Moon4Light a2bf343c82 Python: Completed article Creating GUI's in Python 3 (#29633)
* Python: Completed article Creating GUI's in Python 3

In this file I've completed the stub article which is about Creating GUI's in Python 3.

* Update index.md
2019-01-30 14:06:03 -08:00

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---
title: Creating GUI's in Python 3
---
## Popular ways for developing GUI's in Python 3
Python provides various interfaces for creating Graphical User Interfaces(GUI' s). Some of them popular ways are as under:
**1. Tkinter**
It is the standard builds of Python include an object-oriented interface to the Tcl/Tk widget set, called tkinter. This is probably the easiest to install and use (since it comes included with most binary distributions of Python).
**2. wxPython**
It is an open source, portable GUI class library written in C++ that provides a native look and feel on a number of platforms, with Windows, Mac OS X, GTK, X11, all listed as current stable targets. Language bindings are available for a number of languages including Python, Perl, Ruby, etc.
**3. Qt**
It has bindings available for the Qt toolkit (using either PyQt or PySide) and for KDE (PyKDE4). PyQt is currently more mature than PySide, but you must buy a PyQt license from Riverbank Computing if you want to write proprietary applications. PySide is free for all applications.
**4. Kivy**
It is a cross-platform GUI library supporting both desktop operating systems (Windows, macOS, Linux) and mobile devices (Android, iOS). It is written in Python and Cython, and can use a range of windowing backends.
Kivy is free and open source software distributed under the MIT license.
**5. Gtk+**
The GObject introspection bindings for Python allow you to write GTK+ 3 applications.
The older PyGtk bindings for the Gtk+ 2 toolkit have been implemented by James Henstridge.
## Resources
* [Tkinter](https://docs.python.org/3/library/tk.html)
* [wxWidgets](https://www.wxwidgets.org)
* [Qt]( https://www.qt.io/qt-for-python)
* [Gtk+](http://www.pygtk.org)