That's easy to understand if you check the class inheritance Button is a Bin Bin is a Container which can own only one child then Button is a Container like VBox and HBox, but only has one child which you can access via button.child, it's a Label by default (if you pass a string while constructing), but can be any other widget (add it by button.add)
On Mon, Dec 24, 2012 at 8:04 AM, Saeed Rasooli <[email protected]> wrote: > About GtkButton, yes, and you have 2 options, which is show below as 2 > examples: > > ____________________________________________ > > import gtk > > win = gtk.Dialog() > button = gtk.Button('Hello <b>World</b>') > button.child.set_use_markup(True) ## button.child is a Label > win.vbox.pack_start(button, 1, 1) > win.vbox.show_all() > win.run() > > ____________________________________________ > > import gtk > > win = gtk.Dialog() > button = gtk.Button() ## don't add anything inside the button by now > label = gtk.Label('Hello <b>World</b>') > label.set_use_markup(True) > button.add(label) > win.vbox.pack_start(button, 1, 1) > win.vbox.show_all() > win.run() > > > On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 3:59 PM, Ajay Garg <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Will be grateful for any pointers. >> >> >> Regards, >> Ajay >> >> _______________________________________________ >> pygtk mailing list [email protected] >> http://www.daa.com.au/mailman/listinfo/pygtk >> Read the PyGTK FAQ: http://faq.pygtk.org/ >> > >
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