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+/****************************************************************************
+**
+** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
+** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
+**
+** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
+**
+** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
+** No Commercial Usage
+** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed.
+** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions
+** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying
+** this package.
+**
+** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
+** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser
+** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software
+** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the
+** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
+** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements
+** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html.
+**
+** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain
+** additional rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL
+** Exception version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this
+** package.
+**
+** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
+** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com.
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+** $QT_END_LICENSE$
+**
+****************************************************************************/
+
+/*!
+ \group appearance
+ \title Widget Appearance and Style
+ \brief Classes used for customizing UI appearance and style.
+*/
+
+/*!
+ \page style-reference.html
+ \title Implementing Styles and Style Aware Widgets
+ \brief An overview of styles and the styling of widgets.
+
+ \ingroup frameworks-technologies
+
+ \previouspage Widget Classes
+ \contentspage Widgets and Layouts
+ \nextpage {Qt Style Sheets}{Style sheets}
+
+ Styles (classes that inherit QStyle) draw on behalf of widgets
+ and encapsulate the look and feel of a GUI. The QStyle class is
+ an abstract base class that encapsulates the look and feel of a
+ GUI. Qt's built-in widgets use it to perform nearly all of their
+ drawing, ensuring that they look exactly like the equivalent
+ native widgets.
+
+ Several styles are built into Qt (e.g., windows style and motif style).
+ Other styles are only available on specific platforms (such as
+ the windows XP style). Custom styles are made available as plugins
+ or by creating an instance of the style class in an application and
+ setting it with QApplication::setStyle().
+
+ To implement a new style, you inherit one of Qt's existing styles
+ - the one most resembling the style you want to create - and
+ reimplement a few virtual functions. This process is somewhat
+ involved, and we therefore provide this overview. We give a
+ step-by-step walkthrough of how to style individual Qt widgets.
+ We will examine the QStyle virtual functions, member variables,
+ and enumerations.
+
+ The part of this document that does not concern the styling of
+ individual widgets is meant to be read sequentially because later
+ sections tend to depend on earlier ones. The description of the
+ widgets can be used for reference while implementing a style.
+ However, you may need to consult the Qt source code in some cases.
+ The sequence in the styling process should become clear after
+ reading this document, which will aid you in locating relevant code.
+
+ To develop style aware widgets (i.e., widgets that conform to
+ the style in which they are drawn), you need to draw them using the
+ current style. This document shows how widgets draw themselves
+ and which possibilities the style gives them.
+
+ \tableofcontents
+
+ \section1 Classes for Widget Styling
+
+ These classes are used to customize an application's appearance and
+ style.
+
+ \annotatedlist appearance
+
+ \section1 The QStyle implementation
+
+ The API of QStyle contains functions that draw the widgets, static
+ helper functions to do common and difficult tasks (e.g.,
+ calculating the position of slider handles) and functions to do
+ the various calculations necessary while drawing (e.g., for the
+ widgets to calculate their size hints). The style also help some
+ widgets with the layout of their contents. In addition, it creates
+ a QPalette that contains \l{QBrush}es to draw with.
+
+ QStyle draws graphical elements; an element is a widget or a
+ widget part like a push button bevel, a window frame, or a scroll
+ bar. Most draw functions now take four arguments:
+
+ \list
+ \o an enum value specifying which graphical element to draw
+ \o a QStyleOption specifying how and where to render that element
+ \o a QPainter that should be used to draw the element
+ \o a QWidget on which the drawing is performed (optional)
+ \endlist
+
+ When a widget asks a style to draw an element, it provides the style
+ with a QStyleOption, which is a class that contains the information
+ necessary for drawing. Thanks to QStyleOption, it is possible to make
+ QStyle draw widgets without linking in any code for the widget. This
+ makes it possible to use \l{QStyle}'s draw functions on any paint
+ device. Ie you can draw a combobox on any widget, not just on a
+ QComboBox.
+
+ The widget is passed as the last argument in case the style needs
+ it to perform special effects (such as animated default buttons on
+ Mac OS X), but it isn't mandatory.
+
+ We will in the course of this section look at the style elements,
+ the style options, and the functions of QStyle. Finally, we describe
+ how the palette is used.
+
+ Items in item views is drawn by \l{Delegate Classes}{delegates} in
+ Qt. The item view headers are still drawn by the style. Qt's
+ default delegate, QStyledItemDelegate, draws its items partially
+ through the current style; it draws the check box indicators and
+ calculate bounding rectangles for the elements of which the item
+ consists. In this document, we only describe how to implement a
+ QStyle subclass. If you wish to add support for other datatypes
+ than those supported by the QStyledItemDelegate, you need to
+ implement a custom delegate. Note that delegates must be set
+ programmatically for each individual widget (i.e., default
+ delegates cannot be provided as plugins).
