import uuid import weakref from contextlib import contextmanager import logging import math import os.path import pathlib import sys import tkinter as tk import tkinter.filedialog import tkinter.font import tkinter.messagebox from tkinter.simpledialog import SimpleDialog import numpy as np from PIL import Image, ImageTk import matplotlib as mpl from matplotlib import _api, backend_tools, cbook, _c_internal_utils from matplotlib.backend_bases import ( _Backend, FigureCanvasBase, FigureManagerBase, NavigationToolbar2, TimerBase, ToolContainerBase, cursors, _Mode, CloseEvent, KeyEvent, LocationEvent, MouseEvent, ResizeEvent) from matplotlib._pylab_helpers import Gcf from . import _tkagg from ._tkagg import TK_PHOTO_COMPOSITE_OVERLAY, TK_PHOTO_COMPOSITE_SET _log = logging.getLogger(__name__) cursord = { cursors.MOVE: "fleur", cursors.HAND: "hand2", cursors.POINTER: "arrow", cursors.SELECT_REGION: "crosshair", cursors.WAIT: "watch", cursors.RESIZE_HORIZONTAL: "sb_h_double_arrow", cursors.RESIZE_VERTICAL: "sb_v_double_arrow", } @contextmanager def _restore_foreground_window_at_end(): foreground = _c_internal_utils.Win32_GetForegroundWindow() try: yield finally: if mpl.rcParams['tk.window_focus']: _c_internal_utils.Win32_SetForegroundWindow(foreground) _blit_args = {} # Initialize to a non-empty string that is not a Tcl command _blit_tcl_name = "mpl_blit_" + uuid.uuid4().hex def _blit(argsid): """ Thin wrapper to blit called via tkapp.call. *argsid* is a unique string identifier to fetch the correct arguments from the ``_blit_args`` dict, since arguments cannot be passed directly. """ photoimage, data, offsets, bbox, comp_rule = _blit_args.pop(argsid) if not photoimage.tk.call("info", "commands", photoimage): return _tkagg.blit(photoimage.tk.interpaddr(), str(photoimage), data, comp_rule, offsets, bbox) def blit(photoimage, aggimage, offsets, bbox=None): """ Blit *aggimage* to *photoimage*. *offsets* is a tuple describing how to fill the ``offset`` field of the ``Tk_PhotoImageBlock`` struct: it should be (0, 1, 2, 3) for RGBA8888 data, (2, 1, 0, 3) for little-endian ARBG32 (i.e. GBRA8888) data and (1, 2, 3, 0) for big-endian ARGB32 (i.e. ARGB8888) data. If *bbox* is passed, it defines the region that gets blitted. That region will be composed with the previous data according to the alpha channel. Blitting will be clipped to pixels inside the canvas, including silently doing nothing if the *bbox* region is entirely outside the canvas. Tcl events must be dispatched to trigger a blit from a non-Tcl thread. """ data = np.asarray(aggimage) height, width = data.shape[:2] if bbox is not None: (x1, y1), (x2, y2) = bbox.__array__() x1 = max(math.floor(x1), 0) x2 = min(math.ceil(x2), width) y1 = max(math.floor(y1), 0) y2 = min(math.ceil(y2), height) if (x1 > x2) or (y1 > y2): return bboxptr = (x1, x2, y1, y2) comp_rule = TK_PHOTO_COMPOSITE_OVERLAY else: bboxptr = (0, width, 0, height) comp_rule = TK_PHOTO_COMPOSITE_SET # NOTE: _tkagg.blit is thread unsafe and will crash the process if called # from a thread (GH#13293). Instead of blanking and blitting here, # use tkapp.call to post a cross-thread event if this function is called # from a non-Tcl thread. # tkapp.call coerces all arguments to strings, so to avoid string parsing # within _blit, pack up the arguments into a global data structure. args = photoimage, data, offsets, bboxptr, comp_rule # Need a unique key to avoid thread races. # Again, make the key a string to avoid string parsing in _blit. argsid = str(id(args)) _blit_args[argsid] = args try: photoimage.tk.call(_blit_tcl_name, argsid) except tk.TclError as e: if "invalid command name" not in str(e): raise photoimage.tk.createcommand(_blit_tcl_name, _blit) photoimage.tk.call(_blit_tcl_name, argsid) class TimerTk(TimerBase): """Subclass of `backend_bases.TimerBase` using Tk timer events.""" def __init__(self, parent, *args, **kwargs): self._timer = None super().