def search():
print(variable1.get())
return ''
ttk.Entry(mainframe, width=7, textvariable=variable1).grid(column=2, row=1)
ttk.Label(mainframe, text="label").grid(column=1, row=1)
ttk.Button(mainframe, text="Search", command=search).grid(column=2, row=13)
On pressing the button, the value in the text field would get printed.
But make sure You import the ttk separately.
The full code for a basic application is-
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
root=Tk()
mainframe = ttk.Frame(root, padding="10 10 12 12")
mainframe.grid(column=0, row=0, sticky=(N, W, E, S))
mainframe.columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
mainframe.rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
variable1=StringVar() # Value saved here
def search():
print(variable1.get())
return ''
ttk.Entry(mainframe, width=7, textvariable=variable1).grid(column=2, row=1)
ttk.Label(mainframe, text="label").grid(column=1, row=1)
ttk.Button(mainframe, text="Search", command=search).grid(column=2, row=13)
root.mainloop()
I faced the problem of gettng entire text from Text widget and following solution worked for me :
txt.get(1.0,END)
Where 1.0 means first line, zeroth character (ie before the first!)
is the starting position and END is the ending position.
Thanks to Alan Gauld in this link
I did come also in search of how to get input data from the Text widget. Regarding the problem with a new line on the end of the string. You can just use .strip() since it is a Text widget that is always a string.
Also, I'm sharing code where you can see how you can create multiply Text widgets and save them in the dictionary as form data, and then by clicking the submit button get that form data and do whatever you want with it. I hope it helps others. It should work in any 3.x python and probably will work in 2.7 also.
from tkinter import *
from functools import partial
class SimpleTkForm(object):
def __init__(self):
self.root = Tk()
def myform(self):
self.root.title('My form')
frame = Frame(self.root, pady=10)
form_data = dict()
form_fields = ['username', 'password', 'server name', 'database name']
cnt = 0
for form_field in form_fields:
Label(frame, text=form_field, anchor=NW).grid(row=cnt,column=1, pady=5, padx=(10, 1), sticky="W")
textbox = Text(frame, height=1, width=15)
form_data.update({form_field: textbox})
textbox.grid(row=cnt,column=2, pady=5, padx=(3,20))
cnt += 1
conn_test = partial(self.test_db_conn, form_data=form_data)
Button(frame, text='Submit', width=15, command=conn_test).grid(row=cnt,column=2, pady=5, padx=(3,20))
frame.pack()
self.root.mainloop()
def test_db_conn(self, form_data):
data = {k:v.get('1.0', END).strip() for k,v in form_data.items()}
# validate data or do anything you want with it
print(data)
if __name__ == '__main__':
api = SimpleTkForm()
api.myform()
I would argue that creating a simple extension of Text and turning text into a property is the cleanest way to go. You can then stick that extension in some file that you always import, and use it instead of the original Text widget. This way, instead of having to remember, write, repeat, etc all the hoops tkinter makes you jump through to do the simplest things, you have a butt-simple interface that can be reused in any project. You can do this for Entry, as well, but the syntax is slightly different.
import tkinter as tk
root = tk.Tk()
class Text(tk.Text):
#property
def text(self) -> str:
return self.get('1.0', 'end-1c')
#text.setter
def text(self, value) -> None:
self.replace('1.0', 'end-1c', value)
def __init__(self, master, **kwargs):
tk.Text.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
#Entry version of the same concept as above
class Entry(tk.Entry):
#property
def text(self) -> str:
return self.get()
#text.setter
def text(self, value) -> None:
self.delete(0, 'end')
self.insert(0, value)
def __init__(self, master, **kwargs):
tk.Entry.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
textbox = Text(root)
textbox.grid()
textbox.text = "this is text" #set
print(textbox.text) #get
entry = Entry(root)
entry.grid()
entry.text = 'this is text' #set
print(entry.text) #get
root.mainloop()
Lets say that you have a Text widget called my_text_widget.
To get input from the my_text_widget you can use the get function.
Let's assume that you have imported tkinter.
Lets define my_text_widget first, lets make it just a simple text widget.
my_text_widget = Text(self)
To get input from a text widget you need to use the get function, both, text and entry widgets have this.
input = my_text_widget.get()
The reason we save it to a variable is to use it in the further process, for example, testing for what's the input.

