15.16. Widget Groupings

You will design a more user friendly interface if you group and organize your widgets in a coherent design. Tkinter has four basic ways to group widgets. These are described in the following table. They are often referred to as “container” widgets because in the widget hierarchy of a GUI program they are the parent widget of a group of related widgets.

Widget

Purpose

tk.Frame, ttk.Frame

Create a container for a set of widgets to be displayed as a unit.

ttk.LabelFrame

Group a number of related widgets using a border and a title.

tk.PanedWindow

Group one or more widgets into “panes”, where the “panes” can be re-sized by the user by dragging separator lines.

ttk.Notebook

A tabbed set of frames, only one of which is visible at any given time.

Widgets are always organized as a hierarchy, where the main application window is the root of the hierarchy. Typically, the child widgets of an application window are a combination of “frames”. The “frames” hold other widgets. A “frame” will not be visible until it is assigned a size and location using a layout manager. The image below shows examples of the four types of widget “containers”. The “containers” in this example used a grid layout manager on a 2x2 grid.

../_images/Grouping_examples.png

Examples of grouping widgets

For the Frame and LabelFrame groups, the frame is the “parent” of the widgets displayed inside the frame. That is, when the buttons were created, the frame was the first parameter to the tk.Button() function.

For the PanedWindow and Notebook groups, you use an .add(widget) function to add your widgets to the group. You are still creating a hierarchy of widgets, but the syntax is different.

You can download and run this example program, all_frame_widgets.py that allows you to interact with the four types of “contaners.”

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