__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.parent = parent def _timer_start(self): self._timer_stop() self._timer = self.parent.after(self._interval, self._on_timer) def _timer_stop(self): if self._timer is not None: self.parent.after_cancel(self._timer) self._timer = None def _on_timer(self): super()._on_timer() # Tk after() is only a single shot, so we need to add code here to # reset the timer if we're not operating in single shot mode. However, # if _timer is None, this means that _timer_stop has been called; so # don't recreate the timer in that case. if not self._single and self._timer: if self._interval > 0: self._timer = self.parent.after(self._interval, self._on_timer) else: # Edge case: Tcl after 0 *prepends* events to the queue # so a 0 interval does not allow any other events to run. # This incantation is cancellable and runs as fast as possible # while also allowing events and drawing every frame. GH#18236 self._timer = self.parent.after_idle( lambda: self.parent.after(self._interval, self._on_timer) ) else: self._timer = None class FigureCanvasTk(FigureCanvasBase): required_interactive_framework = "tk" manager_class = _api.classproperty(lambda cls: FigureManagerTk) def __init__(self, figure=None, master=None): super().__init__(figure) self._idle_draw_id = None self._event_loop_id = None w, h = self.get_width_height(physical=True) self._tkcanvas = tk.Canvas( master=master, background="white", width=w, height=h, borderwidth=0, highlightthickness=0) self._tkphoto = tk.PhotoImage( master=self._tkcanvas, width=w, height=h) self._tkcanvas_image_region = self._tkcanvas.create_image( w//2, h//2, image=self._tkphoto) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.resize) if sys.platform == 'win32': self._tkcanvas.bind("", self._update_device_pixel_ratio) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.key_press) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.motion_notify_event) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.enter_notify_event) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.leave_notify_event) self._tkcanvas.bind("", self.key_release) for name in ["", "", ""]: self._tkcanvas.bind(name, self.button_press_event) for name in [ "", "", ""]: self._tkcanvas.bind(name, self.button_dblclick_event) for name in [ "", "", ""]: self._tkcanvas.bind(name, self.button_release_event) # Mouse wheel on Linux generates button 4/5 events for name in "", "": self._tkcanvas.bind(name, self.scroll_event) # Mouse wheel for windows goes to the window with the focus. # Since the canvas won't usually have the focus, bind the # event to the window containing the canvas instead. # See https://wiki.tcl-lang.org/3893 (mousewheel) for details root = self._tkcanvas.winfo_toplevel() # Prevent long-lived references via tkinter callback structure GH-24820 weakself = weakref.ref(self) weakroot = weakref.ref(root) def scroll_event_windows(event): self = weakself() if self is None: root = weakroot() if root is not None: root.unbind("", scroll_event_windows_id) return return self.scroll_event_windows(event) scroll_event_windows_id = root.bind("", scroll_event_windows, "+") # Can't get destroy events by binding to _tkcanvas. Therefore, bind # to the window and filter. def filter_destroy(event): self = weakself() if self is None: root = weakroot() if root is not None: root.unbind("", filter_destroy_id) return if event.widget is self._tkcanvas: CloseEvent("close_event", self)._process() filter_destroy_id = root.bind("", filter_destroy, "+") self._tkcanvas.focus_set() self._rubberband_rect_black = None self._rubberband_rect_white = None def _update_device_pixel_ratio(self, event=None): # Tk gives scaling with respect to 72 DPI, but Windows screens are # scaled vs 96 dpi, and pixel ratio settings are given in whole # percentages, so round to 2 digits. ratio = round(self._tkcanvas.tk.call('tk', 'scaling') / (96 / 72), 2) if self._set_device_pixel_ratio(ratio): # The easiest way to resize the canvas is to resize the canvas # widget itself, since we implement all the logic for resizing the # canvas backing store on that event. w, h = self.get_width_height(physical=True) self._tkcanvas.configure(width=w, height=h) def resize(self, event): width, height = event.width, event.height # compute desired figure size in inches dpival = self.figure.dpi winch = width / dpival hinch = height / dpival