Well most people with Perl on Windows, get it from ActiveState.
Tk comes standard with ActiveStatePerl.
Here is a sample to get you started.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
use strict;
use Tk;
my @types =(
["All files", '*'],
["C files", [qw/.c++ .cpp .c/]],
["Log files", [qw/.log/]],,
["Text files", [qw/.txt/]],
);
my $mw = new MainWindow ( ) ;
my @files;
$mw -> Button ( -text => 'Select Files ' ,
-command => \&select_files
)-> pack(-padx=>5, -pady=>5) ;
MainLoop ( ) ;
sub select_files {
my $return_ref = $mw ->getOpenFile (
-initialdir => '.',
-filetypes => \@types,
-multiple => 1) ;
foreach my $file( @{$return_ref} ){
print "Result ", $file, "\n" ;
}
}
I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth.
flash japh
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