On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 09:04:50 -0800, chuck wrote: > On Mar 3, 10:40 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <bj_...@gmx.net> wrote: >> On Tue, 03 Mar 2009 18:06:56 -0800, chuck wrote: >> > I am learning python right now. In the lesson on tkinter I see this >> > piece of code >> >> > from Tkinter import * >> >> > class MyFrame(Frame): >> > def __init__(self): >> > Frame.__init__(self) >> > self.grid() >> >> > My question is what does "self.grid()" do? I understand that the >> > grid method registers widgets with the geometry manager and adds them >> > to the frame >> >> Not "the frame" but the container widget that is the parent of the >> widget on which you call `grid()`. In this case that would be a (maybe >> implicitly created) `Tkinter.Tk` instance, because there is no explicit >> parent widget set here. Which IMHO is not a good idea. >> >> And widgets that layout themselves in the `__init__()` are a code smell >> too. No standard widget does this, and it takes away the flexibility >> of the code using that widget to decide how and where it should be >> placed. > > I think I understand what you're saying! How would you recommend I go > about this? How do I create an explicit parent?
You create it and pass it as argument to child widgets. import Tkinter as tk class MyFrame(tk.Frame): def __init__(self, parent): tk.Frame.__init__(self, parent) > What exactly is meant by "widgets that layout themselves"- what is the > right way to do this? Call one of the three layout methods on the widget instance after you created it, and not in the `__init__()` of the widget. Your example above "grids" itself at its parent widget, I think at the next free cell on a grid if you don't give the position as argument. There is no chance to use another layout manager or to place it in another cell. Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list