class QGraphicsWidget

The QGraphicsWidget class is the base class for all widget items in a QGraphicsScene . More

Inheritance diagram of PySide6.QtWidgets.QGraphicsWidget

Inherited by: QGraphicsProxyWidget, QLegend, QChart, QPolarChart

Synopsis

Properties

Methods

Virtual methods

Slots

Signals

Static functions

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

QGraphicsWidget is an extended base item that provides extra functionality over QGraphicsItem . It is similar to QWidget in many ways:

Unlike QGraphicsItem , QGraphicsWidget is not an abstract class; you can create instances of a QGraphicsWidget without having to subclass it. This approach is useful for widgets that only serve the purpose of organizing child widgets into a layout.

QGraphicsWidget can be used as a base item for your own custom item if you require advanced input focus handling, e.g., tab focus and activation, or layouts.

Since QGraphicsWidget resembles QWidget and has similar API, it is easier to port a widget from QWidget to QGraphicsWidget , instead of QGraphicsItem .

Note

QWidget -based widgets can be directly embedded into a QGraphicsScene using QGraphicsProxyWidget .

Noticeable differences between QGraphicsWidget and QWidget are:

QGraphicsWidget

QWidget

Coordinates and geometry are defined with qreals (doubles or floats, depending on the platform).

QWidget uses integer geometry (QPoint, QRect).

The widget is already visible by default; you do not have to call show() to display the widget.

QWidget is hidden by default until you call show() .

A subset of widget attributes are supported.

All widget attributes are supported.

A top-level item’s style defaults to style

A top-level widget’s style defaults to style

Graphics View provides a custom drag and drop framework, different from QWidget .

Standard drag and drop framework.

Widget items do not support modality.

Full modality support.

QGraphicsWidget supports a subset of Qt’s widget attributes, (Qt::WidgetAttribute), as shown in the table below. Any attributes not listed in this table are unsupported, or otherwise unused.

Widget Attribute

Usage

Qt::WA_SetLayoutDirection

Set by setLayoutDirection() , cleared by unsetLayoutDirection() . You can test this attribute to check if the widget has been explicitly assigned a layoutDirection . If the attribute is not set, the layoutDirection() is inherited.

Qt::WA_RightToLeft

Toggled by setLayoutDirection() . Inherited from the parent/scene. If set, the widget’s layout will order horizontally arranged widgets from right to left.

Qt::WA_SetStyle

Set and cleared by setStyle() . If this attribute is set, the widget has been explicitly assigned a style. If it is unset, the widget will use the scene’s or the application’s style.

Qt::WA_Resized

Set by setGeometry() and resize() .

Qt::WA_SetPalette

Set by setPalette() .

Qt::WA_SetFont

Set by setFont() .

Qt::WA_WindowPropagation

Enables propagation to window widgets.

Although QGraphicsWidget inherits from both QObject and QGraphicsItem , you should use the functions provided by QGraphicsItem , not QObject, to manage the relationships between parent and child items. These functions control the stacking order of items as well as their ownership.

Note

The QObject::parent() should always return None for QGraphicsWidgets, but this policy is not strictly defined.

Note

Properties can be used directly when from __feature__ import true_property is used or via accessor functions otherwise.

property autoFillBackgroundᅟ: bool

This property holds whether the widget background is filled automatically.

If enabled, this property will cause Qt to fill the background of the widget before invoking the paint() method. The color used is defined by the QPalette::Window color role from the widget’s palette.

In addition, Windows are always filled with QPalette::Window, unless the WA_OpaquePaintEvent or WA_NoSystemBackground attributes are set.

By default, this property is false.

See also

WA_NoSystemBackground

Access functions:
property focusPolicyᅟ: Qt.FocusPolicy

This property holds the way the widget accepts keyboard focus.

The focus policy is Qt::TabFocus if the widget accepts keyboard focus by tabbing, Qt::ClickFocus if the widget accepts focus by clicking, Qt::StrongFocus if it accepts both, and Qt::NoFocus (the default) if it does not accept focus at all.

