Ed Leafe wrote: > On Sunday 31 July 2005 22:39, Paul Rubin wrote: > > > > import dabo > > > app = dabo.dApp() > > > dApp.start() > > > > > > Sorry, I couldn't do it in 5. ;-) Oh, and that includes a full menu, > > > too. > > > > I get an ImportError exception when I try that. Any suggestions? Note > > that I don't get that exception from Tkinter. > > bash-3.00$ python > > Python 2.3.4 (#1, Oct 26 2004, 16:42:40) > > [GCC 3.4.2 20041017 (Red Hat 3.4.2-6.fc3)] on linux2 > > Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. > > >>> import dabo > > Traceback (most recent call last): > > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? > > ImportError: No module named dabo > > >>> import Tkinter > > >>> > > Oh, c'mon now Paul, now you're trolling. You know exactly what the problem > is, and try to make it look like a bug. > > Fine: you don't want to use anything that doesn't come standard with Python. > You've made your point. We get it. There is no need to repeat yourself > constantly. > > The only point of my post was that for those without your aversion to > installing useful tools, Dabo provides a ton of functionality. Also, as my > partner Paul McNett pointed out, I could have done it in *two* lines: > > import dabo > dabo.dApp().start() > > ;-) > > -- > > -- Ed Leafe > -- http://leafe.com > -- http://dabodev.com If you're creating a new instance of your dApp(I assume its a class) with no arguments, then effectively your just creating a default program which is already defined in the dabo module. If you could write it in a few, short lines of code by defining a new class, then you might have something there.
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