| from Tkinter import * |
| |
| # The way to think about this is that each radio button menu |
| # controls a different variable -- clicking on one of the |
| # mutually exclusive choices in a radiobutton assigns some value |
| # to an application variable you provide. When you define a |
| # radiobutton menu choice, you have the option of specifying the |
| # name of a varaible and value to assign to that variable when |
| # that choice is selected. This clever mechanism relieves you, |
| # the programmer, from having to write a dumb callback that |
| # probably wouldn't have done anything more than an assignment |
| # anyway. The Tkinter options for this follow their Tk |
| # counterparts: |
| # {"variable" : my_flavor_variable, "value" : "strawberry"} |
| # where my_flavor_variable is an instance of one of the |
| # subclasses of Variable, provided in Tkinter.py (there is |
| # StringVar(), IntVar(), DoubleVar() and BooleanVar() to choose |
| # from) |
| |
| |
| |
| def makePoliticalParties(var): |
| # make menu button |
| Radiobutton_button = Menubutton(mBar, text='Political Party', |
| underline=0) |
| Radiobutton_button.pack(side=LEFT, padx='2m') |
| |
| # the primary pulldown |
| Radiobutton_button.menu = Menu(Radiobutton_button) |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add_radiobutton(label='Republican', |
| variable=var, value=1) |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add('radiobutton', {'label': 'Democrat', |
| 'variable' : var, |
| 'value' : 2}) |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add('radiobutton', {'label': 'Libertarian', |
| 'variable' : var, |
| 'value' : 3}) |
| |
| var.set(2) |
| |
| # set up a pointer from the file menubutton back to the file menu |
| Radiobutton_button['menu'] = Radiobutton_button.menu |
| |
| return Radiobutton_button |
| |
| |
| def makeFlavors(var): |
| # make menu button |
| Radiobutton_button = Menubutton(mBar, text='Flavors', |
| underline=0) |
| Radiobutton_button.pack(side=LEFT, padx='2m') |
| |
| # the primary pulldown |
| Radiobutton_button.menu = Menu(Radiobutton_button) |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add_radiobutton(label='Strawberry', |
| variable=var, value='Strawberry') |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add_radiobutton(label='Chocolate', |
| variable=var, value='Chocolate') |
| |
| Radiobutton_button.menu.add_radiobutton(label='Rocky Road', |
| variable=var, value='Rocky Road') |
| |
| # choose a default |
| var.set("Chocolate") |
| |
| # set up a pointer from the file menubutton back to the file menu |
| Radiobutton_button['menu'] = Radiobutton_button.menu |
| |
| return Radiobutton_button |
| |
| |
| def printStuff(): |
| print "party is", party.get() |
| print "flavor is", flavor.get() |
| print |
| |
| ################################################# |
| #### Main starts here ... |
| root = Tk() |
| |
| |
| # make a menu bar |
| mBar = Frame(root, relief=RAISED, borderwidth=2) |
| mBar.pack(fill=X) |
| |
| # make two application variables, |
| # one to control each radio button set |
| party = IntVar() |
| flavor = StringVar() |
| |
| Radiobutton_button = makePoliticalParties(party) |
| Radiobutton_button2 = makeFlavors(flavor) |
| |
| # finally, install the buttons in the menu bar. |
| # This allows for scanning from one menubutton to the next. |
| mBar.tk_menuBar(Radiobutton_button, Radiobutton_button2) |
| |
| b = Button(root, text="print party and flavor", foreground="red", |
| command=printStuff) |
| b.pack(side=TOP) |
| |
| root.title('menu demo') |
| root.iconname('menu demo') |
| |
| root.mainloop() |