You must enable keyboard focus for a widget if it processes keyboard events. This is normally done from the widget’s constructor. For instance, the QLineEdit constructor calls setFocusPolicy(Qt::StrongFocus).

If you enable a focus policy (i.e., not Qt::NoFocus), QGraphicsWidget will automatically enable the ItemIsFocusable flag. Setting Qt::NoFocus on a widget will clear the ItemIsFocusable flag. If the widget currently has keyboard focus, the widget will automatically lose focus.

See also

focusInEvent() focusOutEvent() keyPressEvent() keyReleaseEvent() enabled

Access functions:
property fontᅟ: QFont

This property holds the widgets’ font.

This property provides the widget’s font.

QFont consists of font properties that have been explicitly defined and properties implicitly inherited from the widget’s parent. Hence, font() can return a different font compared to the one set with setFont(). This scheme allows you to define single entries in a font without affecting the font’s inherited entries.

When a widget’s font changes, it resolves its entries against its parent widget. If the widget does not have a parent widget, it resolves its entries against the scene. The widget then sends itself a FontChange event and notifies all its descendants so that they can resolve their fonts as well.

By default, this property contains the application’s default font.

See also

font() font resolve()

Access functions:
property geometryᅟ: QRectF

This property holds the geometry of the widget.

Sets the item’s geometry to rect. The item’s position and size are modified as a result of calling this function. The item is first moved, then resized.

A side effect of calling this function is that the widget will receive a move event and a resize event. Also, if the widget has a layout assigned, the layout will activate.

See also

geometry() resize()

Access functions:
property layoutᅟ: QGraphicsLayout

This property holds The layout of the widget.

Any existing layout manager is deleted before the new layout is assigned. If layout is None, the widget is left without a layout. Existing subwidgets’ geometries will remain unaffected.

QGraphicsWidget takes ownership of layout.

All widgets that are currently managed by layout or all of its sublayouts, are automatically reparented to this item. The layout is then invalidated, and the child widget geometries are adjusted according to this item’s geometry() and contentsMargins(). Children who are not explicitly managed by layout remain unaffected by the layout after it has been assigned to this widget.

If no layout is currently managing this widget, layout() will return None.

Access functions:
property layoutDirectionᅟ: Qt.LayoutDirection

This property holds the layout direction for this widget..

This property modifies this widget’s and all of its descendants’ Qt::WA_RightToLeft attribute. It also sets this widget’s Qt::WA_SetLayoutDirection attribute.

The widget’s layout direction determines the order in which the layout manager horizontally arranges subwidgets of this widget. The default value depends on the language and locale of the application, and is typically in the same direction as words are read and written. With Qt::LeftToRight, the layout starts placing subwidgets from the left side of this widget towards the right. Qt::RightToLeft does the opposite - the layout will place widgets starting from the right edge moving towards the left.

Subwidgets inherit their layout direction from the parent. Top-level widget items inherit their layout direction from QGraphicsScene::layoutDirection. If you change a widget’s layout direction by calling setLayoutDirection(), the widget will send itself a LayoutDirectionChange event, and then propagate the new layout direction to all its descendants.

See also

layoutDirection layoutDirection

Access functions:
property maximumSizeᅟ: QSizeF

This property holds the maximum size of the widget.

Access functions:

property minimumSizeᅟ: QSizeF

This property holds the minimum size of the widget.

Access functions:

property paletteᅟ: QPalette

This property holds the widget’s palette.

This property provides the widget’s palette. The palette provides colors and brushes for color groups (e.g., QPalette::Button) and states (e.g., QPalette::Inactive), loosely defining the general look of the widget and its children.

QPalette consists of color groups that have been explicitly defined, and groups that are implicitly inherited from the widget’s parent. Because of this, palette() can return a different palette than what has been set with setPalette(). This scheme allows you to define single entries in a palette without affecting the palette’s inherited entries.

