On 28 Ott, 10:40, Gilles Ganault <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > Hello > > I'm reading O'Reily's "Python Programming on Win32", but couldn't find > a simple example on how to create a window with just a label and > pushbutton. >
This is probably because maybe the book addresses how to use python to do windows-specific stuff (like using a COM interface) and presumes a basic knowledge of python in the reader (just guessing, never read the book ) > If someone has such a basic example handy, I'm interested. > > Thank you. There are as many way to do it as many GUI toolkits for python you can find (and there are many) although they all share a similar structure. Here is the one for Tkinter, which is the default python GUI toolkit. The example is copied verbatim from the python on-line documentation ( section "Graphical User Interfaces with Tk" of "The Python Standard Library"). Ciao ------ FB from Tkinter import * class Application(Frame): def say_hi(self): print "hi there, everyone!" def createWidgets(self): self.QUIT = Button(self) self.QUIT["text"] = "QUIT" self.QUIT["fg"] = "red" self.QUIT["command"] = self.quit self.QUIT.pack({"side": "left"}) self.hi_there = Button(self) self.hi_there["text"] = "Hello", self.hi_there["command"] = self.say_hi self.hi_there.pack({"side": "left"}) def __init__(self, master=None): Frame.__init__(self, master) self.pack() self.createWidgets() root = Tk() app = Application(master=root) app.mainloop() root.destroy() -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list