QIODeviceBase#

Base class for QIODevice that provides flags describing the mode in which a device is opened. More

Inheritance diagram of PySide6.QtCore.QIODeviceBase

Inherited by: QTextStream, QIODevice, QSerialPort, QNetworkReply, QLocalSocket, QAbstractSocket, QUdpSocket, QTcpSocket, QProcess, QFileDevice, QSaveFile, QFile, QTemporaryFile, QDataStream, QSslSocket, QBuffer, QCoapReply, QCoapResourceDiscoveryReply, QBluetoothSocket

Note

This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE

Detailed Description#

class PySide6.QtCore.QIODeviceBase#
PySide6.QtCore.QIODeviceBase.OpenModeFlag#

(inherits enum.Flag) This enum is used with open() to describe the mode in which a device is opened. It is also returned by openMode() .

Constant

Description

QIODeviceBase.NotOpen

The device is not open.

QIODeviceBase.ReadOnly

The device is open for reading.

QIODeviceBase.WriteOnly

The device is open for writing. Note that, for file-system subclasses (e.g. QFile ), this mode implies Truncate unless combined with ReadOnly, Append or NewOnly.

QIODeviceBase.ReadWrite

The device is open for reading and writing.

QIODeviceBase.Append

The device is opened in append mode so that all data is written to the end of the file.

QIODeviceBase.Truncate

If possible, the device is truncated before it is opened. All earlier contents of the device are lost.

QIODeviceBase.Text

When reading, the end-of-line terminators are translated to ‘\n’. When writing, the end-of-line terminators are translated to the local encoding, for example ‘\r\n’ for Win32.

QIODeviceBase.Unbuffered

Any buffer in the device is bypassed.

QIODeviceBase.NewOnly

Fail if the file to be opened already exists. Create and open the file only if it does not exist. There is a guarantee from the operating system that you are the only one creating and opening the file. Note that this mode implies WriteOnly, and combining it with ReadWrite is allowed. This flag currently only affects QFile . Other classes might use this flag in the future, but until then using this flag with any classes other than QFile may result in undefined behavior. (since Qt 5.11)

QIODeviceBase.ExistingOnly

Fail if the file to be opened does not exist. This flag must be specified alongside ReadOnly, WriteOnly, or ReadWrite. Note that using this flag with ReadOnly alone is redundant, as ReadOnly already fails when the file does not exist. This flag currently only affects QFile . Other classes might use this flag in the future, but until then using this flag with any classes other than QFile may result in undefined behavior. (since Qt 5.11)

Certain flags, such as Unbuffered and Truncate, are meaningless when used with some subclasses. Some of these restrictions are implied by the type of device that is represented by a subclass. In other cases, the restriction may be due to the implementation, or may be imposed by the underlying platform; for example, QTcpSocket does not support Unbuffered mode, and limitations in the native API prevent QFile from supporting Unbuffered on Windows.