Tkinter PopUp window not taking the textvariable values from Entry and Combobox

I used Tkinter in Python3 to create a GUI and one of the functions is a pop up window after a button click. This is how my popup window looks like this. The pop up window will take the user inputs and update a variable from the class object (self). Everything works fine except the part in the function UpdateValues() as shown in the code below.
After inputting and updating the Frequency (variable freq in the code) and Iterations (variable loop in code) values in the popup window, they fail to print on the terminal and give a blank screen. Thus the self.freq and self.loop are unable to get updated.
I'm a newbie to python-classes and tkinter and have been struggling with this problem for a while now. Any help will be much appreciated. Thank you!
CODE:
'''Class and other attributes here'''
# Blinking light ssh command
self.freq = "500"
self.loop = "10"
def RunCode():
cmd = "sshpass -p \"raspberry\" ssh -to StrictHostKeyChecking=no pi#pi ./led "+self.freq+" "+self.loop
os.system(cmd)
def PopUpBox1():
popup = tk.Tk()
popup.title("Edit Parameters")
w = 325
h = 75
x = (ws/2) - w/2
y = (hs/2) - h/2
popup.geometry('%dx%d+%d+%d' % (w,h,x,y))
popup.resizable(False,False)
# Adding widgets to PopUpBox
# Modified Button Click Function for Update
def UpdateValues():
update.configure(text='Updated')
print(freq.get())
print(loop.get())
self.freq = str(freq.get())
self.loop = str(loop.get())
popup.destroy()
# Frequency and Iterations label
ttk.Label(popup, text="Frequency:",font='200').grid(column=0, row=0, padx=4, pady=4, sticky='w')
ttk.Label(popup, text="Iterations:",font='200').grid(column=1, row=0, padx=4, pady=4, sticky='w')
# Adding a Textbox Entry widget for frequency values
freq = tk.StringVar()
name_entered = tk.Entry(popup, width=12, textvariable=freq)
name_entered.grid(column=0, row=1, padx=4, pady=4)
# Adding a Combobox for iteration values
loop = tk.StringVar()
number_chosen = ttk.Combobox(popup, width=12, textvariable=loop)
number_chosen['values'] = (1, 2, 4, 42, 100)
number_chosen.grid(column=1, row=1, padx=4, pady=4)
number_chosen.current(0)
# Adding a Button for Updation
update = ttk.Button(popup, text="Update", command = UpdateValues)
update.grid(column=2, row=1, padx=4, pady=4)
# Place cursor into name Entry
name_entered.focus()

python 3 Tkinter ComboBox don't get value

I am trying to get the value of from a combobox in tkinter using python 3.6, i been looking to many tutorials but i don't see the problem yet.
every time i press the button don't show anything.
but also there is not errors.
so to clarify ... I am trying to get the value of the tk.combobox when i press ttk.Button.
thank you in advance for any ideas or comments.
this is what i have so far.
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import ttk
def combo_box_updater():
total_location = ['linden', 'mineola', 'brooklyn']
return total_location
def start_analisys(event=None):
site = jobsite_name.get()
print(site)
# this is part of a definition that automatically will update the names in later versions
job_site = combo_box_updater()
# basic gui setup
unified = tk.Toplevel()
unified.title('Unified 1 Week Timesheet')
unified.configure(background="#00012f")
unified.geometry("650x200")
unified.resizable(width=False, height=False)
entry_width = 30
# basic frame
frame1 = tk.Frame(unified)
frame1.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky='w')
# combo box in the fourth row
jobsite_name = tk.StringVar()
combo_box = ttk.Combobox(frame1, font="none 12 bold", width=20, textvariable=jobsite_name, text="choose location")
combo_box.grid(row=0, column=1, sticky="wesn")
combo_box['values'] = [x for x in job_site]
# Left button side
ttk.Button(frame1, text='Run', command=start_analisys, ).grid(row=0, column=2, sticky='nsew', rowspan=3)
unified.mainloop()
Made three minor edits to your code: added a label to display the result, added a line to combo box setup, and changed the creation of the main window.
