In [1]:
from __future__ import print_function
The Button is not used to represent a data type. Instead the button widget is used to handle mouse clicks. The on_click method of the Button can be used to register function to be called when the button is clicked. The doc string of the on_click can be seen below.
In [2]:
import ipywidgets as widgets
print(widgets.Button.on_click.__doc__)
Since button clicks are stateless, they are transmitted from the front-end to the back-end using custom messages. By using the on_click method, a button that prints a message when it has been clicked is shown below.
In [3]:
from IPython.display import display
button = widgets.Button(description="Click Me!")
display(button)
def on_button_clicked(b):
print("Button clicked.")
button.on_click(on_button_clicked)
The Text widget also has a special on_submit event. The on_submit event fires when the user hits return.
In [4]:
text = widgets.Text()
display(text)
def handle_submit(sender):
print(text.value)
text.on_submit(handle_submit)
Widget properties are IPython traitlets and traitlets are eventful. To handle changes, the observe method of the widget can be used to register a callback. The doc string for observe can be seen below.
In [5]:
print(widgets.Widget.observe.__doc__)
Mentioned in the doc string, the callback registered must have the signature handler(change) where change is a dictionary holding the information about the change.
Using this method, an example of how to output an IntSlider's value as it is changed can be seen below.
In [6]:
int_range = widgets.IntSlider()
display(int_range)
def on_value_change(change):
print(change['new'])
int_range.observe(on_value_change, names='value')
Often, you may want to simply link widget attributes together. Synchronization of attributes can be done in a simpler way than by using bare traitlets events.
In [7]:
import traitlets
In [8]:
caption = widgets.Label(value='The values of slider1 and slider2 are synchronized')
sliders1, slider2 = widgets.IntSlider(description='Slider 1'),\
widgets.IntSlider(description='Slider 2')
l = traitlets.link((sliders1, 'value'), (slider2, 'value'))
display(caption, sliders1, slider2)
In [9]:
caption = widgets.Label(value='Changes in source values are reflected in target1')
source, target1 = widgets.IntSlider(description='Source'),\
widgets.IntSlider(description='Target 1')
dl = traitlets.dlink((source, 'value'), (target1, 'value'))
display(caption, source, target1)
Function traitlets.link and traitlets.dlink return a Link or DLink object. The link can be broken by calling the unlink method.
In [10]:
l.unlink()
dl.unlink()
Since attributes of widgets on the Python side are traitlets, you can register handlers to the change events whenever the model gets updates from the front-end.
The handler passed to observe will be called with one change argument. The change object holds at least a type key and a name key, corresponding respectively to the type of notification and the name of the attribute that triggered the notification.
Other keys may be passed depending on the value of type. In the case where type is change, we also have the following keys:
owner : the HasTraits instanceold : the old value of the modified trait attributenew : the new value of the modified trait attributename : the name of the modified trait attribute.
In [11]:
caption = widgets.Label(value='The values of range1 and range2 are synchronized')
slider = widgets.IntSlider(min=-5, max=5, value=1, description='Slider')
def handle_slider_change(change):
caption.value = 'The slider value is ' + (
'negative' if change.new < 0 else 'nonnegative'
)
slider.observe(handle_slider_change, names='value')
display(caption, slider)
When synchronizing traitlets attributes, you may experience a lag because of the latency due to the roundtrip to the server side. You can also directly link widget attributes in the browser using the link widgets, in either a unidirectional or a bidirectional fashion.
Javascript links persist when embedding widgets in html web pages without a kernel.
In [12]:
caption = widgets.Label(value='The values of range1 and range2 are synchronized')
range1, range2 = widgets.IntSlider(description='Range 1'),\
widgets.IntSlider(description='Range 2')
l = widgets.jslink((range1, 'value'), (range2, 'value'))
display(caption, range1, range2)
In [13]:
caption = widgets.Label(value='Changes in source_range values are reflected in target_range1')
source_range, target_range1 = widgets.IntSlider(description='Source range'),\
widgets.IntSlider(description='Target range 1')
dl = widgets.jsdlink((source_range, 'value'), (target_range1, 'value'))
display(caption, source_range, target_range1)
Function widgets.jslink returns a Link widget. The link can be broken by calling the unlink method.
In [14]:
# l.unlink()
# dl.unlink()
Linking in the kernel means linking via python. If two sliders are linked in the kernel, when one slider is changed the browser sends a message to the kernel (python in this case) updating the changed slider, the link widget in the kernel then propagates the change to the other slider object in the kernel, and then the other slider's kernel object sends a message to the browser to update the other slider's views in the browser. If the kernel is not running (as in a static web page), then the controls will not be linked.
Linking using jslink (i.e., on the browser side) means contructing the link in Javascript. When one slider is changed, Javascript running in the browser changes the value of the other slider in the browser, without needing to communicate with the kernel at all. If the sliders are attached to kernel objects, each slider will update their kernel-side objects independently.
To see the difference between the two, go to the static version of this page in the ipywidgets documentation and try out the sliders near the bottom. The ones linked in the kernel with link and dlink are no longer linked, but the ones linked in the browser with jslink and jsdlink are still linked.