Table Of Contents
Layout¶
Layouts are used to calculate and assign widget positions.
The Layout
class itself cannot be used directly.
You should use one of the following layout classes:
- Anchor layout:
kivy.uix.anchorlayout.AnchorLayout
- Box layout:
kivy.uix.boxlayout.BoxLayout
- Float layout:
kivy.uix.floatlayout.FloatLayout
- Grid layout:
kivy.uix.gridlayout.GridLayout
- Page Layout:
kivy.uix.pagelayout.PageLayout
- Relative layout:
kivy.uix.relativelayout.RelativeLayout
- Scatter layout:
kivy.uix.scatterlayout.ScatterLayout
- Stack layout:
kivy.uix.stacklayout.StackLayout
Understanding the size_hint Property in Widget¶
The size_hint
is a tuple of values used by
layouts to manage the sizes of their children. It indicates the size
relative to the layout’s size instead of an absolute size (in
pixels/points/cm/etc). The format is:
widget.size_hint = (width_percent, height_percent)
The percent is specified as a floating point number in the range 0-1. For example, 0.5 is 50%, 1 is 100%.
If you want a widget’s width to be half of the parent’s width and the height to be identical to the parent’s height, you would do:
widget.size_hint = (0.5, 1.0)
If you don’t want to use a size_hint for either the width or height, set the value to None. For example, to make a widget that is 250px wide and 30% of the parent’s height, do:
widget.size_hint = (None, 0.3)
widget.width = 250
Being Kivy properties
, these can also be set via
constructor arguments:
widget = Widget(size_hint=(None, 0.3), width=250)
Changed in version 1.4.1: The reposition_child internal method (made public by mistake) has been removed.
-
class
kivy.uix.layout.
Layout
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
kivy.uix.widget.Widget
Layout interface class, used to implement every layout. See module documentation for more information.
-
add_widget
(widget, index=0, canvas=None)[source]¶ Add a new widget as a child of this widget.
Parameters: - widget:
Widget
Widget to add to our list of children.
- index: int, defaults to 0
Index to insert the widget in the list. Notice that the default of 0 means the widget is inserted at the beginning of the list and will thus be drawn on top of other sibling widgets. For a full discussion of the index and widget hierarchy, please see the Widgets Programming Guide.
New in version 1.0.5.
- canvas: str, defaults to None
Canvas to add widget’s canvas to. Can be ‘before’, ‘after’ or None for the default canvas.
New in version 1.9.0.
>>> from kivy.uix.button import Button >>> from kivy.uix.slider import Slider >>> root = Widget() >>> root.add_widget(Button()) >>> slider = Slider() >>> root.add_widget(slider)
- widget:
-
do_layout
(*largs)[source]¶ This function is called when a layout is called by a trigger. If you are writing a new Layout subclass, don’t call this function directly but use
_trigger_layout()
instead.The function is by default called before the next frame, therefore the layout isn’t updated immediately. Anything depending on the positions of e.g. children should be scheduled for the next frame.
New in version 1.0.8.
-
layout_hint_with_bounds
(sh_sum, available_space, min_bounded_size, sh_min_vals, sh_max_vals, hint)[source]¶ (internal) Computes the appropriate (size) hint for all the widgets given (potential) min or max bounds on the widgets’ size. The
hint
list is updated with appropriate sizes.It walks through the hints and for any widgets whose hint will result in violating min or max constraints, it fixes the hint. Any remaining or missing space after all the widgets are fixed get distributed to the widgets making them smaller or larger according to their size hint.
This algorithms knows nothing about the widgets other than what is passed through the input params, so it’s fairly generic for laying things out according to constraints using size hints.
Parameters: - sh_sum: float
The sum of the size hints (basically
sum(size_hint)
).- available_space: float
The amount of pixels available for all the widgets whose size hint is not None. Cannot be zero.
- min_bounded_size: float
The minimum amount of space required according to the size_hint_min of the widgets (basically
sum(size_hint_min)
).- sh_min_vals: list or iterable
Items in the iterable are the size_hint_min for each widget. Can be None. The length should be the same as
hint
- sh_max_vals: list or iterable
Items in the iterable are the size_hint_max for each widget. Can be None. The length should be the same as
hint
- hint: list
A list whose size is the same as the length of
sh_min_vals
andsh_min_vals
whose each element is the corresponding size hint value of that element. This list is updated in place with correct size hints that ensure the constraints are not violated.
Returns: Nothing.
hint
is updated in place.
-