On Tuesday 14 October 2008 12:55, lkcl wrote: > hello_loader.py is the main.... err.... um.... i just double- > checked, so i'd be able to advise you and... err... the problem i > described (with the GridTest) seems to have... gone away!!
There are lots of references to PyGTK classes in there. Is there a way to select Qt instead of GTK? > however, clicking too fast _did_ end up with fifty little windows of > text (!) > > and the respect for text boundaries is definitely broken - shrink the > window to 300 x 400 with the kitchensink example (which is where i > stopped and moved to webkit, so all the _other_ examples prior to that > will work) and you'll see that the text in a column down the left hand > side end up all overlapping each other. so, you get to see the top > few pixels of each word. Hacking the code a bit, I can run the hello_loader.py example. The items on the left do indeed overlap. It looks like the minimum size of the labels aren't being respected for some reason. > if there's a way to enforce the displaying of text - for the _text_ > to say "i need to be a total area of X in order to display my words. > if you make my width too small, i will _force_ my height to be larger > as i wrap the text". Yes, there are ways to relate the height of a widget to its width, and there may well be a way to do that for a standard text widget, but it might involve some experimentation with the underlying text document. David -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list