On 17/08/18 03:19, Matthew Polack wrote: > def viewPercent(): > percentCalc = score/total*100 > rounded = round(percentCalc, 2) > percentViewLab["text"] = rounded
Since you only want the rounded value for display this is usually achieved using string formatting: >>> s = "Here is a string with a rounded float: %.2f" % 42.3456789 >>> s 'Here is a string with a rounded float: 42.35' That doesn't change the value of the variable but changes how it is displayed. There are lots of other options in format strings to control justification, padding etc. You should definitely explore their capabilities. Just because you are using a GUI rather than a console doesn't mean the string methods are any less useful. > from tkinter import * > import random > > # GLOBAL VARIABLES > # Created with a starting value. > answer = 0 > score = 0 > wrong = 0 > mistakes = 0 > total = 0 > > def makeproblem(): > global answer > > txt.delete(0.0, 'end') > sentence = "Here is your problem " > number1 = random.randint(2,12) > number2 = random.randint(2,12) > answer = number1 * number2 > > center = txt.tag_config("center", justify="center") > > txt.insert(0.0, sentence, "center") > txt.insert(2.2, number1, "center") > txt.insert(3.3, " x ", "center") > txt.insert(4.4, number2, "center") All of the above could be replaced with a single format string and a single insert. display = """ Here is your problem: %d x %d """ % (number1, number2) txt.insert(1.0,display, "center") > def checkanswer(): > txt.delete(0.0, 'end') > > global score > global mistakes > global total Its conventional (although not necessary) to put all globals at the very top of the function. > response = int(answerbox.get()) > wordScore = "Your score is now " > if response == answer: > score += 1 > total += 1 > result = "Great Job! " > root.update() > viewSC() > viewPercent() > viewTotal() > else : > total += 1 > result = "Sorry...you made a mistake. \n " > # the \n above adds a line break. > mistakes += 1 > viewMistakes() > viewTotal() > viewPercent() Notice you display Total and Percent in both block but do it in an inconsistent order. If you took both of this display calls outside the if/else you only need to call them once and they will be in the same sequence for all cases. > center = txt.tag_config("center", justify="center") > txt.insert(0.0, result, "center") > txt.insert(3.0, wordScore, "center") > txt.insert(8.1, score, "center") > # txt.insert(1,1, "Score is") > #txt.insert(3,3, score) Again this could all be replaced with string formatting and a single insert() > def about(): > txt.delete(0.0, 'end') > > instructions = "Here is how you play the game. Press generate > problem..and then enter your answer. Your score will be displayed below." If you use triple quoted strings you can have more text and lay it out using line breaks etc. > txt.insert(0.0,instructions) > root = Tk() > root.geometry("640x700+0+0") > root.title("Times Tables Game") > > # MENU SECTION > # These are included as an example menu structure...in many cases they > don't do much...but do feature instructions and a quit feature. > > # create a toplevel menu > menubar = Menu(root) > > # Just an example of printing hello to console for use in a menu item. > def hello(): > print ("hello!") > > # display the menu > root.config(menu=menubar) > > # create a pulldown menu, and adds it to the menu bar > filemenu = Menu(menubar, tearoff=0) > filemenu.add_command(label="Open", command=makeproblem) > filemenu.add_command(label="Save", command=makeproblem) > filemenu.add_separator() > filemenu.add_command(label="Exit", command=root.quit) > > menubar.add_cascade(label="File", menu=filemenu) > > # create more pulldown menus > editmenu = Menu(menubar, tearoff=0) > editmenu.add_command(label="Cut", command=checkanswer) > editmenu.add_command(label="Copy", command=checkanswer) > editmenu.add_command(label="Paste", command=checkanswer) > menubar.add_cascade(label="Edit", menu=editmenu) > > helpmenu = Menu(menubar, tearoff=0) > helpmenu.add_command(label="About", command=about) > menubar.add_command(label="Hello", command=hello) > menubar.add_cascade(label="Help", menu=helpmenu) > menubar.add_command(label="Quit", command=root.quit) A bit odd adding a command after you add the cascade. Normally we do the cascade as the last item. > # Plain text labels at top of window. > timeslabel = Label(root, text="Times Tables Practice", fg="white", > bg="blue", font=("arial", 36, "bold")) > timeslabel.grid(columnspan=12, sticky='ew') > instruction = Label(root, text="Please click on the button to generate a > problem", fg="blue", bg="white", font=("arial", 16, "bold")) > instruction.grid(row=2, columnspan=20) > > # Makes an entry box with the variable of 'answerbox' > answerbox = Entry(root, bg="grey", font=("arial", 24, "bold"), justify > ="center") > answerbox.grid(row=15, columnspan=2, padx=0, pady=0, sticky=EW) > > # Makes a button that generate the Times Tables problem > btn = Button(root, text="GENERATE PROBLEM", bg="blue", fg="white", > command=makeproblem) > btn.grid(row=11, columnspan=2, sticky=EW) > > # Makes a button that checks the answer > btn = Button(root, text="CHECK