问题
Note
The example code is an abridged version but can run with a basic function. Please focus on class MainWindow(tk.Frame)
Questions
What kind of object
can play the role of the parent or master
for tkinter class
initialization?
In my case, see the example code, why can not pass self
as parent
to ProjectInfo(...)
or ConfirmItems(...)
in class MainWindow(tk.Frame)
? It would pop up an empty window if using self
instead of self.parent
.
Reference
This question originates from my comments on Best way to structure a tkinter application, which means it fails to pass self
as parent
.
I would like to issue a new question to follow that discussions.
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import messagebox
from collections import OrderedDict
class ProjectInfo(tk.Frame):
def __init__(self, parent, controller, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(parent, *args, **kwargs)
self.parent = parent
self.controller = controller
self.widgets_init()
def widgets_init(self):
tk.Label(self,
text = "Rock Controller!",
width = 10,
anchor = "w",
justify = "left").grid(row = 0, column = 0)
tk.Label(self,
text = "Input Name: ").grid(row = 1, column = 0)
self.entry = tk.Entry(self)
self.entry.grid(row = 1, column = 1)
class ConfirmItems(tk.Frame):
def __init__(self, parent, frames, controller, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(parent, *args, **kwargs)
self.parent = parent
self.frames = frames
self.controller = controller
self.widgets_init()
def update_entries(self):
self.controller.project_info.name = self.controller.project_info.entry.get()
def update_frames(self):
self.message = 'Click Cancel go back to reset!\n'
for key, values in self.frames.items():
for v in values:
x = getattr(key, v)
self.message += v + ': ' + str(x) + '\n'
def show_settings(self):
answer = tk.messagebox.askokcancel("Check Settings", self.message)
if answer in ["yes", 1]:
self.quit()
def combine_funcs(self, *funcs):
def combined_func(*args, **kwargs):
for f in funcs:
f(*args, **kwargs)
return combined_func
def widgets_init(self):
self.cancel = tk.Button(self,
text = "Cancel",
command = self.quit)
self.cancel.grid(row = 0, column = 0)
self.submit = tk.Button(self,
text = "Submit",
command = self.combine_funcs(
self.update_entries,
self.update_frames,
self.show_settings))
# command = lambda:[self.update_frames(), self.show_settings()]
self.submit.grid(row = 0, column = 1)
class MainWindow(tk.Frame):
def __init__(self, parent, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(parent, *args, **kwargs)
self.parent = parent
self.controller = self
self.project_info = ProjectInfo(self.parent, self.controller)
self.project_info.grid(row = 0)
self.widgets_init()
self.confirm_items = ConfirmItems(self.parent, self.frames, self.controller)
self.confirm_items.grid(row = 1)
def widgets_init(self):
self.dict_list = [(self.project_info, ('name',))]
self.frames = OrderedDict(self.dict_list)
def main():
root = tk.Tk()
root.title("Welcome to Controller World!")
root.geometry("300x300")
gui = MainWindow(root)
root.mainloop()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
回答1:
What kind of object can play the role of the parent or master for tkinter class initialization?
Any tkinter widget can play the role of parent or master, though most often it will be the root window, a toplevel window, or a frame.
In my case, see the example code, why can not pass self as parent to ProjectInfo(...) or ConfirmItems(...) in class MainWindow(tk.Frame)?
There is nothing in your code preventing you from passing self
as the parent.
It would pop up an empty window if using self instead of self.parent.
In the case of using self
as the parent for ProjectInfo
, self
refers to the instance of MainWindow
. I don't see anywhere where you are calling pack
or grid
on that instance. If the parent is not visible, none of its children will be visible.
You need to call pack
or grid
on the gui
variable. Since it is designed to be the only widget in the root window, pack
makes the most sense.
def main():
...
gui = MainWindow(root)
gui.pack(side="top", fill="both", expand=True)
...
As a general rule of thumb, if you have a class that inherits from a widget and it creates other widgets, those widgets should always be children of self
or one of its descendants, never its own parent. Having a class put child widgets in its parent completely defeats the purpose of inheriting from tk.Frame
.
The whole point of inheriting from tk.Frame
is to create a new class that behaves exactly like standard widgets. You can add it to other widgets with pack
or place
or grid
, it has some standard options such as borderwidth
and relief
, and is entirely self-contained.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/59007013/what-is-a-parent-master-that-initialize-a-tkinter-class