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import ttk
def combo_box_updater():
total_location = ['linden', 'mineola', 'brooklyn']
return total_location
def start_analisys(event=None):
site = jobsite_name.get()
aLabel["text"] = site
print(site)
# this is part of a definition that automatically will update the names in later versions
job_site = combo_box_updater()
# basic gui setup
unified = tk.Tk()
unified.title('Unified 1 Week Timesheet')
unified.configure(background="#00012f")
unified.geometry("650x200")
unified.resizable(width=False, height=False)
entry_width = 30
# basic frame
frame1 = tk.Frame(unified)
frame1.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky='w')
# combo box in the fourth row
jobsite_name = tk.StringVar()
combo_box = ttk.Combobox(frame1, font="none 12 bold", width=20, textvariable=jobsite_name)
combo_box.grid(row=0, column=1, sticky="wesn")
combo_box['values'] = [x for x in job_site]
combo_box.current(0)
# Left button side
ttk.Button(frame1, text='Run', command=start_analisys, ).grid(row=0, column=2, sticky='nsew', rowspan=3)
# add a label
aLabel = ttk.Label(frame1, text='My Label')
# place the label
aLabel.grid(column=3, row=0)
unified.mainloop()
if __name__ == '__main__':
pass
When you add the values as an afterthought like that you need to add the corresponding commands as well. It's much better to add the values through the init method so the commands are automatically added:
jobsite_name = tk.StringVar(value="choose location")
combo_box = ttk.Combobox(frame1, textvariable=jobsite_name, values=job_site, font="none 12 bold", width=20)

Tkinter. Press Enter in Entry box. Append to Text box. How?

I am making a chat program and decided to use Tkinter for the interface.
What I wanna do is a breeze in C# but Tkinter is new to me.
Basically I have a form with a Entry control and a Text control.
I want to know how to append text from the Entry control to the Text control after the user presses Enter.
Here's my code so far:
from tkinter import *
class Application:
def hello(self):
msg = tkinter.messagebox.askquestion('title','question')
def __init__(self, form):
form.resizable(0,0)
form.minsize(200, 200)
form.title('Top Level')
# Global Padding pady and padx
pad_x = 5
pad_y = 5
# create a toplevel menu
menubar = Menu(form)
#command= parameter missing.
menubar.add_command(label="Menu1")
#command= parameter missing.
menubar.add_command(label="Menu2")
#command= parameter missing.
menubar.add_command(label="Menu3")
# display the menu
form.config(menu=menubar)
# Create controls
label1 = Label(form, text="Label1")
textbox1 = Entry(form)
#command= parameter missing.
button1 = Button(form, text='Button1')
scrollbar1 = Scrollbar(form)
textarea1 = Text(form, width=20, height=10)
textarea1.config(yscrollcommand=scrollbar1.set)
scrollbar1.config(command=textarea1.yview)
textarea1.grid(row=0, column=1, padx=pad_x, pady=pad_y, sticky=W)
scrollbar1.grid(row=0, column=2, padx=pad_x, pady=pad_y, sticky=W)
textbox1.grid(row=1, column=1, padx=pad_x, pady=pad_y, sticky=W)
button1.grid(row=1, column=2, padx=pad_x, pady=pad_y, sticky=W)
form.mainloop()
root = Tk()
Application(root)
So you're using a tkinter.Text box, which supports the .insert method. Let's use it!
def __init__(self,form):
# Lots of your code is duplicated here, so I'm just highlighting the main parts
button1 = Button(form, text='Button1', command = self.addchat)
self.textbox = textbox1 # to make it accessible outside your __init__
self.textarea = textarea1 # see above
form.bind("<Return>", lambda x: self.addchat())
# this is the magic that makes your enter key do something
def addchat(self):
txt = self.textbox.get()
# gets everything in your textbox
self.textarea.insert(END,"\n"+txt)
# tosses txt into textarea on a new line after the end
self.textbox.delete(0,END) # deletes your textbox text

How to get the input from the Tkinter Text Widget?

How to get Tkinter input from the Text widget?
EDIT
I asked this question to help others with the same problem - that is the reason why there is no example code. This issue had been troubling me for hours and I used this question to teach others. Please do not rate it as if it was a real question - the answer is the thing that matters.
To get Tkinter input from the text box, you must add a few more attributes to the normal .get() function. If we have a text box myText_Box, then this is the method for retrieving its input.
def retrieve_input():
input = self.myText_Box.get("1.0",END)
The first part, "1.0" means that the input should be read from line one, character zero (ie: the very first character). END is an imported constant which is set to the string "end". The END part means to read until the end of the text box is reached. The only issue with this is that it actually adds a newline to our input. So, in order to fix it we should change END to end-1c(Thanks Bryan Oakley) The -1c deletes 1 character, while -2c would mean delete two characters, and so on.
def retrieve_input():
input = self.myText_Box.get("1.0",'end-1c')
Here is how I did it with python 3.5.2:
from tkinter import *
root=Tk()
def retrieve_input():
inputValue=textBox.get("1.0","end-1c")
print(inputValue)
textBox=Text(root, height=2, width=10)
textBox.pack()
buttonCommit=Button(root, height=1, width=10, text="Commit",
command=lambda: retrieve_input())
#command=lambda: retrieve_input() >>> just means do this when i press the button
buttonCommit.pack()
mainloop()
with that, when i typed "blah blah" in the text widget and pressed the button, whatever i typed got printed out. So i think that is the answer for storing user input from Text widget to variable.