When a widget’s palette changes, it resolves its entries against its parent widget, or if it doesn’t have a parent widget, it resolves against the scene. It then sends itself a PaletteChange event, and notifies all its descendants so they can resolve their palettes as well.

By default, this property contains the application’s default palette.

See also

palette resolve()

Access functions:
property preferredSizeᅟ: QSizeF

This property holds the preferred size of the widget.

Access functions:

property sizeᅟ: QSizeF

This property holds the size of the widget.

Calling resize() resizes the widget to a size bounded by minimumSize() and maximumSize() . This property only affects the widget’s width and height (e.g., its right and bottom edges); the widget’s position and top-left corner remains unaffected.

Resizing a widget triggers the widget to immediately receive a GraphicsSceneResize event with the widget’s old and new size. If the widget has a layout assigned when this event arrives, the layout will be activated and it will automatically update any child widgets’s geometry.

This property does not affect any layout of the parent widget. If the widget itself is managed by a parent layout; e.g., it has a parent widget with a layout assigned, that layout will not activate.

By default, this property contains a size with zero width and height.

Access functions:
property sizePolicyᅟ: QSizePolicy

This property holds the size policy for the widget.

Access functions:

property windowFlagsᅟ: Combination of Qt.WindowType

This property holds the widget’s window flags.

Window flags are a combination of a window type (e.g., Qt::Dialog) and several flags giving hints on the behavior of the window. The behavior is platform-dependent.

By default, this property contains no window flags.

Windows are panels. If you set the Qt::Window flag, the ItemIsPanel flag will be set automatically. If you clear the Qt::Window flag, the ItemIsPanel flag is also cleared. Note that the ItemIsPanel flag can be set independently of Qt::Window.

See also

isWindow() isPanel()

Access functions:
property windowTitleᅟ: str

This property holds This property holds the window title (caption)..

This property is only used for windows.

By default, if no title has been set, this property contains an empty string.

Access functions:
__init__([parent=None[, wFlags=Qt.WindowFlags()]])
Parameters:

Constructs a QGraphicsWidget instance. The optional parent argument is passed to QGraphicsItem ‘s constructor. The optional wFlags argument specifies the widget’s window flags (e.g., whether the widget should be a window, a tool, a popup, etc).

actions()
Return type:

.list of QAction

Returns the (possibly empty) list of this widget’s actions.

See also

insertAction() removeAction() actions() associatedGraphicsWidgets()

addAction(action)
Parameters:

actionQAction

Appends the action action to this widget’s list of actions.

All QGraphicsWidgets have a list of QActions, however they can be represented graphically in many different ways. The default use of the QAction list (as returned by actions() ) is to create a context QMenu .

A QGraphicsWidget should only have one of each action and adding an action it already has will not cause the same action to be in the widget twice.

addActions(actions)
Parameters:

actions – .list of QAction

Appends the actions actions to this widget’s list of actions.

adjustSize()

Adjusts the size of the widget to its effective preferred size hint.

This function is called implicitly when the item is shown for the first time.

See also

effectiveSizeHint() MinimumSize

autoFillBackground()
Return type:

bool

Getter of property autoFillBackgroundᅟ .

changeEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQEvent

This event handler can be reimplemented to handle state changes.

The state being changed in this event can be retrieved through event.

Change events include: QEvent::ActivationChange, QEvent::EnabledChange, QEvent::FontChange, QEvent::StyleChange, QEvent::PaletteChange, QEvent::ParentChange, QEvent::LayoutDirectionChange, and QEvent::ContentsRectChange.

close()
Return type:

bool

Call this function to close the widget.

Returns true if the widget was closed; otherwise returns false. This slot will first send a QCloseEvent to the widget, which may or may not accept the event. If the event was ignored, nothing happens. If the event was accepted, it will hide() the widget.

If the widget has the Qt::WA_DeleteOnClose attribute set it will be deleted.

closeEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQCloseEvent

This event handler, for event, can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive widget close events. The default implementation accepts the event.

