![]() Self.table = Table(self.tableframe, dataframe=pd.DataFrame(), width=300, height=400) Self.tableframe = tk.Frame(self.rightframe, highlightbackground="blue", highlightthickness=5) Self.button3 = tk.Button(self.rightframeheader, text='Generate Plot', command=self.generatePlot, width=10) Self.button2 = tk.Button(self.rightframeheader, text='Clear', command=self.clear, width=10) ![]() Self.button1 = tk.Button(self.rightframeheader, text='Import CSV', command=self.import_csv, width=10) Self.rightframeheader = tk.Frame(self.rightframe, background="white") Self.leftframe = tk.Frame(self.main, background="white") Self.rightframe = tk.Frame(self.main, background="white") Self.main = tk.Frame(master, background="white") Now obviously this is a big problem, especially if you have several large libraries lying around which are not actually being used.įrom tkinter.filedialog import askopenfilename, asksaveasfileįrom _tkagg import FigureCanvasTkAggįrom llections import PatchCollection Regardless of whether they are actually needed, or not. When we normally use Pyinstaller to bundle our applications, it ends up including ALL of the libraries that we have installed. ![]() Now you might have already put two-and-two together and realized the problem here. Running this on my old device might have given me double the above amount. And this is on a relatively new Python installation (3-4 months old). That was quite a long list right? I don’t even recognize half of those libraries (they were installed as dependencies). ![]()
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