On Feb 27, 5:29 pm, rantingrick wrote:
> Great post Kevin! The only thing i would like to add are my two
> favorite references for learning Tkinter. They are not geared around
> the new ttk stuff, but still 95% relevant to any Tkinter-ing
>
> http://effbot.org/tkinterbook/
> http://infohost.nmt.ed
rantingrick ha scritto:
> On Feb 27, 11:11 am, Kevin Walzer wrote:
>
> (...snip...)
>
>> Kevin Walzer
>> Code by Kevinhttp://www.codebykevin.com
>
> Great post Kevin! The only thing i would like to add are my two
> favorite references for learning Tkinter. They are not geared around
> the new t
On Feb 27, 11:11 am, Kevin Walzer wrote:
(...snip...)
> Kevin Walzer
> Code by Kevinhttp://www.codebykevin.com
Great post Kevin! The only thing i would like to add are my two
favorite references for learning Tkinter. They are not geared around
the new ttk stuff, but still 95% relevant to any Tk
On 2/27/10 3:05 AM, Fabiano wrote:
Hi,
I'm going to start my little journey into the Python's lands.
I have already red the old posts about but I suppose this is an evolving
topic.
I have understood Tk is the default Python's GUI toolkit, I have also
read that version 8.5 has native widgets and
> Are the new Tk comaprable with other toolkits(Qt, GTK,Wx?)?
> Does Tk lack other features compared to the Qt,GTK,Wx...?
> (Or: is there things you can't simply do with Tk?)
>
> Thanks in advance for replying
tkinter is a good starting point. You can get some definite benefits
going to wx or Qt
Hi,
I'm going to start my little journey into the Python's lands.
I have already red the old posts about but I suppose this is an evolving
topic.
I have understood Tk is the default Python's GUI toolkit, I have also
read that version 8.5 has native widgets and visual improvements.
My question is: