I want the simplest possible way to pop up simple dialogs in Python scripts. Ideally, the solution would:
- Work on Windows, OS X, Gnome, KDE
- Look like a native dialog on any OS
- Require minimal code
To pop up a simple standard dialog should require only minimal code. Essentially you're just saying "Pop up a standard dialog with this text", or "Pop up a dialog with question x and feed response into variable y".
This is for simple scripts that would otherwise run on the command line. I don't want to know about GUI frameworks or have to set up code that says "start a GUI thread, register an event handler, configure some window properties, run a loop", etc. I don't want to have to set up a window or close the window afterward. I give it the text to put in the window and/or buttons and/or checkboxes, it returns what the user clicked on. Everything else should be taken care of automatically. For example:
message_box('File conversion complete')
for a standard dialog box with an "Ok" button, or
balloon_tip('File conversion complete')
for a system tray popup balloon, or
format = button_box('Which file format do you want?', 'JPG', 'PNG')
and they press one of the two buttons, and then format
equals 'JPG'
, or
response = text_query('What would you like to name the file?')
and after they type in the box and press Ok, response
now equals 'bananas.txt'
. No other code required. No ugly command line prompts for the poor user.
I've listed Zenity and EasyGUI as example answers, since they're similar to what I want, but not perfect.
[Previously asked on Python Forum]
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1635027/whats-the-simplest-cross-platform-way-to-pop-up-graphical-dialogs-in-python 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…