To get Tkinter input from the text box in python 3 the complete student level program used by me is as under:
#Imports all (*) classes,
#atributes, and methods of tkinter into the
#current workspace
from tkinter import *
#***********************************
#Creates an instance of the class tkinter.Tk.
#This creates what is called the "root" window. By conventon,
#the root window in Tkinter is usually called "root",
#but you are free to call it by any other name.
root = Tk()
root.title('how to get text from textbox')
#**********************************
mystring = StringVar()
####define the function that the signup button will do
def getvalue():
## print(mystring.get())
#*************************************
Label(root, text="Text to get").grid(row=0, sticky=W) #label
Entry(root, textvariable = mystring).grid(row=0, column=1, sticky=E) #entry textbox
WSignUp = Button(root, text="print text", command=getvalue).grid(row=3, column=0, sticky=W) #button
############################################
# executes the mainloop (that is, the event loop) method of the root
# object. The mainloop method is what keeps the root window visible.
# If you remove the line, the window created will disappear
# immediately as the script stops running. This will happen so fast
# that you will not even see the window appearing on your screen.
# Keeping the mainloop running also lets you keep the
# program running until you press the close buton
root.mainloop()
In order to obtain the string in a Text widget one can simply use get method defined for Text which accepts 1 to 2 arguments as start and end positions of characters, text_widget_object.get(start, end=None). If only start is passed and end isn't passed it returns only the single character positioned at start, if end is passed as well, it returns all characters in between positions start and end as string.
There are also special strings, that are variables to the underlying Tk. One of them would be "end" or tk.END which represents the variable position of the very last char in the Text widget. An example would be to returning all text in the widget, with text_widget_object.get('1.0', 'end') or text_widget_object.get('1.0', 'end-1c') if you don't want the last newline character.
Demo
See below demonstration that selects the characters in between the given positions with sliders:
try:
import tkinter as tk
except:
import Tkinter as tk
class Demo(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabeFrame that in order to demonstrate the string returned by the
get method of Text widget, selects the characters in between the
given arguments that are set with Scales.
"""
def __init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self.start_arg = ''
self.end_arg = None
self.position_frames = dict()
self._create_widgets()
self._layout()
self.update()
def _create_widgets(self):
self._is_two_args = tk.Checkbutton(self,
text="Use 2 positional arguments...")
self.position_frames['start'] = PositionFrame(self,
text="start='{}.{}'.format(line, column)")
self.position_frames['end'] = PositionFrame( self,
text="end='{}.{}'.format(line, column)")
self.text = TextWithStats(self, wrap='none')
self._widget_configs()
def _widget_configs(self):
self.text.update_callback = self.update
self._is_two_args.var = tk.BooleanVar(self, value=False)
self._is_two_args.config(variable=self._is_two_args.var,
onvalue=True, offvalue=False)
self._is_two_args['command'] = self._is_two_args_handle
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['command'] = self.update
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['command'] = self.update
def _layout(self):
self._is_two_args.grid(sticky='nsw', row=0, column=1)
self.position_frames['start'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=0)
#self.position_frames['end'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
self.text.grid(sticky='nsew', row=2, column=0,
rowspan=2, columnspan=2)
_grid_size = self.grid_size()
for _col in range(_grid_size[0]):
self.grid_columnconfigure(_col, weight=1)
for _row in range(_grid_size[1] - 1):
self.grid_rowconfigure(_row + 1, weight=1)
def _is_two_args_handle(self):
self.update_arguments()
if self._is_two_args.var.get():
self.position_frames['end'].grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
else:
self.position_frames['end'].grid_remove()
def update(self, event=None):
"""
Updates slider limits, argument values, labels representing the
get method call.
"""
self.update_sliders()
self.update_arguments()
def update_sliders(self):
"""
Updates slider limits based on what's written in the text and
which line is selected.