+
+ \section2 The Style Elements
+
+ A style element is a graphical part of a GUI. A widget consists
+ of a hierarchy (or tree) of style elements. For instance, when a
+ style receives a request to draw a push button (from QPushButton,
+ for example), it draws a label (text and icon), a button bevel,
+ and a focus frame. The button bevel, in turn, consists of a frame
+ around the bevel and two other elements, which we will look at
+ later. Below is a conceptual illustration of the push button
+ element tree. We will see the actual tree for QPushButton when we
+ go through the individual widgets.
+
+ \image javastyle/conceptualpushbuttontree.png
+
+ Widgets are not necessarily drawn by asking the style to draw
+ only one element. Widgets can make several calls to the style to
+ draw different elements. An example is QTabWidget, which draws its
+ tabs and frame individually.
+
+ There are three element types: primitive elements, control
+ elements, and complex control elements. The elements are defined
+ by the \l{QStyle::}{ComplexControl}, \l{QStyle::}{ControlElement},
+ and \l{QStyle::}{PrimitiveElement} enums. The values of
+ each element enum has a prefix to identify their type: \c{CC_} for
+ complex elements, \c{CE_} for control elements, and \c{PE_} for
+ primitive elements. We will in the following three sections see what
+ defines the different elements and see examples of widgets that use
+ them.
+
+ The QStyle class description contains a list of these elements and
+ their roles in styling widgets. We will see how they are used when
+ we style individual widgets.
+
+ \section3 Primitive Elements
+
+ Primitive elements are GUI elements that are common and often used
+ by several widgets. Examples of these are frames, button bevels,
+ and arrows for spin boxes, scroll bars, and combo boxes.
+ Primitive elements cannot exist on their own: they are always part
+ of a larger construct. They take no part in the interaction with
+ the user, but are passive decorations in the GUI.
+
+ \section3 Control Elements
+
+ A control element performs an action or displays information
+ to the user. Examples of control elements are push buttons, check
+ boxes, and header sections in tables and tree views. Control
+ elements are not necessarily complete widgets such as push
+ buttons, but can also be widget parts such as tab bar tabs and
+ scroll bar sliders. They differ from primitive elements in that
+ they are not passive, but fill a function in the interaction with
+ the user. Controls that consist of several elements often use the
+ style to calculate the bounding rectangles of the elements. The
+ available sub elements are defined by the \l{QStyle::}{SubElement}
+ enum. This enum is only used for calculating bounding rectangles,
+ and sub elements are as such not graphical elements to be drawn
+ like primitive, control, and complex elements.
+
+ \section3 Complex Control Elements
+
+ Complex control elements contain sub controls. Complex controls
+ behave differently depending on where the user handles them with
+ the mouse and which keyboard keys are pressed. This is dependent
+ on which sub control (if any) that the mouse is over or received a
+ mouse press. Examples of complex controls are scroll bars and
+ combo boxes. With a scroll bar, you can use the mouse to move the
+ slider and press the line up and line down buttons. The available
+ sub controls are defined by the \l{QStyle}{SubControl} enum.
+
+ In addition to drawing, the style needs to provide the widgets
+ with information on which sub control (if any) a mouse press was
+ made on. For instance, a QScrollBar needs to know if the user
+ pressed the slider, the slider groove, or one of the buttons.
+
+ Note that sub controls are not the same as the control elements
+ described in the previous section. You cannot use the style to
+ draw a sub control; the style will only calculate the bounding
+ rectangle in which the sub control should be drawn. It is common,
+ though, that complex elements use control and primitive elements
+ to draw their sub controls, which is an approach that is
+ frequently used by the built-in styles in Qt and also the Java
+ style. For instance, the Java style uses PE_IndicatorCheckBox to
+ draw the check box in group boxes (which is a sub control of
+ CC_GroupBox). Some sub controls have an equivalent control element,
+ e.g., the scroll bar slider (SC_SCrollBarSlider and
+ CE_ScrollBarSlider).
+
+ \section3 Other QStyle Tasks
+
+ The style elements and widgets, as mentioned, use the style to
+ calculate bounding rectangles of sub elements and sub controls,
+ and pixel metrics, which is a style dependent size in screen
+ pixels, for measures when drawing. The available rectangles and
+ pixel metrics are represented by three enums in QStyle:
+ \l{QStyle::}{SubElement}, \l{QStyle::}{SubControl}, and
+ \l{QStyle::}{PixelMetric}. Values of the enums can easily by
+ identified as they start with SE_, SC_ and PM_.
