Thank you. I just deleted all of them, reran pyuic4 on window.ui and regenerated window.py just to make sure. Unfortunately, I get the same problem.
I've got the GUI perfectly designed just like I want it in window.py... just can't figure out how to use it in my program. On Friday, August 23, 2013 3:16:59 PM UTC-5, Dave Angel wrote: > Michael Staggs wrote: > > > > > > > > > > That's the problem though. It is exactly how I want it in designer. It's > > > perfect as it is in designer when I preview it. Here is a screenshot of the > > > preview: http://i.imgur.com/ULRolq8.png > > > > > > The problem isn't that I can't design it in QT Designer. It is designed > > > just like I want it. The problem is, when I try to follow zetcode and other > > > tutorials about how to import and use my form as designed by qt designer > > > and run through pyuic4.... it doesn't seem to even notice my ui file...and > > > certainly isnt acting on it. > > > > > > > I don't know PyQT, so I've kept quiet so far... > > > > You don't say what the name of the generated file is, but perhaps since > > the source file was window.ui, the generated one is window.py > > > > My guess is that when you do the > > > > from window import Ui_MainWindow > > > > it is finding some OTHER window.py file. > > > > Have you tried simply adding an illegal line to the generated file, to > > force the compiler to fail the import? Once you're sure that it is > > importing this particular file, you can remove such a line. > > > > Could be that you have some other window.py file (or window.pyc, or > > whatever) and that it's finding that one. Or it's finding some older > > version of this one. > > > > > > > > -- > > DaveA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list