VB6 frontend GUI with Python
Claire Blair
no.reply at here.com
Tue Nov 20 05:11:42 EST 2007
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> Claire Blair wrote:
>
>
>>I am trying to write a VB6 (not VB.Net) application that has a console
>>window that allows Python command to be typed at the prompt.
>>
>>The idea is so that, I can have full Python scripting from within my
>>application. I should be able to type commands from a Python script
>>(include import etc, so I can use other Python libraries). In other
>>words, I want to provide a complete (or almost complete) interactive
>>Python Scripting environment from within my application - so that I
>>enter commands in the VB6 console, and I get the (text) results
>>displayed in my VB6 console, and in the case of a graphic output (let
>>say I am importing wxPython for graphing functionality), I would have
>>the graph display after I have typed my command in my VB6 console.
>>
>>My initial route was to try to embed the Python interpreter, using BOOST
>>Python, writing a Win32 DLL around that and then calling the functions
>>from VB6. But I had various problems with that approach - so I am now
>>looking to use a Python COM server approach (although I would have
>>preferred not to touch COM).
>>
>>I have done a lot of Googling and research online - but I can't find
>>anything remotely useful, taht shows me how to do what I want to do. If
>>anyone has done something similar to what I am trying to do, or knows of
>>any links that may show me how to do provide a VB6 frontend GUI (i.e.
>>console) fo ruse with Python, I will be very grateful.
>
>
> You keep talking about "a console", but OTOH you want to use wxPython -
> which clearly is not console, but GUI. So I'm not really sure what you are
> after.
Yes, this seems to be confusing a lot of people. I want to be able to
use various existing plotting libraries (most of which use wxPython or
pyOpenGL). The end result is that (assuming my paths etc have been
correctly set), I can type something like this in my console:
>>> import someGraphingModule
>>> # a few other commands to fetch data etc ...
>>>
>>> # The following line will then open a window (using
>>> # wxPython, wxOpenGL (or whatever windowing library is
>>> # is provided by module someGraphingModule
>>> someGraphingModule.plotdata
>
> It might be possible to make wx render into a given window-handle.
>
> But may I ask: what is the reason for using VB at all? Why not do the
> GUI-frontend in wxPython?
>
> Diez
Simple. its because my main application (the GUI that is), is written in
VB6. I have a MDI application (i.e. many child windows in the same
application), and I want to use one of these windows as a console to
inteactively type Python commands. If I were to use wxPython, I would
not be able to treat the console 'the same' as the other child windows
in the application (i.e. minimize, close all etc). Maybe a simpler way
to think of this is to imagine that I am writing a PythonWin clone in
VB6. What I am asking here, is how can I create the 'Interactive Window' ?
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