Reputation: 1152
I have a program which creates a window where a message is displayed according to a check box.
How can I make the window size constant when the message is displayed and the message is not displayed?
from Tkinter import *
class App:
def __init__(self,master):
self.var = IntVar()
frame = Frame(master)
frame.grid()
f2 = Frame(master,width=200,height=100)
f2.grid(row=0,column=1)
button = Checkbutton(frame,text='show',variable=self.var,command=self.fx)
button.grid(row=0,column=0)
msg2="""I feel bound to give them full satisfaction on this point"""
self.v= Message(f2,text=msg2)
def fx(self):
if self.var.get():
self.v.grid(column=1,row=0,sticky=N)
else:
self.v.grid_remove()
top = Tk()
app = App(top)
top.mainloop()
Upvotes: 72
Views: 200981
Reputation: 15345
Below code will fix root = tk.Tk()
to its size before it was called:
root.resizable(False, False)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tkwindowwithlabel5.py", line 23, in <module>
main()
File "tkwindowwithlabel5.py", line 16, in main
window.resizeable(width = True, height =True)
File "/usr/lib/python3.4/tkinter/__init__.py", line 1935, in
__getattr__
return getattr(self.tk, attr)
AttributeError: 'tkapp' object has no attribute 'resizeable'
is what you will get with the first answer. tk does support min and max size
window.minsize(width = X, height = x)
window.maxsize(width = X, height = x)
i figured it out but just trying the first one. using python3 with tk.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 22804
This is a variant of an existing solution already provided above:
import tkinter as tk
root = tk.Tk()
root.resizable(0, 0)
root.mainloop()
The advantage is that you type less.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 20391
This code makes a window with the conditions that the user cannot change the dimensions of the Tk()
window, and also disables the maximise button.
import tkinter as tk
root = tk.Tk()
root.resizable(width=False, height=False)
root.mainloop()
Within the program you can change the window dimensions with @Carpetsmoker's answer, or by doing this:
root.geometry('{}x{}'.format(<widthpixels>, <heightpixels>))
It should be fairly easy for you to implement that into your code. :)
Upvotes: 131
Reputation:
You could use:
parentWindow.maxsize(#,#);
parentWindow.minsize(x,x);
At the bottom of your code to set the fixed window size.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 27852
You can use the minsize
and maxsize
to set a minimum & maximum size, for example:
def __init__(self,master):
master.minsize(width=666, height=666)
master.maxsize(width=666, height=666)
Will give your window a fixed width & height of 666 pixels.
Or, just using minsize
def __init__(self,master):
master.minsize(width=666, height=666)
Will make sure your window is always at least 666 pixels large, but the user can still expand the window.
Upvotes: 35