Book Image

Python GUI Programming - A Complete Reference Guide

By : Alan D. Moore, B. M. Harwani
Book Image

Python GUI Programming - A Complete Reference Guide

By: Alan D. Moore, B. M. Harwani

Overview of this book

A responsive graphical user interface (GUI) helps you interact with your application, improves user experience, and enhances the efficiency of your applications. With Python, you’ll have access to elaborate GUI frameworks that you can use to build interactive GUIs that stand apart from the rest. This Learning Path begins by introducing you to Tkinter and PyQt, before guiding you through the application development process. As you expand your GUI by adding more widgets, you'll work with networks, databases, and graphical libraries that enhance its functionality. You'll also learn how to connect to external databases and network resources, test your code, and maximize performance using asynchronous programming. In later chapters, you'll understand how to use the cross-platform features of Tkinter and Qt5 to maintain compatibility across platforms. You’ll be able to mimic the platform-native look and feel, and build executables for deployment across popular computing platforms. By the end of this Learning Path, you'll have the skills and confidence to design and build high-end GUI applications that can solve real-world problems. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: Python GUI Programming with Tkinter by Alan D. Moore Qt5 Python GUI Programming Cookbook by B. M. Harwani
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
Title Page

Validating user input

At first glance, Tkinter's selection of the input widgets seems a little disappointing. It doesn't give us a true number entry that only allows digits, nor a true drop-down selector that only allows items from the drop-down list to be selected. We have no date inputs, email inputs, or other specially-formatted input widgets.

But these weaknesses can become strengths. Because these widgets assume nothing, we can make them behave in a way that's appropriate to our specific needs, rather than some generic way that may or may not work optimally. For example, letters may seem inappropriate in a number entry, but are they? In Python, strings such as NaN and Infinity are valid float values; having a box that could increment numerals but also handle those string values may be very useful in some applications.

We're going to learn how to shape...