self.figure.set_size_inches(winch, hinch, forward=False) self._tkcanvas.delete(self._tkcanvas_image_region) self._tkphoto.configure(width=int(width), height=int(height)) self._tkcanvas_image_region = self._tkcanvas.create_image( int(width / 2), int(height / 2), image=self._tkphoto) ResizeEvent("resize_event", self)._process() self.draw_idle() def draw_idle(self): # docstring inherited if self._idle_draw_id: return def idle_draw(*args): try: self.draw() finally: self._idle_draw_id = None self._idle_draw_id = self._tkcanvas.after_idle(idle_draw) def get_tk_widget(self): """ Return the Tk widget used to implement FigureCanvasTkAgg. Although the initial implementation uses a Tk canvas, this routine is intended to hide that fact. """ return self._tkcanvas def _event_mpl_coords(self, event): # calling canvasx/canvasy allows taking scrollbars into account (i.e. # the top of the widget may have been scrolled out of view). return (self._tkcanvas.canvasx(event.x), # flipy so y=0 is bottom of canvas self.figure.bbox.height - self._tkcanvas.canvasy(event.y)) def motion_notify_event(self, event): MouseEvent("motion_notify_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def enter_notify_event(self, event): LocationEvent("figure_enter_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def leave_notify_event(self, event): LocationEvent("figure_leave_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def button_press_event(self, event, dblclick=False): # set focus to the canvas so that it can receive keyboard events self._tkcanvas.focus_set() num = getattr(event, 'num', None) if sys.platform == 'darwin': # 2 and 3 are reversed. num = {2: 3, 3: 2}.get(num, num) MouseEvent("button_press_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), num, dblclick=dblclick, modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def button_dblclick_event(self, event): self.button_press_event(event, dblclick=True) def button_release_event(self, event): num = getattr(event, 'num', None) if sys.platform == 'darwin': # 2 and 3 are reversed. num = {2: 3, 3: 2}.get(num, num) MouseEvent("button_release_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), num, modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def scroll_event(self, event): num = getattr(event, 'num', None) step = 1 if num == 4 else -1 if num == 5 else 0 MouseEvent("scroll_event", self, *self._event_mpl_coords(event), step=step, modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def scroll_event_windows(self, event): """MouseWheel event processor""" # need to find the window that contains the mouse w = event.widget.winfo_containing(event.x_root, event.y_root) if w != self._tkcanvas: return x = self._tkcanvas.canvasx(event.x_root - w.winfo_rootx()) y = (self.figure.bbox.height - self._tkcanvas.canvasy(event.y_root - w.winfo_rooty())) step = event.delta / 120 MouseEvent("scroll_event", self, x, y, step=step, modifiers=self._mpl_modifiers(event), guiEvent=event)._process() @staticmethod def _mpl_modifiers(event, *, exclude=None): # add modifier keys to the key string. Bit details originate from # http://effbot.org/tkinterbook/tkinter-events-and-bindings.htm # BIT_SHIFT = 0x001; BIT_CAPSLOCK = 0x002; BIT_CONTROL = 0x004; # BIT_LEFT_ALT = 0x008; BIT_NUMLOCK = 0x010; BIT_RIGHT_ALT = 0x080; # BIT_MB_1 = 0x100; BIT_MB_2 = 0x200; BIT_MB_3 = 0x400; # In general, the modifier key is excluded from the modifier flag, # however this is not the case on "darwin", so double check that # we aren't adding repeat modifier flags to a modifier key. modifiers = [ ("ctrl", 1 << 2, "control"), ("alt", 1 << 17, "alt"), ("shift", 1 << 0, "shift"), ] if sys.platform == "win32" else [ ("ctrl", 1 << 2, "control"), ("alt", 1 << 4, "alt"), ("shift", 1 << 0, "shift"), ("cmd", 1 << 3, "cmd"), ] if sys.platform == "darwin" else [ ("ctrl", 1 << 2, "control"), ("alt", 1 << 3, "alt"), ("shift", 1 << 0, "shift"), ("super", 1 << 6, "super"), ] return [name for name, mask, key in modifiers if event.state & mask and exclude != key] def _get_key(self, event): unikey = event.char key = cbook._unikey_or_keysym_to_mplkey(unikey, event.keysym) if key is not None: mods = self._mpl_modifiers(event, exclude=key) # shift is not added to the keys as this is already accounted