Logo Size: | 210px |
Developer: | Robin Dunn Harri Pasanen |
Latest Release Version: | 4.2.1[1] |
Programming Language: | C++ / Python |
Operating System: | Cross-platform |
License: | wxWindows License |
wxPython is a wrapper for the cross-platform GUI API (often referred to as a "toolkit") wxWidgets (which is written in C++) for the Python programming language. It is one of the alternatives to Tkinter. It is implemented as a Python extension module (native code).
In 1995, Robin Dunn needed a GUI application to be deployed on HP-UX systems but also run Windows 3.1 within short time frame. He needed a cross-platform solution. While evaluating free and commercial solutions, he ran across Python bindings on the wxWidgets toolkit webpage (known as wxWindows at the time). This was Dunn's introduction to Python. Together with Harri Pasanen and Edward Zimmerman he developed those initial bindings into wxPython 0.2.[2]
In August 1998, version 0.3 of wxPython was released. It was built for wxWidgets 2.0 and ran on Win32, with a wxGTK version in the works.[3]
The first versions of the wrapper were created by hand. However, the code became difficult to maintain and keep synchronized with wxWidgets releases. By 1997, versions were created with SWIG, greatly decreasing the amount of work to update the wrapper.
In 2010, the Project Phoenix began; an effort to clean up the wxPython implementation and in the process make it compatible with Python 3.[4] The project is a new implementation of wxPython, focused on improving speed, maintainability and extensibility. Like the previous version of wxPython, it wraps the wxWidgets C++ toolkit and provides access to the user interface portions of the wxWidgets API.[5]
With the release of 4.0.0a1 wxPython in 2017, the Project Phoenix version became the official version.[6] wxPython 4.x is the current version being developed as of June 2022.[7]
wxPython enables Python to be used for cross-platform GUI applications requiring very little, if any, platform-specific code.
This is a simple "Hello world" module, depicting the creation of the two main objects in wxPython (the main window object and the application object), followed by passing the control to the event-driven system (by calling MainLoop
) which manages the user-interactive part of the program.
import wx
app = wx.App(False) # Create a new app, don't redirect stdout/stderr to a window.frame = wx.Frame(None, title="Hello World") # A Frame is a top-level window.frame.Show(True) # Show the frame.app.MainLoopThis is another example of the wxPython Close Button with wxPython GUI display show in Windows 10 operating system.
class WxButton(wx.Frame):
def __init__(self, *args, **kw): super(WxButton, self).__init__(*args, **kw) self.InitUI
def InitUI(self): pnl = wx.Panel(self) closeButton = wx.Button(pnl, label='Close Me', pos=(20, 20))
closeButton.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self.OnClose)
self.SetSize((350, 250)) self.SetTitle('Close Button') self.Centre
def OnClose(self, e): self.Close(True)
def main: app = wx.App ex = WxButton(None) ex.Show app.MainLoop
if __name__
Being a wrapper, wxPython uses the same free software license used by wxWidgets (wxWindows License)[8] —which is approved by Free Software Foundation and Open Source Initiative.