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CTk Theme Builder 2.4 User Guide
A thank-you to my ever patient, ever loving, beautiful wife, who has let me hide in my office and beaver away at this project, for many an hour.
I would also like to thank my friend and colleague, Jan Bajec, for his graphics contribution.
In case you are wondering, "so where is CTk Theme Builder version 1.0?", well it was never made public. CTk Theme Builder, started with very humble beginnings. In fact it started with a crude CustomTkinter program which was used to display the results of theme file modifications, performed using a Vim editor (yes I also use Vim - sue me ;o). Features were added and added, and well, the project grew legs and became a bit of an obsession. Version 1.0 was based on CustomTkinter 4, which had a radically different JSON format for the theme files. So when Tom decided to release v5 with a drastically different format, I decided to take a break and let things with the new version, bed in. Anyway, although the initial CTk Theme Builder was functional, it was never as polished as I would have liked. The CustomTkinter v5 JSON format was actually a game changer - much improved and more object oriented, although it did present some non-trivial re-engineering challenges, but finally, here we are.
CTk Theme Builder has been developed and refined, based on experience developing CustomTkinter themes, as well as some input provided by friends and colleagues.
Key features include:
- A WYSIWYG Interface - see the effect of your changes as you make them, via a preview panel;
- Ability to flip between Light and Dark theme modes;
- Ability to flip into a render as disabled mode;
- A widget geometry editor, allowing you to set widget borders, corner radius etc;
- A views system, which provides a convenient & flexible way for navigating widget colour properties;
- The ability to merge themes - merge 2 themes into 1;
- A feature for swapping Light & Dark modes;
- Provenance - authors details, date created, date modified plus other attributes are stored to the, theme and can be viewed via the app.
- Colour palettes, which are associated to a theme, helping you to plan and leverage your colours;
- A Colour Harmonics feature, which allows you to generate complementary colours, based on a number of colour methods. These can be copied to the theme colour palette, at the click of a button.
- Easy colour shade adjustments, via a floating (right-click) menu, available via widget colour property tiles;
- The ability to copy/paste colours between widget colour property tiles;
- A preference option, allowing you to auto-load the last theme you worked on, when you open the Theme Builder application.
- Lots of tooltips to help you on your theme building journey. These can be disabled via the Preferences;
- Widget scaling options, accessible via the Preferences.
- Undo / Redo controls, for undoing & redoing individual changes.
Version 2.4 of CTk Theme Builder was designed around CustomeTkinter 5.2.0. Any behaviours / features described herein, are based upon this version. When you install CTk Theme Builder, it will install library modules into a virtual environment. Included in this will be CustomTkinter 5.2.0. If you upgrade, or downgrade the installed CustomTkinter version, this may have unpredictable results.
There are two main panels, the Control Panel and the Preview Panel. There are a sections in the guide, which cover these panels as well as other dialogues.
The job of the Control Panel is to present necessary interface controls, giving you the means to create and manage the appearance of your theme. The controls comprise the main control function along the left side of the panel. The main bulk of the Control Panel window, is comprised of property tiles used to assign colours to the theme palette and to individual widget properties. There are also a number of buttons near the top, which allow you to select individual widget types, so that you can adjust the theme geometry properties (corner radius, border width etc) of the CustomTkinter widgets.
The Preview Panel appears when a theme has been opened and then remains for the duration of the session. Once opened the Preview Panel only closes, when you Quit via the Control Panel.
Whenever you drag and release one of the main windows into a new location of your display, CTk Theme Builder keeps track of where you place it. So for example, you may choose to have the Preview Panel on the left and the Control Panel to the right of it. When you quit the application, it saves the settings, and will subsequently restore the window positions when CTk Theme Builder is next started.
There are various sets of colour tiles, presented by the application. These appear in the control panel as well as the Colour Harmonics Panel (you will learn about these later). In most cases, you can copy and paste hex colour codes (format: #RRGGBB), between these. You can also copy colour codes based on searches from the Web, and / or by using colour samplers. As long as you have a valid hex colour code in your clipboard, you can paste it onto a colour tile.
