I don't have an answer to your question, and this may have come up when
you last asked, but I can't help but think that an application with that
much stuff on the screen at once would tend to be a rather complicated
and confusing application. Isn't there some way to organize the
controls (i.e. tabs, dialogs, etc) so that there isn't a mess of
controls onscreen at the same time?
If you must have a large number of controls on a single panel, would it
be possible to use something like a scrolled window so that only a
portion of the controls are visible at once?
Just some ideas.
Regards,
Cliff
···
On Thu, 2003-08-14 at 18:42, richard terry wrote:
I posted this question on this list some 18 months ago and no-one seemed to
have any solution. As time has passed I will ask it again.Quick background, I design the gui for the gnuMed project (open source medical
records). Much work has been done on the backend now and we are entering the
phase of needing to hook up to the embryonic (currently poorly
designed/looking) front end written in wxPython.As medical data entry is complex and screen real estate at a premium, one of
the critical limiting factors is that the controls don't seem to be able to
be made borderless despite the available flag. I seem to remember Robin
saying there was a reason for this.The project has been considering chaning to QT because of this, which I think
would be a pity as I like the way wxPython/python functions.Does anyone have any ideas on this, any pointers to who I could mail to ask if
it is possible to get the borderless property working in wxPython?
--
I laughed in the mirror for the first time in a year
-The Cure