On Jan 26, 10:52 pm, James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi, I've been searching for a .resize()-like function to overload much > > like can be done for the delete window protocol as follows: > > > toplevel.protocol("WM_DELETE_WINDOW", callback) > > > I realize that the pack manager usually handles all of the resize > > stuff, but I've found an arrangement that the pack manager fails for. > > That is, if one embeds a canvas into a window created inside a text > > widget, > > Your meaning here is unclear. How is it possible to have "a window > created inside a text widget"?
using the create_window function, as below. > > > then resize the text widget (via its container), the canvas and > > its container windows do not resize. So I need to resize the window > > that the canvas is embedded in. > > Try the Toplevel.wm_geometry() function. > > > The most obvious way of doing this > > would be as above, but there does not seem to be an equivalent to the > > "WM_DELETE_WINDOW" protocol for resizing. > > Do you want to detect when a window is resized or do you want to resize > a window programatically. > > If the former, bind the Toplevel to '<Configure>'. > > E.g. > > from Tkinter import * > > def config(t): > def _r(e, t=t): > geom = e.widget.wm_geometry() > geom = geom.split('+')[0] > t.wm_geometry(geom) > print 'resized %s to %s' % (t, geom) > return _r > > tk = Tk() > tk.title('resize me') > t2 = Toplevel(tk) > t2.title('I get resized') > tk.bind('<Configure>', config(t2)) > > Is that cool or what? > Yes, this is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks. > James > > > Any help would be greatly appreciated. > > >DeaconSweeney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list