+
+ The style also contain a set of style hints, which is
+ represented as values in the \l{QStyle::}{StyleHint} enum. All
+ widgets do not have the same functionality and look in the
+ different styles. For instance, when the menu items in a menu do not
+ fit in a single column on the screen, some styles support
+ scrolling while others draw more than one column to fit all items.
+
+ A style usually has a set of standard images (such as a warning, a
+ question, and an error image) for message boxes, file dialogs,
+ etc. QStyle provides the \l{QStyle::}{StandardPixmap} enum. Its
+ values represent the standard images. Qt's widgets use these, so
+ when you implement a custom style you should supply the images
+ used by the style that is being implemented.
+
+ The style calculates the spacing between widgets in layouts. There
+ are two ways the style can handle these calculations. You can set
+ the PM_LayoutHorizontalSpacing and PM_LayoutVerticalSpacing, which
+ is the way the java style does it (through QCommonStyle).
+ Alternatively, you can implement QStyle::layoutSpacing() and
+ QStyle::layoutSpacingImplementation() if you need more control over
+ this part of the layout. In these functions you can calculate the
+ spacing based on control types (QSizePolicy::ControlType) for
+ different size policies (QSizePolicy::Policy) and also the style
+ option for the widget in question.
+
+ \section2 Style Options
+
+ The sub-classes of QStyleOption contain all information necessary
+ to style the individual elements. Style options are instantiated -
+ usually on the stack - and filled out by the caller of the QStyle
+ function. Depending on what is drawn the style will expect
+ different a different style option class. For example, the
+ QStyle::PE_FrameFocusRect element expects a QStyleOptionFocusRect
+ argument, and it's possible to create custom subclasses that a
+ custom style can use. The style options keep public variables
+ for performance reasons.
+
+ The widgets can be in a number of different states, which are
+ defined by the \l{QStyle::}{State} enum. Some of the state flags have
+ different meanings depending on the widget, but others are common
+ for all widgets like State_Disabled. It is QStyleOption that sets
+ the common states with QStyleOption::initFrom(); the rest of the
+ states are set by the individual widgets.
+
+ Most notably, the style options contain the palette and bounding
+ rectangles of the widgets to be drawn. Most widgets have
+ specialized style options. QPushButton and QCheckBox, for
+ instance, use QStyleOptionButton as style option, which contain
+ the text, icon, and the size of their icon. The exact contents of
+ all options are described when we go through individual widgets.
+
+ When reimplementing QStyle functions that take a
+ QStyleOption parameter, you often need to cast the
+ QStyleOption to a subclass (e.g., QStyleOptionFocusRect). For
+ safety, you can use qstyleoption_cast() to ensure that the
+ pointer type is correct. If the object isn't of the right type,
+ qstyleoption_cast() returns 0. For example:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-styles.qdoc 0
+
+ The following code snippet illustrates how to use QStyle to
+ draw the focus rectangle from a custom widget's paintEvent():
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-styles.qdoc 1
+
+ The next example shows how to derive from an existing style to
+ customize the look of a graphical element:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/customstyle/customstyle.h 0
+ \codeline
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/customstyle/customstyle.cpp 2
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/customstyle/customstyle.cpp 3
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/customstyle/customstyle.cpp 4
+
+ \section2 QStyle Functions
+
+ The QStyle class defines three functions for drawing the primitive,
+ control, and complex elements:
+ \l{QStyle::}{drawPrimitive()},
+ \l{QStyle::}{drawControl()}, and
+ \l{QStyle::}{drawComplexControl()}. The functions takes the
+ following parameters:
+
+ \list
+ \o the enum value of the element to draw
+ \o a QStyleOption which contains the information needed to
+ draw the element.
+ \o a QPainter with which to draw the element.
+ \o a pointer to a QWidget, typically the widget
+ that the element is painted on.
+ \endlist
+
+ Not all widgets send a pointer to themselves. If the style
+ option sent to the function does not contain the information you
+ need, you should check the widget implementation to see if it
+ sends a pointer to itself.
+
+ The QStyle class also provides helper functions that are used
+ when drawing the elements. The \l{QStyle::}{drawItemText()}
+ function draws text within a specified rectangle and taking a
+ QPalette as a parameter. The \l{QStyle::}{drawItemPixmap()}
+ function helps to align a pixmap within a specified bounding
+ rectangle.
