Unit 2 GUI - Event
Unit 2 GUI - Event
Event Handlers: Event handlers is a type of function or method that run a specific action when a specific event is triggered. For example, it could
be a button that when user click it, it will display a message, and it will close the message when user click the button again, this is an event
handler.
Trigger Functions: Trigger functions in event-driven programming are a functions that decide what code to run when there are a specific event
occurs, which are used to select which event handler to use for the event when there is specific event occurred.
Events: Events include mouse, keyboard and user interface, which events need to be triggered in the program in order to happen, that mean user
have to interacts with an object in the program, for example, click a button by a mouse, use keyboard to select a button and etc.
Introduction
• A graphical user interface allows the user to interact with the operating system and other programs using graphical elements
such as icons, buttons, and dialog boxes.
• GUIs popularized the use of the mouse.
• GUIs allow the user to point at graphical elements and click the mouse button to activate them.
• GUI Programs Are Event-Driven
• User determines the order in which things happen
• GUI programs respond to the actions of the user, thus they are event driven.
• The tkinter module is a wrapper around tk, which is a wrapper around tcl, which is what is used to create windows and
graphical user interfaces.
Introduction
• A major task that a GUI designer needs to do is to determine what will happen when a GUI is invoked
• Every GUI component may generate different kinds of “events” when a user makes access to it using his mouse or keyboard
• E.g. if a user moves his mouse on top of a button, an event of that button will be generated to the Windows system
• E.g. if the user further clicks, then another event of that button will be generated (actually it is the click event)
• For any event generated, the system will first check if there is an event handler, which defines the action for that event
• For a GUI designer, he needs to develop the event handler to determine the action that he wants Windows to take for that
event.
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GUI Using Python
• Tkinter: Tkinter is the Python interface to the Tk GUI toolkit shipped with Python.
• wxPython: This is an open-source Python interface for wxWindows
• PyQt −This is also a Python interface for a popular cross-platform Qt GUI library.
• JPython: JPython is a Python port for Java which gives Python scripts seamless access to Java class libraries on the local
machine
Tkinter Programming
• Tkinter is the standard GUI library for Python.
• Creating a GUI application using Tkinter
Steps
• Import the Tkinter module.
Import tKinter as tk
• Create the GUI application main window.
root = tk.Tk()
• Add one or more of the above-mentioned widgets to the GUI application.
button = tk.Button(root, text='Stop', width=25, command=root.destroy)
button.pack()
• Enter the main event loop to take action against each event triggered by the user.
root.mainloop()
Tkinter widgets
• Tkinter provides various controls, such as buttons, labels and text boxes used in a GUI application. These controls are commonly
called widgets.
Widget Description
Label Used to contain text or images
Button Similar to a Label but provides additional functionality for mouse overs, presses, and releases as well as keyboard activity/events
Canvas Provides ability to draw shapes (lines, ovals, polygons, rectangles); can contain images or bitmaps
Radiobutton Set of buttons of which only one can be "pressed" (similar to HTML radio input)
Checkbutton Set of boxes of which any number can be "checked" (similar to HTML checkbox input)
Entry Single-line text field with which to collect keyboard input (similar to HTML text input)
Frame Pure container for other widgets
Listbox Presents user list of choices to pick from
Menu Actual list of choices "hanging" from a Menubutton that the user can choose from
Menubutton Provides infrastructure to contain menus (pulldown, cascading, etc.)
Message Similar to a Label, but displays multi-line text
Scale Linear "slider" widget providing an exact value at current setting; with defined starting and ending values
Text Multi-line text field with which to collect (or display) text from user (similar to HTML TextArea)
Scrollbar Provides scrolling functionality to supporting widgets, i.e., Text, Canvas, Listbox, and Entry
Toplevel Similar to a Frame, but provides a separate window container
Operation Using Tkinter Widget
Geometry Managers
• The pack() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets in blocks before placing them in the parent widget.
widget.pack( pack_options )
options
• expand − When set to true, widget expands to fill any space not otherwise used in widget's parent.
