--- CustomTkinter is a python UI-library based on Tkinter, which provides new, modern and fully customizable widgets. They are created and used like normal Tkinter widgets and can also be used in combination with normal Tkinter elements. The widgets and the window colors either adapt to the system appearance or the manually set mode ('light', 'dark'), and all CustomTkinter widgets and windows support HighDPI scaling (Windows, macOS). With CustomTkinter you'll get a consistent and modern look across all desktop platforms (Windows, macOS, Linux). ## Installation Install the module with pip: ``` pip3 install customtkinter ``` **Update existing installation:** ```pip3 install customtkinter --upgrade```\ (update as often as possible because this library is under active development) ## Documentation The **official** documentation can be found in the Wiki Tab here: **--> [Documentation](https://github.com/TomSchimansky/CustomTkinter/wiki)**. ## Example Program To test customtkinter you can try this simple example with only a single button: ```python import tkinter import customtkinter customtkinter.set_appearance_mode("System") # Modes: system (default), light, dark customtkinter.set_default_color_theme("blue") # Themes: blue (default), dark-blue, green app = customtkinter.CTk() # create CTk window like you do with the Tk window app.geometry("400x240") def button_function(): print("button pressed") # Use CTkButton instead of tkinter Button button = customtkinter.CTkButton(master=app, text="CTkButton", command=button_function) button.place(relx=0.5, rely=0.5, anchor=tkinter.CENTER) app.mainloop() ``` which results in the following window on macOS: In the [examples folder](https://github.com/TomSchimansky/CustomTkinter/tree/master/examples), you can find more example programs and in the [Documentation](https://github.com/TomSchimansky/CustomTkinter/wiki) you can find further information on the appearance mode, scaling, themes and all widgets. ## More Examples and Showcase ### Appearance mode change and scaling change CustomTkinter can adapt to the Windows 10/11 light or dark mode: https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/66446067/204672968-6584f360-4c52-434f-9c16-25761341368b.mp4 | _`complex_example.py` on Windows 11 with system appearance mode change and standard 'blue' theme_ ### On macOS you either need python3.10 or higher or the anaconda python version to get a dark window header (Tcl/Tk >= 8.6.9 required): https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/66446067/204673854-b6cbcfda-d9a1-4425-92a3-5b57d7f2fd6b.mp4 | _`complex_example.py` on macOS with system appearance mode change, user-scaling change and standard 'blue' theme_ ### ### Button with images It's possible to put an image on a CTkButton. You just have to pass a PhotoImage object to the CTkButton with the ``image`` argument. If you want no text at all you have to set ``text=""`` or you specify how to position the text and image at once with the ``compound`` option: ![](documentation_images/image_example_dark_Windows.png) | _`image_example.py` on Windows 11_ ### ### Integration of TkinterMapView widget In the following example I used a TkinterMapView which integrates well with a CustomTkinter program. It's a tile based map widget which displays OpenStreetMap or other tile based maps: https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/66446067/204675835-1584a8da-5acc-4993-b4a9-e70f06fa14b0.mp4 | _`examples/map_with_customtkinter.py` from TkinterMapView repository on Windows 11_ You can find the TkinterMapView library and example program here: https://github.com/TomSchimansky/TkinterMapView