The following code is part of gui8.py from "Programming Python": def quit(self): ans = Dialog(self, title = 'Verify quit', text = 'Are you sure you want to quit?', bitmap = 'question', default = 1, strings = ('Yes', 'No')) if ans.num == 0: Frame.quit(self) It works (no surprise there -- the author knows his stuff). I paste the same piece of code into a very similar program and get a stack trace of: Exception in Tkinter callback Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/local/lib/python2.0/lib-tk/Tkinter.py", line 1287, in __call__ return apply(self.func, args) File "<stdin>", line 51, in quit AttributeError: 'Dialog' instance has no attribute 'num' I fire up the interpreter: Python 2.0 (#6, Apr 15 2001, 09:21:33) [GCC 2.95.3 19991030 (prerelease)] on linux2 Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> from Dialog import Dialog >>> ans = Dialog( title = 'Verify quit', ... text = 'Are you sure you want to quit?', ... bitmap='question', ... default=1, ... strings=('Yes','No')) >>> ans.num 0 >>> So, under what conditions does a Dialog instance not have an attribute of 'num'? -- Brian Smith greybria at direct.ca http://mypage.direct.ca/g/greybria
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