ANSWER", bg="darkblue", fg="white", > command=checkanswer) > btn.grid(row=13, columnspan=2, sticky=EW) > > #TEXT BOX AREA > #This important command creates the text box called 'txt'. This is used for > all the text output. > txt = Text(root, width=35, height=8, wrap=WORD, font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > txt.grid(row=12, columnspan=2, sticky=EW ) An interesting future option might be to eliminate this text box and put it in a dialog (along with the result labels) that would open to display the results in a separate window... Consider it homework :-) > #Adds a blankline below answer box...but leaves top alignment alone. You > could use PAD...but that command does both sides. There may be another way > to achieve this. You can do it in various ways including putting a label in a frame and then anchoring the label to the bottom of the frame... But an empty label will suffice here. Only GUI purists would object. The easiest way is probably just to insert a '\n' newline character at the start of the label text. > blankline3 = Label(root, text = "", bg = "white") > blankline3.grid(row=17, sticky='ew') > > # SCORING LABELS AND RESULTS SECTION > # Places the labels and the results beside each other in column 0 and > column 1. > # Note: Each 'View' label grabs the starting score from the declarations at > the top. eg. score = 0 > scorelab = Label(root, text="Score", bg="green", fg="white", font=("arial", > 20, "bold")) > scorelab.grid(row=18, column=0, sticky=E) > > scoreViewLab = Label(root, text=score, fg="black", bg="grey", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > scoreViewLab.grid(row=18, column=1, sticky=W) > > totalLab = Label(root, text="Out of", bg="purple", fg="white", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > totalLab.grid(row=19, column=0, sticky=E) > > totalViewLab = Label(root, text=total, fg="black", bg="grey", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > totalViewLab.grid(row=19, column=1, sticky=W) > > mistakeslab = Label(root, text="Mistakes", bg="red", fg="white", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > mistakeslab.grid(row=20, column=0, sticky=E) > > mistakesViewLab = Label(root, text=mistakes, fg="black", bg="grey", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > mistakesViewLab.grid(row=20, column=1, sticky=W) > > percentlab = Label(root, text="Percentage", bg="aqua", fg="white", > font=("arial", 20, "bold")) > percentlab.grid(row=21, column=0, sticky=E) > > > percentViewLab = Label(root, text=0, fg="black", bg="grey", font=("arial", > 20, "bold")) > percentViewLab.grid(row=21, column=1, sticky=W) > > > #SCORE UPDATE SECTION. > def viewSC(): > scoreViewLab["text"] = score > > def viewTotal(): > totalViewLab["text"] = total > > def viewMistakes(): > mistakesViewLab["text"] = mistakes > > def viewPercent(): > percentViewLab["text"] = rounded You could replace all of these with a single function: def update_label(label,text): label['text'] = text And supply change the calls from, for example: viewTotal() to update_label(totalViewLab, total) And you then need a function to calculate the percent value: def percent_string(score, total): return ".2f" % (score/total *100) And you can now eliminate the percent global variable and call update_label with: update_label(percentViewLab, percent_string(score, total)) ##### Additional teachers notes #### As a general comment while you can use globals for everything it considered bad practice. You should strive to minimise use of global variables (google global variables for lots of discussion about why). Its generally considered better to make your functions as independent as possible so that they take in values via parameters and return a single value (occasionally a tuple). As an example: # global var value = 42 # define a function def double(val): return val * 2 # Now call it value = double(value) So here we have not had to use the global keyword but our function reads the global variable as input and returns a new value which we assign to it. This relies on another good practice for functions namely to keep them small and only do a single task. If you find a single function updating lots of global variables that often indicates that you should have more than one function. In particular we try to separate display from calculation. So in your case the check answer function should really only check the answer and set a success or failure flag. You can then have a display result function that checks the flag and updates all the labels and text. Normally, I wouldn't highlight these issue to a beginner but since you are also a teacher I felt that you should be aware. They cross the boundary from pure coding to software design. Your code as it stands is acceptable for a beginner but in a year you will probably look at it and cringe slightly... But that is true with any new coding venture. :-) -- Alan G Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.alan-g.me.uk/ http://www.amazon.com/author/alan_gauld Follow my photo-blog on Flickr at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/alangauldphotos _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor