Well, I figured it out. Thanks anyway for your help.
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def check_message(self, spawn=True):
'''Method for pulling message from server process.'''
if spawn: self.pid2 = os.fork()
if self.pid2 == 0:
if verbose: print('message checker initialized')
# repeat message check forever
while True:
class MessageServer:
'''Creates a message server object that listens for textual
information
and sends it back to the main program. Intended to be spawned
as a
separate process.
'''
def __init__(self, port_number, server_send, server_receive):
'''@param server_
Thank you for the reply. When I said "TCP/IP" protocol, what I meant
was this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Protocol_Suite.
The reason the server is in a separate process is because it needs to
continually be listening for network packets, which would disrupt the
GUI. In any case, that pa
On Sunday 15 August 2010, it occurred to Jerrad Genson to exclaim:
> Hello,
>
> I'm learning Tkinter, and I have an issue that I'd appreciate help
> with. I have a program that initializes a GUI (I'll call this the "GUI
> process"), then spawns another process that listens on a network via
> the T
I should also mention that I'm running Ubuntu 10.04 and Python 2.6.5.
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Hello,
I'm learning Tkinter, and I have an issue that I'd appreciate help
with. I have a program that initializes a GUI (I'll call this the "GUI
process"), then spawns another process that listens on a network via
the TCP/IP protocol for incoming strings (I'll call this the "server
process"). Ever