On Tue, 22 Mar 2016 23:52:57 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote: > On 3/22/2016 10:46 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote: >> Platform: Linux >> Python: v.2.7.9 >> Tkinter: v.8.6.2 >> >> My program has some buttons for file operations, load_image, >> save_image, and quit. I would like to bind a key that will >> execute the procedures for each of the buttons. The binding >> for the quit button was easy... >> >> root.bind("<q>", quit) >> root.bind("<Q>", quit) >> >> That works but it not executing a quit button procedure. >> It is merely executing an internal command. My problem is >> calling an actual button procedure. Over the last several >> hours I have tried many different syntax arrangements and >> I keep getting "object not defined" errors. I also tried >> placing the bind statements into other places in the code. >> I have run out of ideas. >> >> Below is a basic skeleton of my code. Any help appreciated. >> >> #!/usr/bin/env python >> >> try: >> import Tkinter as tk >> from Tkinter import Tk > > The second import is not needed. tk.Tk is short and should be called > just once. > >> except ImportError: >> import tkinter as tk >> from tkinter import Tk > > ditto. > >> import tkFileDialog, tkMessageBox > > These are 2.x only and should be after the Tkinter import. > For 3.x, import tk.filedialog, tk.messagebox
Thanks for the info. Making the changes... -- <Wildman> GNU/Linux user #557453 The cow died so I don't need your bull! -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list