In this article we will see how we can trigger on hide event in PYGLET module in python. Pyglet is easy to use but powerful library for developing visually rich GUI applications like games, multimedia etc. A window is a “heavyweight” object occupying operating system resources. Windows may appear as floating regions or can be set to fill an entire screen (fullscreen). This event is triggered when a window is minimised or (on Mac OS X) hidden by the user.
We can create a window with the help of command given below
pyglet.window.Window(width, height, title)
Below is the syntax of the on hide event, this method get called when this event is triggered
@window.event def on_hide(): print("Window is minimised")
Below is the implementation
Python3
# importing pyglet module import pyglet import pyglet.window.key # width of window width = 500 # height of window height = 500 # caption i.e title of the window title = "Geeksforneveropen" # creating a window window = pyglet.window.Window(width, height, title) # text text = "neveropen" # creating a label with font = times roman # font size = 36 # aligning it to the center label = pyglet.text.Label(text, font_name = 'Times New Roman' , font_size = 36 , x = window.width / / 2 , y = window.height / / 2 , anchor_x = 'center' , anchor_y = 'center' ) new_label = pyglet.text.Label(text, font_name = 'Times New Roman' , font_size = 10 , x = 25 , y = 25 ) # on draw event @window .event def on_draw(): # clearing the window window.clear() # drawing the label on the window label.draw() # key press event @window .event def on_key_press(symbol, modifier): print ( "nn" ) # key "C" get press if symbol = = pyglet.window.key.C: # close the window window.close() # on hide event @window .event def on_hide(): # printing some message print ( "Window is minimized" ) # image for icon img = image = pyglet.resource.image( "logo.png" ) # setting image as icon window.set_icon(img) # minimize the window window.minimize() # start running the application pyglet.app.run() |
Output :
Window is minimized