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Home/ Questions/Q 712009
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T04:48:00+00:00 2026-05-14T04:48:00+00:00

Can someone give me a simple example involving threads in this manner, please. Problem

  • 0

Can someone give me a simple example involving threads in this manner, please.

Problem with my code is that when I click button One, GUI freezes until its finished. I want buttons to stay responsive when def is being executed. How can i fix that?

class fun:
        wTree = None
        def __init__( self ):                
                self.wTree = gtk.glade.XML( "ui.glade" )

                dic = {
                        "on_buttonOne" : self.one,
                        "on_buttonTwo" : self.two,
                }
                self.wTree.signal_autoconnect( dic )              
                gtk.main()

        def sone(self, widget):
           time.sleep(1)
           print "1"
           time.sleep(1)
           print "2"
           time.sleep(1)
           print "3"
        def stwo(self, widget):
           time.sleep(1)
           print "4"
           time.sleep(1)
           print "5"
           time.sleep(1)
           print "6"
do=fun()

Pretty please, help me.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T04:48:01+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 4:48 am

    When using gtk, it will run a main loop, and you schedule everything you want to do as events to the gtk loop. You don’t need threads to do anything.

    Here’s a complete, full, ready-to-run example that uses glib.timeout_add to do what you want.

    Note that clicking on both buttons (or multiple times on a button) doesn’t freeze the gui and everything happens “at the same time”…

    import gtk
    import glib
    
    def yieldsleep(func):
        def start(*args, **kwds):
            iterable = func(*args, **kwds)
            def step(*args, **kwds):
                try:
                    time = next(iterable)
                    glib.timeout_add_seconds(time, step)
                except StopIteration:
                    pass
            glib.idle_add(step)
        return start
    
    class Fun(object):
        def __init__(self):
            window = gtk.Window()
    
            vbox = gtk.VBox()
    
            btnone = gtk.Button('one')
            btnone.connect('clicked', self.click_one)
            btnone.show()
            vbox.pack_start(btnone)
    
            btntwo = gtk.Button('two')
            btntwo.connect('clicked', self.click_two)
            btntwo.show()
            vbox.pack_start(btntwo)
    
            vbox.show()
            window.add(vbox)
            window.show()
    
        @yieldsleep
        def click_one(self, widget, data=None):
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '1'
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '2'
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '3'
    
        @yieldsleep
        def click_two(self, widget, data=None):
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '4'
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '5'
            yield 1 #time.sleep(1)
            print '6'
    
    do = Fun()
    gtk.main()
    
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