Copy and Paste functions are accessible via a floating menu, which activates when you position your mouse pointer over a tile, and right-click.
Right clicking a colour tile, on any update-able tile, will cause a floating menu to appear. Included on the menu is a Colour Picker option. When selected a pop-up will appear, allowing you to choose, or paste a colour.
When the colour picker appears, the initial colour will automatically reflect the colour of the tile, from which it was invoked.
The appearance of the Colour Picker will vary, depending on your operating system. On Linux you will see the Tkinter, built-in colour picker, whereas for example on Windows, you will see a Windows native colour picker.
If you are sufficiently acquainted with CustomTkinter, you will be aware that the themes designed for CustomTkinter allow you to switch between a Dark Mode and a Light Mode.
When working your themes, you work / see, one appearance mode of a theme, at any given time, but can switch back and forth between the two whenever you wish.
CTk Theme Builder's control panel, communicates with the preview panel, via sockets. By default the listener port used by the preview panel, is 5051. You can only run one instance of CTk Theme Builder at a time using a given socket. If you attempt to run two instances of CTk Theme Builder on the same computer, with the same socket, you will see a timeout message similar to the one seen here:
You can however change the Listener Port in the Preferences dialogue. This will then allow you to run another instance of CTk Theme Builder, from a different install location, if required. It also offers you some latitude, in the event that the default port is in use, by another program.
As you have possibly noticed, when you launch CTk Theme Builder, the control panel has a menu toolbar. This includes a File menu as well as a Tools menu, as we see here:
Note that these are presented differently on MacOS.
The options of the File menu, bear a close correspondence to the buttons displayed on the control panel, whereas the Tools options are only available via the menu toolbar.
When you first start CTk Theme Builder, if you don't have a theme selected, you will find that most of the File menu options are disabled. They only become enabled when you start working on a theme.
Some options on the File menu, have corresponding buttons in the left hand region of the control panel. Please refer to the section on the Control Panel to read about their respective function.
Options which are not included as Control Panel buttons, are described here.
The Flip Modes function effects changes upon the currently selected theme's appearance mode. This option allows you to swap around the Light mode colour properties, with those defined for the Dark mode.
The File menu also includes a Provenance option, which provides details of who created the theme, as well as other details, as we can see here:
This option becomes available when you open a theme.
The Quality Assurance (QA) application, is an enhanced version of the complex_example.py, which Tom Schimansky included as a sample application, with CustomTkinter 5.1.
It is strongly recommended that you take advantage of this feature. It serves as an alternate rendering of your theme. When you think your theme is complete, or almost complete, launching this app provides the nearest thing to an acid test.
A key distinction here, is that the QA app does not employ any frames embedded within another frame, which is in contrast to the CTk Theme Builder preview panel. Because of this, you don't get to see the CTkFrame top_fg_color
effects. So by using both the QA app and the preview panel, you get to see a more varied implementation of the theme, and therefore more opportunity to spot any issues.
When you select this menu option, the QA app is launched, and renders based upon the current state of your work in progress theme. Make a change and re-launch the QA app and you can see the effect. You don't need to perform a Save operation of your theme, to review the effect of your changes. Here is an example screen shot:
The default UI Scaling for the QA application, is a setting of 80%. The scale can be modified within the Preferences dialogue. This is accessible via the Control Panel, Tools menu.
The QA application, once launched is semi-autonomous; You can close it via the Close button on the bottom right of the QA application. You can also open more than one instance of the QA application, allowing you to compare interim changes to the theme. From version 2.3 of the theme builder onward, all instances of the QA application are closed automatically, when you exit the theme builder via the Quit button on the Control Panel.
The Provenance option is only available for themes created using CTk Theme Builder. If you need to access it for a file of different origin, you need to do a Save As, and edit the theme as per the new theme name.
