On Feb 11, 2:51 pm, Steve Holden <st...@holdenweb.com> wrote: > W. eWatson wrote: > > Steve Holden wrote: > >> W. eWatson wrote: > >>> My program in IDLE bombed with: > >>> ============== > >>> Exception in Tkinter callback > >>> Traceback (most recent call last): > >>> File "C:\Python25\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.py", line 1403, in __call__ > >>> return self.func(*args) > >>> File > >>> "C:\Sandia_Meteors\New_Sentinel_Development\Sentuser_Utilities_Related\sentuser\sentuserNC25-Dev4.py", > > >>> line 552, in OperationalSettings > >>> dialog = OperationalSettingsDialog( self.master, set_loc_dict ) > >>> File > >>> "C:\Sandia_Meteors\New_Sentinel_Development\Sentuser_Utilities_Related\sentuser\sentuserNC25-Dev4.py", > > >>> line 81, in __init__ > >>> tkSimpleDialog.Dialog.__init__(self, parent) > >>> File "C:\Python25\lib\lib-tk\tkSimpleDialog.py", line 69, in __init__ > >>> self.wait_visibility() # window needs to be visible for the grab > >>> File "C:\Python25\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.py", line 415, in wait_visibility > >>> self.tk.call('tkwait', 'visibility', window._w) > >>> TclError: window ".34672232" was deleted before its visibility changed > >>> =============== > >>> It runs fine in pythonWin performing the same entry operation. Open a > >>> menu, select an item to open a dialog, select a select button in the > >>> dialog, press OK to leave the dialog. Boom, as above. > > >>> (This does not mean pythonWin doesn't have problems of its own. ) If I > >>> just execute the code (double click on the py file, the console shows no > >>> problems. IDLE is unhappy. > > >>> Another side to this is that I use WinMerge to find differences between > >>> my last saved copy and the current copy. I found the current copy had > >>> two lines where a abc.get() was changed to abc.get. This was undoubtedly > >>> from briefly using the pyWin editor, when I mis-hit some keys. Yet pyWin > >>> had no trouble executing the program. My guess is that while briefly > >>> editing there, I hit some odd combination of keys that produced, > >>> perhaps, an invisible character that pyWin ignores. > > >>> Not the 34672232 window is a dialog that I closed by pressing OK. I > >>> would again guess, that, if there is a problem, it occurs in the code > >>> that destroys the dialog. > > >> Well you have to remember that you are trying to run a windowed GUI > >> under the control of another windows GUI, so it isn't surprising that > >> you hit trouble. > > >> With IDLE the issue will be that IDLE already created a main window > >> before your program started running. With PythonWin you are using two > >> different toolkits, so it isn't really surprising that breaks down - > >> there will be two entirely separate main loops competing with each other. > > > Not quite. I take down IDLE when I run pyWin, and vice versa. > > The two separate loops being PyWin (which uses MFC) and your program > (which uses Tkinter). You just can't mix GUIs in the same process like > that, sorry. > > regards > Stedve > -- > Steve Holden +1 571 484 6266 +1 800 494 3119 > Holden Web LLC http://www.holdenweb.com/
Deja-vu! http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2001-March/076069.html -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list