the user has authenticated?
Thanks
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
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Here is a code snippet I have pulled out of the project. It is as bare bones
as I can make it to get the point across.
the problems I am having:
1. I would really like the window to be centered in the user's screen, but
setting the geometry doesn't place it there. (that isn't included here)
Okay - that makes sense. The login window uses the show="*" for the password
field and is authenticated against a database where the passwords are
encrypted. I have this working in a text only environment, just struggling to
get it right for the GUI
Thanks
Chris Hare
ch...@lab
Good feedback Alan, thanks.
I wasn't using the root window to hold the login form, although I suppose I
could. I guess where I am stuck is the login to control displaying the login
window, and hiding it to display the actual application window once the user
has authenticated.
Chris
229, in verifyLogin
farmid = list.get(ACTIVE)
AttributeError: type object 'list' has no attribute 'get'
When the frame controls were added, list is defined as
list = Listbox(frame)
What have I got messed up? I have poked around the net but I can't find
anything meaningfu
uot;import file"
2. I have to include all of the import statements for things not found in the
class file
Is this normal or am I doing something wrong?
Thanks!
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
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A…. thanks Hugo!!
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 2, 2011, at 2:14 AM, Hugo Arts wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 2, 2011 at 7:29 AM, Chris Hare wrote:
>>
>> I would like to put each of my classes in separate files to make it easier
>> to edit them and keep
Just thought I would drop y'all a note and say thank you for your help on this.
I have the login code working.
I learned a bunch from you guys.
Thanks!
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 2, 2011, at 5:02 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 02/11/11 05:05, Chris Ha
.list.bind("",
self.login_userid.focus_set())
self.list.bind("", self.login_userid.focus_set())
self.list.bind("", self.login_userid.focus_set())
If I can get this working, I should be able to get the other bindings to work.
Chris
rong? the objective is to use the bottom part opt the window
over and over again.
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
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Dang it - sure is a typo!
Thanks!
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 3, 2011, at 12:58 AM, Dipo Elegbede wrote:
> There is nothing called franeButton it should be frameButton. I guess its a
> typo.
>
> On 3 Nov 2011 05:52, "Chris Hare" wro
focus_set() takes exactly 1 argument (2 given)
In situations like this where the function isn't one you wrote, how to you
debug these?
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 3, 2011, at 3:23 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 03/11/11 04:46, Chris Hare wrote:
>>
>
fused about why it is
complaining about 2 arguments, when I am not passing any.
Although, I think I know what the problem is now.
Thanks for your help anyway.
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 3, 2011, at 9:08 AM, Peter Otten wrote:
> Chris Hare wrote:
>
>> Than
That helps Wayne - and was what I was referring to when I posted that I thought
I had figured it out. Thanks for your help.
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
On Nov 3, 2011, at 10:08 AM, Wayne Werner wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 9:41 AM, Chris Hare wrote:
> Thanks
Hi everyone.
I am attempting to create a form for the user to complete. I have the basic
layout and supporting code working, but I am having a problem with getting
things to display in the grid the way I want them.
self.label1 = Label(self.frame, text = "Double click o
I have been searching around a bit, but not really finding anything which is
meaningful.
I want to embed a set of help files in my application, and display them from
within the application. I could use plain text files, which would be easy to
suck into a Text field, but it would be nice to in
I have this code chunk:
tables = ["Farm", "Animals",
"AnimalTypes","Users","Roles","Capabilities","Pedigrees","ChipMaker","Owner","Providers","RegistryL"]
for x in tables:
cmd = "self.cb" + x + "Read = IntVar()"
exec cmd in locals(), globals()
When the code is executed, I get th
Thanks Steve for your help (and the humor). I can see that it was a bad idea
with your explanation. (I just didn't want to type all that extra code :-))
I am going to re-write it using your dict approach - that looks a lot cleaner
Thanks!
Chris Hare
ch...@labr.net
http://www.labr.net
O
Here is what I am trying to:
the application user chooses an image file. I want to store the image data in
a field in a sqlite database. My understanding from the reading I have done is
that I have to convert the image data into a string , which I can then store in
the database. Additionall
I got it figured out.
On Apr 27, 2012, at 12:21 AM, Chris Hare wrote:
>
> Here is what I am trying to:
>
> the application user chooses an image file. I want to store the image data
> in a field in a sqlite database. My understanding from the reading I have
> done
, 2012, at 1:22 PM, Russell Smith wrote:
> What did you do?
>
> On Friday, April 27, 2012, Chris Hare wrote:
>
> I got it figured out.