for. if "shift" in mods and unikey: mods.remove("shift") return "+".join([*mods, key]) def key_press(self, event): KeyEvent("key_press_event", self, self._get_key(event), *self._event_mpl_coords(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def key_release(self, event): KeyEvent("key_release_event", self, self._get_key(event), *self._event_mpl_coords(event), guiEvent=event)._process() def new_timer(self, *args, **kwargs): # docstring inherited return TimerTk(self._tkcanvas, *args, **kwargs) def flush_events(self): # docstring inherited self._tkcanvas.update() def start_event_loop(self, timeout=0): # docstring inherited if timeout > 0: milliseconds = int(1000 * timeout) if milliseconds > 0: self._event_loop_id = self._tkcanvas.after( milliseconds, self.stop_event_loop) else: self._event_loop_id = self._tkcanvas.after_idle( self.stop_event_loop) self._tkcanvas.mainloop() def stop_event_loop(self): # docstring inherited if self._event_loop_id: self._tkcanvas.after_cancel(self._event_loop_id) self._event_loop_id = None self._tkcanvas.quit() def set_cursor(self, cursor): try: self._tkcanvas.configure(cursor=cursord[cursor]) except tkinter.TclError: pass class FigureManagerTk(FigureManagerBase): """ Attributes ---------- canvas : `FigureCanvas` The FigureCanvas instance num : int or str The Figure number toolbar : tk.Toolbar The tk.Toolbar window : tk.Window The tk.Window """ _owns_mainloop = False def __init__(self, canvas, num, window): self.window = window super().__init__(canvas, num) self.window.withdraw() # packing toolbar first, because if space is getting low, last packed # widget is getting shrunk first (-> the canvas) self.canvas._tkcanvas.pack(side=tk.TOP, fill=tk.BOTH, expand=1) # If the window has per-monitor DPI awareness, then setup a Tk variable # to store the DPI, which will be updated by the C code, and the trace # will handle it on the Python side. window_frame = int(window.wm_frame(), 16) self._window_dpi = tk.IntVar(master=window, value=96, name=f'window_dpi{window_frame}') self._window_dpi_cbname = '' if _tkagg.enable_dpi_awareness(window_frame, window.tk.interpaddr()): self._window_dpi_cbname = self._window_dpi.trace_add( 'write', self._update_window_dpi) self._shown = False @classmethod def create_with_canvas(cls, canvas_class, figure, num): # docstring inherited with _restore_foreground_window_at_end(): if cbook._get_running_interactive_framework() is None: cbook._setup_new_guiapp() _c_internal_utils.Win32_SetProcessDpiAwareness_max() window = tk.Tk(className="matplotlib") window.withdraw() # Put a Matplotlib icon on the window rather than the default tk # icon. See https://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl/TkCmd/wm.html#M50 # # `ImageTk` can be replaced with `tk` whenever the minimum # supported Tk version is increased to 8.6, as Tk 8.6+ natively # supports PNG images. icon_fname = str(cbook._get_data_path( 'images/matplotlib.png')) icon_img = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file=icon_fname, master=window) icon_fname_large = str(cbook._get_data_path( 'images/matplotlib_large.png')) icon_img_large = ImageTk.PhotoImage( file=icon_fname_large, master=window) window.iconphoto(False, icon_img_large, icon_img) canvas = canvas_class(figure, master=window) manager = cls(canvas, num, window) if mpl.is_interactive(): manager.show() canvas.draw_idle() return manager @classmethod def start_main_loop(cls): managers = Gcf.get_all_fig_managers() if managers: first_manager = managers[0] manager_class = type(first_manager) if manager_class._owns_mainloop: return manager_class._owns_mainloop = True try: first_manager.window.mainloop() finally: manager_class._owns_mainloop = False def _update_window_dpi(self, *args): newdpi = self._window_dpi.get() self.window.call('tk', 'scaling', newdpi / 72) if self.toolbar and hasattr(self.toolbar, '_rescale'): self.toolbar._rescale() self.canvas._update_device_pixel_ratio() def resize(self, width, height): max_size = 1_400_000 # the measured max on xorg 1.20.8 was 1_409_023 if (width > max_size or height > max_size) and sys.platform == 'linux': raise ValueError( 'You have requested to resize the ' f'Tk window to ({width}, {height}), one