Thus spoketh pyt...@bdurham.com unto us on Fri, 17 Dec 2010 12:04:18 -0500:
> Michael, > > Your code works wonderfully - thank you very much!! > > One question: Why did you add your inner frame to the canvas as a window > via c.create_window() vs. just packing the frame? > To be honest, for no special reason, it seemed the "natural choice" to me :) BTW, in my example I did frame.configure(width=...) in the <Configure> event binding, which at a second glance I would replace with canvas.itemconfigure (w, width=event.width-2...) A real advantage of the window items vs. pack() might be that it is probably easier to handle when there are multiple widgets placed in the canvas. > I tried the frame packing technique per the following code change > (replacing c.createwindow with pack): > > f = Frame(c, width=w-2, height=h-2) > # w = c.create_window(1, 1, window=f, anchor='nw') > f.pack() # note: will not work if passed fill='both', expand=1 > > And the code seemed to work with the following caveats: > > - the top row of the rectangle is not displayed (I can't figure this one > out) You can avoid this with pack(pady=(1,0)) Regards Michael _______________________________________________ Tkinter-discuss mailing list Tkinter-discuss@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tkinter-discuss