How can I access an Entry content with pressing the corresponding Button in dynamically created widgets?
Below is the best I come up with so far. Thank you for any help.
from Tkinter import *
class App(object):
def __init__(self, master):
self.master = master
self.mf = Frame(self.master)
self.l = ["white", "red", "blue", "brown"]
self.font = ("Arial", 30)
self.c, self.r = 1, 0
self.cc, self.rr = 0, 0
self.bel = []
for c in self.l:
action = self.print_entry
self.e = Entry(self.mf, bg=c, width=10, font=self.font)
self.e.grid(row=self.r, column=self.c)
self.b = Button(self.mf, bg=c, text=c, font=self.font)
self.b.grid(row=self.rr, column=self.cc)
self.b.config(command=action)
self.bel.append((self.b, self.e))
self.rr += 1
self.r += 1
self.mf.pack()
def print_entry(self): # this function prints the content of the entry
pass
def main():
root = Tk()
display = App(root)
root.mainloop()
if __name__=="__main__":
main()
You can pass a reference to the entry widget into the command, using lambda or functools.partial. For example:
self.b.config(command= lambda entry=self.e: action(entry))
...
def print_entry(self, entry):
print("the entry is '%s'" % entry.get())
By the way, using self.b and self.e is pointless, since those variables will only ever hold references to the last button and last entry. You should either use a local variable, and/or append the values to a list.
I am trying to use the Python Tkinter .config() method to update some message text. I can't get it to work. What might I be doing wrong (see the update_message method):
#!/usr/bin/python
import alsaaudio as aa
import audioop
import Tkinter as tk
import tkFont
import threading
import Queue
# styles
BACKROUND_COLOR = '#000000'
TYPEFACE = 'Unit-Bold'
FONT_SIZE = 50
TEXT_COLOR = '#777777'
TEXTBOX_WIDTH = 400
# text
TITLE = 'listen closely'
SCORE_MESSAGE = 'your score:\n '
END_MESSAGE = 'too loud!\ntry again'
# configuration
DEVICE = 'hw:1' # hardware sound card index
CHANNELS = 1
SAMPLE_RATE = 8000 # Hz // 44100
PERIOD = 256 # Frames // 256
FORMAT = aa.PCM_FORMAT_S8 # Sound format
NOISE_THRESHOLD = 3
class Display(object):
def __init__(self, parent, queue):
self.parent = parent
self.queue = queue
self._geom = '200x200+0+0'
parent.geometry("{0}x{1}+0+0".format(
parent.winfo_screenwidth(), parent.winfo_screenheight()))
parent.overrideredirect(1)
parent.title(TITLE)
parent.configure(background=BACKROUND_COLOR)
parent.displayFont = tkFont.Font(family=TYPEFACE, size=FONT_SIZE)
self.process_queue()
def process_queue(self):
try:
score = self.queue.get(0)
self.print_message(score)
except Queue.Empty:
pass
self.parent.after(100, self.update_queue)
def update_queue(self):
try:
score = self.queue.get(0)
self.update_message(score)
except Queue.Empty:
pass
self.parent.after(100, self.update_queue)
def print_message(self, messageString):
print 'message', messageString
displayString = SCORE_MESSAGE + str(messageString)
self.message = tk.Message(
self.parent, text=displayString, bg=BACKROUND_COLOR,
font=self.parent.displayFont, fg=TEXT_COLOR, width=TEXTBOX_WIDTH, justify="c")
self.message.place(relx=.5, rely=.5, anchor="c")
def update_message(self, messageString):
print 'message', messageString
displayString = SCORE_MESSAGE + str(messageString)
self.message.config(text=displayString)
def setup_audio(queue, stop_event):
data_in = aa.PCM(aa.PCM_CAPTURE, aa.PCM_NONBLOCK, 'hw:1')
data_in.setchannels(2)
data_in.setrate(44100)
data_in.setformat(aa.PCM_FORMAT_S16_LE)
data_in.setperiodsize(256)
while not stop_event.is_set():
# Read data from device
l, data = data_in.read()
if l:
# catch frame error
try:
max_vol = audioop.rms(data, 2)
scaled_vol = max_vol // 4680
print scaled_vol
if scaled_vol <= 3:
# Too quiet, ignore
continue
queue.put(scaled_vol)
except audioop.error, e:
if e.message != "not a whole number of frames":
raise e
def main():
root = tk.Tk()
queue = Queue.Queue()
window = Display(root, queue)
stop_event = threading.Event()
audio_thread = threading.Thread(target=setup_audio,
args=[queue, stop_event])
audio_thread.start()
try:
root.mainloop()
finally:
stop_event.set()
audio_thread.join()
pass
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
I don't want to be laying down a new message every time I update. If the .config() doesn't work, is there another method to update the text configuration of the message?