+
+ Other QStyle functions do various calculations for the
+ functions that draw. The widgets also use these functions for
+ calculating size hints and also for bounding rectangle
+ calculations if they draw several style elements themselves.
+ As with the functions that draw elements the helper functions
+ typically takes the same arguments.
+
+ \list
+ \o The \l{QStyle::}{subElementRect()} function takes a
+ \l{QStyle::}{SubElement} enum value, and calculates a bounding
+ rectangle for a sub element. The style uses this function to
+ know where to draw the different parts of an element. This is
+ mainly done for reuse. If you create a new style, you can use
+ the same location of sub elements as the super class.
+
+ \o The \l{QStyle::}{subControlRect()} function is used to
+ calculate bounding rectangles for sub controls in complex
+ controls. When you implement a new style, you reimplement \c
+ subControlRect() and calculate the rectangles that are different
+ from the super class.
+
+ \o The \l{QStyle::}{pixelMetric()} function returns a pixel
+ metric, which is a style dependent size given in screen
+ pixels. It takes a value of the \l{QStyle::}{PixelMetric} enum
+ and returns the correct measure. Note that pixel metrics do
+ not necessarily have to be static measures, but can be
+ calculated with, for example, the style option.
+
+ \o The \l{QStyle::}{hitTestComplexControl()} function returns the
+ sub control that the mouse pointer is over in a complex control.
+ Usually, this is simply a matter of using
+ \l{QStyle::}{subControlRect()} to get the bounding rectangles of
+ the sub controls, and see which rectangle contains the position of
+ the cursor.
+ \endlist
+
+ QStyle also have the functions \l{QStyle::}{polish()} and
+ \l{QStyle::}{unpolish()}. All widgets are sent to the \c polish()
+ function before being shown and to \c unpolish() when they
+ are hidden. You can use these functions to set attributes on the
+ widgets or do other work that is required by your style. For
+ instance, if you need to know when the mouse is hovering over the
+ widget, you need to set the \l{Qt::}{WA_Hover} widget attribute.
+ The State_MouseOver state flag will then be set in the widget's
+ style options.
+
+ QStyle has a few static helper functions that do some common and
+ difficult tasks. They can calculate the position of a slider
+ handle from the value of the slider and transform rectangles
+ and draw text considering reverse layouts; see the QStyle
+ class documentation for more details.
+
+ The usual approach when one reimplements QStyle virtual
+ functions is to do work on elements that are different from the
+ super class; for all other elements, you can simply use the super
+ class implementation.
+
+ \section2 The Palette
+
+ Each style provides a color - that is, QBrush - palette that
+ should be used for drawing the widgets. There is one set of colors
+ for the different widget states (QPalette::ColorGroup): active
+ (widgets in the window that has keyboard focus), inactive (widgets
+ used for other windows), and disabled (widgets that are set
+ disabled). The states can be found by querying the State_Active
+ and State_Enabled state flags. Each set contains color certain
+ roles given by the QPalette::ColorRole enum. The roles describe in
+ which situations the colors should be used (e.g., for painting
+ widget backgrounds, text, or buttons).
+
+ How the color roles are used is up to the style. For instance, if
+ the style uses gradients, one can use a palette color and make it
+ darker or lighter with QColor::darker() and QColor::lighter() to
+ create the gradient. In general, if you need a brush that is not
+ provided by the palette, you should try to derive it from one.
+
+ QPalette, which provides the palette, stores colors for
+ different widget states and color roles. The palette for a style
+ is returned by \l{QStyle::}{standardPalette()}. The standard
+ palette is not installed automatically when a new style is set
+ on the application (QApplication::setStyle()) or widget
+ (QWidget::setStyle()), so you must set the palette yourself
+ with (QApplication::setPalette()) or (QWidget::setPalette()).
+
+ It is not recommended to hard code colors as applications and
+ individual widgets can set their own palette and also use the
+ styles palette for drawing. Note that none of Qt's widgets set
+ their own palette. The java style does hard code some colors, but
+ its author looks past this in silence. Of course, it is not
+ intended that the style should look good with any palette.
+
+ \section2 Implementation Issues
+
+ When you implement styles, there are several issues to
+ consider. We will give some hints and advice on implementation
+ here.
+
+ When implementing styles, it is necessary to look through the
+ code of the widgets and code of the base class and its ancestors.
+ This is because the widgets use the style differently, because the
+ implementation in the different styles virtual functions can
+ affect the state of the drawing (e.g., by altering the QPainter
+ state without restoring it and drawing some elements without using
+ the appropriate pixel metrics and sub elements).
