When you create an application with a GUI using Tkinter in Python, the name of your application appears as "Python" in the menu bar on OS X. How can you get it to appear as something else?
可以将文章内容翻译成中文,广告屏蔽插件可能会导致该功能失效(如失效,请关闭广告屏蔽插件后再试):
问题:
回答1:
My answer is based on one buried in the middle of some forums. It was a bit difficult to find that solution, but I liked it because it allows you to distribute your application as a single cross platform script. There's no need to run it through py2app or anything similar, which would then leave you with an OS X specific package.
Anyways, I'm sharing my cleaned up version here to give it a bit more attention then it was getting there. You'll need to install pyobjc
via pip
to get the Foundation
module used in the code.
from sys import platform # Check if we're on OS X, first. if platform == 'darwin': from Foundation import NSBundle bundle = NSBundle.mainBundle() if bundle: info = bundle.localizedInfoDictionary() or bundle.infoDictionary() if info and info['CFBundleName'] == 'Python': info['CFBundleName'] = <Your application name here>
回答2:
May not be quite what you need but I am surprised no one has mentioned the simple, platform independent way (works with Python 3.x on Win 7) :
from tkinter import Tk root = Tk() root.title( "Your title here" ) # or root.wm_title
and if you want to change the icon:
''' Replace the default "Tk" icon with an Application-specific icon ''' ''' (that is located in the same folder as the python source code). ''' import sys from tkinter import PhotoImage program_directory = sys.path[ 0 ] IconFile = os.path.join( program_directory ) + "\ApplicationIcon.gif" IconImage = PhotoImage( file = IconFile ) root.tk.call( 'wm', 'iconphoto', root._w, IconImage ) root.mainloop()