I would use string variables, first create your string variable then set it to want you want it to display at the start next make your object and in text put the sting variable then when you want to change the text in the object change the string variable.
self.messaget = StringVar()
self.messaget.set("")
self.message = tk.Message(
self.parent, textvariable=self.messaget, bg=BACKROUND_COLOR,
font=self.parent.displayFont, fg=TEXT_COLOR,
width=TEXTBOX_WIDTH, justify="c").grid()
#note renember to palce the object after you have created it either using
#.grid(row = , column =) or .pack()
#note that it is textvariable instead of text if you put text instead it will run but
#but will show PY_Var instead of the value of the variable
edit
to change the text without recreating the object you do the name of the string variable you have used and .set
self.messaget.set("hi")
Hi i added a simple GUI in this script
A python script to automatically summarize soccer videos based on the crowd's reactions
The GUI script is the following
from Tkinter import *
from tkFileDialog import askopenfilename
from soccer_reacts import video_edit
class MyFrame(Frame):
def __init__(self):
master = Tk()
Label(master, text="Please Insert Video Path With Browse", width=30).grid(row=0)
Frame.__init__(self)
self.master.title("Video Editor")
self.master.geometry('{}x{}'.format(300, 200))
self.master.rowconfigure(5, weight=1)
self.master.columnconfigure(5, weight=1)
self.grid(sticky=W+E+N+S)
self.button = Button(self, text="Browse", command=self.load_file, width=15)
self.button.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky=W)
self.button2 = Button(self, text="Start", command=self.vid_reactions, width=15)
self.button2.grid(row=2, column=0, sticky=W)
def load_file(self):
fname = askopenfilename(filetypes=(("MP4 files", "*.mp4"),("All files", "*.*") ))
if fname:
self.fname = fname
def vid_reactions(self):
print("[*]Starting operation")
print("[*]File : "+self.fname)
video_edit(self.fname)
print("[*]Operation Finished")
if __name__ == "__main__":
MyFrame().mainloop()
End this is the new code of soccer cuts
import numpy as np # for numerical operations
from moviepy.editor import VideoFileClip, concatenate
def video_edit(file_name):
clip = VideoFileClip(file_name)
cut = lambda i: clip.audio.subclip(i,i+1).to_soundarray(fps=22000)
volume = lambda array: np.sqrt(((1.0*array)**2).mean())
volumes = [volume(cut(i)) for i in range(0,int(clip.audio.duration-2))]
averaged_volumes = np.array([sum(volumes[i:i+10])/10
for i in range(len(volumes)-10)])
increases = np.diff(averaged_volumes)[:-1]>=0
decreases = np.diff(averaged_volumes)[1:]<=0
peaks_times = (increases * decreases).nonzero()[0]
peaks_vols = averaged_volumes[peaks_times]
peaks_times = peaks_times[peaks_vols>np.percentile(peaks_vols,90)]
final_times=[peaks_times[0]]
for t in peaks_times:
if (t - final_times[-1]) < 60:
if averaged_volumes[t] > averaged_volumes[final_times[-1]]:
final_times[-1] = t
else:
final_times.append(t)
final = concatenate([clip.subclip(max(t-5,0),min(t+5, clip.duration))
for t in final_times])
final.to_videofile(file_name) # low quality is the default
When i run the new code, the output is a mp4 file, with the sound of the match
but with no video. I ve checked all the changes i made and i cannot find something wrong. Can anyone help?
I do not why but changing last line from
final.to_videofile(file_name)
to final.write_videofile('The result.mp4')
was a solution
So I am following the tutorial Intro to Tkinter and while copying the source code it did not work when I ran the program. I read over my syntax and searched the comments on the video, stack overflow, and I could not find a solution.
import Tkinter
import turtle
import sys
def main():
root = Tkinter.Tk()
cv = Tkinter.Canvas(root, width = 600, height= 600)
cv.pack(side = Tkinter.LEFT)
root.title("Draw")
t = turtle.RawTurtle(cv)
screen = t.getscreen()
screen.setworldcoordinates(0,0,600,600)
frame = Tkinter.Frame(root)
frame.pack(side = Tkinter.RIGHT, fill = Tkinter.BOTH)
def quithandler():
print 'Goodbye'
sys.exit(0)
quitbutton = Tkinter.Button(frame, text='Quit', command = quithandler)
quitbutton.pack()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
Also I am running python 2.7 on windows. In this program the quit button does not show up, and the canvas does not respond instantly as I run it. What is causing it to do this every time?