The Tools menu provides access to:
- User Preferences
- Colour Harmonics dialogue
- Merge Themes
- About (CTk Theme Builder)
The Colour Harmonics option is only enabled, when you start working on a theme.
Each of these options, are covered in their own dedicated section of the guide.
The Preferences dialogue is accessed via the Tools->Preferences menu option. The preferences screen will appear something like this:
When you start CTk Theme Builder for the very first time, the theme will be set to GreyGhost, as we see in the above image.
For new installations, the Preferences dialogue should be the first port of call, if only to ensure that you have updated the Author (see below), to ensure you are adequately credited for your good work.
For a new installation the Author defaults to the user name that you are logged in as. You can simply over-type this, to whatever suits.
The author, along with some other theme specifics, is automatically embedded into the JSON, of any theme files that you create. When you open a theme created (or produced using Save As) by CTk Theme Builder, the Author's details can be viewed via the Files > Provenance menu option.
For a new installation the application defaults to using the GreyGhost theme. If you are not comfortable with this theme, there are a number to choose from. Please be aware that after saving you preferences, the new theme will not come into effect until you re-launch CTk Theme Builder.
This option allows you to choose the Appearance Mode. Changing this effects a change to the Control Panel's appearance mode. Currently, Light and Dark modes are supported. Changing this has an instant effect, once the Save button is pressed. Be aware that the default theme, GreyGhost, will not appear to change when you switch appearance modes - this is by design.
By default tooltips are enabled. The application is quite generous with tooltips and you might find these useful. However, if you wish you can disable these via this option.
The Confirm cascade switch, when enabled, causes a pop-up dialogue, whenever a Cascade colours option is selected from the floating menu of one of the Theme Palette tiles (by right clicking the tile).
The dialogue informs of the widget properties, which will be updated to the tile colour, and asks whether you wish to proceed or not.
If the switch is disabled, then the colour cascade function proceeds without intervention.
If you wish to save some real-estate, you can disable colour palette labels. By default they are enabled, and you should see something similar to what is shown here:
If enabled, this causes the last theme you were working on to be automatically opened, when you next start CTk Theme Builder.
Linux users should be aware that by default the clipboard contents are emptied if the application is closed. However, there are tools such as Clipboard Manager, which can prevent this.
This option is disabled by default. When set to enabled, it activates the single left mouse click to be used to paste colours into a property colour, or palette tile. Be aware that if you enable this, it's all too easy to get mouse-click happy and perform an unintentional paste. If you want to play it safe, stick to using the right click -> context menu to perform a paste operation.
Changes to this preference, only take effect, when you restart the theme builder application.
Here you can adjust the Widget Scaling of the Control Panel. This has an immediate effect, once you hit Save.
Note that may wish to resize the Control Panel window, when the change is made. Once resized, CTk Theme Builder will remember the sizing, and display position, when you next start the app.
Here you can adjust the Widget Scaling of the Preview Panel. This has an immediate effect, once you hit Save.
Note that you may wish to resize the Preview Panel window, when the change is made. Once resized, CTk Theme Builder will remember the sizing, and display position, when you next start the app.
Here you can adjust the Widget Scaling of the QA (Quality Assurance) application. Unlike the previous two options, this does not have an immediate effect. This scaling is only actioned when you launch the quality assurance application.
Note that you may wish to resize the QA App window, when the change is made. Once resized, CTk Theme Builder will remember the sizing, and display position, when you next start the app.
This setting allows you to tune the shade step options, which are available when you right click a colour tile. The larger the value chosen, the bigger the colour shade step applied, when the Lighten Shade/Darken Shadeoptions are selected.
Shade Steps influence the behaviour demonstrated in the above image, which is taken from the Colour Mappings region of the Control Panel. This is covered later, in the Control Panel section.
This setting allows you to tune the behaviour of the colours generated in the Colour Harmonics dialogue. The larger the selected value, the bigger the difference in consecutive shades generated to the right side of the dialogue.
