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1952

answers:

1

I have a wx.Frame, in which there is a main wx.Panel with several widgets inside of it. I want one button in there to cause a "help panel" to come up. This help panel would probably be a wx.Panel, and I want it to overlay the entire main wx.Panel (not including the menu bar of the wx.Frame). There should be some sort of close button on the help button that will make it disappear again.

What is a good way to achieve this? I've looked into wx.Notebook but haven't found a way to make it not show the tabs.

Note that I don't want to destroy and recreate the help panel every time the user closes and opens it: I just want it to be hidden.

+3  A: 

There may be several ways

a) you can create a custom child panel, and make it same size and position at 0,0 among top of all child widgets. no need of destroying it just Show/Hide it this also resizes with parent frame

b) popup a wx.PopupWindow or derived class and place and size it at correct location

so as suggest in a) here is an example, where all controls are put in panel using sizer, as separate help cntrl is created which can be shown/hidden from button, but you can create a custom cntrl which hides itself on clicking close

import wx

class MyFrame(wx.Frame):
    def __init__(self):
        wx.Frame.__init__(self, None)

        self.panel = wx.Panel(self)

        # create controls
        self.cntrlPanel = wx.Panel(self.panel)
        stc1 = wx.StaticText(self.cntrlPanel, label="wow it works")
        stc2 = wx.StaticText(self.cntrlPanel, label="yes it works")
        btn = wx.Button(self.cntrlPanel, label="help?")
        btn.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self._onShowHelp)

        sizer = wx.BoxSizer(wx.VERTICAL)
        sizer.Add(stc1)
        sizer.Add(stc2)
        sizer.Add(btn)
        self.cntrlPanel.SetSizer(sizer)


        # create help panel
        self.helpPanel = wx.Panel(self.panel)
        self.stcHelp = wx.StaticText(self.helpPanel, label="help help help\n"*8)
        btn = wx.Button(self.helpPanel, label="close[x]")
        btn.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self._onShowCntrls)
        sizer = wx.BoxSizer(wx.VERTICAL)
        sizer.Add(self.stcHelp)
        sizer.Add(btn)
        self.helpPanel.SetSizer(sizer)
        self.helpPanel.Hide()
        self.helpPanel.Raise()
        self.helpPanel.SetBackgroundColour((240,250,240))
        self.Bind(wx.EVT_SIZE, self._onSize)

        self._onShowCntrls(None)

    def _onShowHelp(self, event):
        self.helpPanel.SetPosition((0,0))
        self.helpPanel.Show()
        self.cntrlPanel.Hide()

    def _onShowCntrls(self, event):
        self.cntrlPanel.SetPosition((0,0))
        self.helpPanel.Hide()
        self.cntrlPanel.Show()

    def _onSize(self, event):
        event.Skip()
        self.helpPanel.SetSize(self.GetClientSizeTuple())
        self.cntrlPanel.SetSize(self.GetClientSizeTuple())

app = wx.PySimpleApp()
frame = MyFrame()
frame.Show()
app.SetTopWindow(frame)
app.MainLoop()
Anurag Uniyal
I think maybe I used the word "overlay" incorrectly... I want a wx.Panel that will cover up the main wx.Panel, completely hiding it. I tried doing what you did except with a wx.Panel, but how do I make it always adjust itself according to the size of the wx.Frame?
cool-RR
initially set panel = size of frame client/or inner paneloverride the OnSize(EVT_SIZE) and resize the help according to size of Frame
Anurag Uniyal
ok i have updated example so now, there are two panels one for cntrl and one for help, both internally can arrange cntrls using sizers, and both have button to switch to other panel, also they resize with parent frame, it means it has all you need. But as i said there are several ways to do this.
Anurag Uniyal