14.11.2 Panel Objects
Panel objects, as returned by new_panel() above, are windows with a stacking order. There's always a window associated with a panel which determines the content, while the panel methods are responsible for the window's depth in the panel stack.
Panel objects have the following methods:
- Returns the panel above the current panel.
- Returns the panel below the current panel.
- Push the panel to the bottom of the stack.
- Returns true if the panel is hidden (not visible), false otherwise.
- Hide the panel. This does not delete the object, it just makes the window on screen invisible.
-
Move the panel to the screen coordinates
(y, x)
.
- Change the window associated with the panel to the window win.
- Set the panel's user pointer to obj. This is used to associate an arbitrary piece of data with the panel, and can be any Python object.
- Display the panel (which might have been hidden).
- Push panel to the top of the stack.
- Returns the user pointer for the panel. This might be any Python object.
- Returns the window object associated with the panel.