See also

close() QCloseEvent

focusNextPrevChild(next)
Parameters:

next – bool

Return type:

bool

Finds a new widget to give the keyboard focus to, as appropriate for Tab and Shift+Tab, and returns true if it can find a new widget; returns false otherwise. If next is true, this function searches forward; if next is false, it searches backward.

Sometimes, you will want to reimplement this function to provide special focus handling for your widget and its subwidgets. For example, a web browser might reimplement it to move its current active link forward or backward, and call the base implementation only when it reaches the last or first link on the page.

Child widgets call focusNextPrevChild() on their parent widgets, but only the window that contains the child widgets decides where to redirect focus. By reimplementing this function for an object, you gain control of focus traversal for all child widgets.

See also

focusPolicy()

focusPolicy()
Return type:

FocusPolicy

See also

setFocusPolicy()

Getter of property focusPolicyᅟ .

focusWidget()
Return type:

QGraphicsWidget

If this widget, a child or descendant of this widget currently has input focus, this function will return a pointer to that widget. If no descendant widget has input focus, None is returned.

font()
Return type:

QFont

See also

setFont()

Getter of property fontᅟ .

geometryChanged()

This signal gets emitted whenever the geometry is changed in setGeometry() .

Notification signal of property sizeᅟ .

getWindowFrameMargins()
Return type:

PyObject

Gets the widget’s window frame margins. The margins are stored in left, top, right and bottom as pointers to qreals. Each argument can be omitted by passing None.

grabKeyboardEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQEvent

This event handler, for event, can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive notifications for QEvent::GrabKeyboard events.

See also

grabKeyboard() grabMouse()

grabMouseEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQEvent

This event handler, for event, can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive notifications for QEvent::GrabMouse events.

See also

grabMouse() grabKeyboard()

grabShortcut(sequence[, context=Qt.WindowShortcut])
Parameters:
Return type:

int

Adds a shortcut to Qt’s shortcut system that watches for the given key sequence in the given context. If the context is Qt::ApplicationShortcut, the shortcut applies to the application as a whole. Otherwise, it is either local to this widget, Qt::WidgetShortcut, or to the window itself, Qt::WindowShortcut. For widgets that are not part of a window (i.e., top-level widgets and their children), Qt::WindowShortcut shortcuts apply to the scene.

If the same key sequence has been grabbed by several widgets, when the key sequence occurs a QEvent::Shortcut event is sent to all the widgets to which it applies in a non-deterministic order, but with the ``ambiguous’’ flag set to true.

Warning

You should not normally need to use this function; instead create QActions with the shortcut key sequences you require (if you also want equivalent menu options and toolbar buttons), or create QShortcuts if you just need key sequences. Both QAction and QShortcut handle all the event filtering for you, and provide signals which are triggered when the user triggers the key sequence, so are much easier to use than this low-level function.

hideEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQHideEvent

This event handler, for Hide events, is delivered after the widget has been hidden, for example, setVisible(false) has been called for the widget or one of its ancestors when the widget was previously shown.

You can reimplement this event handler to detect when your widget is hidden. Calling QEvent::accept() or QEvent::ignore() on event has no effect.

initStyleOption(option)
Parameters:

optionQStyleOption

Warning

This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.

Populates a style option object for this widget based on its current state, and stores the output in option. The default implementation populates option with the following properties.

Style Option Property

Value

state & State_Enabled

Corresponds to isEnabled() .

state & State_HasFocus

Corresponds to hasFocus() .

state & State_MouseOver

Corresponds to isUnderMouse() .

direction

Corresponds to layoutDirection() .

rect

Corresponds to rect() .toRect().

palette

Corresponds to palette() .

fontMetrics

Corresponds to QFontMetrics( font() ).

Subclasses of QGraphicsWidget should call the base implementation, and then test the type of option using qstyleoption_cast <>() or test Type before storing widget-specific options.