Thank you for any help.
Indent correctly. + You missed root.mainloop() call.
import Tkinter
import turtle
import sys
def main():
root = Tkinter.Tk()
cv = Tkinter.Canvas(root, width = 600, height= 600)
cv.pack(side = Tkinter.LEFT)
root.title("Draw")
t = turtle.RawTurtle(cv)
screen = t.getscreen()
screen.setworldcoordinates(0,0,600,600)
frame = Tkinter.Frame(root)
frame.pack(side = Tkinter.RIGHT, fill = Tkinter.BOTH)
quitbutton = Tkinter.Button(frame, text='Quit', command = quithandler)
quitbutton.pack()
root.mainloop()
def quithandler():
print 'Goodbye'
sys.exit(0)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
I'm using the ttk Treeview widget to implement a folder/path selection dialog. It's all working as expected except that my horizontal scrollbar won't activate. No matter how wide the folder path goes horizontally, and no matter how narrow the window, the horizontal slider never appears. Vertical scrolling is working perfectly though.
I'm figuring it's either some kind of limitation when you only use one column in the treeview, or just a newbie mistake with configuring and connecting the widgets. I'd bet on the latter.
Example with dialog widened to show full folder depth:
Dialog narrowed to the point where horizontal scrolling should activate (but doesn't):
Here's my GUI layout code:
winDirSel = tk.Toplevel()
winDirSel.title('Select Test Directory...')
tvwDirSel = ttk.Treeview(winDirSel,
height=10,padding=3,
show='tree')
lblTestDir = tk.Label(winDirSel, relief=tk.SUNKEN,
justify=tk.LEFT, anchor=tk.W,
textvariable=ctrlTestDir,width=80)
scbHDirSel = ttk.Scrollbar(winDirSel,
orient=tk.HORIZONTAL,
command=tvwDirSel.xview)
scbVDirSel = ttk.Scrollbar(winDirSel,
orient=tk.VERTICAL,
command=tvwDirSel.yview)
tvwDirSel.configure(xscrollcommand=scbHDirSel.set,
yscrollcommand=scbVDirSel.set)
lblTestDir.grid(row=0,column=0,sticky=tk.EW)
tvwDirSel.grid(row=1,column=0,sticky=tk.NSEW)
scbVDirSel.grid(row=1,column=1,sticky=tk.NS)
scbHDirSel.grid(row=2,column=0,sticky=tk.EW)
winDirSel.rowconfigure(1,weight=1)
winDirSel.columnconfigure(0,weight=1)
OK, after some playing with minwidth and stretch, I think I have a better handle on it. The horizontal scrolling is triggered by the column-edge going out of the window's bounds, not the content of the column. So you can use these parameters to force the column to be wider and thus force the scrolling.
The problem though is that you then lose the automatic adjustment of the column width to suit the width of the tree itself. You either have to force it very wide to accommodate any (assumed) likely folder depth, or you live with folder names getting truncated at the right boundary of the column.
So bottom line: it's just a limitation of the widget itself. (At least with respect to its behavior on my platform, MS Windows.)
Here's what I finally came up with to display a TreeView of files which are lazy-loaded (thanks to this answer) which is inside a PanedWindow (SplitterWindow in wxPython terms) along with a Notebook. The scrollbars are auto-displayed/hidden as needed, thanks to this example.
