Sometimes you just want to make a quick UI to make some visual task easier and
Tkinter is a fast UI toolkit that's packaged with Python since forever. uielem hopes to provide a more modern/Pythonic syntax for using Tkinter.
A simple example:
from Tkinter import Tk, Frame, Label, Listbox, Button, mainloop
tkroot = Tk()
tkroot.title('Kanban')
frame = Frame(tkroot)
frame.pack()
board_frame = Frame(frame)
board_frame.pack(side='top')
for board_name in ["Todo", "Doing", "Done"]:
inner_frame = Frame(board_frame)
inner_frame.pack(side='left')
label = Label(inner_frame, text=board_name)
label.pack(side='top')
listbox = Listbox(inner_frame)
listbox.pack(side='top')
buttons_frame = Frame(frame)
buttons_frame.pack(side='top')
add_button = Button(buttons_frame, text='Add item', command=add)
add_button.pack(side='left')
remove_button = Button(buttons_frame, text='Remove item', command=remove)
remove_button.pack(side='left')
mainloop()
from uielem import UI, uidict
from Tkinter import Tk, Frame, Label, Listbox, Button
uiroot = UI(Tk, name='root', title='Kanban', children=[
UI(Frame, packside='top', children=[
UI(Frame, packside='left', name='boards', children=[
UI(Frame, packside='top', children=[
UI(Label, text=board_name),
UI(Listbox, name=board_name.lower())])
for board_name in ["Todo", "Doing", "Done"]]),
UI(Frame, packside='left', children=[
UI(Button, text='Add item', command=add),
UI(Button, text='Remove item', command=remove), ])])])
uiroot.makeelem()
uidict["root"].mainloop()
pip install -r requirements.txt
uielem depends on undoable.
The basic pattern is just UI(<tkinter elem>, <keyword arguments>, children=[<chidren>]).
packside=sets the packing side for all children (contained in the element).defaulttext=for aTkinter.Entryset the initial text.on_*=sets an event callback (and_is replaced by-). So passingon_Button_3=funcis the same as runningelem.bind('<Button-3>', func)after creation.set_*=sets attribute values after creation. For exampleset_title=['title']has the same effect astitle='title'.- Other non-special keyword arguments are passed through to the Tkinter element.
uidictcontains all named (name=something) elements for easy reference. Names must be globally unique (thinkidin SVG).- To add and remove child elements from a container, treat it like a list (using
.append,.insertand.remove). - Children of the wrapper can be accessed by indexing (such as
uiroot[0][1]). - The wrapper can access the Tkinter object with the
.elemattribute and the Tkinter object can access the wrapper with.ui.
uielem is now rather large so two lighter versions of uielem are provided in the summaries folder but they may not always be up to date.
simple_uielem.pyremoves some of the less used features like code generation.minimal_uielem.pyonly works with UIs generated once and never modified after that (like in the example) but is otherwise fully compatible. Also removes the dependency on undoable.
They also serve as documentation for uielem's architecture/inner workings.