The Harmonics Panel is covered a little later.
This drop-down, allows you to choose which networking port, the application should use, to communicate instructions, between the Control Panel and the Preview Panel.
If you are wanting to run two instances (separate install locations) of CTk Theme Builder, at the same time, they cannot run on the same port number.
The default folder for storing your themes, is the ctk_theme_builder/user_themes folder. However you can elect to change this by clicking the Themes Folder icon. This will allow you to navigate to, and select an alternative location.
NOTE: If you change the theme location at any time, you will need to manually copy / paste your themes from the old location, to the new location, as required.
The Colour Harmonics panel, is accessed via the Tools menu, and only becomes available when you open a theme.
The idea behind it, is that you can generate colours, around which you can base a new theme.
Amongst other functions, right clicking the Keystone Colour tile, presents a Paste option, allowing you to seed a hex colour code, which is then used to generate complementary colours. The core generated colours are rendered below the Keystone Colour* on the left.
The tiles to the right are produced by taking the core colours, and copying them to the first row. Theses are then used to produce shade variants, with each successive row being darkened slightly, as you scan down from the top row of colours, to the bottom.
You can of course, copy one of the generated darker shades and paste it to the Keystone Colour, causing it to generate another set of shade variants.
The Colour Harmonics option is only available for themes created using CTk Theme Builder. If you need to access it for a file of different origin, you need to do a Save As, and edit the theme as per the new theme name.
The drop-down menu, below the Keystone Colour tile, allows you the choice of a number of harmony methods:
- Analogous (2)
- Complementary (1)
- Split-complementary (2)
- Triadic (2)
- Tetradic (3)
The numbers in parentheses, indicate the number of generated complementary colours, associated with the method chosen.
You can read more about the methods here
When pressed, the Copy to Palette button, causes the Keystone Colour, and the generated colours, immediately below it, to be copied to the Scratch tiles on the theme's Theme Palette display.
The Tag Keystone button, causes the Keystone colour and the chosen harmony method to be tagged to your theme. If you subsequently open the Colour Harmonics panel, for a given theme, the colours will be restored to the same state, as per when they were tagged.
The Merge Themes function allows you to create a new theme based upon two existing themes. It allows to to choose an appearance mode from each of the two selected themes, and combine them into a new theme. The dialogue looks like this:
As you can see, you can select the appearance mode required from each of your selected themes.
The "Map primary mode to", allows you to choose which appearance mode of the new theme, the selected primary theme's mode, should be mapped to. The secondary theme adopts the complementary mode to this selection. For example, if you map the primary theme's selections to the "Light" mode of the new theme, the secondary theme selections will be mapped to the "Dark" mode.
The new theme adopts all non-color properties from the primary theme selection.
About the About dialogue...
This is accessible, via the Tools menu.
Aside from a picture of a cute tekno-colour bear, the About dialogue is useful for confirming the versions of CTk Theme Builder & CustomTkinter you are working with.
If you are creating an issue on GitHub, you should quote the reported versions on the About dialogue.
Here we see the Control Panel. This is where the real work goes on.
The Main Controls are accessed via selections and buttons on the left hand side.
The entries we see under Widget Geometry are buttons which allow you to define the respective, non-colour, widget properties.
The area immediately below widget Geometry is the Theme Palette. This is basically a holding space for your common theme colours.
Finally the Colour Mappings region is where you assign colours to CustomTkinter widget properties.
We will go into detail, on these various regions, in the subsequent sections.
The first thing to note, is that as with the File menu options, until a theme has been opened, most of the buttons are disabled. CTk Theme Builder maintains the state of your session, and enables / disables buttons and options accordingly. For example, if you save your theme, the Save button becomes disabled until you modify your theme again.
This is a drop-down menu which allows you to select a theme, on which to begin work. The list is generated based upon entries in your user theme location (please see the Preferences section).