import os
import Tkinter as tk
import ttk as ttk
from ScrolledText import ScrolledText
class App(object):
def __init__(self, master, path):
splitter = tk.PanedWindow(master, orient=tk.HORIZONTAL)
# left-side
frame_left = tk.Frame(splitter)
self.tree = ttk.Treeview(frame_left, show='tree')
ysb = ttk.Scrollbar(frame_left, orient='vertical', command=self.tree.yview)
xsb = ttk.Scrollbar(frame_left, orient='horizontal', command=self.tree.xview)
# right-side
frame_right = tk.Frame(splitter)
nb = ttk.Notebook(frame_right)
page1 = ttk.Frame(nb)
page2 = ttk.Frame(nb)
text = ScrolledText(page2)
# overall layout
splitter.add(frame_left)
splitter.add(frame_right)
splitter.pack(fill=tk.BOTH, expand=1)
# left-side widget layout
self.tree.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky='NSEW')
ysb.grid(row=0, column=1, sticky='ns')
xsb.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky='ew')
# left-side frame's grid config
frame_left.columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
frame_left.rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
# right-side widget layout
text.pack(expand=1, fill="both")
nb.add(page1, text='One')
nb.add(page2, text='Two')
nb.pack(expand=1, fill="both")
# setup
self.tree.configure(yscrollcommand=lambda f, l:self.autoscroll(ysb,f,l), xscrollcommand=lambda f, l:self.autoscroll(xsb,f,l))
# use this line instead of the previous, if you want the scroll bars to always be present, but grey-out when uneeded instead of disappearing
#self.tree.configure(yscrollcommand=ysb.set, xscrollcommand=xsb.set)
self.tree.heading('#0', text='Project tree', anchor='w')
self.tree.column("#0",minwidth=1080, stretch=True)
# add default tree node
abspath = os.path.abspath(path)
self.nodes = dict()
self.insert_node('', abspath, abspath)
self.tree.bind('<<TreeviewOpen>>', self.open_node)
def autoscroll(self, sbar, first, last):
"""Hide and show scrollbar as needed."""
first, last = float(first), float(last)
if first <= 0 and last >= 1:
sbar.grid_remove()
else:
sbar.grid()
sbar.set(first, last)
def insert_node(self, parent, text, abspath):
node = self.tree.insert(parent, 'end', text=text, open=False)
if os.path.isdir(abspath):
self.nodes[node] = abspath
self.tree.insert(node, 'end')
def open_node(self, event):
node = self.tree.focus()
abspath = self.nodes.pop(node, None)
if abspath:
self.tree.delete(self.tree.get_children(node))
for p in os.listdir(abspath):
self.insert_node(node, p, os.path.join(abspath, p))
if __name__ == '__main__':
root = tk.Tk()
root.geometry("800x600")
app = App(root, path='.')
root.mainloop()
import tkinter as tk
import tkinter.ttk as ttk
import tkinter.font as tk_font
class TreeListBox:
def __init__(self, master, root, dict_group):
self.master = master
self.root = root
self.dict_group = dict_group
self.level = 0
self.setup_widget_tree()
self.build_tree(self.root, '')
def setup_widget_tree(self):
container_tree = tk.Frame(self.master, width=250, height=300)
container_tree.propagate(False)
container_tree.pack(side="left", fill='y')
self.tree = ttk.Treeview(container_tree, show="tree", selectmode='browse')
fr_y = tk.Frame(container_tree)
fr_y.pack(side='right', fill='y')
tk.Label(fr_y, borderwidth=1, relief='raised', font="Arial 8").pack(side='bottom', fill='x')
sb_y = tk.Scrollbar(fr_y, orient="vertical", command=self.tree.yview)
sb_y.pack(expand='yes', fill='y')
fr_x = tk.Frame(container_tree)
fr_x.pack(side='bottom', fill='x')
sb_x = tk.Scrollbar(fr_x, orient="horizontal", command=self.tree.xview)
sb_x.pack(expand='yes', fill='x')
self.tree.configure(yscrollcommand=sb_y.set, xscrollcommand=sb_x.set)
self.tree.pack(fill='both', expand='yes')
def build_tree(self, parent, id_stroki):
self.level += 1
id = self.tree.insert(id_stroki, 'end', text=parent)
# -----------------
col_w = tk_font.Font().measure(parent)
if col_w > 1000:
col_w -= 400
elif col_w > 500:
col_w -= 200
elif col_w > 300:
col_w -= 100
col_w = col_w + 25 * self.level
if col_w > self.tree.column('#0', 'width'):
self.tree.column('#0', width=col_w)
# -----------------
for element in sorted(self.dict_group[parent]):
self.build_tree(element, id)
self.level -= 1
if __name__ == '__main__':
dict_group = {'Nomenclature': ['ABC1', 'ABC2'],
'ABC1': ['ABC3', 'ABC4'],
'ABC2': ['ABC5'],
'ABC3': ['ABC______________________________________6'],
'ABC4': ['ABC--------------------------------------8'],
'ABC5': ['ABC######################################9'],
'ABC______________________________________6': [],
'ABC--------------------------------------8': [],
'ABC######################################9': []
}
root = tk.Tk()
myTest = TreeListBox(root, 'Nomenclature', dict_group)
root.mainloop()