I have a program here that has two buttons in it. I am trying to change their position to be a space between them as currently they are directly below each other. What shoul
Mine goes like this:
object1 = Tk()
actionBtn = Button(object1, text="Enter", width=15, height=2, command=quit).place(x=0, y=0)
#.place() is the best thing to use, x and y determine the location in terms of geometry.
you can even add an image with .png extension and goes like this:
buttonEnter = PhotoImage(file="buttonEnter.png") #image file must be inserted
buttonEnter1 = Button(object1, image=buttonEnter, width=20, height=4).place(x=0, y=0)
Actually in the previous semester I have also made some Tkinter application which is the project given by teacher to us. So I go to some tutorials website of Python and find three methods of placing the widgets on the output screen. The three methods are
1. Pack()
2. Grid()
3. Place() #the best method over Pack() and Grid()
Place() method take the coordinates in the form of the x and y. See this link for more clarification https://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/python_gui_programming.htm
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/tk_place.htm
See the bottom of the Page of the given link.The Place() method is defined with its proper arguments. I will prefer the Place() method over Pack() and Grid() because it works like CSS as we use in html, because it take the value of (width,height) and place your widget according to wherever you want.
If you find your answer a thumbs up will be appreciated.
To increase the vertical space between the buttons, use pady
argument in the pack
method: lbl.pack(pady=10)
.
For horizontal spacing, there is a padx
argument. This also works with the grid
method.
I would comment on other answers, but don't have the rep.
The answers suggesting the pad
methods might not be quite what you want. pad
creates extra space between the border of the button and its contents, so using it will just make the button itself bigger.
I may be wrong, but I don't think this will affect the spacing between the widgets themselves.