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78

answers:

1

If I'm using a canvas to display data and I want the user to be able to click on various items on the canvas in order to get more information or interact with it in some way, whats the best way of going about this?

Searching online I can find information about how to bind events to tags but that seems to be more indirect then what I want. I don't want to group items with tags, but rather have specific function calls when the user clicks specific items on the canvas.

+2  A: 

To interact with objects contained in a Canvas object you need to use tag_bind() which has this format: tag_bind(item, event=None, callback, add=None)

The item parameter can be either a tag or an id.

Here is an example to illustrate the concept:

from Tkinter import * 

def onObjectClick(event):                  
  print 'Got object click', event.x, event.y,
  print event.widget.find_closest(event.x, event.y)  

root = Tk()
canv = Canvas(root, width=100, height=100)
obj1Id = canv.create_line(0, 30, 100, 30, width=5, tags="obj1Tag")
obj2Id = canv.create_text(50, 70, text='Click', tags='obj2Tag')

canv.tag_bind(obj1Id, '<ButtonPress-1>', onObjectClick)       
canv.tag_bind('obj2Tag', '<ButtonPress-1>', onObjectClick)   
print 'obj1Id: ', obj1Id
print 'obj2Id: ', obj2Id
canv.pack()
root.mainloop()
tdedecko
Nice example. I like how you show the use of both an id and tag, and use names like `obj1Id` and `obj1Tag` to drive the point home.
Bryan Oakley
Awesome. Thank you.
Ian