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 ...
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 ...
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.
Welcome to Project #4 of the Build & Challenge Series! Today, we’re adding a playful twist by making a Mad Libs game in Python. Remember those stories where you fill in random words and end up with ...
Debugging can truly get on your nerves at times. But that’s part of our job—sometimes more than actual coding itself. Imagine writing a prime number checker, only to find out it’s identifying ...
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 ...
Welcome to Day Eight of my 21-day project series! Today, I have made a pretty simple and fun Number-Guessing Game In Python. It is not a GUI, not an AI. Just a simple guessing game. This mini-project ...
I will make a simple Mini Calculator GUI with Python. I’ll use Customtkinter for this purpose. It would work on clicks only. I haven’t included key binding in this. In case you don’t know this project ...
If you share this odd but fun habit, you’re in for a treat! Today, we’re going to build a random name generator in Python.
Hello, Pythonistas Welcome Back. Today we will see how to make a fully functional modern Scroll bar in CustomTkinter. We will use the CTkScrollbar Widget. Like any other widget in CTk, it is created ...
Welcome to Day Nine of my 21-day project series! Today I have made A Random Wikipedia Article Generator GUI. I am a curious kid so I like to read new stuff that is not based on my past preferences ...
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 ...