For example:

def initStyleOption(self, option):

    QGraphicsWidget.initStyleOption(option)
    if QStyleOptionGroupBox box = QStyleOptionGroupBox(option):
        # Add group box specific state.
        box.flat = isFlat()
        ...

See also

initFrom()

insertAction(before, action)
Parameters:

Inserts the action action to this widget’s list of actions, before the action before. It appends the action if before is None or before is not a valid action for this widget.

A QGraphicsWidget should only have one of each action.

insertActions(before, actions)
Parameters:
  • beforeQAction

  • actions – .list of QAction

Inserts the actions actions to this widget’s list of actions, before the action before. It appends the action if before is None or before is not a valid action for this widget.

A QGraphicsWidget can have at most one of each action.

isActiveWindow()
Return type:

bool

Returns true if this widget’s window is in the active window, or if the widget does not have a window but is in an active scene (i.e., a scene that currently has focus).

The active window is the window that either contains a child widget that currently has input focus, or that itself has input focus.

See also

activeWindow() setActiveWindow() isActive()

layout()
Return type:

QGraphicsLayout

Returns this widget’s layout, or None if no layout is currently managing this widget.

See also

setLayout()

Getter of property layoutᅟ .

layoutChanged()

Notification signal of property layoutᅟ .

layoutDirection()
Return type:

LayoutDirection

Getter of property layoutDirectionᅟ .

moveEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQGraphicsSceneMoveEvent

This event handler, for GraphicsSceneMove events, is delivered after the widget has moved (e.g., its local position has changed).

This event is only delivered when the item is moved locally. Calling setTransform() or moving any of the item’s ancestors does not affect the item’s local position.

You can reimplement this event handler to detect when your widget has moved. Calling QEvent::accept() or QEvent::ignore() on event has no effect.

paintWindowFrame(painter, option[, widget=None])
Parameters:

This virtual function is called by QGraphicsScene to draw the window frame for windows using painter, option, and widget, in local coordinates. The base implementation uses the current style to render the frame and title bar.

You can reimplement this function in a subclass of QGraphicsWidget to provide custom rendering of the widget’s window frame.

See also

paint()

palette()
Return type:

QPalette

See also

setPalette()

Getter of property paletteᅟ .

polishEvent()

This event is delivered to the item by the scene at some point after it has been constructed, but before it is shown or otherwise accessed through the scene. You can use this event handler to do last-minute initializations of the widget which require the item to be fully constructed.

The base implementation does nothing.

propertyChange(propertyName, value)
Parameters:
  • propertyName – str

  • value – object

Return type:

object

rect()
Return type:

QRectF

Returns the item’s local rect as a QRectF. This function is equivalent to QRectF(QPointF(), size() ).

releaseShortcut(id)
Parameters:

id – int

Removes the shortcut with the given id from Qt’s shortcut system. The widget will no longer receive QEvent::Shortcut events for the shortcut’s key sequence (unless it has other shortcuts with the same key sequence).

Warning

You should not normally need to use this function since Qt’s shortcut system removes shortcuts automatically when their parent widget is destroyed. It is best to use QAction or QShortcut to handle shortcuts, since they are easier to use than this low-level function. Note also that this is an expensive operation.

removeAction(action)
Parameters:

actionQAction

Removes the action action from this widget’s list of actions.

resize(size)
Parameters:

sizeQSizeF

Setter of property sizeᅟ .

resize(w, h)
Parameters:
  • w – float

  • h – float

This is an overloaded function.

Constructs a resize with the given width (w) and height (h). This convenience function is equivalent to calling resize(QSizeF(w, h)).

See also

setGeometry() setTransform()

resizeEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQGraphicsSceneResizeEvent

This event handler, for GraphicsSceneResize events, is delivered after the widget has been resized (i.e., its local size has changed). event contains both the old and the new size.

This event is only delivered when the widget is resized locally; calling setTransform() on the widget or any of its ancestors or view, does not affect the widget’s local size.

