On Sun, 23 Apr 2017 09:52:16 +0200 Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> If you wrote the above with Buttons instead of DisplayTables you'd > encounter the same behaviour. The problem is that you call > tkinter.Tk() twice (which is generally a recipe for disaster; if you > want multiple windows use tkinter.Toplevel() for all but the first > one). > > Once you have fixed that you should be OK: > > import tkinter as tk > import table_class > > root = tk.Tk() > > tab = table_class.DisplayTable(root, > ["Left","middle","Right"], > [[1,2,1], > [3,4,3], > [5,6,5]], > datacolor='blue', > cellcolor='yellow', > gridcolor='red', > hdcolor='black') > > second_tab = table_class.DisplayTable(root, > ["Left","middle","Right"], > [[1,2,1], > [3,4,3], > [5,6,5]], > datacolor='blue', > cellcolor='green', > gridcolor='red', > hdcolor='black') > > tab.pack(side=tk.LEFT) > second_tab.pack() > > root.mainloop() Thank you again Peter. Of course your changes worked but at the moment I'm not sure why. if root = tk.Tk() then why isn't table_class.DisplayTable(root, the same as table_class.DisplayTable(tk.Tk(),. Obviously it isn't but I don't know why. Also I found that root.mainloop() isn't necessary in that the result is the same with or without. Perhaps it serves some other purpose? -- Regards, Phil _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor