Are permissions handled the same as Unix on OS X? I remember you had to do
something using the xhost command. Check if this is so. Another
possibility is the configuration of the graphic server, which I don't know
to what extent is compatible with X11.
Gerardo
On Mon, 30 Oct 2006, Jose Hales-
Jose Hales-Garcia wrote:
>> if you're using Unix, Tkinter is an X11 client application; just set
>>
>> DISPLAY to the right thing and run your program as usual.
>
> I've tried setting the DISPLAY to the remote server's (from the command
> line and within Python as suggested) but I get the follo
On Oct 30, 2006, at 9:54 AM, Fredrik Lundh wrote:what platform are you running on?I'm running Mac OS X 10.4.8 on both client and server.I've double checked my settings. In SSH I have X11Forwarding turned on. The .Xauthority file contains the correct host information. I can check with the R stati
On Mon, Oct 30, 2006 at 08:42:00AM -0800, Jose Hales-Garcia wrote:
> We're trying to get Tkinter's widgets to appear on an X11 server
> running remotely. Is this possible?
Yes, in the normal way, by setting the DISPLAY environment variable.
If you want to do it within the application, you can p
Jose Hales-Garcia wrote:
> Sorry if this has been asked already, I couldn't find any
> documentation about it.
>
> We're trying to get Tkinter's widgets to appear on an X11 server
> running remotely. Is this possible?
what platform are you running on?
if you're using Unix, Tkinter is an X1
Hola Jose,
As far as I know, there is nothing non-standard in Tkinter or the
underlying Tk library with respect to X11. Any application written for X11
should display if there is an X server available. What usually happens is
that the application/originating host do not have the authorization
Sorry if this has been asked already, I couldn't find any
documentation about it.
We're trying to get Tkinter's widgets to appear on an X11 server
running remotely. Is this possible?
So far we're only able to open widgets on the local console.
Thank you for your time,
Jose
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