+
+ It is recommended that the styles do not alter the proposed size
+ of widgets with the QStyle::sizeFromContents() function but let
+ the QCommonStyle implementation handle it. If changes need to be
+ made, you should try to keep them small; application development
+ may be difficult if the layout of widgets looks considerably
+ different in the various styles.
+
+ We recommend using the QPainter directly for drawing, i.e., not
+ use pixmaps or images. This makes it easier for the style conform
+ to the palette (although you can set your own color table on a
+ QImage with \l{QImage::}{setColorTable()}).
+
+ It is, naturally, possible to draw elements without using the
+ style to draw the sub elements as intended by Qt. This is
+ discouraged as custom widgets may depend on these sub elements to
+ be implemented correctly. The widget walkthrough shows how Qt
+ uses the sub elements.
+
+ \section1 Java Style
+
+ We have implemented a style that resembles the Java default look
+ and feel (previously known as Metal). We have done this as it is
+ relatively simple to implement and we wanted to build a style for
+ this overview document. To keep it simple and not to extensive, we
+ have simplified the style somewhat, but Qt is perfectly able to
+ make an exact copy of the style. However, there are no concrete
+ plans to implement the style as a part of Qt.
+
+ In this section we will have a look at some implementation
+ issues. Finally, we will see a complete example on the styling of
+ a Java widget. We will continue to use the java style
+ throughout the document for examples and widget images. The
+ implementation itself is somewhat involved, and it is not
+ intended that you should read through it.
+
+ \section2 Design and Implementation
+
+ The first step in designing the style was to select the base
+ class. We chose to subclass QWindowsStyle. This class implements
+ most of the functionality we need other than performing the actual
+ drawing. Also, windows and java share layout of sub controls for
+ several of the complex controls (which reduces the amount of code
+ required considerably).
+
+ The style is implemented in one class. We have done this
+ because we find it convenient to keep all code in one file. Also,
+ it is an advantage with regards to optimization as we instantiate
+ less objects. We also keep the number of functions at a minimum by
+ using switches to identify which element to draw in the functions.
+ This results in large functions, but since we divide the code for
+ each element in the switches, the code should still be easy to
+ read.
+
+ \section2 Limitations and Differences from Java
+
+ We have not fully implemented every element in the Java style.
+ This way, we have reduced the amount and complexity of the code.
+ In general, the style was intended as a practical example for
+ this style overview document, and not to be a part of Qt
+ itself.
+
+ Not all widgets have every state implemented. This goes for
+ states that are common, e.g., State_Disabled. Each state is,
+ however, implemented for at least one widget.
+
+ We have only implemented ticks below the slider. Flat push
+ buttons are also left out. We do not handle the case where the
+ title bars and dock window titles grows to small for their
+ contents, but simply draw sub controls over each other.
+
+ We have not tried to emulate the Java fonts. Java and Qt use very
+ different font engines, so we don't consider it worth the effort
+ as we only use the style as an example for this overview.
+
+ We have hardcoded the colors (we don't use the QPalette) for
+ the linear gradients, which are used, for example, for button
+ bevels, tool bars, and check boxes. This is because the Java
+ palette cannot produce these colors. Java does not change these
+ colors based on widget color group or role anyway (they are not
+ dependent on the palette), so it does not present a problem in any
+ case.
+
+ It is Qt's widgets that are styled. Some widgets do not exist
+ at all in Java, e.g., QToolBox. Others contain elements that the
+ Java widgets don't. The tree widget is an example of the latter in
+ which Java's JTree does not have a header.
+
+ The style does not handle reverse layouts. We assume that the
+ layout direction is left to right. QWindowsStyle handles reverse
+ widgets; if we implemented reverse layouts, widgets that we change
+ the position of sub elements, or handle text alignment in labels
+ our selves would need to be updated.
+
+ \section2 Styling Java Check Boxes
+
+ As an example, we will examine the styling of check boxes in the
+ java style. We describe the complete process and print all code in
+ both the java style and Qt classes involved. In the rest of this
+ document, we will not examine the source code of the individual
+ widgets. Hopefully, this will give you an idea on how to search
+ through the code if you need to check specific implementation
+ details; most widgets follow the same structure as the check
+ boxes. We have edited the QCommonStyle code somewhat to remove
+ code that is not directly relevant for check box styling.
+
+ We start with a look at how QCheckBox builds it style option,
+ which is QStyleOptionButton for checkboxes:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_styles.qdoc 0
+
+ First we let QStyleOption set up the option with the information
+ that is common for all widgets with \c initFrom(). We will look at
+ this shortly.
