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Finding a more elegant way of communicating between views
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Hi!
I am trying to get better in Python/Pythonista by doing a pixel paint app. I have some problems understanding communication between views, nested and otherwise, and I was hoping you might have some suggestion to how I can make my code more elegant.
My paint app is built up from views, there is an editor view at the "root" holding the image and tool buttons. What I want to do, is to open a file selector view on top of this, that does stuff with the editor view "below". For that I need the file view to access variables and functions that belong to the root editor.
Right now, I have nested everything. The editor functions are inside the editor class, and the file view is a function of the editor class. Also, the file view functions are nested inside the file view function itself. But this feels real messy to me, and I'd rather have the file window as a separate class that is outside of the editor. But I'm not sure how to let the communicate back to the editor!
I have made a super-simplified example of how my app works. Can anybody take a quick look and give me some hints?
#!python3 import ui from glob import glob from os.path import basename class pixelEditor(ui.View): def fileWindow(self, sender): fileWindow = ui.View(frame=(100, 150, 300, 300), name='File window', border_width=2) imagefiles = [basename(x) for x in glob('*.*')] def loadAction(sender): # Dummy for the function that loads the image into the editor selectedFile = imagefiles[filelist.selected_row[1]] print ('Selected ' + selectedFile + ' from sender: ' + sender.name) # Sends the selected image to the pixel Editor self.subviews[1].text = selectedFile def fileSelected(sender): filePreview.background_color = 'red' filelistData = ui.ListDataSource(imagefiles) filelistData.delete_enabled=False filelist = ui.TableView(frame=(10, 10 ,150, 280), data_source=filelistData, name='filelist') filelist.row_height = 24 filelist.action = fileSelected # Does not work... fileWindow.add_subview(filelist) filePreview = ui.ImageView(frame=(170,10,120,100)) filePreview.background_color = 'black' fileWindow.add_subview(filePreview) loadButton = ui.Button(name='Load', frame=(170,120,64,32), title='Load') loadButton.background_color = 'white' loadButton.action = loadAction fileWindow.add_subview(loadButton) self.add_subview(fileWindow) print('File window opened.') def __init__(self, width=640, height=480): self.bg_color = 'grey' fileButton = ui.Button(name='File', frame=(10,80,64,32), title='File Window') fileButton.background_color = 'white' fileButton.action = self.fileWindow self.add_subview(fileButton) fileLabel = ui.Label(frame=(100, 80, 300, 32), font=('HelveticaNeue-Light', 32), text='___') fileLabel.name = 'File Label' self.add_subview(fileLabel) print(self.superview) v = pixelEditor() v.present('fullscreen')
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@superrune, if I understand your question correctly:
The file picker view can be defined in a separate class and still communicate easily with the editor view via the superview attribute (after having been included in the view hierarchy, of course).
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If you are trying to make reusable classes, you could consider using a delegate attribute, or menu items are defined with a title, target object and a method that gets called on the target. That way a menu can target the root, or target some low level component.
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Thanks for answering! I’ve tried to restructure the script so that the file windows is a separate class, but it doesn’t behave quite as I expected. But views opens instantaneously, and the buttons don’t seem to work. Any pointers?