• fill − Determines whether widget fills any extra space allocated to it by the packer, or keeps its own minimal dimensions:
NONE (default), X (fill only horizontally), Y (fill only vertically), or BOTH (fill both horizontally and vertically).
• side − Determines which side of the parent widget packs against: TOP (default), BOTTOM, LEFT, or RIGHT.
• The grid() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets in a table-like structure in the parent widget.
widget.grid( grid_options )
options −
• Column/row − The column or row to put widget in; default 0 (leftmost column).
• Columnspan, rowsapn− How many columns or rows to widgetoccupies; default 1.
• ipadx, ipady − How many pixels to pad widget, horizontally and vertically, inside widget's borders.
• padx, pady − How many pixels to pad widget, horizontally and vertically, outside v's borders.
Geometry Managers
• The place() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets by placing them in a specific position in the parent widget.
widget.place( place_options )
options −
• anchor − The exact spot of widget other options refer to: may be N, E, S, W, NE, NW, SE, or SW, compass directions
indicating the corners and sides of widget; default is NW (the upper left corner of widget)
• bordermode − INSIDE (the default) to indicate that other options refer to the parent's inside (ignoring the parent's
border); OUTSIDE otherwise.
• height, width − Height and width in pixels.
• relheight, relwidth − Height and width as a float between 0.0 and 1.0, as a fraction of the height and width of the parent
widget.
• relx, rely − Horizontal and vertical offset as a float between 0.0 and 1.0, as a fraction of the height and width of the parent
widget.
• x, y − Horizontal and vertical offset in pixels.
Common Widget Properties
import tkinter as tk
r = tk.Tk()
r.title('Counting Seconds')
button = tk.Button(r, text='Stop', width=25, command=r.destroy)
button.pack()
r.mainloop()
Button Widgets
• A button, unlike a frame or label, is very much designed for the user to interact with, and in particular, press to perform some
action. Like labels, they can display text or images, but also have a whole range of new options used to control their behavior.
Syntax
button = ttk.Button(parent, text=‘ClickMe', command=submitForm)
Example:
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter import messagebox
def hello():
msg = messagebox.showinfo( "GUI Event Demo","Button Demo")
root = tk.Tk()
root.geometry("200x200")
b = tk.Button(root, text='Fire Me',command=hello)
b.place(x=50,y=50)
root.mainloop()
Button Widgets
• Button:To add a button in your application, this widget is used.
Syntax :
w=Button(master, text=“caption” option=value)
Example: root.configure(background='red')
root.geometry("200x200") root.configure(background='blue')
radio=IntVar() elif(radio.get()==3):
rb1.grid(row=0)
rb2=Radiobutton(root,text='Blue', variable=radio,width=25,value=2, command=choice)
rb2.grid(row=1)
rb3=Radiobutton(root,text='Green', variable=radio,width=25,value=3, command=choice)
rb3.grid(row=3)
Scale
• Scale widget is used to implement the graphical slider to the python application so that the user can slide through the range of
values shown on the slider and select the one among them. We can control the minimum and maximum values along with the
resolution of the scale. It provides an alternative to the Entry widget when the user is forced to select only one value from the
given range of values.
• Syntax
w = Scale(top, options)
Example:
from tkinter import messagebox
root= Tk()
root.title('Scale Demo')
root.geometry("200x200")
def slide():
msg = messagebox.showinfo( "GUI Event Demo",v.get())
v = DoubleVar()
scale = Scale( root, variable = v, from_ = 1, to = 50, orient = HORIZONTAL)
scale.pack(anchor=CENTER)
btn = Button(root, text="Value", command=slide)
btn.pack(anchor=CENTER)
root.mainloop()
Spinbox
• The Spinbox widget is an alternative to the Entry widget. It provides the range of values to the user, out of which, the user can
select the one.
Syntax
w = Spinbox(top, options)
Example:
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import messagebox
root= Tk()
root.title('Scale Demo')
root.geometry("200x200")
def slide():
msg = messagebox.showinfo( "SpinBox Event Demo",spin.get())