Is there a way to prevent the dialog from displaying hidden
directories? My research has not found anything relating
to hidden files or directories.
--
GNU/Linux user #557453
"Philosophy is common sense with big words."
-James Madison
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tkFileDialog.askdirectory() allows the selection of a directory. In my code
it displays a line of text at the top of the frame ("Please choose a
directory, then select OK"). A little below that the current path
("C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\My Documents\Python\...") is displayed as
a string and
Subject: Re: tkFileDialog question
Matt,
There is also a nice thing you need to know about Python if you
already do not know. That is the fact that all empty collections bool
to False. This makes Truth testing easier.
>>> bool([])
False
>>> bool('')
False
>>> bool(
Matt,
There is also a nice thing you need to know about Python if you
already do not know. That is the fact that all empty collections bool
to False. This makes Truth testing easier.
>>> bool([])
False
>>> bool('')
False
>>> bool({})
False
>>> bool([1])
True
>>> bool([[]])
True
>>> bool(' ')
True
On Nov 15, 8:56 pm, "Gabriel Genellina"
wrote:
> En Fri, 13 Nov 2009 11:32:37 -0300, Matt Mitchell
> escribió:
>
> > answer = tkFileDialog.askdirectory()
>
> > if answer is not '':
> > #do stuff
>
> Although it "reads well", this is *wrong*. You want != here, not the `is
> not` operator.
>
En Fri, 13 Nov 2009 11:32:37 -0300, Matt Mitchell
escribió:
answer = tkFileDialog.askdirectory()
if answer is not '':
#do stuff
Although it "reads well", this is *wrong*. You want != here, not the `is
not` operator.
if answer != '': ...
If you want to compare the *values* of t
Opps, i see you answered your own question ;-)
To save you more hours of Googling take a look at these two sites!
#great reference
http://infohost.nmt.edu/tcc/help/pubs/tkinter/
#more in-depth
http://effbot.org/tkinterbook/
you'll want to keep them both under your pillow.
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http://mail.python
-bounces+mmitchell=transparent@python.org] On
> Behalf Of Matt Mitchell
> Sent: Friday, November 13, 2009 9:33 AM
> To: python-l...@python.org
> Subject: tkFileDialog question
>
> Hi,
>
> This is my first attempt to write a script with any kind of gui. All I
> need the
@python.org
Subject: tkFileDialog question
Hi,
This is my first attempt to write a script with any kind of gui. All I
need the script to do is ask the user for a directory and then do stuff
with the files in that directory. I used tkFileDialog.askdirectory().
It works great but it pops up an empty tk
Hi,
This is my first attempt to write a script with any kind of gui. All I
need the script to do is ask the user for a directory and then do stuff
with the files in that directory. I used tkFileDialog.askdirectory().
It works great but it pops up an empty tk window. Is there any way to
prevent
James, thank you very much for your answer.
Jaime
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Oops,
That should have been,
class MyApp:
def __init__(self, parent):
self.myParent = parent
self.myContainer1 = Frame(parent)
self.myContainer1.pack()
self.entry = Entry(self.myContainer1)
self.entry.grid(r
I think you are better off not binding a button like you are doing.
Use the "command" option to get the behavior you want. E.g:
class MyApp:
def __init__(self, parent):
self.myParent = parent
self.myContainer1 = Frame(parent)
self.myContainer
I am creating a very simple GUI with one Entry widget and
one Button. The purpose of the Button widget is to Browse for
a file using tkFileDialog.askopenfilename().
I bind the button to a handler which spawns a tkFileDialog. This
works but the button __stays depressed__ after the handler returns!
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