Am 28.11.15 um 11:29 schrieb Ulli Horlacher:
One of my Windows test users reports, that the file dialog window of
askopenfilename() starts behind the console window and has no focus.
On Linux (XFCE) I do not have this problem.
I start it with:
Tk().withdraw()
file = askopenfilename(title='select a file',initialdir=HOME)
set_window_focus() # give focus back to console window
Can one force askopenfilename() to start in foreground with focus?
I can't test it right now, but I think it /should/ go into the
foreground by itself. For a toplevel window, which you create manually,
there is a lift() method which asks the OS to move the window to the
top. But on Windows, this file dialog is a native call and cannot be
influenced that much.
I see two thingd:
1) Tk().withdraw()
- this seems odd to me, because you don't keep a reference to the Tk
object around. Better do
root=Tk()
roo.withdraw()
2) Maybe it helps if you inject an update() after the withdraw(), maybe not
root.update()
3) I can confirm, that also on OSX the file dialog does not raise above
the console window, though it is not as bad because the dialog window is
muhc bigger then the console window.
I think that you are curing a lot of symptoms with the focus setting to
the console etc. Many problems would simply go away if you wrote the
whole thing as a GUI program. If I understand correctly, what you want -
a program to select files and folders to upload to your server - then
this would not be that much more work than the CLI with input() which
you are writing, and definitely less work to get it correct than the
plastering of the symptoms.
For example, a very simple approach would use a listbox with a + and a -
button. upon hitting - (or the delete key), you delete the selected
entries. Upon hitting +, you pop up the file selection dialog. upon
hitting a Go button, you send the files to the server. A minimalistic
version of it is included below. That is less then 50 lines of code,
including comments, without all the focus problems, providing a standard
desktop GUI metaphor. I haven't seen your command line code, but I doubt
that it is significantly simpler.
Of course, the code below can still use a great deal of polishing, like
scrollbars for the listbox, allowing multiple selection both for the
file dialog and the listbox, nice icons for the buttons, trapping the
close button on the main window with an "are you sure?"-type question,
maybe wrapping it up in a class, a progress bar during the upload and a
way to interrupt it... which is left as an exercise to the reader.
Christian
=================================
import Tkinter as tk, tkFileDialog as fd, ttk
from Tkinter import N,S,W,E
# create one ttk::frame to fill the main window
root=tk.Tk()
main=ttk.Frame(master=root)
# tell the pack geometry manager to completely
# fill the toplevel with this frame
main.pack(fill=tk.BOTH, expand=1)
# now create a listbox and a button frame
lb=tk.Listbox(master=main)
bf=ttk.Frame(master=main)
# use the grid manager to stack them, whereby
# the listbox should expand
lb.grid(row=0, column=0, sticky=(N,S,E,W))
bf.grid(row=1, column=0, sticky=(N,S,E,W))
main.rowconfigure(0, weight=1)
main.columnconfigure(0, weight=1)
def addfile():
filename=fd.askopenfilename()
if filename:
lb.insert(tk.END, filename)
def remove(*args):
sel=lb.curselection()
if sel:
lb.delete(sel)
def submit():
print("Submitting files:")
for filename in lb.get(0,tk.END):
print("Sending %s"%filename)
# create the three buttons
btnplus=ttk.Button(master=bf, text="+", command=addfile)
btnminus=ttk.Button(master=bf, text="-", command=remove)
btngo=ttk.Button(master=bf, text="Submit", command=submit)
btnplus.pack(side=tk.LEFT)
btnminus.pack(side=tk.LEFT)
btngo.pack(side=tk.LEFT)
# bind also the delete and Backspace keys
lb.bind('<Delete>', remove)
lb.bind('<BackSpace>', remove)
root.mainloop()
===================================================
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