I search to disable F11 keys or ctr+ F11 who put my program qt in fullscreen.
In Design mode change QWidget minimumSize and maximumSize parameters to equal value (bottom right corner of Qt creator).
For example: for minimumSize width = 400, height = 250; for maximumSize equal values width = 400, height = 250. You can see it on a screenshot:
example of values for necessary parameters
Related
Why when creating a button with a script in the function _ready, these buttons cannot be resized. (And position)
var pos
var siz
var yBut = 150
var but
func _ready():
siz = get_viewport().get_visible_rect().size
pos = get_viewport().get_visible_rect().position
but = Button.new()
$sc/vb.add_child(but, true)
but.rect_position = pos/2
but.rect_size = Vector2(siz.x, 150)
ps. The buttons are placed in a ScrollContainer in which the vBoxContainer.
Container controls will auto resize and position children controls. Try using the Button's size flags to suggest it's size.
You can also compose ui with multiple levels of other Container controls such as V and HBoxContainer using size flags. This will give you finer control over the whole look of the ui. This will also make it easier to add controls later that will adaptively resize.
You can also set rect_min_size and the Container will not resize it any smaller than min size. However, that may break dynamic layout.
Hope this helps!
This may sound like a duplicate of Set maximum size for JavaFX ImageView but it's different.
I'd like to restrict the maximum size of an ImageView. Unfortunately, the only way to set the ImageView's size seems to be fitWidth and fitHeight which however enlarges the image if it's smaller than the fit values.
I tried setting fitWidth/fitHeight to 0/0 and wrap the ImageView into a pane with maxWidth set - no success (image is displayed in original size).
To me it seems as this is not achievable by JavaFX, however I can't believe it. But I couldn't find anything online. Are there any tricks/bugs/workarounds on this?
If you dont want the image to stretch, you can use:
setPreserveRatio(true);
Then you are able to fit width and height as you want
ImageView setPreserveRatio javadoc
In javadoc in this method there are the rules of scaling too
You just needed to add in if statement to set those larger than maxsize to a fixed size. The rest would remain their original size.
ImageView im = new ImageView();
im.setImage(image);
im.maxHeight(690 - 10);
int yoursize = 690;
if(im.maxHeight(690 - 10)> yoursize ){
im.setFitHeight(690- 10);
System.out.println("Fix Size : 690 ");
}
im.setPreserveRatio(true);
im.setSmooth(true);
im.setCache(true);
You can get the actual Image resource and query its width/height to use for the fit values:
Image image = imageView.getImage();
double nativeWidth = image.getWidth();
double nativeHeight = image.getHeight();
I would like to be able to modify the Qt window's properties with Xlib fonctions.
I tried using QX11Info to get the display and QWidget::winId to get the window.
Display *display = QX11Info::display();
int window = QWidget::winId ();
XMoveResizeWindow(display, window, 100, 100, 400, 400);
But it didn't work.
I thought that maybe the window QWidget::winId () returns isn't the main one of the application. So I tried to modify its parent to see if it was the right window.
Display *display = QX11Info::display();
int window = QWidget::winId ();
unsigned int nbChildren;
Window root,parent,*children;
XQueryTree(display, window, &root, &parent, &children, &nbChildren);
XMoveResizeWindow(display, parent, 100, 100, 400, 400);
But it didn't work either.
I also tried XStoreName(display, window, "test Qt");for both example. The problem could have been that the window was not resisable.
I know I should do this kind of things with Qt directly but I am trying with easy fonctions to see if I can get the right window id. My goal is to change the window properties, using customs xlib intern atoms.
I would like to know what I am doing wrong.
Thank you.
I found my error.
The problem was that I was using these fonctions before the window was displayed.
Display *display = QX11Info::display();
int window = QWidget::winId ();
XMoveResizeWindow(display, window, 100, 100, 400, 400);
This works if it is used after "show()".
Sorry for that.
I've a GtkToolBar which has say 3 GtkToolButtons with each of these having a stock icon value, and hence they all appear in the same size; now I added a 4th GtkToolButton with a custom image (.png), which was of an arbitrary dimension and only this button ended up looking huge (since the image was of higher resolution). What do I do to scale this GtkToolButton to match the other 3 buttons?
Here's the code which does what I briefed about:
GtkWidget *custom_icon = gtk_image_new_from_file(path);
GtkToolItem *toolbar_item = gtk_toggle_tool_button_new();
gtk_tool_button_set_icon_widget(GTK_TOOL_BUTTON(toolbar_item), custom_icon);
gtk_tool_button_set_label(GTK_TOOL_BUTTON(toolbar_item), "Custom Item");
gtk_toolbar_insert(toolbar, toolbar_item, -1);
Here is another solution.
