# screen_change.py Minimal micro-gui demo showing a Button causing a screen change. # Released under the MIT License (MIT). See LICENSE. # Copyright (c) 2021 Peter Hinch # hardware_setup must be imported before other modules because of RAM use. import hardware_setup # Create a display instance from gui.core.ugui import Screen, ssd from gui.widgets import Button, CloseButton, Label from gui.core.writer import CWriter # Font for CWriter import gui.fonts.arial10 as font from gui.core.colors import * # Defining a button in this way enables it to be re-used on # multiple Screen instances. Note that a Screen class is # passed, not an instance. def fwdbutton(wri, row, col, cls_screen, text='Next'): def fwd(button): Screen.change(cls_screen) # Callback Button(wri, row, col, callback = fwd, fgcolor = BLACK, bgcolor = GREEN, text = text, shape = RECTANGLE) wri = CWriter(ssd, font, GREEN, BLACK, verbose=False) # This screen overlays BaseScreen. class BackScreen(Screen): def __init__(self): super().__init__() Label(wri, 2, 2, 'New screen.') CloseButton(wri) class BaseScreen(Screen): def __init__(self): super().__init__() Label(wri, 2, 2, 'Base screen.') fwdbutton(wri, 40, 2, BackScreen) CloseButton(wri) def test(): print('Screen change demo.') Screen.change(BaseScreen) # Pass class, not instance! test()