On Jul 26, 3:13 pm, Mike Driscoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Jul 26, 2:33 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > > Windows XP SP3 > > Python 2.5 > > wx.version() = '2.8.1.1 (msw-unicode)' > > ------ > > I have written the following *simplest* implementation of wx.timer I > > can think of. No workie. I want an exception, a print statement, or > > something. > > > The wxpython demos all work, but for some reason this isn't. The > > demos are simple and straghtforward, so I think I understand how it > > should work. Clues please? I've tried variations of ID's, SetOwners, > > using and redefining Notify(), Bind, Connect, etc. In the cases where > > the interpreter doesn't complain about passed argument types, the > > callback function is never called. > > > import wx > > > class MyFrame(wx.Frame): > > def __init__(self, parent, id, title): > > wx.Frame.__init__(self, parent, id, title, pos=(100, > > 100)) > > > timer = wx.Timer(self, -1) > > self.Bind(wx.EVT_TIMER, self.OnTick, timer) > > timer.Start(100) > > > def OnTick(self, event): > > print 'Hi. Bye.' > > 1/0 #<-- should crash as evidence callback is being called > > > class MyApp(wx.App): > > def OnInit(self): > > frame1 = MyFrame(None, wx.ID_ANY, "This is a test") > > frame1.Show(True) > > return True > > > app = MyApp(0) > > app.MainLoop() > > > Thanks for any advice!! > > > Michael > > I'm not seeing anything either. Please post this to the wxPython > user's group for additional help: > > http://www.wxpython.org/maillist.php > > Mike
I think I figured it out. By looking at the wxTimer example here: http://wiki.wxpython.org/AnotherTutorial#head-420329f7c159d81cb03a6dd226ddb822ea296c92 My code created a temporary timer object and did not make it a class member. When I changed it to be a class member with self.timer, then it worked. thanks Michael -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list