> Yes. You must leave it out.
Now I'm reading a Tkinter reference at
http://infohost.nmt.edu/tcc/help/pubs/tkinter/minimal-app.html
and it has this example:
#!/usr/local/bin/python
from Tkinter import *
class Application(Frame):
def __init__(self, master=None):
Frame.__init__(self, master)
self.grid()
self.createWidgets()
def createWidgets(self):
self.quitButton = Button ( self, text='Quit',
command=self.quit )
self.quitButton.grid()
app = Application()
app.master.title("Sample application")
app.mainloop()
Is this just outdated? I don't understand why it uses quit() instead of
destroy(). When I try this in IDLE, quit() just causes the application to hang
(I assume because it ends the mainloop without actually closing the
application). Or is this just a problem when using IDLE?
If the latter, which is preferable, quit or destroy?
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