Graphical user interfaces with Tk¶
Tk/Tcl has long been an integral part of Python. It provides a robust and
platform independent windowing toolkit, that is available to Python programmers
using the tkinter package, and its extension, the tkinter.ttk module.
The tkinter package is a thin object-oriented layer on top of Tcl/Tk. To
use tkinter, you donât need to write Tcl code, but you will need to
consult the Tk documentation, and occasionally the Tcl documentation.
tkinter is a set of wrappers that implement the Tk widgets as Python
classes.
tkinterâs chief virtues are that it is fast, and that it usually comes
bundled with Python. Although its standard documentation is weak, good
material is available, which includes: references, tutorials, a book and
others. tkinter is also famous for having an outdated look and feel,
which has been vastly improved in Tk 8.5. Nevertheless, there are many other
GUI libraries that you could be interested in. The Python wiki lists several
alternative GUI frameworks and tools.
tkinterâ Python interface to Tcl/Tktkinter.colorchooserâ Color choosing dialogtkinter.fontâ Tkinter font wrapper- Tkinter Dialogs
tkinter.messageboxâ Tkinter message promptstkinter.scrolledtextâ Scrolled Text Widgettkinter.dndâ Drag and drop supporttkinter.ttkâ Tk themed widgets- IDLE â Python editor and shell
turtleâ Turtle graphics- Introduction
- Get started
- Tutorial
- How toâ¦
- Turtle graphics reference
- Methods of RawTurtle/Turtle and corresponding functions
- Methods of TurtleScreen/Screen and corresponding functions
- Public classes
- Explanation
- Help and configuration
turtledemoâ Demo scripts- Changes since Python 2.6
- Changes since Python 3.0