You can reimplement this event handler to detect when your widget has been resized. Calling QEvent::accept() or QEvent::ignore() on event has no effect.

setAttribute(attribute[, on=true])
Parameters:

If on is true, this function enables attribute; otherwise attribute is disabled.

See the class documentation for QGraphicsWidget for a complete list of which attributes are supported, and what they are for.

setAutoFillBackground(enabled)
Parameters:

enabled – bool

Setter of property autoFillBackgroundᅟ .

setContentsMargins(margins)
Parameters:

marginsQMarginsF

Sets the widget’s contents margins to margins.

Contents margins are used by the assigned layout to define the placement of subwidgets and layouts. Margins are particularly useful for widgets that constrain subwidgets to only a section of its own geometry. For example, a group box with a layout will place subwidgets inside its frame, but below the title.

Changing a widget’s contents margins will always trigger an update() , and any assigned layout will be activated automatically. The widget will then receive a ContentsRectChange event.

See also

getContentsMargins() setGeometry()

setContentsMargins(left, top, right, bottom)
Parameters:
  • left – float

  • top – float

  • right – float

  • bottom – float

This is an overloaded function.

Sets the widget’s contents margins to left, top, right and bottom.

setFocusPolicy(policy)
Parameters:

policyFocusPolicy

See also

focusPolicy()

Setter of property focusPolicyᅟ .

setFont(font)
Parameters:

fontQFont

See also

font()

Setter of property fontᅟ .

setGeometry(x, y, w, h)
Parameters:
  • x – float

  • y – float

  • w – float

  • h – float

This convenience function is equivalent to calling setGeometry(QRectF( x, y, w, h)).

See also

geometry() resize()

setLayout(layout)
Parameters:

layoutQGraphicsLayout

Sets the layout for this widget to layout. Any existing layout manager is deleted before the new layout is assigned. If layout is None, the widget is left without a layout. Existing subwidgets’ geometries will remain unaffected.

All widgets that are currently managed by layout or all of its sublayouts, are automatically reparented to this item. The layout is then invalidated, and the child widget geometries are adjusted according to this item’s geometry() and contentsMargins(). Children who are not explicitly managed by layout remain unaffected by the layout after it has been assigned to this widget.

QGraphicsWidget takes ownership of layout.

Setter of property layoutᅟ .

setLayoutDirection(direction)
Parameters:

directionLayoutDirection

Setter of property layoutDirectionᅟ .

setPalette(palette)
Parameters:

paletteQPalette

See also

palette()

Setter of property paletteᅟ .

setShortcutAutoRepeat(id[, enabled=true])
Parameters:
  • id – int

  • enabled – bool

If enabled is true, auto repeat of the shortcut with the given id is enabled; otherwise it is disabled.

setShortcutEnabled(id[, enabled=true])
Parameters:
  • id – int

  • enabled – bool

If enabled is true, the shortcut with the given id is enabled; otherwise the shortcut is disabled.

Warning

You should not normally need to use this function since Qt’s shortcut system enables/disables shortcuts automatically as widgets become hidden/visible and gain or lose focus. It is best to use QAction or QShortcut to handle shortcuts, since they are easier to use than this low-level function.

setStyle(style)
Parameters:

styleQStyle

Sets the widget’s style to style. QGraphicsWidget does not take ownership of style.

If no style is assigned, or style is None, the widget will use style() (if this has been set). Otherwise the widget will use style() .

This function sets the Qt::WA_SetStyle attribute if style is not None; otherwise it clears the attribute.

See also

style()

static setTabOrder(first, second)
Parameters:

Warning

This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.

Moves the second widget around the ring of focus widgets so that keyboard focus moves from the first widget to the second widget when the Tab key is pressed.

