How can I create a simple message box in Python?

青春壹個敷衍的年華 提交于 2019-12-17 08:01:45

问题


I'm looking for the same effect as alert() in JavaScript.

I wrote a simple web-based interpreter this afternoon using Twisted.web. You basically submit a block of Python code through a form, and the client comes and grabs it and executes it. I want to be able to make a simple popup message, without having to re-write a whole bunch of boilerplate wxPython or TkInter code every time (since the code gets submitted through a form and then disappears).

I've tried tkMessageBox:

import tkMessageBox
tkMessageBox.showinfo(title="Greetings", message="Hello World!")

but this opens another window in the background with a tk icon. I don't want this. I was looking for some simple wxPython code but it always required setting up a class and entering an app loop etc. Is there no simple, catch-free way of making a message box in Python?


回答1:


You could use an import and single line code like this:

import ctypes  # An included library with Python install.   
ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(0, "Your text", "Your title", 1)

Or define a function (Mbox) like so:

import ctypes  # An included library with Python install.
def Mbox(title, text, style):
    return ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(0, text, title, style)
Mbox('Your title', 'Your text', 1)

Note the styles are as follows:

##  Styles:
##  0 : OK
##  1 : OK | Cancel
##  2 : Abort | Retry | Ignore
##  3 : Yes | No | Cancel
##  4 : Yes | No
##  5 : Retry | No 
##  6 : Cancel | Try Again | Continue

Have fun!

Note: edited to use MessageBoxW instead of MessageBoxA




回答2:


Have you looked at easygui?

import easygui

easygui.msgbox("This is a message!", title="simple gui")



回答3:


Also you can position the other window before withdrawing it so that you position your message

#!/usr/bin/env python

from Tkinter import *
import tkMessageBox

window = Tk()
window.wm_withdraw()

#message at x:200,y:200
window.geometry("1x1+200+200")#remember its .geometry("WidthxHeight(+or-)X(+or-)Y")
tkMessageBox.showerror(title="error",message="Error Message",parent=window)

#centre screen message
window.geometry("1x1+"+str(window.winfo_screenwidth()/2)+"+"+str(window.winfo_screenheight()/2))
tkMessageBox.showinfo(title="Greetings", message="Hello World!")



回答4:


The code you presented is fine! You just need to explicitly create the "other window in the background" and hide it, with this code:

import Tkinter
window = Tkinter.Tk()
window.wm_withdraw()

Right before your messagebox.




回答5:


On Mac, the python standard library has a module called EasyDialogs. There is also a (ctypes based) windows version at http://www.averdevelopment.com/python/EasyDialogs.html

If it matters to you: it uses native dialogs and doesn't depend on Tkinter like the already mentioned easygui, but it might not have as much features.




回答6:


The PyMsgBox module does exactly this. It has message box functions that follow the naming conventions of JavaScript: alert(), confirm(), prompt() and password() (which is prompt() but uses * when you type). These function calls block until the user clicks an OK/Cancel button. It's a cross-platform, pure Python module with no dependencies.

Install with: pip install PyMsgBox

Sample usage:

>>> import pymsgbox
>>> pymsgbox.alert('This is an alert!', 'Title')
>>> response = pymsgbox.prompt('What is your name?')

Full documentation at http://pymsgbox.readthedocs.org/en/latest/




回答7:


In Windows, you can use ctypes with user32 library:

from ctypes import c_int, WINFUNCTYPE, windll
from ctypes.wintypes import HWND, LPCSTR, UINT
prototype = WINFUNCTYPE(c_int, HWND, LPCSTR, LPCSTR, UINT)
paramflags = (1, "hwnd", 0), (1, "text", "Hi"), (1, "caption", None), (1, "flags", 0)
MessageBox = prototype(("MessageBoxA", windll.user32), paramflags)

MessageBox()
MessageBox(text="Spam, spam, spam")
MessageBox(flags=2, text="foo bar")



回答8:


import ctypes
ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(0, "Your text", "Your title", 1)

The last number (here 1) can be change to change window style (not only buttons!):

## Button styles:
# 0 : OK
# 1 : OK | Cancel
# 2 : Abort | Retry | Ignore
# 3 : Yes | No | Cancel
# 4 : Yes | No
# 5 : Retry | No 
# 6 : Cancel | Try Again | Continue

## To also change icon, add these values to previous number
# 16 Stop-sign icon
# 32 Question-mark icon
# 48 Exclamation-point icon
# 64 Information-sign icon consisting of an 'i' in a circle

For example,

ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(0, "That's an error", "Warning!", 16)

will give this:




回答9:


Use

from tkinter.messagebox import *
Message([master], title="[title]", message="[message]")

The master window has to be created before. This is for Python 3. This is not fot wxPython, but for tkinter.




