Update: My problem is solved.
My fault is totally misunderstanding kivy, if your variable is changing over time, you have to trigger this on python (e.g clock.schedule).
Sorry for my English, it's not my native.
I try to write a Gui for my automation code (checking gmail, reading e-mail, do some simple actions on web). Main Python-selenium code is ready and working well.
My questions is how can i establish a communication between py code and kv code? I'll generate a python text variable, work as an simple event log and I need to update (grow-expand) a label text on kivy side simultaneously.
Related
I am trying to create a system which saves records to a text file in Python using the guizero library, but it's behaving quite oddly. I've created an abstracted version of the program to post because the original is much longer. The abstracted version experiences the same problem.
I have attached a function to a pushButton, expecting it to run when the button is pressed, but it executes as soon as the program itself runs. To add to this, it doesn't run when I press the button.
The code
The output
The people who are familiar with the Live Server of VS Code, would have easily understood what is the main motive of this question.
But for others, here's the explanation:
Main motive of Live Server is to Automatically Reload Your Site on Save in web development! (Which get changed for python tkinter).
When ever I change something in my python file which contains tkinter code, the change should be reflected in the main window (the main window should not re-open to reflect the changes).
I have tried to search on web as well as on stack over flow, but all the results are for updating value in entry, label, buttons etc. But what I want is, the whole window should be updated when ever I change something in my main file, and the main window should not be reopened to do so. So in short, updating whole window without closing it, on every changes in the main file or automatically reload your program on save without reopening!
What have I tried?:
I tried to detect change in file using os.getsize which satisfied the first part of my question, but however I am not able to solve the second part i.e window should not be closed.
import os
main__tkinter_filename="myfile.py"
initial_filesize=os.path.getsize(main_tkinter_filename) # Getting size of the file for
# comparison.
while 1:
final_filesize=os.path.getsize(main_tkinter_filename)
if final_filsize<intial_filesize or final_filesize>initial_filesize:
webbrowser.open(main_tkinter_filename)
Example:
from tkinter import *
root=Tk()
root.mainloop
results in the below GUI:
If i have added a=Label(text='text')anda.pack() after root=Tk(), it should show me the label, and if i have removed the same code, it should remove them.
I will answer your question by the best of my understanding,
I have some (a few projects of my own, still way too limited) experience with flutter which has hot-reload feature (same as you described above, which you want with python, mainly tkinter), I recently switched to python for gui (Loved it!), so I would like to share my research here:
I was successfully able to set up hot-reload both with kivy (kivymd hot reload, which comes with watchdog and kaki, which works real-time), and with tkinter, while there is a hitch with the later, you will have to press Ctrl + R as to reload the tkinter window, but it works without having to re-run the python program, I will leave the link to the found resources here, hope it helps with your query!
To setup hot-reload with tkinter (requires Ctrl + R), please refer here.
To setup hot-reload with kivy/kivymd (real-time), which I personally prefer, you can find the official docs here.
To mention, I use the above on Manjaro (Arch linux) with pycharm, atom, but I have also tried and have made it run successfully on Windows 10 with vs code (worked like charm)
Hope I could be of help! If you face any problem regarding the same, please feel free to ask! Thanks!
After digging around I have finally found out a way to implement hot reload feature (which #Stange answers provides) but just updating the selected frame or code.
The basic idea is constanly reading the file and executing the selected code, and removing the object in a list which are meant to be removed.
# Live Checker.py
import keyboard
while 1:
if keyboard.is_pressed("Ctrl+r"):
with open('test.py','r') as file:
file_data=file.read()
file_data_start_index=file_data.find("'#Start#'")
file_data_end_index=file_data.find("'#End#'")
exec_command=file_data[file_data_start_index:file_data_end_index]
with open('exec_log.txt','w') as txt_file:
txt_file.write(exec_command)
Here I am constantly checking if if ctrl+r key is pressed, and if pressed
it reads the file,
writes the selected code from the file into a txt file.
I have specified the start and end of the code to be updated by #Start# and #End# respectively.