Note that a "TestCard" theme is automatically included when you install CTk Theme Builder. This intentionally includes some gaudy colours. If you are new to CustomTkinter theme files, you can use this as a scratch theme, to experiment and discover how widget property changes, effect changes in the widget rendering. Be aware that this theme will be overwritten whenever you perform an upgrade to the app.
This option allows you to switch the Preview Panel (covered in a later section) between the CustomTkinter Light and Dark modes.
This also causes the Theme Palette and Colour Mappings regions to update, to reflect the widget colour properties configured for the selected mode, for the theme that you are working on.
The default position for the Top Frame is set to enabled. If enabled this renders the Preview Panel, in such as way as to emulate the rendered widgets inside an embedded (top) frame.
When CustomTkinter renders a top frame, it uses the top_fg_color property to determine the frame's foreground colour. This is often a contrasting shade (or colour) to the parent frame's fg_colour.
It's a good idea to toggle this switch, to ensure that your widgets render well, in both modes.
You should occasionally enable this switch, to see how your widget colours render, when they have been disabled.
This allows you to ensure that the disabled text colour/shade is discernible against the containing frame's foreground colour.
The Properties View allows you to control the way widgets (or widget groupings) are presented for selection in the Filter View drop-down. There is a Basicview as well as a Categorised view. See the next section, for more details on these.
Depending on the Properties View setting, this drop-down menu allows you to control which properties are listed in the Colour Mappings region.
In Basic mode, you can select All, to render all property widgets, or you can select an individual widget.
In Categorised mode, you can also select All, or you can select groups of widgets, based on common attribute. For example, all widgets which allow text entry, or which have scrollable components.
In the above image, we have the Categorised view selected and we are filtering on widgets with buttons.
The Refresh Preview button, causes a full reload of the Preview Panel.
This can be useful where you have been changing the state of the widgets in the Preview Panel. For example, you may have entered text in a CTkEntry widget and wish to reset its state, such that it re-renders the placeholder text.
These buttons come into play, when you make changes to any of the following:
- Widget colour property tiles;
- Theme palette colour tiles;
- Any widget geometry changes.
These buttons allow you to undo changes, or redo undone changes one step at a time.
The Undo button and its File menu equivalent, only become enabled, when you make a property change, either by changing a theme palette colour, cascading a colour, from a theme palette tile, or by modifying a widget geometry. The Redo button and its File menu equivalent, only become active, whilst any changes have been undone. If you save the theme or use the Reset button, both Undo and Redo functions will be disabled until further changes are made / undone.
The Undo and Redo buttons, are not able to roll back or redo changes, when you use the Sync Modes or Sync Palette buttons. Neither can you undo actions performed by the Flip modesoption, available via the File menu.
This allows you to roll back any changes to your last Save. When this is done, the Preview Panel is also flashed back to the reset state.
We all make mistakes ;o)
As this suggests, this allows you to create a brand new theme. When pressed a pop-up dialogue will be displayed, where you can enter the new theme name. When you click OK on the New Theme pop-up dialogue, the theme is created and automatically saved.
If you have been working on another theme, and have unsaved changes, a pop-up dialogue will appear, asking you if you wish to discard your changes.
The Sync Modes button, operates against the displayed widget colour properties, which you have currently selected via the Filter View, and which are rendered in the Colour Mappings region. It's effect is to copy the colour properties to the complementary appearance mode. For example, if you have Dark Mode selected, the colour properties will be copied over to the Light Mode property counter-parts.
Here we see an example, where we have selected the Categorised view and filtered based on widgets with borders:
We can see from the display, that we are working on the Dark appearance mode (Dark Mode button is a lighter colour - enabled). The properties showing are all border properties for various widget types. Using the Sync Modes here, would result in the border colours on display, being copied to the Light mode properties.
This operation does not include the Theme Palette properties.
The Theme Palette holds a separate set of colours, for each of your theme's appearance modes. This function behaves in a similar fashion to the Sync Modes button, except that it only effects changes to the Theme Palette colours.
