When not to use OOP
Python comes built-in with object-oriented programming capabilities, but at the same time, we can write scripts that do not need to use OOP.
For some tasks, OOP does not make sense.
This recipe will show when not to use OOP.
Getting ready
In this recipe, we will create a Python GUI similar to previous recipes. We will compare the OOP code to the non-OOP alternative way of programming.
How to do it...
Let's first create a new GUI using OOP methodology. The following code will create the GUI displayed below the code:
import tkinter as tk from tkinter import ttk from tkinter import scrolledtext from tkinter import Menu class OOP(): def __init__(self): self.win = tk.Tk() self.win.title("Python GUI") self.createWidgets() def createWidgets(self): tabControl = ttk.Notebook(self.win) tab1 = ttk.Frame(tabControl) tabControl.add(tab1, text='Tab 1') tabControl...