Tkinter Rapid Application Development (RAD) library.
tkRAD is a Python3.2+ library designed to enable really Rapid
Application Development (RAD) process by using predefined classes to
derive in your own subclasses, with quite useful embedded services
such as dynamic Tkinter XML widget building, service manager,
events manager, RC configuration manager and so on.
tkRAD is a deliberately short-made API designed for comfort,
easiness and simplicity.
tkRAD provides the necessary core tools to quickly start up an
application development or for Tkinter widget testing through
tkRAD.easy.builder module - see 'QUICK START'
instructions below.
tkRAD - tkinter Rapid Application Development library.
(c) 2013+ Raphaël SEBAN - e-mail: motus@laposte.net
This project is licensed under the GNU LGPL v3 Lesser General Public License.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program.
If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/
This release of tkRAD supports:
-
Application frame with
tkRAD.widgets.RADApplicationclass; -
Lightweight MainWindow with
tkRAD.widgets.RADMainWindowclass; -
More complex Tkinter XML widget factory embedded in
tkRAD.xml.RADXMLMainWindowclass; -
Automagic XML menu / submenu cascade handling with direct access to submenus through
get_object_by_id()class method, event-driven commands support, automatic menu label underlining support and keyboard accelerator support; -
Tkinter XML widget building through
tkRAD.xml.RADXMLFramegeneric widget container class; -
Tkinter XML widget building for easy TESTING through
tkRAD.easy.buildermodule; -
some innovative and really useful programming tools in
tkRAD.corepackage modules;
Since tkRAD has been designed for subclassing, if tkRAD don't meet
your needs, just create your own implementations derived from
tkRAD.xml generic classes such as RADXMLBase, RADXMLWidgetBase
and RADXMLWidget.
Classifier:
Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
At this time, tkRAD library has been reported to work as follows:
-
Linux:
-
TESTED OK under Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu;
-
should work quite fine under any Linux distribution;
-
-
MacOS:
- NOT YET TESTED;
-
MS-Windows:
-
TESTED OK under MS-Windows 8 with Python v3.3.3;
-
tkRAD.easy.builder2has been TESTED OK for Python v2.7+;
-
Code has very few platform-dependencies and should remain STABLE in time between each release;
Any platform users feedback is welcome.
Please, refer to CHANGES.md file for more detail.
tkRAD is self-documented in its own source code;
feel free to use:
$ pydoc3 -b
in a UNIX-like console terminal set in the closest parent directory
of tkRAD/ e.g.:
$ cd ~/tmp # where you have ~/tmp/tkRAD/ copied in;
$ pydoc3 -b
and study generated autodoc in your favourite internet browser;
Please, feel free to visit tkRAD internationalized (i18n) wiki
documentation for more detailed explanations, tips and tricks and
source code examples.
Wiki URL: https://github.com/tarball69/tkRAD/wiki
tkRAD package library does NOT really need to be installed.
Just [grab a zipped copy]
(https://github.com/tarball69/tkRAD/wiki/En%3Ainstall)
of tkRAD/ directory into your own application's source library
and start using tkRAD by importing classes in your own code.
Since tkRAD library may evolve rapidly and thus might become less
compatible with your ongoing code development, it is a rather
relevant practice to keep your favourite tkRAD version copied into
your own application's source library.
-
tkRADworks fine with Python v3.2 or later installed on your own OS platform; -
at least
tkinterpackage must also be installed, which is the common default case when you install Python;
make sure this package really exists on your system by entering in a console terminal:
$ python3
>>> import tkinter # case-sensitive /!\
if you get an error message, tkinter is NOT installed;
use your favourite package manager to solve this issue;
-
only
tkRAD.easy.builder2needs Python v2.7 or later installed to work fine, since this module has been especially designed for these early versions of Python; -
if you use
tkRAD.easy.builder2with Python v2.7+, you must also haveTkinterpackage installed, which is the common default case when you install Python2.7+;
make sure this package really exists on your system by entering in a console terminal:
$ python
>>> import Tkinter # case-sensitive /!\
if you get an error message, Tkinter is NOT installed;
use your favourite package manager to solve this issue;
In order to track bugs and fix them correctly, we'd like to hear from you.
If you encountered any problem during the use of tkRAD lib,
please leave us a comment and tell us:
-
environment:
- which platform? (Windows, macOS, Linux)
- which Python version? (2.7+, 3.2+)
- tkinter installed correctly? (yes/no)
-
context:
- when did it happen?
- while trying wiki tutorial code samples?
- while trying
tkRAD.easy.builderfeatures? - while trying to write your own app?
- when did it happen?
-
traceback (optional):
- are you sure it is NOT an XML source code mistype error?
- could you copy/paste the console error text, please?
- could you tell us few words about what happened?
Whatever happened, we'd like to know about it.
You will find an open issue "It did NOT work for me!" at:
https://github.com/tarball69/tkRAD/issues/6
Thank you for contributing to make tkRAD a better place for
everyone.
Please refer to the "Easy tests with tkRAD.easy.builder" page:
https://github.com/tarball69/tkRAD/wiki/en%3Aeasy_builder
For the little story, the very first public release of tkRAD was
entirely written with an ASUS 1001PX NETBOOK(!) computer, under
a Linux Lubuntu 13.10 distro for the need of a Video Editor: Qut.
It was in December 2013 and it is a TRUE story.
Enjoy!