回答10:


import sys
from tkinter import *
def mhello():
    pass
    return

mGui = Tk()
ment = StringVar()

mGui.geometry('450x450+500+300')
mGui.title('My youtube Tkinter')

mlabel = Label(mGui,text ='my label').pack()

mbutton = Button(mGui,text ='ok',command = mhello,fg = 'red',bg='blue').pack()

mEntry = entry().pack 



回答11:


Also you can position the other window before withdrawing it so that you position your message

from tkinter import *
import tkinter.messagebox

window = Tk()
window.wm_withdraw()

# message at x:200,y:200
window.geometry("1x1+200+200")  # remember its.geometry("WidthxHeight(+or-)X(+or-)Y")
tkinter.messagebox.showerror(title="error", message="Error Message", parent=window)

# center screen message
window.geometry(f"1x1+{round(window.winfo_screenwidth() / 2)}+{round(window.winfo_screenheight() / 2)}")
tkinter.messagebox.showinfo(title="Greetings", message="Hello World!")

Please Note: This is Lewis Cowles' answer just Python 3ified, since tkinter has changed since python 2. If you want your code to be backwords compadible do something like this:

try:
    import tkinter
    import tkinter.messagebox
except ModuleNotFoundError:
    import Tkinter as tkinter
    import tkMessageBox as tkinter.messagebox



回答12:


Not the best, here is my basic Message box using only tkinter.

#Python 3.4
from    tkinter import  messagebox  as  msg;
import  tkinter as      tk;

def MsgBox(title, text, style):
    box = [
        msg.showinfo,       msg.showwarning,    msg.showerror,
        msg.askquestion,    msg.askyesno,       msg.askokcancel,        msg.askretrycancel,
];

tk.Tk().withdraw(); #Hide Main Window.

if style in range(7):
    return box[style](title, text);

if __name__ == '__main__':

Return = MsgBox(#Use Like This.
    'Basic Error Exemple',

    ''.join( [
        'The Basic Error Exemple a problem with test',                      '\n',
        'and is unable to continue. The application must close.',           '\n\n',
        'Error code Test',                                                  '\n',
        'Would you like visit http://wwww.basic-error-exemple.com/ for',    '\n',
        'help?',
    ] ),

    2,
);

print( Return );

"""
Style   |   Type        |   Button      |   Return
------------------------------------------------------
0           Info            Ok              'ok'
1           Warning         Ok              'ok'
2           Error           Ok              'ok'
3           Question        Yes/No          'yes'/'no'
4           YesNo           Yes/No          True/False
5           OkCancel        Ok/Cancel       True/False
6           RetryCancal     Retry/Cancel    True/False
"""



回答13:


check out my python module: pip install quickgui (Requires wxPython, but requires no knowledge of wxPython) https://pypi.python.org/pypi/quickgui

Can create any numbers of inputs,(ratio, checkbox, inputbox), auto arrange them on a single gui.




回答14:


A recent message box version is the prompt_box module. It has two packages: alert and message. Message gives you greater control over the box, but takes longer to type up.

Example Alert code:

import prompt_box

prompt_box.alert('Hello') #This will output a dialog box with title Neutrino and the 
#text you inputted. The buttons will be Yes, No and Cancel

Example Message code:

import prompt_box

prompt_box.message('Hello', 'Neutrino', 'You pressed yes', 'You pressed no', 'You 
pressed cancel') #The first two are text and title, and the other three are what is 
#printed when you press a certain button



回答15:


ctype module with threading

i was using the tkinter messagebox but it would crash my code. i didn't want to find out why so i used the ctypes module instead.

for example:

import ctypes
ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(0, "Your text", "Your title", 1)

i got that code from Arkelis


i liked that it didn't crash the code so i worked on it and added a threading so the code after would run.

example for my code

import ctypes
import threading


def MessageboxThread(buttonstyle, title, text, icon):
    threading.Thread(
        target=lambda: ctypes.windll.user32.MessageBoxW(buttonstyle, text, title, icon)
    ).start()

messagebox(0, "Your title", "Your text", 1)

for button styles and icon numbers:

## Button styles:
# 0 : OK
# 1 : OK | Cancel
# 2 : Abort | Retry | Ignore
# 3 : Yes | No | Cancel
# 4 : Yes | No
# 5 : Retry | No
# 6 : Cancel | Try Again | Continue

## To also change icon, add these values to previous number
# 16 Stop-sign icon
# 32 Question-mark icon
# 48 Exclamation-point icon
# 64 Information-sign icon consisting of an 'i' in a circle


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2963263/how-can-i-create-a-simple-message-box-in-python

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