Application Main Window | Qt Widgets (original) (raw)

Overview of the Main Window Classes

These classes provide everything you need for a typical modern main application window, such as the main window itself, menu and tool bars, and a status bar.

QDockWidget Widget that can be docked inside a QMainWindow or floated as a top-level window on the desktop
QMainWindow Main application window
QMdiArea Area in which MDI windows are displayed
QMdiSubWindow Subwindow class for QMdiArea
QMenu Menu widget for use in menu bars, context menus, and other popup menus
QMenuBar Horizontal menu bar
QSizeGrip Resize handle for resizing top-level windows
QStatusBar Horizontal bar suitable for presenting status information
QToolBar Movable panel that contains a set of controls
QWidgetAction Extends QAction by an interface for inserting custom widgets into action based containers, such as toolbars

The Main Window Classes

Qt provides the following classes for managing main windows and associated user interface components:

Example Code

Using QMainWindow is straightforward. Generally, you subclass QMainWindow and set up menus, toolbars, and dock widgets inside the QMainWindow constructor.

To add a menu bar to the main window, create the menus, and add them to the main window's menu bar. Note that the QMainWindow::menuBar() function will automatically create the menu bar the first time it is called. You can also call QMainWindow::setMenuBar() to use a custom menu bar in the main window.

MainWindow::MainWindow(QWidget *parent) : QMainWindow(parent) { ... newAct = new QAction(QIcon::fromTheme(QIcon::ThemeIcon::DocumentNew), tr("&New"), this); newAct->setShortcuts(QKeySequence::New); newAct->setStatusTip(tr("Create a new file")); connect(newAct, &QAction::triggered, this, &MainWindow::newFile);

openAct = new [QAction](qaction.html)([QIcon](qicon.html)::fromTheme([QIcon](qicon.html)::ThemeIcon::DocumentOpen),
                      tr("&Open..."), this);
openAct->setShortcuts([QKeySequence](qkeysequence.html)::Open);
openAct->setStatusTip(tr("Open an existing file"));
connect(openAct, &[QAction](qaction.html)::triggered, this, &MainWindow::open);
...

Once actions have been created, you can add them to the main window components. To begin with, add them to the pop-up menus:

fileMenu = menuBar()->addMenu(tr("&File"));
fileMenu->addAction(newAct);
fileMenu->addAction(openAct);
...
fileMenu->addSeparator();
...

The QToolBar and QMenu classes use Qt's action system to provide a consistent API. In the above code, some existing actions were added to the file menu with the QMenu::addAction() function. QToolBar also provides this function, making it easy to reuse actions in different parts of the main window. This avoids unnecessary duplication of work.

Create a toolbar as a child of the main window, and add the desired actions to it:

fileToolBar = addToolBar(tr("File")); fileToolBar->addAction(newAct); fileToolBar->addAction(openAct); ... fileToolbar->setAllowedAreas(Qt::TopToolBarArea | Qt::BottomToolBarArea); addToolBar(Qt::TopToolBarArea, fileToolbar);

In this example, the toolbar is restricted to the top and bottom toolbar areas of the main window, and is initially placed in the top tool bar area. We can see that the actions specified by newAct and openAct will be displayed both on the toolbar and in the file menu.

QDockWidget is used in a similar way to QToolBar. You create a dock widget as a child of the main window, and add widgets as children of the dock widget:

contentsWindow = new [QDockWidget](qdockwidget.html)(tr("Table of Contents"), this);
contentsWindow->setAllowedAreas([Qt](qt.html)::LeftDockWidgetArea
                              | [Qt](qt.html)::RightDockWidgetArea);
addDockWidget([Qt](qt.html)::LeftDockWidgetArea, contentsWindow);

headingList = new [QListWidget](qlistwidget.html)(contentsWindow);
contentsWindow->setWidget(headingList);

In this example, the dock widget can only be placed in the left and right dock areas, and it is initially placed in the left dock area.

The QMainWindow API lets you customize which dock widget areas occupy the four corners of the dock widget area. If required, the default can be changed with the QMainWindow::setCorner() function:

setCorner(Qt::TopLeftCorner, Qt::LeftDockWidgetArea); setCorner(Qt::BottomLeftCorner, Qt::LeftDockWidgetArea); setCorner(Qt::TopRightCorner, Qt::RightDockWidgetArea); setCorner(Qt::BottomRightCorner, Qt::RightDockWidgetArea);

The following diagram shows the configuration produced by the above code. Note that the left and right dock widgets will occupy the top and bottom corners of the main window in this layout.

Once all the main window components have been set up, the central widget is created and installed by using code similar to the following:

QWidget *centralWidget = new QWidget(this); setCentralWidget(centralWidget);

The central widget can be any subclass of QWidget.