On 17/08/11 23:20, brandon w wrote:

I guess I will have to find another way to create a digital clock in a
tkinter window.

The point about a GUI is that you display widgets that have text on them. It could be a Label, or a Button or a Text box or even a Canvas. Then to change the text you simply replace the text en-masse with a new string, you don't attempt to backspace or return or anything like you would with print(). (Actually with a Text box widget you could do that by controlling the cursor, but for your purpose that is just making it harder than it needs to be!)

You just assign a new string to the widgets text attribute.

You can see how to do that with one of the examples on my GUI tutor.
It replaces the text on a label with the contents of an entry box:


# create the event handler to clear the text
def evClear():
  lHistory['text'] = eHello.get()
  eHello.delete(0,END)


the label(lHistory) simply displays whatever is assigned to its text attribute, and in this case its whatever is in the Entry widget (eHello) before we clear it. It could just as well be a string displaying the current time...

HTH,

--
Alan G
Author of the Learn to Program web site
http://www.alan-g.me.uk/

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