Thanks Peter .. I will check out the mailing list. In the meanwhile - i have made some progress. Now working out - how to get a button_fired event to actually return the values ..
It's a process (as always..) Cheers, -A Peter Wang wrote: > Ash wrote: > > Hello everyone ! > > > > I am trying to find some sort of a cookbook or more examples for using > > Enthought Traits to build GUI's. I tried to follow the documentations > > present at the enthought site, but couldnt get too far - especially on > > how to handle a control event ? > > The traits manual is in the lib/site-packages/enthought/traits/doc > directory, named Traits2_UM.doc/.pdf. The traits UI manual/user guide > is also in there. However, what is not so obvious is that there is > also an excellent, massive set of powerpoint slides (121 pages) that > Dave Morrill put together that talks about the architecture of Traits > UI, and how to build GUIs using it. (Er, how to build them *well*, > i.e. adhering to the M-V-C pattern and maximizing code reuse.) Those > slides are in traits_ui.ppt. > > > say i have a list "control" that create using the following two lines: > > > > class Project(HasTraits): > > coordinate_system=Enum('Cartesian','Cylindrical') > > > > I added the following line to get the option selected by the user: > > > > def _coordinate_system_changed(self,old,new): > > print 'System changed from %s to %s ' %(old,new) > > > > but it does not return what the user select. It should return either 0 > > or 1 based on the two choices, but i can't seem to find a way to trap > > that. > > The way that this works is that _coordinate_system_changed() gets > called with the old value and the new value of self.coordinate_system. > Thus, it doesn't "return" anything; your method is a "handler" method > that gets called when the value of a particular trait gets changed. > > Why do you say it should return 0 or 1? Do you mean that you want to > get the index into the list of enumeration choices? The Enum trait > type is not quite like C in this regard. In C/C++, enums are really > ints; in traits, enums are lists of values of possibly mixed type. > > > I am relatively new to this GUI programming in Python and really could > > use some tips/hints. > > No problem, hope the above helped. You might want to email your > questions to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (and subscribe to it!). That > is the primary mailing list for several enthought libraries (including > traits) and you'll get very speedy, in-depth answers to your questions > there. > > > -Peter -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list