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Book Overview & Buying
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Table Of Contents
Tkinter GUI Application Development Blueprints
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In addition to the
bind method that you previously saw, you might find the following two event-related options useful in certain cases:
unbind option to undo the effect of an earlier binding. The syntax is as follows:widget.unbind(event)
The following are some examples of its usage:
entry.unbind('<Alt-Shift-5>')
root.unbind_all('<F1>')
root.unbind_class('Entry', '<KeyPress-Del>')For example, let's suppose that you want to create a new event called <<commit>>, which is triggered by the F9 key. To create this virtual event on a given widget, use the following syntax:
widget.event_add('<<commit>>', '<KeyRelease-F9>')<<commit>> to a callback by using a normal bind() method, as follows:widget.bind('<<commit>>', callback)Other event-related methods can be accessed by typing the following line in the Python terminal:
>>> import tkinter >>> help(tkinter.Event)
Now that you are ready to dive into real application development with Tkinter, let's spend some time exploring a few custom styling options that Tkinter offers. We will also have a look at some of the configuration options that are commonly used with the root window.
Change the font size
Change margin width
Change background colour