On Tue, May 10, 2005 at 09:56:17PM +0200, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> Am Dienstag, den 10.05.2005, 11:01 -0300 schrieb Christian Robottom
> Reis:
> > On Tue, May 10, 2005 at 07:00:58AM -0700, Brian wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2005-10-05 at 09:49 +0200, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> > > > Hi,
> > > > 
> > > > Am Montag, den 09.05.2005, 16:50 -0700 schrieb Brian:
> > > > > How do you set a tooltip for the new gtk.ToolButton.   It seems that a
> > > > > ToolButton is a subclass of a ToolItem which has a set_tip().  But how
> > > > > do you access it from the gtk.ToolButton widget?
> > > > 
> > > > tooltips = gtk.Tooltips()
> > > > [...]
> > > > 
> > > > toolbar = gtk.Toolbar()
> > > > toolbar.set_tooltips(True)
> > > > 
> > > > toolbutton = gtk.ToolButton()
> > > > toolbutton.set_tooltip(tooltips, "hi")
> > > > 
> > > > cheers,
> > > >    Danny
> > > > 
> > > 
> > > But that is what is driving me crazy over this:
> > > 
> > > bash-2.05b$ ./tooltip.py
> > > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > >   File "./tooltip.py", line 78, in ?
> > >     tt = Tooltips()
> > >   File "./tooltip.py", line 51, in __init__
> > >     button1.set_tip(tooltips)
> > > AttributeError: 'gtk.ToolButton' object has no attribute 'set_tip'
> > 
> > But the example above has set_tooltip, not set_tip.
> 
> Yes, but what I'm not getting where the imaginary tool_item_set_tip
> comes from. 

This is the most confusing exchange ever witnessed on pygtk-list. 

Danny, you and Brian need to stop taking drugs <wink>.

Take care,
--
Christian Robottom Reis | http://async.com.br/~kiko/ | [+55 16] 3376 0125
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