Graphic User Interface FAQ¶
Contents
What platform-independent GUI toolkits exist for Python?¶
Depending on what platform(s) you are aiming at, there are several.
Tkinter¶
Standard builds of Python include an object-oriented interface to the Tcl/Tk widget set, called Tkinter. This is probably the easiest to install and use. For more info about Tk, including pointers to the source, see the Tcl/Tk home page at https://www.tcl.tk. Tcl/Tk is fully portable to the Mac OS X, Windows, and Unix platforms.
wxWidgets¶
wxWidgets (https://www.wxwidgets.org) is a free, portable GUI class library written in C++ that provides a native look and feel on a number of platforms, with Windows, Mac OS X, GTK, X11, all listed as current stable targets. Language bindings are available for a number of languages including Python, Perl, Ruby, etc.
wxPython (http://www.wxpython.org) is the Python binding for wxwidgets. While it often lags slightly behind the official wxWidgets releases, it also offers a number of features via pure Python extensions that are not available in other language bindings. There is an active wxPython user and developer community.
Both wxWidgets and wxPython are free, open source, software with permissive licences that allow their use in commercial products as well as in freeware or shareware.
Qt¶
There are bindings available for the Qt toolkit (using either PyQt or PySide) and for KDE (PyKDE4). PyQt is currently more mature than PySide, but you must buy a PyQt license from Riverbank Computing if you want to write proprietary applications. PySide is free for all applications.
Qt 4.5 upwards is licensed under the LGPL license; also, commercial licenses are available from The Qt Company.
Gtk+¶
PyGtk bindings for the Gtk+ toolkit have been implemented by James Henstridge; see <http://www.pygtk.org>.
FLTK¶
Python bindings for the FLTK toolkit, a simple yet powerful and mature cross-platform windowing system, are available from the PyFLTK project.
What platform-specific GUI toolkits exist for Python?¶
By installing the PyObjc Objective-C bridge, Python programs can use Mac OS X’s Cocoa libraries.
Pythonwin by Mark Hammond includes an interface to the Microsoft Foundation Classes and a Python programming environment that’s written mostly in Python using the MFC classes.
Tkinter questions¶
How do I freeze Tkinter applications?¶
Freeze is a tool to create stand-alone applications. When freezing Tkinter applications, the applications will not be truly stand-alone, as the application will still need the Tcl and Tk libraries.
One solution is to ship the application with the Tcl and Tk libraries, and point
to them at run-time using the TCL_LIBRARY
and TK_LIBRARY
environment variables.
To get truly stand-alone applications, the Tcl scripts that form the library have to be integrated into the application as well. One tool supporting that is SAM (stand-alone modules), which is part of the Tix distribution (http://tix.sourceforge.net/).
Build Tix with SAM enabled, perform the appropriate call to
Tclsam_init()
, etc. inside Python’s
Modules/tkappinit.c
, and link with libtclsam and libtksam (you
might include the Tix libraries as well).
Can I have Tk events handled while waiting for I/O?¶
On platforms other than Windows, yes, and you don’t even
need threads! But you’ll have to restructure your I/O
code a bit. Tk has the equivalent of Xt’s XtAddInput()
call, which allows you
to register a callback function which will be called from the Tk mainloop when
I/O is possible on a file descriptor. See File Handlers.
I can’t get key bindings to work in Tkinter: why?¶
An often-heard complaint is that event handlers bound to events with the
bind()
method don’t get handled even when the appropriate key is pressed.
The most common cause is that the widget to which the binding applies doesn’t have “keyboard focus”. Check out the Tk documentation for the focus command. Usually a widget is given the keyboard focus by clicking in it (but not for labels; see the takefocus option).