"""
self._update_line_sliders()
self._update_column_sliders()
def _update_line_sliders(self):
if self.text.lines_length:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['state'] = 'normal'
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['from_'] = 1
_no_of_lines = self.text.line_count
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['to'] = _no_of_lines
else:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].line.slider['state'] = 'disabled'
def _update_column_sliders(self):
if self.text.lines_length:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['state'] = 'normal'
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['from_'] = 0
_line_no = int(self.position_frames[_key].line.slider.get())-1
_max_line_len = self.text.lines_length[_line_no]
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['to'] = _max_line_len
else:
for _key in self.position_frames:
self.position_frames[_key].column.slider['state'] = 'disabled'
def update_arguments(self):
"""
Updates the values representing the arguments passed to the get
method, based on whether or not the 2nd positional argument is
active and the slider positions.
"""
_start_line_no = self.position_frames['start'].line.slider.get()
_start_col_no = self.position_frames['start'].column.slider.get()
self.start_arg = "{}.{}".format(_start_line_no, _start_col_no)
if self._is_two_args.var.get():
_end_line_no = self.position_frames['end'].line.slider.get()
_end_col_no = self.position_frames['end'].column.slider.get()
self.end_arg = "{}.{}".format(_end_line_no, _end_col_no)
else:
self.end_arg = None
self._update_method_labels()
self._select()
def _update_method_labels(self):
if self.end_arg:
for _key in self.position_frames:
_string = "text.get('{}', '{}')".format(
self.start_arg, self.end_arg)
self.position_frames[_key].label['text'] = _string
else:
_string = "text.get('{}')".format(self.start_arg)
self.position_frames['start'].label['text'] = _string
def _select(self):
self.text.focus_set()
self.text.tag_remove('sel', '1.0', 'end')
self.text.tag_add('sel', self.start_arg, self.end_arg)
if self.end_arg:
self.text.mark_set('insert', self.end_arg)
else:
self.text.mark_set('insert', self.start_arg)
class TextWithStats(tk.Text):
"""
Text widget that stores stats of its content:
self.line_count: the total number of lines
self.lines_length: the total number of characters per line
self.update_callback: can be set as the reference to the callback
to be called with each update
"""
def __init__(self, master, update_callback=None, *args, **kwargs):
tk.Text.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self._events = ('<KeyPress>',
'<KeyRelease>',
'<ButtonRelease-1>',
'<ButtonRelease-2>',
'<ButtonRelease-3>',
'<Delete>',
'<<Cut>>',
'<<Paste>>',
'<<Undo>>',
'<<Redo>>')
self.line_count = None
self.lines_length = list()
self.update_callback = update_callback
self.update_stats()
self.bind_events_on_widget_to_callback( self._events,
self,
self.update_stats)
#staticmethod
def bind_events_on_widget_to_callback(events, widget, callback):
"""
Bind events on widget to callback.
"""
for _event in events:
widget.bind(_event, callback)
def update_stats(self, event=None):
"""
Update self.line_count, self.lines_length stats and call
self.update_callback.
"""
_string = self.get('1.0', 'end-1c')
_string_lines = _string.splitlines()
self.line_count = len(_string_lines)
del self.lines_length[:]
for _line in _string_lines:
self.lines_length.append(len(_line))
if self.update_callback:
self.update_callback()
class PositionFrame(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabelFrame that has two LabelFrames which has Scales.
"""
def __init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self._create_widgets()
self._layout()
def _create_widgets(self):
self.line = SliderFrame(self, orient='vertical', text="line=")
self.column = SliderFrame(self, orient='horizontal', text="column=")
self.label = tk.Label(self, text="Label")
def _layout(self):
self.line.grid(sticky='ns', row=0, column=0, rowspan=2)
self.column.grid(sticky='ew', row=0, column=1, columnspan=2)
self.label.grid(sticky='nsew', row=1, column=1)
self.grid_rowconfigure(1, weight=1)
self.grid_columnconfigure(1, weight=1)
class SliderFrame(tk.LabelFrame):
"""
A LabelFrame that encapsulates a Scale.
