Gui Library in Python [closed] - python

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I am in need of making an interface for Automata Construction. For those who are unaware of what an automata is, I basically need circles and arrows, extending them on the user interface and then various text to describe it. For example :- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:DFAexample.svg
I was wondering if there is any advanced library in Python which could let me do all of this. Please give me suggestions. I plan to use lots of internal frames and showing parsing of strings diagramatically . I had planned to use jython to use the swing libraries but I would like to know if there any other suggestions that I can use.

I've used PyQt4 to produce something like this:
http://doc.qt.nokia.com/4.6/graphicsview-diagramscene.html
which is the C++ version. Draw boxes, draw arrows, drag them around and so forth. Actually I think I pretty much ported the C++ version line-by-line to Python. Or someone else did.

PySide (Qt), WxPython, PyGtk

I looked at your picture and have another one idea - you can use graphviz and pydot.

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Which do I use for building simple GUIs with matplotlib plot? [closed]

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I I just want to build a simple GUI (like button, scale changing parameter values) to update matplotlib plot using python. Which package is easier for me to use? TKinter, PyQt5, wxPython, etc??? I am not a software developer. I am an engineer. Just use python for data analysis and plotting. I like to have a simple gui to changing parameter values to update plot.
I am thinking if tkinter would be best? I came across the following example. It is pretty easier. Any suggestion would be appreciated.
Embed a pyplot in a tkinter window and update it
Thanks
Well if you are working on small projects then you should use Tkinter as it is easy use and user friendly but when you working on big projects then you need to use PyQt5 as it will give you lots of functionalities and it is easier to use too.
Believe it takes very less time to understand this library in python.
For learning purpose you can visit pdfdrive.com and download your free eBooks.

How do I make a Gui in python? [closed]

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Alright so I am not big brain. Can someone give me a tutorial or recommend one? I've heard tkinter is good, so maybe use that? I don't know please help me.
See GuiProgramming in the official wiki which shows a HUGE amount of frameworks in categories such as:
cross-browser
cross-platform
platform-specific
and other from which most of the known ones I'd say are PyJamas, PyGame, PyQt, Kivy, Tkinter and wxPython
This might help you out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GhzpvvIXlM
It is a simple tutorial that explains how to make a GUI. It uses Tkinter.
You can use Tkinter or Guizero to create GUIs using Python

python - how to make autocomplete gui? [closed]

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I searched so much but I couldn't find what I should use so I tried to use the built-in Tkinter but I can't find how to make what I want to make with it.
I want to have a text entry where user types something and my program makes some dynamic suggestions by opening a dropdown menu and user can choose the top option by pressing enter or they can click on one of the options or use up/down keys. and then that option will be added to a large text box under that single line textbox.
Can you recommend me any toolkit for python that I can make this GUI with? Also a link to a good tutorial for that toolkit would be much appreciated bc I'm new to python GUI.
Actually since this is very useful I'm sure there must be some snippet out there that would do this! But I can't find it yet!
Sorry if my question is a little too broad. But I'm so exhausted from searching to no avail. So I thought maybe some experienced people can easily help me out.
You can check out this module, which does exactly what you want (disclaimer: I am the author of that code).
Specifically, the code is not a tkinter.Entry widget, but a 'wrapper' (tk.Frame) around a tkinter.Entry and a tkinter.Listbox widget, the latter of which displays the results in an ordered list. If you want to redesign this behaviour yourself, I highly recommend using a similar approach rather than packing one widget below the other.
According to this link you have a lot of choices.
PyGTK
PyQt
wxPython

Is there a description of all available wxPython Widgets? [closed]

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I'm using wxPython, (with python 2.7) and am curious as to anyone have provided a sort of guide or an overview over available widgets? When I say a widget I imply a graphical entity drawn on the screen.
I have seen the documentation of the API, and by assuming that all "widgets" are sublasses to wx.Window, a better overview can be found in "tree-view in the aforementioned documentation.
However, if I did not know beforehand (from a tutorial) what a "notebook" was (in the wx sense), it would have been hard to be inspired to use this widget, using only the API reference.
The freely available book "wxPython in action" shows some examples here and there, but does not either contain an overview.
Does a better, more graphical, overview or presentation exist? Not necessarily of all possible widgets, but at least the most popular?
The Phoenix documentation has screenshots of a lot of the widgets:
docs.wxpython.org/gallery.html
You should also download the wxPython demo. It shows nearly all the widgets and how to use them. It can be found at http://www.wxpython.org

"htop" style gui with python, how? [closed]

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I am intersted in building some text based GUIs, things that look like the terminal, but has functions like selecting rows and performing actions.
You know, things like htop and atop, ex:
Any resource on that?
You need Uwrid - a console user interface library for Python.
Documentation available on the website.
There is also Curses, which is in the Python standard library.
don't miss http://pythondialog.sourceforge.net/ also
Also, the library panwid offers a data table widget for Urwid, which does a lot of the heavy-lifting for an htop-like interface.

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