+
+ The down boolean is true when the user press the box down; this is
+ true whether the box is checked or not of the checkbox. The
+ State_NoChange state is set when we have a tristate checkbox and
+ it is partially checked. It has State_On if the box is checked and
+ State_Off if it is unchecked. State_MouseOver is set if the mouse
+ hovers over the checkbox and the widget has attribute Qt::WA_Hover
+ set - you set this in QStyle::polish(). In addition, the style
+ option also contains the text, icon, and icon size of the button.
+
+ \l{QStyleOption::}{initFrom()} sets up the style option with the
+ attributes that are common for all widgets. We print its
+ implementation here:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_styles.qdoc 1
+
+ The State_Enabled is set when the widget is enabled. When the
+ widget has focus the State_HasFocus flag is set. Equally, the
+ State_Active flag is set when the widget is a child of the active
+ window. The State_MouseOver will only be set if the widget has
+ the WA_HoverEnabled windows flag set. Notice that keypad
+ navigation must be enabled in Qt for the State_HasEditFocus to
+ be included; it is not included by default.
+
+ In addition to setting state flags the QStyleOption contains
+ other information about the widget: \c direction is the layout
+ direction of the layout, \c rect is the bounding rectangle of the
+ widget (the area in which to draw), \c palette is the QPalette
+ that should be used for drawing the widget, and \c fontMetrics is
+ the metrics of the font that is used by the widget.
+
+ We give an image of a checkbox and the style option to match
+ it.
+
+ \image javastyle/checkboxexample.png A java style checkbox
+
+ The above checkbox will have the following state flags in its
+ style option:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State flag
+ \o Set
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o Yes
+ \row
+ \o State_NoChange
+ \o No
+ \row
+ \o State_On
+ \o Yes
+ \row
+ \o State_Off
+ \o No
+ \row
+ \o State_MouseOver
+ \o Yes
+ \row
+ \o State_Enabled
+ \o Yes
+ \row
+ \o State_HasFocus
+ \o Yes
+ \row
+ \o State_KeyboardFocusChange
+ \o No
+ \row
+ \o State_Active
+ \o Yes
+ \endtable
+
+ The QCheckBox paints itself in QWidget::paintEvent() with
+ style option \c opt and QStylePainter \c p. The QStylePainter
+ class is a convenience class to draw style elements. Most
+ notably, it wraps the methods in QStyle used for painting. The
+ QCheckBox draws itself as follows:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_styles.qdoc 2
+
+ QCommonStyle handles the CE_CheckBox element. The QCheckBox
+ has two sub elements: SE_CheckBoxIndicator (the checked indicator)
+ and SE_CheckBoxContents (the contents, which is used for the
+ checkbox label). QCommonStyle also implements these sub element
+ bounding rectangles. We have a look at the QCommonStyle code:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_styles.qdoc 3
+
+ As can be seen from the code extract, the common style gets
+ the bounding rectangles of the two sub elements of
+ CE_CheckBox, and then draws them. If the checkbox has focus,
+ the focus frame is also drawn.
+
+ The java style draws CE_CheckBoxIndicator, while QCommonStyle
+ handles CE_CheckboxLabel. We will examine each implementation and
+ start with CE_CheckBoxLabel:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_styles.qdoc 4
+
+ \l{QStyle::}{visualAlignment()} adjusts the alignment of text
+ according to the layout direction. We then draw an icon if it
+ exists, and adjust the space left for the text.
+ \l{QStyle::}{drawItemText()} draws the text taking alignment,
+ layout direction, and the mnemonic into account. It also uses the
+ palette to draw the text in the right color.
+
+ The drawing of labels often get somewhat involved. Luckily, it
+ can usually be handled by the base class. The java style
+ implements its own push button label since Java-contrary to
+ windows-center button contents also when the button has an icon.
+ You can examine that implementation if you need an example of
+ reimplementing label drawing.
+
+ We take a look at the java implementation
+ of CE_CheckBoxIndicator in \c drawControl():
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/javastyle.cpp 0
+
+ We first save the state of the painter. This is not always
+ necessary but in this case the QWindowsStyle needs the painter in
+ the same state as it was when PE_IndicatorCheckBox was called (We
+ could also set the state with function calls, of course). We then
+ use \c drawButtonBackground() to draw the background of the check
+ box indicator. This is a helper function that draws the background
+ and also the frame of push buttons and check boxes. We take a look
+ at that function below. We then check if the mouse is hovering
+ over the checkbox. If it is, we draw the frame java checkboxes
+ have when the box is not pressed down and the mouse is over it.
