J-Burns wrote:
Hello. Im a bit new to using Tkinter and im not a real pro in programming itself... :P. Need some help here.
OK, looks like you are getting direct answers, but I thought I'd mention an easy way to experiment with Tkinter programming. If you start Idle with the "-n" switch (*), then anything you do shares the same "mainloop" as Idle, and your window manipulation is "live". This means, that immediately after typing in: >>> import Tkinter >>> f = Tkinter.Frame() You will see the frame f show up. You can experiment directly with watching the effects of calls that you make in the interactive interpretter. (*) Easy way to do this: On some systems, associate a button with "pythonw -m idlelib.idle -n". On a Windows system with an Idle shortcut/button/icon already: Copy the shortcut/button/icon Right-click the shortcut and select the "properties" menu. On the "General" tab of the Properties window: Give the shortcut a nicer name (I use Idle25-n for mine). On the "Shortcut" tab of the properties window, add a space and a -n to the target line. Click OK, and try out your new button. --Scott David Daniels [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list