Exploring Python for next desktop GUI Project
Zachary Ware
zachary.ware+pylist at gmail.com
Thu Jul 24 16:13:42 EDT 2014
On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 2:02 PM, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick
<kwpolska at gmail.com> wrote:
> Pretty much everyone in the world hates Tcl and Tk. Ask your favorite
> search engine for some results.
Whee, I'm an alien! ;)
I'm not saying Tk is the best thing since sliced bread, I just don't
see what so many people seem to hate about it.
> i’ve tried to write a Tkinter thing once. I don’t have a copy anymore
> (consciously deleted), but I vaguely remember some issues with widgets
> that do not work. I also remember that the list of widgets is quite
> small and not enough for many projects.
I have had no issues with widgets not working. I will admit that the
widget set is fairly small, though. You can get more from Tix (which
is also distributed with tkinter), but I haven't had any need for that
yet.
> The best way to handle this is just choose one of the two (wxwidgets
> chose GTK 2, for example) and be considered native enough by most, as
> people don’t really mind mixing them (as there are no good Qt web
> browsers, and VLC uses Qt and not GTK)
That's fair, and I agree that Tk should probably provide "close to
GTK" and "close to QT" themes for ttk[1]. As I understand it, though,
ttk gives almost complete control over the look of individual widgets,
so if you really don't like how your widget looks, change it!
> ttk on Linux doesn’t change a thing. It still uses the ugly, ancient,
> motif-esque style:
>
> https://www.google.com/search?q=tk+linux&tbm=isch
>
> (also, off by 10 years, motif is actually from the 1980s.)
Motif is indeed ugly, but your search for 'tk linux' doesn't tell me
anything about 'ttk linux'. I would be interested in the results of
the script below on Linux, which I may or may not be able to try for
myself later (but can't right now).
--
Zach
[1] Such themes might already exist, I haven't checked. If anyone
wants to see what themes are available and how they look, try this
(2/3 compatible, also attached in case Gmail messes it up):
import sys
try:
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import ttk
except ImportError:
import Tkinter as tk
import ttk
class App(object):
def __init__(self, root):
self.root = root
self.root.title('Theme tester')
self.info_label = ttk.Label(self.root,
text="Python {}.{} with Tcl/Tk {} on {}".format(
sys.version_info[0], sys.version_info[1],
self.root.tk.eval('info patchlevel'),
sys.platform))
self.info_label.pack()
self.theme_idx = 0
self.change_btn = ttk.Button(self.root,
text='Change theme',
command=self.change_theme
)
self.change_btn.pack()
self.rb_var = tk.StringVar(self.root)
self.radiobtn = ttk.Radiobutton(self.root,
text='Radio button option 1',
variable=self.rb_var,
value='1')
self.radiobtn.pack()
self.radiobtn2 = ttk.Radiobutton(self.root,
text='Radio button option 2',
variable=self.rb_var,
value='2')
self.radiobtn2.pack()
self.checkbtn = ttk.Checkbutton(self.root, text='Checkbutton')
self.checkbtn.pack()
self.entry = ttk.Entry(self.root)
self.entry.insert(0, 'Entry')
self.entry.pack()
self.style = ttk.Style(self.root)
self.available_themes = self.style.theme_names()
self.theme_label = ttk.Label(self.root, text='Platform default')
self.theme_label.pack()
def change_theme(self):
try:
theme = self.available_themes[self.theme_idx]
except IndexError:
theme = self.available_themes[0]
self.theme_idx = 0
self.style.theme_use(theme)
self.theme_label.configure(text=theme)
self.theme_idx += 1
root = tk.Tk()
app = App(root)
root.mainloop()
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