+ You may note that java does not handle tristate boxes, so we have
+ not implemented it.
+
+ Here we use a png image for our indicator. We could also check
+ here if the widget is disabled. We would then have to use
+ another image with the indicator in the disabled color.
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/javastyle.cpp 1
+
+ We have seen how check boxes are styled in the java style from the
+ widget gets a paint request to the style is finished painting. To
+ learn in detail how each widget is painted, you need to go through
+ the code step-by-step as we have done here. However, it is
+ usually enough to know which style elements the widgets draw. The
+ widget builds a style option and calls on the style one or more
+ times to draw the style elements of which it consists. Usually,
+ it is also sufficient to know the states a widget can be in and the
+ other contents of the style option, i.e., what we list in the next
+ section.
+
+ \section1 Widget Walkthrough
+
+ In this section, we will examine how most of Qt's widgets are
+ styled. Hopefully, this will save you some time and effort while
+ developing your own styles and widgets. You will not find
+ information here that is not attainable elsewhere (i.e., by
+ examining the source code or the class descriptions for the style
+ related classes).
+
+ We mostly use java style widgets as examples. The java style does not
+ draw every element in the element trees. This is because they are
+ not visible for that widget in the java style. We still make sure
+ that all elements are implemented in a way that conforms with the
+ java style as custom widgets might need them (this does not
+ exclude leaving implementations to QWindowsStyle though).
+
+ The following is given for each widget:
+
+ \list
+ \o A table with the members (variables, etc.) of its style option.
+ \o A table over the state flags (QStyle::StateFlag) that
+ can be set on the widget and when the states are set.
+ \o Its element tree (see section \l{The Style Elements}).
+ \o An image of the widget in which the elements are outlined.
+ \omit This is not written yet - probably never will be
+ either
+ \o List of style hints that should be checked for the
+ widget.
+ \o List of standard pixmaps that could be used by the
+ elements.
+ \endomit
+ \endlist
+
+ The element tree contains the primitive, control, and complex
+ style elements. By doing a top-down traversal of the element tree,
+ you get the sequence in which the elements should be drawn. In the
+ nodes, we have written the sub element rectangles, sub control
+ elements, and pixel metrics that should be considered when drawing
+ the element of the node.
+
+ Our approach on styling center on the drawing of the widgets. The
+ calculations of sub elements rectangles, sub controls, and pixel
+ metrics used \bold during drawing is only listed as contents in
+ the element trees. Note that there are rectangles and pixel
+ metrics that are only used by widgets. This leaves these
+ calculations untreated in the walkthrough. For instance, the
+ \l{QStyle::}{subControlRect()} and
+ \l{QStyle::}{sizeFromContents()} functions often call
+ \l{QStyle::}{subElementRect()} to calculate their bounding
+ rectangles. We could draw trees for this as well. However, how
+ these calculations are done is completely up to the individual
+ styles, and they do not have to follow a specific structure (Qt
+ does not impose a specific structure). You should still make sure
+ that you use the appropriate pixel metrics, though. To limit the
+ size of the document, we have therefore chosen not to include
+ trees or describe the calculations made by the Java (or any other)
+ style.
+
+ You may be confused about how the different pixel metrics, sub
+ element rectangles, and sub control rectangles should be used when
+ examining the trees. If you are in doubt after reading the QStyle
+ enum descriptions, we suggest that you examine the QCommonStyle
+ and QWindowsStyle implementations.
+
+ Some of the bounding rectangles that we outline in the widget
+ images are equal. Reasons for this are that some elements draw
+ backgrounds while others draw frames and labels. If in doubt,
+ check the description of each element in QStyle. Also, some
+ elements are there to layout, i.e., decide where to draw, other
+ elements.
+
+ \section2 Common Widget Properties
+
+ Some states and variables are common for all widgets. These are
+ set with QStyleOption::initFrom(). Not all elements use this function;
+ it is the widgets that create the style options, and for some
+ elements the information from \l{QStyleOption::}{initFrom()} is not
+ necessary.
+
+ A table with the common states follows:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Enabled
+ \o Set if the widget is not disabled (see
+ QWidget::setEnabled())
+ \row
+ \o State_Focus
+ \o Set if the widget has focus (see
+ QWidget::hasFocus())
+ \row
+ \o State_KeyobordFocusChange
+ \o Set when the user changes focus with the keyboard
+ (see Qt::WA_KeyboardFocusChange)
+ \row
+ \o State_MouseOver
+ \o Set if the mouse cursor is over the widget
+ \row
+ \o State_Active
+ \o Set if the widget is a child of the active window.