of which ' f'is bigger than {max_size}. At larger sizes xorg will ' 'either exit with an error on newer versions (~1.20) or ' 'cause corruption on older version (~1.19). We ' 'do not expect a window over a million pixel wide or tall ' 'to be intended behavior.') self.canvas._tkcanvas.configure(width=width, height=height) def show(self): with _restore_foreground_window_at_end(): if not self._shown: def destroy(*args): Gcf.destroy(self) self.window.protocol("WM_DELETE_WINDOW", destroy) self.window.deiconify() self.canvas._tkcanvas.focus_set() else: self.canvas.draw_idle() if mpl.rcParams['figure.raise_window']: self.canvas.manager.window.attributes('-topmost', 1) self.canvas.manager.window.attributes('-topmost', 0) self._shown = True def destroy(self, *args): if self.canvas._idle_draw_id: self.canvas._tkcanvas.after_cancel(self.canvas._idle_draw_id) if self.canvas._event_loop_id: self.canvas._tkcanvas.after_cancel(self.canvas._event_loop_id) if self._window_dpi_cbname: self._window_dpi.trace_remove('write', self._window_dpi_cbname) # NOTE: events need to be flushed before issuing destroy (GH #9956), # however, self.window.update() can break user code. An async callback # is the safest way to achieve a complete draining of the event queue, # but it leaks if no tk event loop is running. Therefore we explicitly # check for an event loop and choose our best guess. def delayed_destroy(): self.window.destroy() if self._owns_mainloop and not Gcf.get_num_fig_managers(): self.window.quit() if cbook._get_running_interactive_framework() == "tk": # "after idle after 0" avoids Tcl error/race (GH #19940) self.window.after_idle(self.window.after, 0, delayed_destroy) else: self.window.update() delayed_destroy() def get_window_title(self): return self.window.wm_title() def set_window_title(self, title): self.window.wm_title(title) def full_screen_toggle(self): is_fullscreen = bool(self.window.attributes('-fullscreen')) self.window.attributes('-fullscreen', not is_fullscreen) class NavigationToolbar2Tk(NavigationToolbar2, tk.Frame): def __init__(self, canvas, window=None, *, pack_toolbar=True): """ Parameters ---------- canvas : `FigureCanvas` The figure canvas on which to operate. window : tk.Window The tk.Window which owns this toolbar. pack_toolbar : bool, default: True If True, add the toolbar to the parent's pack manager's packing list during initialization with ``side="bottom"`` and ``fill="x"``. If you want to use the toolbar with a different layout manager, use ``pack_toolbar=False``. """ if window is None: window = canvas.get_tk_widget().master tk.Frame.__init__(self, master=window, borderwidth=2, width=int(canvas.figure.bbox.width), height=50) self._buttons = {} for text, tooltip_text, image_file, callback in self.toolitems: if text is None: # Add a spacer; return value is unused. self._Spacer() else: self._buttons[text] = button = self._Button( text, str(cbook._get_data_path(f"images/{image_file}.png")), toggle=callback in ["zoom", "pan"], command=getattr(self, callback), ) if tooltip_text is not None: add_tooltip(button, tooltip_text) self._label_font = tkinter.font.Font(root=window, size=10) # This filler item ensures the toolbar is always at least two text # lines high. Otherwise the canvas gets redrawn as the mouse hovers # over images because those use two-line messages which resize the # toolbar. label = tk.Label(master=self, font=self._label_font, text='\N{NO-BREAK SPACE}\n\N{NO-BREAK SPACE}') label.pack(side=tk.RIGHT) self.message = tk.StringVar(master=self) self._message_label = tk.Label(master=self, font=self._label_font, textvariable=self.message, justify=tk.RIGHT) self._message_label.pack(side=tk.RIGHT) NavigationToolbar2.