"""
def __init__(self, master, orient, *args, **kwargs):
tk.LabelFrame.__init__(self, master, *args, **kwargs)
self.slider = tk.Scale(self, orient=orient)
self.slider.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
if __name__ == '__main__':
root = tk.Tk()
demo = Demo(root, text="text.get(start, end=None)")
with open(__file__) as f:
demo.text.insert('1.0', f.read())
demo.text.update_stats()
demo.pack(fill='both', expand=True)
root.mainloop()
I think this is a better way-
variable1=StringVar() # Value saved here
def search():
print(variable1.get())
return ''
ttk.Entry(mainframe, width=7, textvariable=variable1).grid(column=2, row=1)
ttk.Label(mainframe, text="label").grid(column=1, row=1)
ttk.Button(mainframe, text="Search", command=search).grid(column=2, row=13)
On pressing the button, the value in the text field would get printed.
But make sure You import the ttk separately.
The full code for a basic application is-
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
root=Tk()
mainframe = ttk.Frame(root, padding="10 10 12 12")
mainframe.grid(column=0, row=0, sticky=(N, W, E, S))
mainframe.columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
mainframe.rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
variable1=StringVar() # Value saved here
def search():
print(variable1.get())
return ''
ttk.Entry(mainframe, width=7, textvariable=variable1).grid(column=2, row=1)
ttk.Label(mainframe, text="label").grid(column=1, row=1)
ttk.Button(mainframe, text="Search", command=search).grid(column=2, row=13)
root.mainloop()
I faced the problem of gettng entire text from Text widget and following solution worked for me :
txt.get(1.0,END)
Where 1.0 means first line, zeroth character (ie before the first!)
is the starting position and END is the ending position.
Thanks to Alan Gauld in this link
I did come also in search of how to get input data from the Text widget. Regarding the problem with a new line on the end of the string. You can just use .strip() since it is a Text widget that is always a string.
Also, I'm sharing code where you can see how you can create multiply Text widgets and save them in the dictionary as form data, and then by clicking the submit button get that form data and do whatever you want with it. I hope it helps others. It should work in any 3.x python and probably will work in 2.7 also.
from tkinter import *
from functools import partial
class SimpleTkForm(object):
def __init__(self):
self.root = Tk()
def myform(self):
self.root.title('My form')
frame = Frame(self.root, pady=10)
form_data = dict()
form_fields = ['username', 'password', 'server name', 'database name']
cnt = 0
for form_field in form_fields:
Label(frame, text=form_field, anchor=NW).grid(row=cnt,column=1, pady=5, padx=(10, 1), sticky="W")
textbox = Text(frame, height=1, width=15)
form_data.update({form_field: textbox})
textbox.grid(row=cnt,column=2, pady=5, padx=(3,20))
cnt += 1
conn_test = partial(self.test_db_conn, form_data=form_data)
Button(frame, text='Submit', width=15, command=conn_test).grid(row=cnt,column=2, pady=5, padx=(3,20))
frame.pack()
self.root.mainloop()
def test_db_conn(self, form_data):
data = {k:v.get('1.0', END).strip() for k,v in form_data.items()}
# validate data or do anything you want with it
print(data)
if __name__ == '__main__':
api = SimpleTkForm()
api.myform()
I would argue that creating a simple extension of Text and turning text into a property is the cleanest way to go. You can then stick that extension in some file that you always import, and use it instead of the original Text widget. This way, instead of having to remember, write, repeat, etc all the hoops tkinter makes you jump through to do the simplest things, you have a butt-simple interface that can be reused in any project. You can do this for Entry, as well, but the syntax is slightly different.
import tkinter as tk
root = tk.Tk()
class Text(tk.Text):
#property
def text(self) -> str:
return self.get('1.0', 'end-1c')
#text.setter
def text(self, value) -> None:
self.replace('1.0', 'end-1c', value)
def __init__(self, master, **kwargs):
tk.Text.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
#Entry version of the same concept as above
class Entry(tk.Entry):
#property
def text(self) -> str:
return self.get()
#text.setter
def text(self, value) -> None:
self.delete(0, 'end')
self.insert(0, value)
def __init__(self, master, **kwargs):
tk.Entry.__init__(self, master, **kwargs)
textbox = Text(root)
textbox.grid()
textbox.text = "this is text" #set
print(textbox.text) #get
entry = Entry(root)
entry.grid()
entry.text = 'this is text' #set
print(entry.text) #get
root.mainloop()
Lets say that you have a Text widget called my_text_widget.
To get input from the my_text_widget you can use the get function.
Let's assume that you have imported tkinter.
Lets define my_text_widget first, lets make it just a simple text widget.
my_text_widget = Text(self)
To get input from a text widget you need to use the get function, both, text and entry widgets have this.
input = my_text_widget.get()
The reason we save it to a variable is to use it in the further process, for example, testing for what's the input.

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