Hi, Thus spoketh Bryan Oakley <bryan.oak...@gmail.com> unto us on Sat, 19 May 2012 07:42:52 -0500:
> On Sat, May 19, 2012 at 12:42 AM, Juha Salo <juha.k.s...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > Hi! > > > > Is there a way to get rid of the selection (blue area in the window) > > after double-clicking on a Text widget? I use Vista and Python 3.2.3. > > I have the following example: > > > > > The selection happens on a single click; are you wanting to keep it on a > single-click, but remove it on a double click? I do not have Vista at hand here, so I cannot tell if it is a single or a double click that causes the selection [1], here on linux it is a double-click that causes the rest of the line, after the "fooo" to be selected if you click "somewhere" in the text or the "fooo" if you click into it. You can get rid of this by either adding a return "break" statement to the dbclick() callback or by adding root.unbind_class('Text', '<Double-Button-1>') to your code *before* the text widget is created (of course this will do the same for all Text widgets in you app though), doing a simple txt.unbind('<Double-Button-1>') does not seem to work, apparently because is it called *after* widget creation. [1] If you want to check the default widget bindings, have a look at text.tcl where these are defined, here the relevant code for single- and double click looks like: bind Text <1> { tk::TextButton1 %W %x %y %W tag remove sel 0.0 end } (...) bind Text <Double-1> { set tk::Priv(selectMode) word tk::TextSelectTo %W %x %y catch {%W mark set insert sel.first} } Looking there is often a better way dealing with default bindings than trying to understand them by clicking into the widget on a trial-and-error base, because considerable confusion may arise by interfering other bindings, for example there is also a <Triple-1> binding on text widgets which might fire if you repeatedly double-click into the widget. I hope this helps Michael .-.. .. ...- . .-.. --- -. --. .- -. -.. .--. .-. --- ... .--. . .-. Not one hundred percent efficient, of course ... but nothing ever is. -- Kirk, "Metamorphosis", stardate 3219.8 _______________________________________________ Tkinter-discuss mailing list Tkinter-discuss@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tkinter-discuss