On Mon, 2007-05-21 at 18:23 +0200, Petr Muller wrote: > There's PyQt thingy, imho very good and easy to learn/use, but still > powerful. I've used it for a small gui-oriented project with almost no > problems and it worked like a charm. However, sometimes I had troubles > finding useful documentation for it. > I've also tried to play with PyGTK, it's quite nice and easy (and you > have the advantage of Glade), but I don't like GTK way of creating GUI. > I haven't used Tkinter a lot, only looked at it. And I didn't like it much.
How does GTK's way of creating the GUI (I presume you're not talking look and feel) differ from Qt's? From what I can see (having developed large apps in both GTKmm and Qt (C++), they both function the same. In other words you create the widget first, then parent it in a container and add callbacks. Whereas wxPython's approach is somewhat different. It appears that most wxPython apps setup the GUI programmatically, whereas Most Qt and Gtk apps tend to use XML-based gui-building factories. In this latter case, Glade's method is quite different from Qt's. > > I would really suggest PyQt. (with a big IMHO :) > > Petr -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list