Here's my Tkinter class: class TwoChoice: def __init__(self, master):
frame = Frame(master) frame.pack() m = Label(root, text= maentry) m.pack() n = Label(root, text= fave) n.pack() self.button = Button(frame, text=home_team, command= self.comm_1) self.button.pack(side=LEFT) self.hi_there = Button(frame, text=vis_team, command=self.comm_2) self.hi_there.pack(side=LEFT) def comm_1(self): print home_team root.quit() def comm_2(self): print vis_team root.quit() I call it by root = Tk() gui= TwoChoice(root) root.mainloop() The next time I call it I want to just run the same thing but with different values for the variables. Instead it gives me like two copies of the widget. Greg Neil Cerutti wrote: > On 2006-11-07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I'm trying to write a GUI that will put up multiple widgets in > > succession. My problem is that each widget also contains the > > previous widgets when they pop up. How do I reinitialize the > > widget each time so that it doesn't contain earlier ones? > > Show your code. > > > Actually, another question I have is, is there a way to set > > python so that it will assume any undefined variable is 0 or > > ''? That is, I have several statements like "If k > 0 then so > > and so" and I would like it to assume k=0 unless I tell it > > otherwise. I've just been defining k=0 at the start of the > > program but it seems there should be a better way. > > The best way to do it is to never use undefined names. > > -- > Neil Cerutti > If only faces could talk. --Pat Summerall -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list