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This geometry manager organizes widgets by placing them in a specific position in the parent widget.
widget.place( place_options ) |
Here is the list of possible options:
anchor : The exact spot of widget other options refer to: may be N, E, S, W, NE, NW, SE, or SW, compass directions indicating the corners and sides of widget; default is NW (the upper left corner of widget)
bordermode : INSIDE (the default) to indicate that other options refer to the parent's inside (ignoring the parent's border); OUTSIDE otherwise.
height, width : Height and width in pixels.
relheight, relwidth : Height and width as a float between 0.0 and 1.0, as a fraction of the height and width of the parent widget.
relx, rely : Horizontal and vertical offset as a float between 0.0 and 1.0, as a fraction of the height and width of the parent widget.
x, y : Horizontal and vertical offset in pixels.
Try following example by moving cursor on different buttons:
from Tkinter import * import tkMessageBox import Tkinter top = Tkinter.Tk() def helloCallBack(): tkMessageBox.showinfo( "Hello Python", "Hello World") B = Tkinter.Button(top, text ="Hello", command = helloCallBack) B.pack() B.place(bordermode=OUTSIDE, height=100, width=100) top.mainloop() |
This would produce following result:
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