I am new to QT and I am creating a widget that has a gridlayout. The gridlayout contains a matrix of QLineEdit widgets. The window resizes to fit the layout but when layout is large it goes off screen. When I maximize the screen, the QLineEdit widgets are resized to fit the screen and for large layouts they become extremely small.
I want to be able to resize the window without resizing the QLineEdit widgets and add scroll bars to navigate.
I tried the following with no luck:
Window->resize(QSize(500,500));
QScrollArea *scrollArea = new QScrollArea;
scrollArea->setWidget(Window);
where window is the widget containing the layout. Also, the window closes when after executing "scrollArea->setWidget(Window);" and I dont why.
If someone can help me out I would really appreciate it.
Thank You!
For disabling the vertical resize on the widgets, why don't you just use the setFixedHeight() method on the widgets?
For the menu bar, why don't you take it out of the widget that is scrollable. You can have a layout for the window that contains the menu bar and then the widget that contains everything else (scrollable part). Is that what you are looking for?
I fixed my problem by creating a QMainWindow with the menu bar. Then created a widget which includes the layout, set the Scroll Area to the widget. Finally set the central widget of the main widow to the scroll area.
Related
I'm getting started with Qt and decided to build a full-screen text editor. I want to have a button (button with arrow in screenshot) attached to a QDockWidget which opens and closes it so the button is always visible to the right side of the screen and stay anchored to it when dock is visible or resized.
My current app is a simple fullscreen textEdit set to centeralwidget in Mainwindow.
I haven't found a way to do this yet with layouts or existing addAnchor() functions so any help or direction is appreciated.
You can achieve what you want by using a container for your text edit and the button. A QWidget instance can be used as an "invisible"*** container for other widgets.
So in Qt Designer you add a widget as a central widget of the main-window, inside this widget you add the text edit and the button, then you set a vertical layout for this container widget.
Don't forget to restrict the docking widget to only dock to the right side, you can do that with: dock->setAllowedAreas(Qt::DockWidgetArea::RightDockWidgetArea); //assuming dock is the pointer to your QDockWidget.
In case you want the dockWidget to be able to dock to any side and the button to follow, you can do that too, but it get a little bit more complicated. Basically you need to connect a slot to dockLocationChanged of your dockWidget and based on where it's docked you need to set-up a new layout for the container widget to be vertical or horizontal and the order of the textEdit and the button based on the side the dock happened.
LE:*** you will most likely need to set the margins you want, since both the widget and it's layout can have them and the actual content might have higher spacing than you want.
I have two Qt widgets in the window. One of them is QDockWidget, and another one is just QWidget.
When I drag the QDockWidget, the default behaviour of the another widget is moving without changing its size. And I want it to fill the whole window except dock widget, and to change its size programmatically when I drag QDockWidget. Hwo to do it better?
The solution was to set container horizontal policy as "fixed"
I want to make a QToolBar have 3 columns of buttons when docked on the left side of the QMainWindow, but have 1 row when docked on the top of the main window. Is this possible?
I have a tried using a QToolBar with a custom layout, but the normal re-size behavior of the QToolBar doesn’t work (doesn’t hide widgets behind an expand button when its too small). The non-working expand button isn’t that big of a deal, but the bigger problem is that the custom layout prevents the main window from being smaller than the toolbar.
I was able to get my desired behavior by putting each row of Tool Buttons in a QHBoxLayout, putting that layout in a empty QWidget, and calling toolBar->addWidget( widget ) for each row. This gives me a grid toolbar when the toolbar is mounted on the left, and single horizontal bar when mounted on the top.
What I'm looking to do is use the Qt Dock and the Dock widgets as they are, except I would like the show only the widget as opposed to the whole Dock.
to clarify: when a docked widget is brought into view, the whole dock appears and the widget sits on the dock. I would like to hide the portion of the dock which isn't being occupied by the widget, is there any way to do that?
Please let me know if I can clarify further.
I don't think it is feasible with Dock widgets. There are 4 fixed dock areas on a QMainWindow which are shown if a dock widget is dropped onto them.
What you might try is to disable actual docking with void setAllowedAreas(Qt::NoDockWidgetArea) and handle "snapping" yourself with void QWidget::moveEvent ( QMoveEvent * event ), snapping the widget to the main window edges if it comes within x pixels of it.
Hummm this seems difficult...
For a start, use QDockWidget::setTitleBarWidget ( QWidget * widget ) to set a custom title bar. You can create a special widget which has a small minimum size, minimum size hint, and which is not painted (or painted as invisible)...
Hello everyone, here is my code:
myplot *p = new myplot(gao.structpayloadgraph,
gao1.structpayloadgraph,
gao.structcol-2, "payload");
ui->scrollArea->setVerticalScrollBarPolicy(Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff);
ui->scrollArea->setHorizontalScrollBarPolicy(Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff);
ui->scrollArea->setWidgetResizable(false);
p->resize(ui->scrollArea->size().width(), ui->scrollArea->size().height());
ui->scrollArea->setWidget(p);
I want p to take up the full available space of the scrollbar area and fit itself. However, the appearance looks 'squeezed' even though I called the resize function. What should I do to achieve the desired effect?
You have to treat the scroll area content widget as a normal QWidget. If you want automatic resize and you must use layouts in Qt. Try the following :
QVBoxLayout layout = new QVBoxLayout( ui->scrollAreaContent);
layout->setMargin(0);
layout->setContentsMargins(0,0,0,0);
layout->setSpacing(0);
ui->scrollAreaContent->setLayout( layout);
layout->addWidget(p);
NOTE: ui->scrollAreaContent is a guess, but I think you are using ui files and default content widget is named like that ...
Go to the top right of the QT creator designer screen (Object, Class), right click on the QScrollArea row and select the "Lay Out" menu item, choose a layout (eg vertical or horizontal layout), make sure that your QWidget has a minimum or above size policy. Your scroll widget should now resize with the layout.