Hopefully you will find the functionality of Save, Save As, Delete and Quit somewhat obvious. Needless to say, if you have any unsaved changes, you will be prompted with a choice of what you wish to do with them.
NOTE: You should use the CTk Theme Builder app to delete unwanted theme files. Deleting them from outside of the application, can lead to orphaned template files, accumulating on disk.
The Widget Geometry buttons allow you to target a particular widget type, and adjust its geometry properties (corner radius, border width etc).
To make adjustments, move the sliders and the rendered widget will respond, to provide a mini-preview or the effects of your changes.
Depending on the widget type, different property sliders may appear.
When you Save your changes, the preview panel will also update the rendering accordingly, for any matching widget types.
Depending on your methodology, you might find the Theme Palette, more or less useful. It's an area where you can persist colours, whilst switching between Filter View selections, as well as between theme maintenance sessions.
If you are more methodical, you can use it to plan your colours, in order to strive for better consistency. For example, you may want to use the same colour / shade for most of your widget borders.
Be aware that the Colour Harmonics dialogue has a copy to Palette* button. When pressed, this will cause the keystone colour, and the generated base colours, to be copied to the first tiles in the Theme Palette (Scratch1, Scratch2 etc. up to 4 colours in total, depending on the selected harmony method).
If you don't care for the labels which appear below the Theme Palette tiles, they can be switched off, via the Tools > Preferences menu selection.
If you right-click a tile in the Theme Palette region, you will be presented with a floating menu. This will provide options for copying, pasting or various options for adjusting the colour of the selected tile.
An inclusion to the floating menu, is the Cascade colours option. Depending on which label you launch the menu from, this option allows you to update the colour to a whole bunch of related widget properties. When selected, the default behaviour is for a pop-up dialogue to appear. This will inform you of the various widget properties, which will be subject to the colour assignment, and you will be asked to confirm the change.
Cascade colours does a lot of heavy lifting, especially in the early stages of theme development. As an example, consider the current border settings here:
Note that the border colour in the theme palette is a shade of grey.
By right clicking the grey tile we see the Cascade colour option: When selected we are prompted to confirm the action (you can disable the confirmation in Preferences, if desired):
Now with the one extra click, we get:
There are cascade options available for all the palette tiles, excepting the Scratch tiles. So for example, the Button tile colour, can be applied to button color, of all widgets with a button.
This last feature is arguably, one of the most powerful features of CTk Theme Builder.
Here is where you target and manage individual widget colour properties. This region reflects the colour properties of the widgets selected via the Properties View / Filter View widgets. Depending on your selection, you will see the widget colour properties, for one, several, or all widget types.
As with the Theme Palette tiles, floating menus are available, which allow you to perform operations, as we see here:
The Lighter Shade/Darker Shade options, cause incremental adjustments in the shade of the colour, based upon the Adjust Shade Step setting, as described under user Preferences.
As you can see there are multiplier options, which allow you to magnify the shade step adjustment.
The Lighter Shade/Darker Shade controls maintain the differential between the RGB channels. This means that as soon as one of the channels touches the min or max allowed values (decimal 0, 255), further adjustments have no effect.
So in the colour example above, we can see that the red channel is maxed out (0xff = 255). This would therefore block any Lighter Shade operations from having any effect. This is done, to prevent the colour from mutating.
By using the right mouse click, you can also Copy / Paste colours between tiles.
The Preview Panel is launched as soon as a theme is opened. This panel listens for instructions, sent by the Control Panel, which tell it what widget properties, to adjust within the display. It's job, is to make the task of maintaining themes as WYSIWYG as possible.
Whenever you change a widget property, whether that be a colour property or a property relating to the widget's geometry, a message is sent to the Preview Panel, instructing it as to what needs updating.
The only way to close the Preview Panel is via the Quit button, on the Control Panel interface. Doing so causes a message to be sent, telling it to close down.
