Welcome to the 200th article on python-hub.com! For this milestone, we’re bringing you something special as part of our Build & Challenge Series—a Real-Time Rock-Paper-Scissors Game in Python. For ...
Welcome to Day Ten of my 21-day project series! Today I have made for you (and me) Your Own Gallery in Python. It’s a great relief to just scroll through your gallery when you need a break. And when ...
Tomorrow, we’ll build a full Rich Text Editor with bold, italic, font styles, colors, links—you name it. But first, let’s master the basics.
Hello, Pythonistas🙋‍♀️, welcome back. Today, we’re gonna be making this awesome modern-looking calculator app 🔢. We will use the customtkinter library for making this calculator app. I strongly ...
In this tutorial, we’ll explore how to create and customize a Tkinter window in Python. You’ll learn how to change the window’s title, resize it, set transparency, modify the stacking order, and even ...
Ever wanted to build your own Flappy Bird game? Well, buckle up because we’re about to do just that—from setting up the project to making that little bird flap its wings and dodge pipes like a pro. No ...
A well-designed and responsive login page is crucial for any Flutter application, ensuring a seamless user experience across different devices. In this guide, we will build a beautiful, responsive ...
Hello Pythonistas, I hope you all are doing well. Today we’ll learn managing multiple instances 🤹‍♀️ in Python OOP. This is your Restaurant class’s code till now:- ...
Today, we’re diving into the world of gamified learning with KC7 Cyber Detective Game, a unique, no-cost platform designed to teach cybersecurity through play. Let’s explore why games are reshaping ...
For this website, I constantly need to upscale the images I have. But going to other websites and upscaling my images raises a question about that data’s privacy.
But suddenly, it’s all looking like spaghetti. Let me introduce you to your new best friend: Frame. It helps you keep your layout neat and organized—just like folders on your desktop.
So far we have seen labels, buttons, images, etc in Python’s built-in toolkit Tkinter. With any of the widgets, we were using a method called pack(). And if you are like me you would love to explore ...