# Main.py
def check():
with open('exec_log.txt','r') as exec_c:
exec_command=exec_c.read()
if len(exec_command)==0:
pass
else:
print(exec_command)
exec('for i in root.winfo_children():i.destroy()\n'+exec_command)
print('exec')
with open('exec_log.txt','w') as exec_c:
pass
root.update()
root.after(100,check)
root.after(100,check)
And in the main file, i have added the above code which continusly check if exec_log.txt file has any changes, and if changes are there, then it executes them and all so destroys the widget specified in the remove_list.
This is just a temporary solution which in my case helps me to implement the hot reload feature in tkinter.
I'm using pywinauto to interact with the window of an old game - specifically the dedicated server GUI. I've been able to connect to it with:
app = Application(backend="uia").connect(path=r"C:\Program Files (x86)\___.exe")
Using a loop, I'm able to read each line in a Listbox in a specific window using:
for i in dlg.ListBox.descendants():
print (i.window_text())
The Listbox behaves as like a console output area and I've also been able to write commands to the Edit (input) field which appear in the Listbox.
All of this is great considering I didn't think it would be easy at all!
However, the last part of what I'd like to do is proving more difficult...
I want to listen for changes in the list box so I can react to them and write different responses back into the Listbox. So for example, when a player joins the server, I want my code to know that a new line has appeared in the Listbox (so I can write a custom welcome message to the Edit field).
I have tried to look at listener scripts but I feel a bit out of my depth and can't seem to find a simple code example that could help me accomplish this. Does anyone have any ideas where I could look or what I could use?
Even better... would anyone be able to provide some sample code for me to re-work?
Looking for help on where to start with this, not too good with Python. What I trying to do is use tkinter for a gui interface but i need to be able to process recieved data and update labels widgets as information changes. I all ready have the communication portion of my program working fine in the shell but when I try to tie it to tkinter it will stop processing as soon as the interface is generated. Anyone have a simple code for me to modify to my needs or point me to a reference example somewhere. Spent days so far trying different options and I still have yet to find something that works.
Thanks for any help
Convert your working program into functions that you can register as callbacks in the tkinter UI (say buttons, or other widgets), that is, make it event-driven, and then, for background processing register some of the functions with the after widget method. The root.mainloop() will never return (only on UI close), use it as the last instruction.
So you can't just write your logic in a top-down structure, and hope that it will work well with the UI. The mainloop will be permanently looping, and will call specific funtions in your code, as appropriate to the received events from the user, or to callbacks you registered to run after some time with after.
See here for the after part
Take a look here for structuring tkinter programs. It should have enough info and links for you to study and learn how to do it in a right way.
I have looked at similar questions that may answer my question but I am still very unclear on how to go about the following:
I can create programs to run in the Python Shell in Idle and I can also set up windows with widgets in Tkinter, but whatever I create in Tkinter is pointless because I cannot figure out how to take my Python Shell code and "wrap" it in the Tkinter GUI.
I have assumed that it cannot be done, and that entirely new code must be written to assist the language that is specific to Tkinter. I am very confused on how to create a well-rounded program without being left with just a GUI "skeleton" with random buttons, labels, entries, etc. and a Python program that is very unappealing and can only run in the ugly little Shell.
What you create with Tkinter is not pointless. It sounds to me like you're trying to compile a stand-alone program in Python, using the Tkinter library to provide the GUI. Once you have a script working, you can use a program to compile into a standalone program. Look into using py2app on a mac, or py2exe on Windows. Google them and see if that's what you're looking for.
Porting an application from command line to GUI might require some rework (depending on degree of interactivity you want to achieve).
Basically, in a GUI application, you build a few widgets (buttons...) at startup, and then perfom all your actions "on reaction" of user input. You typically do this by binding callbacks onto your widgets (button, input field), and then enter a mainloop (or eventloop).
You might read this chapter about events and binding.
If your application is mainly computing oriented, providing a gui with a "launch" button, and an output field is straightforward. If you perform some command line input, you can switch to widget input at low cost. More interactive apps will require to be architectured toward interaction capabilities.