Re: Tkinter or Python issue?

2005-10-19 Thread Eric Brunel
On Tue, 18 Oct 2005 22:30:33 -0400, Ron Provost [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello,

 I'm using python 2.4.2 on Win XP Pro.  I'm trying to understand a behavior
 I'm seeing in some Tkinter code I have.  I've reduced my question to a small
 piece of code:


 #BEGIN CODE
 #
 import Tkinter as Tk
 import tkFont

 sampleText = Here is a test string.  This is more text
 Here is a second line of text.  How much
 more can I type.  I can't think of anything else to type.
 

 root = Tk.Tk( )
 t = Tk.Text( root )
 t.pack( )

 t.insert( Tk.END, sampleText )

 t.tag_config( 'AB', font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24,
 weight=tkFont.BOLD ) )
 t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10,
 weight=tkFont.BOLD, underline=1 ) )

Here is what I think is happening:
- The first tag_config creates a font using tkFont.Font. At tcl level, this 
font is not known as an object as in Python, but just as a font name, which is 
a string. This name happens to be built using the internal identifier for the 
Python object.
- Once this tag_config is over, no Python variable references your tkFont.Font 
instance anymore. It is is fact still known at tcl level (via the font name), 
but Python doesn't know that. So the reference counter for your tkFont.Font 
instance falls to 0, and the object is discarded.
- The second tag_config seems to create a new font using tkFont.Font. 
Unfortunately, since the previous font has been discarded, the space occupied 
by this font is reused for the new font. So the new font happens to have the 
same internal identifier as the font object created by the first tkFont.Font. 
So its name is in fact the same as your previous font, and is registered as 
such at tcl level. So in fact, you didn't create a new font at tcl level, but 
modified the previous one.

All this actually happens by accident. If you add something allocating some 
memory between the two tag_config, you'll certainly see your code working. It 
works when I run it myself...

[snip]
 f1 = font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24, weight=tkFont.BOLD )
 f2 = font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10, weight=tkFont.BOLD,
 underline=1 )
 t.tag_config( 'AB', font=f1 )
 t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=f2 )

You should now see why it works here: your first tkFont.Font is remembered at 
Python level in a variable. So it is not discarded once the tag_config is over. 
So the second tkFont.Font is not allocated at the same location, so it doesn't 
have the same id, and it doesn't have the same name at tcl level. This is the 
general solution to the problem: keep your fonts in Python variables, so they 
won't be discarded and their names will never be re-used. You could have 
written:

f1 = font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24, weight=tkFont.BOLD )
t.tag_config( 'AB', font=f1 )
f2 = font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10, weight=tkFont.BOLD, underline=1 
)
t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=f2 )

This should still work. The order is not important; it's just the fact that 
your fonts are actually known at Python level which prevents Tkinter to reuse 
their name.

BTW, this is a variant of a well known problem biting newbies regularly, 
documented here:
http://tkinter.unpythonic.net/wiki/Images

It's basically the same problem for images: it does not suffice to reference an 
image at tcl level; it must also be referenced at Python level or it will be 
discarded by Python and you won't be able to use it in your widgets.

HTH
-- 
python -c print ''.join([chr(154 - ord(c)) for c in 
'U(17zX(%,5.zmz5(17;8(%,5.Z65\'*9--56l7+-'])
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Re: Tkinter or Python issue?

2005-10-19 Thread Fredrik Lundh
Eugene Druker wrote:

 tkFont.Font(...) is a class instance, while you need font description.

Font instances are font descriptors.

 f = tkFont.Font(family=ariel, size=24, weight=tkFont.BOLD)
 f
tkFont.Font instance at 0x00A3AC60
 print f
font10726496

 t.tag.config( 'TBU', font=('times', 12, 'bold','underline') )
 t.tag_config( 'AB', font=('arial',24,'bold') )

the problem here is a variation of the old garbage collection problem (Tcl
uses names as references, so the fact that Tk uses an object isn't enough to
keep Python's GC away from it).  the solution is to hold on to the objects
in Python.

/F 



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Re: Tkinter or Python issue?

2005-10-19 Thread Russell E. Owen
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
 Eric Brunel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

You should now see why it works here: your first tkFont.Font is remembered at 
Python level in a variable. So it is not discarded once the tag_config is 
over. So the second tkFont.Font is not allocated at the same location, so it 
doesn't have the same id, and it doesn't have the same name at tcl level. This 
is the general solution to the problem: keep your fonts in Python variables, 
so they won't be discarded and their names will never be re-used.

Yes. I consider this dangerous behavior, by the way and submitted a 
patch (that was not accepted) that would prevent this garbage collection.

tkFont is Tkinter's interface to tk named fonts. If you create a tkFont 
instance for a named font and then let it disappear, the named font 
disappears, even if other tkFont instances exist that map the same named 
font.

-- Russell
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Tkinter or Python issue?

2005-10-18 Thread Ron Provost
Hello,

I'm using python 2.4.2 on Win XP Pro.  I'm trying to understand a behavior 
I'm seeing in some Tkinter code I have.  I've reduced my question to a small 
piece of code:


#BEGIN CODE
#
import Tkinter as Tk
import tkFont

sampleText = Here is a test string.  This is more text
Here is a second line of text.  How much
more can I type.  I can't think of anything else to type.


root = Tk.Tk( )
t = Tk.Text( root )
t.pack( )

t.insert( Tk.END, sampleText )

t.tag_config( 'AB', font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24, 
weight=tkFont.BOLD ) )
t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10, 
weight=tkFont.BOLD, underline=1 ) )

t.tag_add( 'AB', '1.8', '1.15' )
t.tag_add( 'TBU', '2.10', '2.30' )

root.mainloop( )
#
###END CODE

Now when I run this I expect to see a small bit of the sampleText in ariel 
bold and another bit in times bold underline, instead I see both bits in the 
later style.  Interestingly, if I create the Font objects before calling 
t.tag_config() (i.e. replace the two t.tag_config( ) lines with the 
following):


f1 = font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24, weight=tkFont.BOLD )
f2 = font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10, weight=tkFont.BOLD, 
underline=1 )
t.tag_config( 'AB', font=f1 )
t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=f2 )


In rerunning the code, I see each bit of text now styled differently.  This 
is the behavior that I both expect and want.  Does anybody know why the two 
bits of code result in different behavior?  Is it a Python thing or a 
Tkinter thing?

Thanks for your feedback.

Ron 


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Re: Tkinter or Python issue?

2005-10-18 Thread Eugene Druker

Ron Provost [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [snip]
 t.insert( Tk.END, sampleText )

 t.tag_config( 'AB', font=tkFont.Font( family='ariel', size=24,
 weight=tkFont.BOLD ) )
 t.tag_config( 'TBU', font=tkFont.Font( family='times', size=10,
 weight=tkFont.BOLD, underline=1 ) )

 t.tag_add( 'AB', '1.8', '1.15' )
 t.tag_add( 'TBU', '2.10', '2.30' )

 root.mainloop( )
 [snip]

tkFont.Font(...) is a class instance, while you need font description.
Try:
t.tag.config( 'TBU', font=('times', 12, 'bold','underline') )
t.tag_config( 'AB', font=('arial',24,'bold') )

Eugene


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