I started making a GUI with Tkinter and I added the module tkMessageBox as well. But recently I discovered that importing the module
An easier way to get properly themed dialog boxes is by compiling your python scripts into .exe files using pyinstaller
. (py2exe
might also work, but I haven't used that module in a while and don't plan on going back if I don't have to...)
Error message when running as a python script:
Error message when running as an .exe:
I tried forcing a different theme with ttk.Style().theme_use('clam')
, however the dialog boxes don't seem to conform to those themes. It must default to the user's system's style. Still better than the windows 98 feel! for the record, I tested on a computer running windows 7 with Python 2.7.
EDIT
It appears you can add a manifest file using the --manifest
option in pyinstaller, however it appears that this isn't very applicable anyways since it seems pyinstaller
does that for you.
If you need themed dialog boxes that prompt the user for input, consider using the ttk themed version of tkSimpleDialog
called ttkSimpleDialog
(link). Full Disclosure: I made the modifications to the original tkSimpleDialog
module.
The Tk messagebox on Windows is the system provided messagebox. Tk does not create a messagebox using Tk buttons and frames but shows the stock dialog provided by the Windows API.
To check your report here I ran up Tcl/Tk 8.6, Python 3.4 and Powershell and got each to show a messagebox. As you can see Tcl/Tk comes up looking as we would expect but both Python and Powershell are defaulting to the old style non-themed look and feel.
The reason for this is most likely to do with embedded manifests in the executable that launches this. The Tcl/Tk wish
executable contains a manifest resource that states the application supports the themed common controls library. The python.exe and pythonw.exe files have no such resources. The necessary manifest is embedded in the Tk86.dll file that is used by tkinter but I think this needs to be associated with the executable. I tested this hypothesis by opening the pythonw.exe file with Visual Studio and replacing the existing RT_MANIFEST resource with the one extracted from the Tk86.dll. With a suitable manifest in place the Python tkinter messagebox comes up properly themed:
Supposedly this manifest can be provided as an XML file in the same folder as the executable but in testing this that did not seem to work. I had to actually embed the manifest in the executable resources.
See "Enabling Visual Styles" for more information on manifest resources.
From the docs:
Starting with Tk 8.5, the ttk module became available. This module replaces much (but not all) of the original Tkinter machinery. Use this module to gain these advantages:
Platform-specific appearance. In releases before Tk 8.5, one of the commonest complaints about Tk applications was that they did not conform to the style of the various platforms.
The ttk module allows you to write your application in a generic way, yet your application can look like a Windows application under Windows, like a MacOS app under MacOS, and so on, without any change to your program.
Each possible different appearance is represented by a named ttk theme. For example, the classic theme gives you the appearance of the original Tkinter widgets described in the previous sections.
ttk
uses the system styles to represent something. Tkinter
does not. It is its own style.