Note that since the tab order of the second widget is changed, you should order a chain like this:

setTabOrder(a, b) # a to b
setTabOrder(b, c) # a to b to c
setTabOrder(c, d) # a to b to c to d

not like this:

# WRONG
setTabOrder(c, d) # c to d
setTabOrder(a, b) # a to b AND c to d
setTabOrder(b, c) # a to b to c, but not c to d

If first is None, this indicates that second should be the first widget to receive input focus should the scene gain Tab focus (i.e., the user hits Tab so that focus passes into the scene). If second is None, this indicates that first should be the first widget to gain focus if the scene gained BackTab focus.

By default, tab order is defined implicitly using widget creation order.

setWindowFlags(wFlags)
Parameters:

wFlags – Combination of WindowType

See also

windowFlags()

Setter of property windowFlagsᅟ .

setWindowFrameMargins(margins)
Parameters:

marginsQMarginsF

Sets the widget’s window frame margins to margins. The default frame margins are provided by the style, and they depend on the current window flags.

If you would like to draw your own window decoration, you can set your own frame margins to override the default margins.

setWindowFrameMargins(left, top, right, bottom)
Parameters:
  • left – float

  • top – float

  • right – float

  • bottom – float

This is an overloaded function.

Sets the widget’s window frame margins to left, top, right and bottom.

setWindowTitle(title)
Parameters:

title – str

See also

windowTitle()

Setter of property windowTitleᅟ .

showEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQShowEvent

This event handler, for Show events, is delivered before the widget has been shown, for example, setVisible(true) has been called for the widget or one of its ancestors when the widget was previously hidden.

You can reimplement this event handler to detect when your widget is shown. Calling QEvent::accept() or QEvent::ignore() on event has no effect.

size()
Return type:

QSizeF

Getter of property sizeᅟ .

style()
Return type:

QStyle

Returns a pointer to the widget’s style. If this widget does not have any explicitly assigned style, the scene’s style is returned instead. In turn, if the scene does not have any assigned style, this function returns style() .

See also

setStyle()

testAttribute(attribute)
Parameters:

attributeWidgetAttribute

Return type:

bool

Returns true if attribute is enabled for this widget; otherwise, returns false.

See also

setAttribute()

ungrabKeyboardEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQEvent

This event handler, for event, can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive notifications for QEvent::UngrabKeyboard events.

See also

ungrabKeyboard() ungrabMouse()

ungrabMouseEvent(event)
Parameters:

eventQEvent

This event handler, for event, can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive notifications for QEvent::UngrabMouse events.

See also

ungrabMouse() ungrabKeyboard()

unsetLayoutDirection()

Reset function of property layoutDirectionᅟ .

unsetWindowFrameMargins()

Resets the window frame margins to the default value, provided by the style.

windowFlags()
Return type:

Combination of WindowType

See also

setWindowFlags()

Getter of property windowFlagsᅟ .

windowFrameEvent(e)
Parameters:

eQEvent

Return type:

bool

This event handler, for event, receives events for the window frame if this widget is a window. Its base implementation provides support for default window frame interaction such as moving, resizing, etc.

You can reimplement this handler in a subclass of QGraphicsWidget to provide your own custom window frame interaction support.

Returns true if event has been recognized and processed; otherwise, returns false.

See also

event()

windowFrameGeometry()
Return type:

QRectF

Returns the widget’s geometry in parent coordinates including any window frame.

windowFrameRect()
Return type:

QRectF

Returns the widget’s local rect including any window frame.

windowFrameSectionAt(pos)
Parameters:

posQPointF

Return type:

WindowFrameSection

Returns the window frame section at position pos, or Qt::NoSection if there is no window frame section at this position.

This function is used in QGraphicsWidget ‘s base implementation for window frame interaction.

You can reimplement this function if you want to customize how a window can be interactively moved or resized. For instance, if you only want to allow a window to be resized by the bottom right corner, you can reimplement this function to return Qt::NoSection for all sections except Qt::BottomRightSection.

windowTitle()
Return type:

str

See also

setWindowTitle()

Getter of property windowTitleᅟ .

windowType()
Return type:

WindowType

Returns the widgets window type.

See also

windowFlags() isWindow() isPanel()