@AnimeshPandey, Compare this single threaded Tkinter app with this multithreaded Tkinter app. In the first one, the window doesn't even appear until the loop is 100% complete. In the second one, the loop smoothly reports its progress.
(I would have used a progressbar instead of a label, but ttk isn't installed on my box. The principle is the same, regardless)
Would you guys mind helping a fellow pythonista ? Please take a look @ this: stackoverflow.com/questions/17999382/… Could I have made the question a little better?
Its a JS question..but I just wanted to know if I could have made it any better
Thanks a lot for this small example ... I was actually try to understand this concept from this example : http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15323574/how-to-connect-a-progress-bar-to-a-function which is quite complex!
okay so here's a question; I run my flask server, and it works. I run it as a daemon, and it turns up an internal server error for fetching my data. Any ideas? There's no clear stack trace
@AnimeshPandey sorry to tell you but until you start coding your own kernel level /os things or maybe longer the compiler/interpreter is always right . ignoring some optimizations and the like
after fighting the itsabug/itsafeature fight for a long time now I've come to the realization that it's best to simply not care what you label such feedback
it's more useful to triage things by giving a severity grade than worrying about if something is a bug or not
@Kevin The multithreaded tkinter app that you given earlier worked fine and I was also able to apply whole concept in my project, but I can't figure out to destroy the window after it reaches 100. I tried `root.destroy()` but that exited with many warnings!
I'll see to it! How do we check whther the window has been closed? Whenever I close my app in between, some errors pop up, if I can check that the window has been closed, then I can handle those errors accrdingly !
I agree with you, and with Jon, I think anyone can learn the most by itself
but sometimes you cant see the obvious -- and even if you search or code, first: you should have some sleep and/or rest then second: ask someone if the first step didn't help
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I understand but if someone had told me with swing up front "there are 12 different ways to specify size, and certain layout managers will ignore some/all of them" I would have saved so much time and sanity
and part of that is my fault for not following the right tutorials and instead diving in first, so it's possible that was just on me
I started having issues after I programatically changed quite a few windows 7 settings. I thought I had reversed everything, but apparently something stuck. I can connect to the network, but it switches between saying I have internet, I am connected but don't have internet, and occasionally disco...