On Feb 4, 5:49 pm, andrew cooke <and...@acooke.org> wrote: > On Feb 4, 8:06 pm, len <lsumn...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > How does one find the methods that are available in the classes. > > heh. welcome to the wonderful world of wxpython :o( > > if you use eclipse to edit your code, then (providing the wind is in > the right direction and the file you are editing doesn't have any > syntax errors) pressing F3 when you are on a particular method will > take you to the definition. or, at least, one of the definitions with > that name. > > and if you want to see a list of available methods the simplest way is > to use tab completion (or dir() in python itself). > > if you're not using eclipse (with pydev) check to see if the ide/ > editor you are using has something similar. > > also, wxpython comes with some examples, all packaged in a demo > program. that is your best source of documentation. go through all > the examples in there and look at the code (the demo program will show > you the code and even let you edit it and see the results of your > changes). > > to be honest, wxpython is a bit of a nightmare (imho). but the results > can be worth it. > > good luck, > andrew
I don't think the docs are any worse than any other complicated third party package. Reportlab comes to mind...and the wxPython list members are very helpful. Mike -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list