GdkPixbuf *pixbuf = gdk_pixbuf_new_from_file(icon_file_path, NULL);
int width, height;
gdk_pixbuf_get_file_info (icon_file_path, &width, &height);
gtk_icon_theme_add_builtin_icon ("custom_icon", width, pixbuf);
g_object_unref (G_OBJECT (pixbuf));
GtkToolItem *toolbar_item = gtk_toggle_tool_button_new();
gtk_tool_button_set_icon_name (GTK_TOOL_BUTTON(toolbar_item), "custom_icon");
If you have the image in different sizes, you can add them all and let Gtk choose the one of the correct size (or resize if not found): Just repeat the first five lines for each of the image files.
You can use your icon anywhere else and its size will also be adjusted automatically.
For example, to use it for your main window:
gtk_window_set_icon_name(GTK_WINDOW(main_window), "custom_icon");
Found it out myself! Here's the trick so that it helps someone like me. Query the icon size from the stock menu item, which is a enum (standard values like GTK_ICON_SIZE_BUTTON, GTK_ICON_SIZE_LARGE_TOOLBAR, etc.). Now get the pixel size using gtk_icon_size_lookup. Create a pixbuf from the custom icon/image file with the right dimensions. Create a GtkImage from that and set it to the new menu item and you're done!
GtkToolItem *stock_menu_item = gtk_toggle_tool_button_new_from_stock(GTK_STOCK_NEW);
GtkIconSize toolbar_icon_size = gtk_tool_item_get_icon_size(stock_menu_item);
gint width = 0, height = 0;
gtk_icon_size_lookup(toolbar_icon_size, &width, &height);
GdkPixbuf *app_icon = gdk_pixbuf_new_from_file_at_size(icon_file_path, width, height, NULL);
GtkImage *tray_icon = gtk_image_new_from_pixbuf(app_icon);
g_object_unref(app_icon);
app_icon = NULL;
GtkToolItem *toolbar_item = gtk_toggle_tool_button_new();
gtk_tool_button_set_icon_widget(GTK_TOOL_BUTTON(toolbar_item), tray_icon);
I want to display an image in my app. I use QtDesigner to design UI, then use pyqt to coding. The problem is the image that will be shown is lager than the widget size on the UI. I refer to offical demo:
QT - Widget Image Viewer Demo
add imagelabel and scrollArea, code as follows:
---- UI init ----
self.label = QtGui.QLabel(self.centralwidget)
self.label.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(40, 140, 361, 511))
self.label.setSizePolicy(QtGui.QSizePolicy.Preferred,QtGui.QSizePolicy.Preferred)
self.label.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("label"))
self.scrollArea = QtGui.QScrollArea(self.centralwidget)
self.scrollArea.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(40, 140, 361, 511))
self.scrollArea.setWidget(self.label)
self.scrollArea.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("scrollArea"))
---- function ----
filename = "./Penguins.jpg"
image = QtGui.QImage(filename)
pp = QtGui.QPixmap.fromImage(image)
lbl = QtGui.QLabel(self.label)
lbl.setPixmap(pp)
self.scrollArea.setWidgetResizable(True)
lbl.show()
but it doesn't stretch the image, even no scroll bar appear!
You need to call self.label.setScaledContents(true);. So that QLabel will resize itself to the size of pixmap/image and scroll-bar will get visible. See this documentation.
The default implementation of QLabel::setScaledContents wasn't working for me, since it didn't allow me to keep the aspect ratio when the images where larger then the label's
maximum sizes.
This little helper will scale the image down to fit into a label's maximum size if needed (but not up), always keeping the aspect ratio:
/**
* Fill a QLabel widget with an image file, respecting the widget's maximum sizes,
* while scaling the image down if needed (but not up), and keeping the aspect ratio
* Returns false if image loading failed
****************************************************************************/
static bool SetLabelImage(QLabel *label, QString imageFileName)
{
QPixmap pixmap(imageFileName);
if (pixmap.isNull()) return false;
int w = std::min(pixmap.width(), label->maximumWidth());
int h = std::min(pixmap.height(), label->maximumHeight());
pixmap = pixmap.scaled(QSize(w, h), Qt::KeepAspectRatio, Qt::SmoothTransformation);
label->setPixmap(pixmap);
return true;
}
I do not use PyQt but the QtPixmap control has scaled() functions. You can resize the image before put in the label:
scaled()
scaledToHeight()
scaledToWidth()
This is the sample code I use in C++ to resize an image to the QLabel size:
imatge.load("sprite.png");
QPixmap imatge2 = imatge.scaled(ui->label->width(),ui->label->height());