On May 10, 1:29 am, "Eric Brunel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Wed, 09 May 2007 18:37:32 +0200, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi, > > I have developed a GUI usingtkinter(grid geometory manager). > > The structure is a top frame containing multiple subframes. Each > > subframe has a combination of widgets like(Entry, label, > > button,listboxes). The subframes are placed with a padx and pady > > offset with regards to the other subframes. And the widgets within > > these subframes have their own padx and pady offsets. The GUI runs > > fine on my linux box, but on a different linux box things get wierd. > > I see things like- > > 1) The frame width increasing > > 2) The widget padx translating to much bigger offsets with reference > > to the subframe edges > > 3) Widget widths like that for Entry become bigger > > > I Know its to do with the screen resolution settings and user settings > > on different machines. Can anyone point me in the right > > direction(before I start looking into it)as how to account for > > different screen resolutions so as to have as uniform a GUI look as > > possible across different user machines. > > [snip] > > For some reason, tk uses different default units for coordinates and font > sizes: a coordinate specified as just a number is considered to be in > pixels (a.k.a screen points); a font size specified as just a number is > considered to be in points, i.e 1/72 inch. So these units are the same > only if your screen resolution is exactly 72 dpi, which is usually not the > case. > > If this is actually your problem, the way to correct it is quite simple: > the tk command "tk scaling 1" tells tk that a point and a pixel are the > same thing. To issue it, you may have to use explicitely the tcl > interpreter used byTkinterby doing: > aWidget.tk.call('tk', 'scaling', 1) > where aWidget is anyTkinterwidget. This is what I had to do with Python > 2.1; it may be easier with later Python/Tkinterversions. > > HTH > -- > python -c "print ''.join([chr(154 - ord(c)) for c in > 'U(17zX(%,5.zmz5(17l8(%,5.Z*(93-965$l7+-'])"
This is just what I watned...Thanks that works great -Rahul -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list