Please refer to Known Issues & Behaviours for details on some behaviours of the Preview Panel.
The second CTkButton on the preview panel included an icon (eye-con), which shows as black when the appearance mode is set to Light, and white when the the appearance mode is set to Dark. This is to help you design in colours, with icons in mind, ensuring that your colours don't obscure icons.
This section covers widgets which are composites of other widgets. These are worth mentioning to avoid any confusion.
As you can guess by the name, this is an extension of the CTkFrame widget. With the exception of its label_fg_color property, its other property defaults are taken from CTkFrame and CTkScrollbar. Changing the properties of these widgets, will result in changes to the CTkScrollableFrame widget.
The CTkTabview widget is a composite of CTkFrame and CTkSegmentedButton. It has no properties of its own in a theme file and so inherits its defaults from these two widget types.
There are several new features in 2.4:
- New Undo / Redo buttons, allowing individual changes to be undone or re-done.
- Improved Theme Palette management - we now transparently allow switching appearance modes, without losing palette changes. These previously had to be saved, before switching modes, so as not to lose changes.
- The ability to adjust the network port, on which CTk Theme builder, controls the Preview Panel.
- When deleting a theme, CTk Theme Builder, now greys out colours in the Preview Panel.
- Windows users may have noticed an issue with the tool-tips, causing the background text and tool-tip text to be muddled together. This is now fixed.
- An issue with the button_length adjustment for CTkSwitch has been fixed. This was causing any changes to not be visualised.
- Fixed a scaling bug in QA app, which caused geometry to get messed up.
- When doing a Save As, the theme was not "remembered" and auto opened upon application launch, When Load Last Theme was enabled in preferences - this is now fixed.
- Supplied themes have been improved - mainly around disabled text colouration.
- Fix widget type display, in geometry dialogue (bottom right), for control panel themes which include a frame border. Text was blotting out part of border.
There is currently no method or theme property, to set disabled text colour for CTkLabel. When disabled, it currently defaults to what is presumably the underlying Tkinter default. An issue has been raised and it looks like a fix will be made available.
An issue has been raised on the CustomTkinter, GITHub repository where CTkSlider.configure(button_corner_radius=...) is called
CTk 5.2.0: Exception encountered when configuring CTkSlider, button_corner_radius #1790. A fix is pending.
For the time being, adjustments to the button corner radius of CTkSlider, have no visual effect inside the geometry pup up. You can however set a value, save it and hit the Refresh button, to preview the effect in the Preview Panel.
Adjusting the button length causes:
raise ValueError(f"{list(kwargs_dict.keys())} are not supported arguments. Look at the documentation for supported arguments.")
ValueError: ['button_length'] are not supported arguments. Look at the documentation for supported arguments.
This has been raised as Issue #1905, https://github.com/TomSchimansky/CustomTkinter/issues/1905 As a partial workaround, CTk Theme Builder, forces a refresh of the Preview Panel, so that the effect of the adjustment can be seen. However, you will not see the changes in rel time, within the CTkSlider geometry dialogue.
In addition, there is the DropdownMenu theme property to consider. You can perhaps think of this as a sub-component, used by CTkComboBox and CTkOptionMenu. The bottom line is that it is not a widget in its own right. This means that to effect any changes made to it in the Control Panel, we currently perform a similar action, to that described above - tearing down and rebuilding the widgets in the Preview Panel. Unfortunately these widget types don't currently have configurable properties, allowing the drop-down properties to be changed on the fly.
Linux users should be aware that by default the clipboard contents are emptied if the application is closed. However, there are tools, such as Clipboard Manager, which can prevent this.
When working in the Colour Mappings region, by using the right mouse click, you can Copy / Paste colours between tiles. However for widget properties which have a value set to "transparent", for example CTkLabel > fg_color, this functionality is disabled. In addition the Colour Picker is also disabled.
This will likely be addressed in a future version.