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Custom Widget Plugin#

Creating a custom widget plugin for Qt Designer.

../_images/customwidgetplugin-example.webp

In this example, the custom widget used is based on the Analog Clock example , and does not provide any custom signals or slots.

Preparation#

To provide a custom widget that can be used with Qt Designer, we need to supply a self-contained implementation and provide a plugin interface. In this example, we reuse the Analog Clock example for convenience.

Project files#

CMake#

The project files need to state that a plugin linking to the Qt Designer libraries is to be built:

find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core Gui UiPlugin Widgets)

qt_add_plugin(customwidgetplugin)
target_link_libraries(customwidgetplugin PUBLIC
    Qt::Core
    Qt::Gui
    Qt::UiPlugin
    Qt::Widgets
)

The link libraries list specifies Qt::UiPlugin. This indicates that the plugin uses the abstract interfaces QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface and QDesignerCustomWidgetCollectionInterface only and has no linkage to the Qt Designer libraries. When accessing other interfaces of Qt Designer that have linkage, Designer should be used instead; this ensures that the plugin dynamically links to the Qt Designer libraries and has a run-time dependency on them.

The following example shows how to add the header and source files of the widget:

target_sources(customwidgetplugin PRIVATE
    analogclock.cpp analogclock.h
    customwidgetplugin.cpp customwidgetplugin.h
)

We provide an implementation of the plugin interface so that Qt Designer can use the custom widget.

It is also important to ensure that the plugin is installed in a location that is searched by Qt Designer. We do this by specifying a target path for the project and adding it to the list of items to install:

set(INSTALL_EXAMPLEDIR "${QT6_INSTALL_PREFIX}/${QT6_INSTALL_PLUGINS}/designer")        install(TARGETS customwidgetplugin
    RUNTIME DESTINATION "${INSTALL_EXAMPLEDIR}"
    BUNDLE DESTINATION "${INSTALL_EXAMPLEDIR}"
    LIBRARY DESTINATION "${INSTALL_EXAMPLEDIR}"
)

The custom widget is created as a library. It will be installed alongside the other Qt Designer plugins when the project is installed (using ninja install or an equivalent installation procedure).

For more information about plugins, see the How to Create Qt Plugins documentation.

qmake#

The following example shows how to link a plugin to the Qt Designer libraries:

CONFIG      += plugin
TEMPLATE    = lib
QT          += widgets uiplugin

The QT variable contains the keyword uiplugin, which is the equivalent of the Qt::UiPlugin library.

The following example shows how to add the header and source files of the widget:

HEADERS     = analogclock.h \
              customwidgetplugin.h
SOURCES     = analogclock.cpp \
              customwidgetplugin.cpp
OTHER_FILES += analogclock.json

The following example shows how to install a plugin to the Qt Designer's plugin path:

TARGET = $$qtLibraryTarget($$TARGET)

target.path = $$[QT_INSTALL_PLUGINS]/designer
INSTALLS += target

AnalogClock Class Definition and Implementation#

The AnalogClock class is defined and implemented in exactly the same way as described in the Analog Clock example . Since the class is self-contained, and does not require any external configuration, it can be used without modification as a custom widget in Qt Designer.

AnalogClockPlugin Class Definition#

The AnalogClock class is exposed to Qt Designer through the AnalogClockPlugin class. This class inherits from both QObject and the QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface class, and implements an interface defined by QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface .

To ensure that Qt recognizes the widget as a plugin, export relevant information about the widget by adding the Q_PLUGIN_METADATA() macro:

class AnalogClockPlugin(QObject, QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface):

    Q_OBJECT
    Q_PLUGIN_METADATA(IID "org.qt-project.Qt.QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface")
    Q_INTERFACES(QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface)
# public
    AnalogClockPlugin = explicit(QObject parent = None)
    bool isContainer() override
    bool isInitialized() override
    QIcon icon() override
    QString domXml() override
    QString group() override
    QString includeFile() override
    QString name() override
    QString toolTip() override
    QString whatsThis() override
    QWidget createWidget(QWidget parent) override
    def initialize(core):
# private
    initialized = False

The functions provide information about the widget that Qt Designer can use in the widget box . The initialized private member variable is used to record whether the plugin has been initialized by Qt Designer.

Note that the only part of the class definition that is specific to this particular custom widget is the class name.

AnalogClockPlugin Implementation#

The class constructor simply calls the QObject base class constructor and sets the initialized variable to false.

def __init__(self, parent):
    super().__init__(parent)

Qt Designer will initialize the plugin when it is required by calling the initialize() function:

def initialize(self, */):

    if initialized:
        return
    initialized = True

In this example, the initialized private variable is tested, and only set to true if the plugin is not already initialized. Although, this plugin does not require any special code to be executed when it is initialized, we could include such code after the test for initialization.

The isInitialized() function lets Qt Designer know whether the plugin is ready for use:

def isInitialized(self):

    return initialized

Instances of the custom widget are supplied by the createWidget() function. The implementation for the analog clock is straightforward:

QWidget AnalogClockPlugin.createWidget(QWidget parent)

    return AnalogClock(parent)

In this case, the custom widget only requires a parent to be specified. If other arguments need to be supplied to the widget, they can be introduced here.

The following functions provide information for Qt Designer to use to represent the widget in the widget box. The name() function returns the name of class that provides the custom widget:

def name(self):

    return "AnalogClock"

The group() function is used to describe the type of widget that the custom widget belongs to:

def group(self):

    return "Display Widgets [Examples]"

The widget plugin will be placed in a section identified by its group name in Qt Designer's widget box. The icon used to represent the widget in the widget box is returned by the icon() function:

def icon(self):

    return {}

In this case, we return a null icon to indicate that we have no icon that can be used to represent the widget.

A tool tip and “What’s This?” help can be supplied for the custom widget’s entry in the widget box. The toolTip() function should return a short message describing the widget:

def toolTip(self):

    return {}

The whatsThis() function can return a longer description:

def whatsThis(self):

    return {}

The isContainer() function tells Qt Designer whether the widget is supposed to be used as a container for other widgets. If not, Qt Designer will not allow the user to place widgets inside it.

def isContainer(self):

    return False

Most widgets in Qt can contain child widgets, but it only makes sense to use dedicated container widgets for this purpose in Qt Designer. By returning false, we indicate that the custom widget cannot hold other widgets; if we returned true, Qt Designer would allow other widgets to be placed inside the analog clock and a layout to be defined.

The domXml() function provides a way to include default settings for the widget in the standard XML format used by Qt Designer. In this case, we only specify the widget’s geometry:

def domXml(self):

    return uR"(
<ui language="c++">
  <widget class="AnalogClock" name="analogClock">
)"
R"(
    <property name="geometry">
      <rect>
        <x>0</x>
        <y>0</y>
        <width>100</width>
        <height>100</height>
      </rect>
    </property>
")
R"(
    <property name="toolTip">
      <string>The current time</string>
    </property>
    <property name="whatsThis">
      <string>The analog clock widget displays the current time.</string>
    </property>
  </widget>
</ui>
)"_s

If the widget provides a reasonable size hint, it is not necessary to define it here. In addition, returning an empty string instead of a <widget> element will tell Qt Designer not to install the widget in the widget box.

To make the analog clock widget usable by applications, we implement the includeFile() function to return the name of the header file containing the custom widget class definition:

def includeFile(self):

    return "analogclock.h"

Example project @ code.qt.io