On 10/29/08, Olrik Lenstra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello everyone, > > A while ago I joined the Tutor mailing list, and they helped me out with a > question regarding wxPython. > Now however, I have tried a program in Tkinter and I would like to see if > there is a similar command to "wx.SafeYield(self, True)".
It will be a combination of commands, not a single one. Initially I considered this as "probably without solution", since tcl acquired a yield command just in the 8.6a3 release, but then I looked at wx.SafeYield code and apparently it is possible to replicate it. Here is an initial cut, it is very possible to contain something not equivalent to wx.SafeYield (besides it could be improved): import ttk inside_tkyield = False disabled_wins = {} def safe_yield(window, only_if_needed=False): window_disabler(window) try: return tk_yield(window, only_if_needed) finally: for widget, flags in disabled_wins.iteritems(): ttk.Widget.state(widget, flags) disabled_wins.clear() def window_disabler(window): widgets = window.children.values() widgets.append(window) for widget in widgets: if widget.instate(['!disabled']): prev_flags = widget.state(['disabled']) disabled_wins[widget] = prev_flags def tk_yield(window, only_if_needed=False): # wx implements this differently based on the backend it is using global inside_tkyield if inside_tkyield: if not only_if_needed: raise RuntimeError("safe_yield called recursively") return False inside_tkyield = True; window.update() window.update_idletasks() inside_tkyield = False; return True Note that this depends on ttk widgets (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyttk) since it uses widget.state to disable and reenable the widgets. On windows the "wm" command supports disabling the entire window, so it is easier if you can use it. > Below is a copy of the message to the tutor list. > > > Dear Mailing list, > > > > a while ago a few of you helped me solve an issue I had with a GUI / scan > > program that I made. > > The problem was that when I tried to move the frame it would hang until > the > > scan was finished. > > To solve this I had to add "wx.SafeYield(self, True)" to the scan and the > > GUI wouldn't hang any more. > > Now I have redone the program and have written it with Tkinter instead of > > WxPython. > > > > So is there a similar command for Tkinter as there is for WxPython? > > > > Thanks in advance. > > Regards, > > Olrik > > > > _______________________________________________ > Tkinter-discuss mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tkinter-discuss > > -- -- Guilherme H. Polo Goncalves -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list