In Tk, there is a utility command, wm
, for interacting with the
window manager. Options to the wm
command allow you to control
things like titles, placement, icon bitmaps, and the like. In
Tkinter, these commands have been implemented as methods
on the Wm class. Toplevel widgets are subclassed from the
Wm class, and so can call the Wm methods directly.
To get at the toplevel window that contains a given widget, you can often just refer to the widget's master. Of course if the widget has been packed inside of a frame, the master won't represent a toplevel window. To get at the toplevel window that contains an arbitrary widget, you can call the _root() method. This method begins with an underscore to denote the fact that this function is part of the implementation, and not an interface to Tk functionality.
Here are some examples of typical usage:
import Tkinter class App(Frame): def __init__(self, master=None): Frame.__init__(self, master) self.pack() # create the application myapp = App() # # here are method calls to the window manager class # myapp.master.title("My Do-Nothing Application") myapp.master.maxsize(1000, 400) # start the program myapp.mainloop()
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