__init__(self, canvas) if pack_toolbar: self.pack(side=tk.BOTTOM, fill=tk.X) def _rescale(self): """ Scale all children of the toolbar to current DPI setting. Before this is called, the Tk scaling setting will have been updated to match the new DPI. Tk widgets do not update for changes to scaling, but all measurements made after the change will match the new scaling. Thus this function re-applies all the same sizes in points, which Tk will scale correctly to pixels. """ for widget in self.winfo_children(): if isinstance(widget, (tk.Button, tk.Checkbutton)): if hasattr(widget, '_image_file'): # Explicit class because ToolbarTk calls _rescale. NavigationToolbar2Tk._set_image_for_button(self, widget) else: # Text-only button is handled by the font setting instead. pass elif isinstance(widget, tk.Frame): widget.configure(height='18p') widget.pack_configure(padx='3p') elif isinstance(widget, tk.Label): pass # Text is handled by the font setting instead. else: _log.warning('Unknown child class %s', widget.winfo_class) self._label_font.configure(size=10) def _update_buttons_checked(self): # sync button checkstates to match active mode for text, mode in [('Zoom', _Mode.ZOOM), ('Pan', _Mode.PAN)]: if text in self._buttons: if self.mode == mode: self._buttons[text].select() # NOT .invoke() else: self._buttons[text].deselect() def pan(self, *args): super().pan(*args) self._update_buttons_checked() def zoom(self, *args): super().zoom(*args) self._update_buttons_checked() def set_message(self, s): self.message.set(s) def draw_rubberband(self, event, x0, y0, x1, y1): # Block copied from remove_rubberband for backend_tools convenience. if self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white: self.canvas._tkcanvas.delete(self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white) if self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black: self.canvas._tkcanvas.delete(self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black) height = self.canvas.figure.bbox.height y0 = height - y0 y1 = height - y1 self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black = ( self.canvas._tkcanvas.create_rectangle( x0, y0, x1, y1)) self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white = ( self.canvas._tkcanvas.create_rectangle( x0, y0, x1, y1, outline='white', dash=(3, 3))) def remove_rubberband(self): if self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white: self.canvas._tkcanvas.delete(self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white) self.canvas._rubberband_rect_white = None if self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black: self.canvas._tkcanvas.delete(self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black) self.canvas._rubberband_rect_black = None def _set_image_for_button(self, button): """ Set the image for a button based on its pixel size. The pixel size is determined by the DPI scaling of the window. """ if button._image_file is None: return # Allow _image_file to be relative to Matplotlib's "images" data # directory. path_regular = cbook._get_data_path('images', button._image_file) path_large = path_regular.with_name( path_regular.name.replace('.png', '_large.png')) size = button.winfo_pixels('18p') # Nested functions because ToolbarTk calls _Button. def _get_color(color_name): # `winfo_rgb` returns an (r, g, b) tuple in the range 0-65535 return button.winfo_rgb(button.cget(color_name)) def _is_dark(color): if isinstance(color, str): color = _get_color(color) return max(color) < 65535 / 2 def _recolor_icon(image, color): image_data = np.asarray(image).copy() black_mask = (image_data[..., :3] == 0).all(axis=-1) image_data[black_mask, :3] = color return Image.fromarray(image_data, mode="RGBA") # Use the high-resolution (48x48 px) icon if it exists and is needed with Image.open(path_large if (size > 24 and path_large.exists()) else path_regular) as im: # assure a RGBA image as foreground color is RGB im = im.convert("RGBA") image = ImageTk.PhotoImage(im.resize((size, size)), master=self) button._ntimage = image # create a version of the icon with the button's text color foreground = (255 / 65535) * np.array( button.winfo_rgb(button.cget("foreground"))) im_alt = _recolor_icon(im, foreground) image_alt = ImageTk.PhotoImage( im_alt.resize((size, size)), master=self) button._ntimage_alt = image_alt if _is_dark("background"): # For Checkbuttons, we need to set `image` and `selectimage` at # the same time. Otherwise, when updating the `image` option # (such as when changing DPI), if the old `selectimage` has # just been overwritten, Tk will throw an error. image_kwargs = {"image": image_alt} else: image_kwargs = {"image": image} # Checkbuttons