Max wrote: > puzz wrote: > > sorry about the missunderstanding... > > > > but my question is "how" and not "where" to put it online > > and that's where the "newbie" comes from > > > > P M > > If you just want to make it available for download, that's easy. If you > want to make it open source, you could upload it to > planet-source-code.com (I used to put a lot there; don't know if they > have a python section) or SourceForge depending on your "market". > > But what I think you want is a web interface (where a user goes to your > site and uses it in the browser window). This is more tricky, but you're > almost certainly going to have to abandon Tkinter. You could try doing > an applet in Jython (which compiles Python to Java bytecode so you could > in theory do a Java-style applet). > > The alternative is to have the curve drawn server-side, so you would > have an HTML form on the page, and on clicking a button, load the graph > (into an "iframe" or something perhaps [I have a feeling iframes have > been deprecated - check first]). In which case you'd want to look up > CGI, AJAX, etc. > I'd suggest drawing curves in a <canvas>; supported by Firfox, Safari, Opera ... and, if you use Google's "excanvas", it can be supported by IE.
André > --Max -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list