On Fri, 11 Jan 2008 08:12:48 -0800 (PST) [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I have a C program that works very well. However, being C it has no > GUI.
What does C have to do with it not having a GUI? I've written more C programs with a GUI than Python ones - and the C experience was generally better. Of course, I was using Intuition, not X. > I have experience using wxPython from within Python apps and I like it > a lot for its cross-platform capabilities. I was hoping to use > wxPython for this as well. Sure, the GUI can be disconnected from the application. In fact, that's the right way to do it - it allows you to change the GUI as times move forward. I've done this in three different ways. Diez pegged them two of them. When the underlying C code is poorly organized, use subprocess to run the the C application, build what you're going to send to it's standard in, and watch what it writes to standard output. If the C code is well-organized - structures with routines that manipulate them, so you can identify objects - and command handling on standard in is basically "parse the arguments, then invoke the the right function with those values", then you can wrap the structures as object - with the appropriate functions as methods, and use it in two ways. One is to expose things via a shared library, and the use ctypes to talk to it. The other is to embed a python into your application, and have it launch the script that's going to provide the GUI. <mike -- Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.mired.org/consulting.html Independent Network/Unix/Perforce consultant, email for more information. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list