On recent Python (> 2.7) versions, you can use the ttk
module, which provides access to the Tk themed widget set, which has been introduced in Tk 8.5
.
Here's how you import ttk
in Python 2:
import ttk
help(ttk.Notebook)
In Python 3, the ttk
module comes with the standard distributions as a submodule of tkinter
.
Here's a simple working example based on an example from the TkDocs
website:
from tkinter import ttk
import tkinter as tk
from tkinter.scrolledtext import ScrolledText
def demo():
root = tk.Tk()
root.title("ttk.Notebook")
nb = ttk.Notebook(root)
# adding Frames as pages for the ttk.Notebook
# first page, which would get widgets gridded into it
page1 = ttk.Frame(nb)
# second page
page2 = ttk.Frame(nb)
text = ScrolledText(page2)
text.pack(expand=1, fill="both")
nb.add(page1, text='One')
nb.add(page2, text='Two')
nb.pack(expand=1, fill="both")
root.mainloop()
if __name__ == "__main__":
demo()
Another alternative is to use the NoteBook
widget from the tkinter.tix
library. To use tkinter.tix
, you must have the Tix
widgets installed, usually alongside your installation of the Tk
widgets. To test your installation, try the following:
from tkinter import tix
root = tix.Tk()
root.tk.eval('package require Tix')
For more info, check out this webpage on the PSF website.
Note that tix
is pretty old and not well-supported, so your best choice might be to go for ttk.Notebook
.
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