Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to use tkinter slider `Scale` widget with discrete steps?

Is it possible to have a slider (Scale widget in tkinter) where the possible values that are displayed when manipulating the slider are discrete values read from a list?

The values in my list are not in even steps and are situation dependent.

From all the examples I've seen, you can specify a minimum value, a maximum value and a step value (n values at a time), but my list might look like this:

list=['0', '2000', '6400', '9200', '12100', '15060', '15080']

Just as an example. To reiterate, I want it go from for instance list[0] to list[1] or list[6] to list[5] when pulling the slider.

If anyone has any other suggestion for easily being able to pick a value from hundreds of items in a list, I'm all ears. I tried the OptionMenu widget but it gets to extensive and hard get a view of.

like image 787
Halldinz0r Avatar asked Sep 09 '14 12:09

Halldinz0r


1 Answers

Edit you could set the command of the slider to a callback, have that callback compare the current value to your list and then jump to the nearest by calling set() on the slider

so:

slider = Slider(parent, from_=0, to=100000, command=callback)

and:

def callback(event):
    current = event.widget.get()
    #compare value here and select nearest
    event.widget.set(newvalue)

Edit: to show a complete (but simple example)

try:
    import tkinter as tk
except ImportError:
    import Tkinter as tk

valuelist = [0,10,30,60,100,150,210,270]

def valuecheck(value):
    newvalue = min(valuelist, key=lambda x:abs(x-float(value)))
    slider.set(newvalue)

root = tk.Tk()

slider = tk.Scale(root, from_=min(valuelist), to=max(valuelist), command=valuecheck, orient="horizontal")

slider.pack()

root.mainloop()

i've tested this in python 2.7.6 and 3.3.2, even when dragging the slider this jumps to the nearest value to where the mouse is currently as opposed to only jumping when you let go of the slider.

like image 144
James Kent Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 05:10

James Kent