QOffscreenSurface#

The QOffscreenSurface class represents an offscreen surface in the underlying platform. More

Inheritance diagram of PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface

Synopsis#

Functions#

Signals#

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#

QOffscreenSurface is intended to be used with QOpenGLContext to allow rendering with OpenGL in an arbitrary thread without the need to create a QWindow .

Even though the surface is typically renderable, the surface’s pixels are not accessible. QOffscreenSurface should only be used to create OpenGL resources such as textures or framebuffer objects.

An application will typically use QOffscreenSurface to perform some time-consuming tasks in a separate thread in order to avoid stalling the main rendering thread. Resources created in the QOffscreenSurface ‘s context can be shared with the main OpenGL context. Some common use cases are asynchronous texture uploads or rendering into a QOpenGLFramebufferObject .

How the offscreen surface is implemented depends on the underlying platform, but it will typically use a pixel buffer (pbuffer). If the platform doesn’t implement or support offscreen surfaces, QOffscreenSurface will use an invisible QWindow internally.

Note

Due to the fact that QOffscreenSurface is backed by a QWindow on some platforms, cross-platform applications must ensure that create() is only called on the main (GUI) thread. The QOffscreenSurface is then safe to be used with makeCurrent() on other threads, but the initialization and destruction must always happen on the main (GUI) thread.

Note

In order to create an offscreen surface that is guaranteed to be compatible with a given context and window, make sure to set the format to the context’s or the window’s actual format, that is, the QSurfaceFormat returned from format() or format() after the context or window has been created. Passing the format returned from requestedFormat() to setFormat() may result in an incompatible offscreen surface since the underlying windowing system interface may offer a different set of configurations for window and pbuffer surfaces.

Note

Some platforms may utilize a surfaceless context extension (for example EGL_KHR_surfaceless_context) when available. In this case there will be no underlying native surface. For the use cases of QOffscreenSurface (rendering to FBOs, texture upload) this is not a problem.

class PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface([screen=None[, parent=None]])#
Parameters:

Creates an offscreen surface for the targetScreen with the given parent.

The underlying platform surface is not created until create() is called.

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.create()#

Allocates the platform resources associated with the offscreen surface.

It is at this point that the surface format set using setFormat() gets resolved into an actual native surface.

Call destroy() to free the platform resources if necessary.

Note

Some platforms require this function to be called on the main (GUI) thread.

See also

destroy()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.destroy()#

Releases the native platform resources associated with this offscreen surface.

See also

create()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.isValid()#
Return type:

bool

Returns true if this offscreen surface is valid; otherwise returns false.

The offscreen surface is valid if the platform resources have been successfully allocated.

See also

create()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.requestedFormat()#
Return type:

PySide6.QtGui.QSurfaceFormat

Returns the requested surfaceformat of this offscreen surface.

If the requested format was not supported by the platform implementation, the requestedFormat will differ from the actual offscreen surface format.

This is the value set with setFormat() .

See also

setFormat() format()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.resolveInterface(name, revision)#
Parameters:
  • name – str

  • revision – int

Return type:

void

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.screen()#
Return type:

PySide6.QtGui.QScreen

Returns the screen to which the offscreen surface is connected.

See also

setScreen()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.screenChanged(screen)#
Parameters:

screenPySide6.QtGui.QScreen

This signal is emitted when an offscreen surface’s screen changes, either by being set explicitly with setScreen() , or automatically when the window’s screen is removed.

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.setFormat(format)#
Parameters:

formatPySide6.QtGui.QSurfaceFormat

Sets the offscreen surface format.

The surface format will be resolved in the create() function. Calling this function after create() will not re-resolve the surface format of the native surface.

See also

format() create() destroy()

PySide6.QtGui.QOffscreenSurface.setScreen(screen)#
Parameters:

screenPySide6.QtGui.QScreen

Sets the screen to which the offscreen surface is connected.

If the offscreen surface has been created, it will be recreated on the newScreen.

See also

screen()