may switch the background to `selectcolor` in the # checked state, so check separately which image it needs to use in # that state to still ensure enough contrast with the background. if ( isinstance(button, tk.Checkbutton) and button.cget("selectcolor") != "" ): if self._windowingsystem != "x11": selectcolor = "selectcolor" else: # On X11, selectcolor isn't used directly for indicator-less # buttons. See `::tk::CheckEnter` in the Tk button.tcl source # code for details. r1, g1, b1 = _get_color("selectcolor") r2, g2, b2 = _get_color("activebackground") selectcolor = ((r1+r2)/2, (g1+g2)/2, (b1+b2)/2) if _is_dark(selectcolor): image_kwargs["selectimage"] = image_alt else: image_kwargs["selectimage"] = image button.configure(**image_kwargs, height='18p', width='18p') def _Button(self, text, image_file, toggle, command): if not toggle: b = tk.Button( master=self, text=text, command=command, relief="flat", overrelief="groove", borderwidth=1, ) else: # There is a bug in tkinter included in some python 3.6 versions # that without this variable, produces a "visual" toggling of # other near checkbuttons # https://bugs.python.org/issue29402 # https://bugs.python.org/issue25684 var = tk.IntVar(master=self) b = tk.Checkbutton( master=self, text=text, command=command, indicatoron=False, variable=var, offrelief="flat", overrelief="groove", borderwidth=1 ) b.var = var b._image_file = image_file if image_file is not None: # Explicit class because ToolbarTk calls _Button. NavigationToolbar2Tk._set_image_for_button(self, b) else: b.configure(font=self._label_font) b.pack(side=tk.LEFT) return b def _Spacer(self): # Buttons are also 18pt high. s = tk.Frame(master=self, height='18p', relief=tk.RIDGE, bg='DarkGray') s.pack(side=tk.LEFT, padx='3p') return s def save_figure(self, *args): filetypes = self.canvas.get_supported_filetypes_grouped() tk_filetypes = [ (name, " ".join(f"*.{ext}" for ext in exts)) for name, exts in sorted(filetypes.items()) ] default_extension = self.canvas.get_default_filetype() default_filetype = self.canvas.get_supported_filetypes()[default_extension] filetype_variable = tk.StringVar(self.canvas.get_tk_widget(), default_filetype) # adding a default extension seems to break the # asksaveasfilename dialog when you choose various save types # from the dropdown. Passing in the empty string seems to # work - JDH! # defaultextension = self.canvas.get_default_filetype() defaultextension = '' initialdir = os.path.expanduser(mpl.rcParams['savefig.directory']) # get_default_filename() contains the default extension. On some platforms, # choosing a different extension from the dropdown does not overwrite it, # so we need to remove it to make the dropdown functional. initialfile = pathlib.Path(self.canvas.get_default_filename()).stem fname = tkinter.filedialog.asksaveasfilename( master=self.canvas.get_tk_widget().master, title='Save the figure', filetypes=tk_filetypes, defaultextension=defaultextension, initialdir=initialdir, initialfile=initialfile, typevariable=filetype_variable ) if fname in ["", ()]: return # Save dir for next time, unless empty str (i.e., use cwd). if initialdir != "": mpl.rcParams['savefig.directory'] = ( os.path.dirname(str(fname))) # If the filename contains an extension, let savefig() infer the file # format from that. If it does not, use the selected dropdown option. if pathlib.Path(fname).suffix[1:] != "": extension = None else: extension = filetypes[filetype_variable.get()][0] try: self.canvas.figure.savefig(fname, format=extension) except Exception as e: tkinter.messagebox.showerror("Error saving file", str(e)) def set_history_buttons(self): state_map = {True: tk.NORMAL, False: tk.DISABLED} can_back = self._nav_stack._pos > 0 can_forward = self._nav_stack._pos < len(self._nav_stack) - 1 if "Back" in self._buttons: self._buttons['Back']['state'] = state_map[can_back] if "Forward" in self._buttons: self._buttons['Forward']['state'] = state_map[can_forward] def add_tooltip(widget, text): tipwindow = None def showtip(event): """Display text in tooltip window.""" nonlocal tipwindow if tipwindow or not text: return x, y, _, _ = widget.bbox("insert") x = x + widget.winfo_rootx() + widget.winfo_width() y = y + widget.winfo_rooty() tipwindow = tk.Toplevel(widget) tipwindow.overrideredirect(1) tipwindow.geometry(f"+{x}+{y}") try: # For Mac OS tipwindow.tk.call("::tk::unsupported::MacWindowStyle", "style", tipwindow._w, "help", "noActivates") except tk.TclError: pass label = tk.Label(tipwindow, text=text, justify=tk.LEFT, relief=tk.SOLID, borderwidth=1) label.pack(ipadx=1) def hidetip(event): nonlocal tipwindow if tipwindow: tipwindow.destroy() tipwindow = None widget.bind("", showtip) widget.bind("", hidetip) @backend_tools._register_tool_class(FigureCanvasTk) class RubberbandTk(backend_tools.RubberbandBase): def draw_rubberband(self, x0, y0, x1, y1): NavigationToolbar2Tk.draw_rubberband( self._make_classic_style_pseudo_toolbar(), None, x0, y0, x1, y1) def remove_rubberband(self): NavigationToolbar2Tk.remove_rubberband( self._make_classic_style_pseudo_toolbar()) class ToolbarTk(ToolContainerBase, tk.Frame): def __init__(self, toolmanager, window=None): ToolContainerBase.__init__(self, toolmanager) if window is None: window = self.toolmanager.canvas.get_tk_widget().master xmin, xmax = self.toolmanager.canvas.figure.bbox.intervalx height, width = 50, xmax - xmin tk.Frame.__init__(self, master=window, width=int(width), height=int(height), borderwidth=2) self._label_font = tkinter.font.Font(size=10) # This filler item ensures the toolbar is always at least two text # lines high. Otherwise the canvas gets redrawn as the mouse hovers # over images because those use two-line messages which resize the # toolbar. label = tk.Label(master=self, font=self._label_font, text='\N{NO-BREAK SPACE}\n\N{NO-BREAK SPACE}') label.pack(side=tk.RIGHT) self._message = tk.StringVar(master=self) self._message_label = tk.Label(master=self, font=self._label_font, textvariable=self._message) self._message_label.pack(side=tk.RIGHT) self._toolitems = {} self.pack(side=tk.TOP, fill=tk.X) self._groups = {} def _rescale(self): return NavigationToolbar2Tk._rescale(self) def add_toolitem( self, name, group, position, image_file, description, toggle): frame = self._get_groupframe(group) buttons = frame.pack_slaves() if position >= len(buttons) or position < 0: before = None else: before = buttons[position] button = NavigationToolbar2Tk._Button(frame, name, image_file, toggle, lambda: self._button_click(name)) button.pack_configure(before=before) if description is not None: add_tooltip(button, description) self._toolitems.setdefault(name, []) self._toolitems[name].append(button) def _get_groupframe(self, group): if group not in self._groups: if self._groups: self._add_separator() frame = tk.Frame(master=self, borderwidth=0) frame.pack(side=tk.LEFT, fill=tk.Y) frame._label_font = self._label_font self._groups[group] = frame return self._groups[group] def _add_separator(self): return NavigationToolbar2Tk._Spacer(self) def _button_click(self, name): self.trigger_tool(name) def toggle_toolitem(self, name, toggled): if name not in self._toolitems: return for toolitem in self._toolitems[name]: if toggled: toolitem.select() else: toolitem.deselect() def remove_toolitem(self, name): for toolitem in self._toolitems.pop(name, []): toolitem.pack_forget() def set_message(self, s): self._message.set(s) @backend_tools._register_tool_class(FigureCanvasTk) class SaveFigureTk(backend_tools.SaveFigureBase): def trigger(self, *args): NavigationToolbar2Tk.save_figure( self._make_classic_style_pseudo_toolbar()) @backend_tools._register_tool_class(FigureCanvasTk) class ConfigureSubplotsTk(backend_tools.ConfigureSubplotsBase): def trigger(self, *args): NavigationToolbar2Tk.configure_subplots(self) @backend_tools._register_tool_class(FigureCanvasTk) class HelpTk(backend_tools.ToolHelpBase): def trigger(self, *args): dialog = SimpleDialog( self.figure.canvas._tkcanvas, self._get_help_text(), ["OK"]) dialog.done = lambda num: dialog.frame.master.withdraw() Toolbar = ToolbarTk FigureManagerTk._toolbar2_class = NavigationToolbar2Tk FigureManagerTk._toolmanager_toolbar_class = ToolbarTk @_Backend.export class _BackendTk(_Backend): backend_version = tk.TkVersion FigureCanvas = FigureCanvasTk FigureManager = FigureManagerTk mainloop = FigureManagerTk.start_main_loop