#!python3 import ui from glob import glob from os.path import basename class fileWindow(ui.View): def __init__(self, frame=(100, 150, 300, 300)): self.name = 'File window' self.border_width = 2 imagefiles = [basename(x) for x in glob('*.*')] def loadAction(sender): selectedFile = imagefiles[filelist.selected_row[1]] print ('Selected ' + selectedFile + ' from sender: ' + sender.name) # Sends the selected image to the pixel Editor self.subviews[1].text = selectedFile def fileSelected(sender): # This does not work.. filePreview.background_color = 'red' filelistData = ui.ListDataSource(imagefiles) filelistData.delete_enabled=False filelist = ui.TableView(frame=(10, 10 ,150, 280), data_source=filelistData, name='filelist') filelist.row_height = 24 filelist.action = fileSelected # This does not work... self.add_subview(filelist) filePreview = ui.ImageView(frame=(170,10,120,100)) filePreview.background_color = 'black' self.add_subview(filePreview) loadButton = ui.Button(name='Load', frame=(170,120,64,32), title='Load') loadButton.background_color = 'white' loadButton.action = loadAction self.add_subview(loadButton) class pixelEditor(ui.View): def __init__(self, width=640, height=480): self.bg_color = 'grey' def openFileWindow(): fv = fileWindow() fv.present() print('File window opened.') fileButton = ui.Button(name='File', frame=(10,80,64,32), title='File Window') fileButton.background_color = 'white' fileButton.action = openFileWindow() self.add_subview(fileButton) fileLabel = ui.Label(frame=(100, 80, 300, 32), font=('HelveticaNeue-Light', 32), text='___') fileLabel.name = 'File Label' self.add_subview(fileLabel) print(self.superview) v = pixelEditor() v.present('fullscreen') ```
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@superrune, remove the parentheses from the end of
fileButton.action = openFileWindow()
Now you are calling the method (and immediately opening the window) and setting
action
to the value returned, which is None, and thus the button does nothing. -
Thanks @mikael, for explaining this to me. That makes total sense. When I do that though, I get this error:
TypeError: openFileWindow() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given
Answers on stackoverflow mention that the error occurs when you forgot to add ‘self’ to the functions inside the class, but that doesn’t seem to make any change. -
@superrune a button action needs sender as parameter to identify which object has been tapped
def openFileWindow(sender):
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I’m slowly moving closer to something that works! So I moved the open view function out of the class, and now opening the window works! So now I need to get these two windows to talk to each other. Inside the init of the file window I am printing the superview to make sure it’s actually a child, but superview returns none. So why isn’t the parent/child relationship set up, even though I am creating this as a sub view?
#!python3 import ui from glob import glob from os.path import basename class fileWindow(ui.View): def __init__(self): self.frame=(100, 150, 300, 300) self.name = 'File window' self.border_width = 2 print ('Loader superview:', self.superview) imagefiles = [basename(x) for x in glob('*.*')] def loadAction(sender): selectedFile = imagefiles[filelist.selected_row[1]] print ('Selected ' + selectedFile + ' from sender: ' + sender.name) # Sends the selected image to the pixel Editor self.superview.text = selectedFile def fileSelected(sender): # This does not work.. filePreview.background_color = 'red' filelistData = ui.ListDataSource(imagefiles) filelistData.delete_enabled=False filelist = ui.TableView(frame=(10, 10 ,150, 280), data_source=filelistData, name='filelist') filelist.row_height = 24 filelist.action = fileSelected # This does not work... self.add_subview(filelist) filePreview = ui.ImageView(frame=(170,10,120,100)) filePreview.background_color = 'black' self.add_subview(filePreview) loadButton = ui.Button(name='Load', frame=(170,120,64,32), title='Load') loadButton.background_color = 'white' loadButton.action = loadAction self.add_subview(loadButton) def openFileWindow(sender): fv = fileWindow() sender.add_subview(fv) fv.present() #fv = fileWindow() #v.present() print('File window opened.') class pixelEditor(ui.View): def __init__(self, width=640, height=480): self.bg_color = 'grey' fileButton = ui.Button(name='File', frame=(10,80,64,32), title='File Window') fileButton.background_color = 'white' fileButton.action = openFileWindow self.add_subview(fileButton) fileLabel = ui.Label(frame=(100, 80, 300, 32), font=('HelveticaNeue-Light', 32), text='___') fileLabel.name = 'File Label' self.add_subview(fileLabel) print(self.superview) v = pixelEditor() v.present('fullscreen')
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I tried changing self to sender in the function that opens the window, but still the parent view is returned as None.
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@superrune normal way is this, remark action = self.xxxxx and def xxx(self,sender) at same level as the def init
class pixelEditor(ui.View): def __init__(self, width=640, height=480): self.bg_color = 'grey' fileButton = ui.Button(name='File', frame=(10,80,64,32), title='File Window') fileButton.background_color = 'white' fileButton.action = self.openFileWindow self.add_subview(fileButton) fileLabel = ui.Label(frame=(100, 80, 300, 32), font=('HelveticaNeue-Light', 32), text='___') fileLabel.name = 'File Label' self.add_subview(fileLabel) print(self.superview) def openFileWindow(self, sender): fv = fileWindow() fv.present() print('File window opened.')```
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When I do that, I get the error message
'pixelEditor' object has no attribute 'openFileWindow'
Moving the definition before the action assignment doesnt change anything either.
