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python - What does calling Tk () actually do? - Stack Overflow root = tk Tk() app = Application(root) The program would run as well as it did before With all this in mind, what I'm interested in knowing is: What does calling root = tk Tk() actually do (as in, what gets initialized) and why can the previous snippet work without it? Would I run into any pitfalls or limitations if I don't call Tk() and just built my application around the Frame class?
Tkinter: Python may not be configured for Tk - Stack Overflow So appearantly many seems to have had this issue (me including) and I found the fault to be that Tkinter wasn't installed on my system when python was compiled This post describes how to solve the problem by: Removing the virtual environment python distribution install Tkinter with sudo apt-get install tk-dev (for deb) or sudo pacman -S tk (for arch manjaro) Then proceed to compile python
Removing the TK icon on a Tkinter window - Stack Overflow tk iconbitmap(xbm_location) # Here we call the iconmask method with xbm location, since it's a blank xbm (filled with zeroes) it will be represented as a fully transparent icon
Tk (), Toplevel () and winfo_toplevel (). Difference between them and . . . On the second part, winfo_toplevel refers to the automatically created Tk instance again and creates other children with that automatically created Tk as the parent, which should be technically fine but would be harder to maintain as a code, than the standard ways of creating the same GUI I'd presume