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Update label of tkinter menubar item?

Is it possible to change the label of an item in a menu with tkinter?

In the following example, I'd like to change it from "An example item" (in the "File" menu) to a different value.

from tkinter import *

root = Tk()
menu_bar = Menu(root)

file_menu = Menu(menu_bar, tearoff=False)
file_menu.add_command(label="An example item", command=lambda: print('clicked!'))
menu_bar.add_cascade(label="File", menu=file_menu)

root.config(menu=menu_bar)
root.mainloop()
like image 327
kiri Avatar asked Dec 04 '13 07:12

kiri


2 Answers

I do not know if that used to be different on 2.7, but it does not work on 3.4 anymore.

On python 3.4 you should start counting entries with 0 and use entryconfig.

menu.entryconfig(0, label = "Clicked!")

http://effbot.org/tkinterbook/menu.htm

like image 156
mvbentes Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 18:09

mvbentes


Check this dynamic menu example. The main feature here is that you don't need to care about a serial number (index) of your menu item. No index (place) of your menu is needed to track. Menu item could be the first or the last, it doesn't matter. So you could add new menus without index tracking (position) of your menus.

The code is on Python 3.6.

# Using lambda keyword and refresh function to create a dynamic menu.
import tkinter as tk

def show(x):
    """ Show your choice """
    global label
    new_label = 'Choice is: ' + x
    menubar.entryconfigure(label, label=new_label)  # change menu text
    label = new_label  # update menu label to find it next time
    choice.set(x)

def refresh():
    """ Refresh menu contents """
    global label, l
    if l[0] == 'one':
        l = ['four', 'five', 'six', 'seven']
    else:
        l = ['one', 'two', 'three']
    choice.set('')
    menu.delete(0, 'end')  # delete previous contents of the menu
    menubar.entryconfigure(label, label=const_str)  # change menu text
    label = const_str  # update menu label to find it next time
    for i in l:
        menu.add_command(label=i, command=lambda x=i: show(x))

root = tk.Tk()
# Set some variables
choice = tk.StringVar()
const_str = 'Choice'
label = const_str
l = ['dummy']
# Create some widgets
menubar = tk.Menu(root)
root.configure(menu=menubar)
menu = tk.Menu(menubar, tearoff=False)
menubar.add_cascade(label=label, menu=menu)
b = tk.Button(root, text='Refresh menu', command=refresh)
b.pack()
b.invoke()
tk.Label(root, textvariable=choice).pack()
root.mainloop()
like image 39
FooBar167 Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 18:09

FooBar167