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@superrune did you remark the new indentation of OpenFileWindow
It became a method of the class...
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@superrune The other problem, of the superview, is that you use self.superview in the init.
The class is not yet really created. Try this and see where I use the self.superview#!python3 import ui from glob import glob from os.path import basename class fileWindow(ui.View): def __init__(self): self.frame=(100, 150, 300, 300) self.name = 'File window' self.border_width = 2 #print ('Loader superview:', self.superview) imagefiles = [basename(x) for x in glob('*.*')] filelistData = ui.ListDataSource(imagefiles) filelistData.delete_enabled=False filelist = ui.TableView(frame=(10, 10 ,150, 280), data_source=filelistData, name='filelist') filelist.row_height = 24 filelist.action = self.fileSelected # This does not work... self.add_subview(filelist) filePreview = ui.ImageView(frame=(170,10,120,100)) filePreview.background_color = 'black' self.add_subview(filePreview) loadButton = ui.Button(name='Load', frame=(170,120,64,32), title='Load') loadButton.background_color = 'white' loadButton.action = self.loadAction self.add_subview(loadButton) ui.delay(self.x,0.01) def x(self): print ('Loader superview title = ', self.superview.title) def loadAction(self,sender): selectedFile = imagefiles[filelist.selected_row[1]] print ('Selected ' + selectedFile + ' from sender: ' + sender.name) # Sends the selected image to the pixel Editor self.superview.text = selectedFile def fileSelected(self,sender): # This does not work.. filePreview.background_color = 'red' class pixelEditor(ui.View): def __init__(self, width=640, height=480): self.bg_color = 'grey' fileButton = ui.Button(name='File', frame=(10,80,64,32), title='File Window') fileButton.background_color = 'white' fileButton.action = self.openFileWindow self.add_subview(fileButton) fileLabel = ui.Label(frame=(100, 80, 300, 32), font=('HelveticaNeue-Light', 32), text='___') fileLabel.name = 'File Label' self.add_subview(fileLabel) print(self.superview) def openFileWindow(self,sender): fv = fileWindow() sender.add_subview(fv) fv.present() #fv = fileWindow() #v.present() print('File window opened.') v = pixelEditor() v.present('fullscreen')
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Thanks, that also worked. I had the sub-window opening OK a couple steps back as well. But the next problem still remains, though, even in this version.
I do a
print ('Loader superview:', self.superview)
when I init thefileWindow
, to see that there is a parent view I can put the selected file into, but that still returnsNone
. Is there a way to get the new view properly assigned as a child of the firstpixelEditor
view?edit: I see you have made a new function that prints the superview, but it returns
fileWindow
. So the windows parent is itself? Why is the superview notpixelEditor
?Thanks for taking the time to help me out!!
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@superrune I'll check your question but you also have another error
selectedFile = self['filelist'].data_source.items[self['filelist'].selected_row[1]]
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@superrune You made a mistake: the superview is a button and my print in my new little x function is the title of the button, not the class.
You named your button 'File Window'.... -
@superrune Then, change in OpenFileWindow, set the FileWindow as a child of self which is the pixeleditor
def openFileWindow(self,sender): fv = fileWindow() self.add_subview(fv)
And in def x():
def x(self): print ('Loader superview type = ', type(self.superview))
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@superrune other big problem, when you present the FileWindow, the PixelEditor is no more presented, thus try without presenting it:
def openFileWindow(self,sender): fv = fileWindow() self.add_subview(fv) #fv.present() #fv = fileWindow() #v.present() print('File window opened.')
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@superrune And last little problem, to "send" the selected file name to PixelEditor, use something like
# Sends the selected image to the pixel Editor self.superview.name = selectedFile
and you will see the name of the file on the title bar of the PixelEditor View.
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@cvp said:
print ('Loader superview type = ', type(self.superview))
Thanks,
I still have to do a
fv.present()
inside theopenFileWindow
function, right? The window will not show up otherwise...print ('Loader superview type = ', type(self.superview))
now returns a NoneType, though.I still want to put the selected file name into
fileLabel.text
- how would you go about doing that?