>
> On Apr 27, 2012, at 12:21 AM, Chris Hare wrote:
>
> >
> > Here is what I am trying to:
> >
> > the applicat
What I am trying to do is put an image on a canvas object, which I think is
allowed.
self.picture1 = Canvas(self.pictureFrame,width=150,height=150)
self.imageBuffer = StringIO.StringIO()
image = Image.open(filename)
image = image.resize((150,150),Image.ANTIALIAS)
image.save(self.imageBuffer, f
I have four images in a frame. I want to pop up a menu when the user right
clicks on an image, and when they choose an option from the menu, execute the
action.
I can create the popup menu, and bind it to the image. However, what I can't
figure out is how to detect in the popup menu code w
ked a button? this is the
first time I am doing this so I am not even sure what I need to search for
online.
Thanks
On May 1, 2012, at 7:31 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 01/05/12 21:59, Chris Hare wrote:
>> ... what I can't figure out is how to detect in the popup menu code
> &
, 2012, at 5:30 AM, Peter Otten wrote:
> Chris Hare wrote:
>
>> I have four images in a frame. I want to pop up a menu when the user
>> right clicks on an image, and when they choose an option from the menu,
>> execute the action.
>>
>> I can create the popup menu
Hello Everyone:
Here is what I am trying to do:
I have a window which has a row of buttons on it. Below the buttons is a
label frame. Depending upon which button they push, I want to change the
widgets in the label frame. I can add widgets now with no problem.
Basically, I am trying to
Thanks Peter - I will give it a look
On May 7, 2012, at 1:02 PM, Peter Otten wrote:
> Chris Hare wrote:
>
>> Hello Everyone:
>>
>> Here is what I am trying to do:
>>
>> I have a window which has a row of buttons on it. Below the buttons is a
>> labe
Here is what I want to do:
I have a bunch of modules to import. instead of duplicating a lot of code for
each import, I want to do something like this:
importList = [ "sys", "os", "imp", "stat", "re", "webbrowser", "Image",
"StringIO", "shutil", "datetime" ]
for object in importList:
Thanks all for the ideas. I wanted to have my own error messages printed for
the user - something a little more meaningful than the standard error.
Thanks for the advice - very helpful!
On Jul 9, 2012, at 6:12 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 09/07/12 10:19, Kwpolska wrote:
>> Why does this bloody
So, I have to admit, imports have me really confused. I am trying to break
apart a 10,000+ line single file into various files, one for each class, and
one containing a whole bunch of functions which are used by a lot of classes.
Some of those functions use calls to methods in a Class. Even
On Jul 9, 2012, at 12:42 PM, Walter Prins wrote:
> Hi Chris
>
>> So, I have to admit, imports have me really confused. I am trying to break
>> apart a 10,000+ line single file into various files, one for each class, and
>> one containing a whole bunch of functions which are used by a lot of
Good advice - thanks for that. And I think you're right - I think what is
happening is in fact a bunch of circular references. As I resolve issues, I
will be looking for those! Appreciate all the advice!
On Jul 9, 2012, at 5:16 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 07/09/2012 11:56 AM, Ch
This piece of code works:
Big-Mac:Classes chare$ more tmp.py
import re
def special_match(string, search=re.compile(r'[^a-zA-Z0-9\.\
\-\#\$\*\@\!\%\^\&]').search):
#string = string.rstrip()
return not bool(search(string))
print special_match("admin")
print special_match("&!*")
p
piece of code - it was standalone, and didn't work in the class where it
has been moved to. No excuse, but there it is nonetheless.
Chris
On Jul 10, 2012, at 10:33 AM, Devin Jeanpierre wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 10:56 AM, Chris Hare wrote:
>> The input to the function
I know they are bad. That is why I would prefer not to use it, but I am not
sure how else to handle this problem.
In this app, the user must log in. Once authenticated, they have a userid
stored in the SQLite database. Before splitting my app into multiple files, I
used a global variable.
On Jul 10, 2012, at 6:24 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 11/07/12 00:16, Alan Gauld wrote:
>
>>> One thought was a RAM based SQLite database, but that seems
>> > like a lot of work. I dunno, maybe that is the option.
>>
>> is definitely the best option where the "global" needs to be shared
>> acros
On Jul 11, 2012, at 8:05 AM, Walter Prins wrote:
> [snip]
> Your original example modified as demonstration:
>
> a.py:
>
> import shared
> import b
>
> def func1():
>print "global var in func1 = %s" % shared.global_var
>
> class intclass:
>def func2(self):
>
On Jul 6, 2012, at 11:59 PM, redstone-cold wrote:
> What’s the differences between these two pieces of code ?
> (1)
> for i in range(1, 7):
> print(2 * i, end=' ')
>
>
> (2)
> for i in range(1, 7):
> print(2 * i, end=' ')
> print()
>
I think they are exactly the same, except the se
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