+ \row
+ \o State_HasEditFocus
+ \o Set if the widget has the edit focus
+ \endtable
+
+ The other common members for widgets are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o rect
+ \o The bounding rectangle of the element to draw. This
+ is set to the widget bounding rectangle
+ (QWidget::rect()).
+ \row
+ \o direction
+ \o The layout direction; a value of the
+ Qt::LayoutDirection enum.
+ \row
+ \o palette
+ \o The QPalette to use when drawing the element. This
+ is set to the widgets palette (QWidget::palette()).
+ \row
+ \o fontMetrics
+ \o The QFontMetrics to use when drawing text on the
+ widget.
+ \endtable
+
+ The complex style options (classes that inherit
+ QStyleOptionComplex) used for complex style elements share two
+ variables: \l{QStyleOptionComplex::}{subControls} and
+ \l{QStyleOptionComplex::}{activeSubControls}. Both variables are
+ an OR'ed combination of QStyle::SubControl enum values. They
+ indicate which sub controls the complex control consists of and
+ which of these controls are currently active.
+
+ As mentioned, the style calculates the size of the widgets
+ contents, which the widgets calculate their size hints from. In
+ addition, complex controls also use the style to test which
+ sub-controls the mouse is over.
+
+ \section2 Widget Reference
+
+ Without further delay, we present the widget walkthrough; each
+ widget has its own sub-section.
+
+ \section3 Push Buttons
+
+ The style structure for push buttons is shown below. By doing a
+ top-down traversal of the tree, you get the sequence in which the
+ elements should be drawn.
+
+ \image javastyle/pushbutton.png The style structure for push buttons
+
+ The layout of the buttons, with regard element bounds, varies from
+ style to style. This makes it difficult to show conceptual images
+ of this. Also, elements may - even be intended to - have the same
+ bounds; the PE_PushButtonBevel, for instance, is used in
+ QCommonStyle to draw the elements that contains it:
+ PE_FrameDefaultButton, PE_FrameButtonBevel, and
+ PE_PanelButtonCommand, all of which have the same bounds in common
+ and windows style. PE_PushButtonBevel is also responsible for
+ drawing the menu indicator (QCommonStyle draws
+ PE_IndicatorArrowDown).
+
+ An image of a push button in the java style that show the bounding
+ rectangles of the elements is given below. Colors are used to
+ separate the bounding rectangles in the image; they do not fill
+ any other purpose. This is also true for similar images for the
+ other widgets.
+
+ \image javastyle/button.png
+
+ The java style, as well as all other styles implemented in Qt,
+ does not use PE_FrameButtonBevel. It is usual that a button
+ with a PE_DefaultFrame adjusts the PE_PanelButtonCommand's
+ rectangle by PM_ButtonDefaultIndicator. The CE_PushButtonLabel
+ is found by adjusting the rect by PM_DefaultFrameWidth.
+
+ We will now examine the style option for push
+ buttons - QStyleOptionButton. A table for the states that
+ QPushButton can set on the style option follows:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o Button is down or menu is pressed shown
+ \row
+ \o State_On
+ \o Button is checked
+ \row
+ \o State_Raised
+ \o Button is not flat and not pressed down
+ \endtable
+
+ Other members of QStyleOptionButton is:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o features
+ \o Flags of the QStyleOptionButton::ButtonFeatures enum,
+ which describes various button properties (see enum)
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o The buttons QIcon (if any)
+ \row
+ \o iconSize
+ \o The QSize of the icon
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o a QString with the buttons text
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Check and Radio Buttons
+
+ The structures for radio and check buttons are identical.
+ We show the structure using QCheckBox element and pixel
+ metric names:
+
+ \image javastyle/checkbox.png
+
+ QStyleOptionButton is used as the style option for both check
+ and radio buttons. We first give a table of the states that
+ can be set in the option:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_sunken
+ \o The box is pressed down
+ \row
+ \o State_NoChange
+ \o The box is partially checked (for tristate
+ checkboxes.)
+ \row
+ \o State_On
+ \o The box is checked
+ \row
+ \o State_Off
+ \o The box is unchecked
+ \endtable
+
+ See \l{Push Buttons} for a table over other members in the
+ QStyleOptionButtonClass.
+
+ \section3 Tabs
+
+ In Qt, QTabBar uses the style to draw its tabs. Tabs exist either
+ in a QTabWidget, which contains a QTabBar, or as a separate bar.
+ If the bar is not part of a tab widget, it draws its own base.
+
+ QTabBar lays out the tabs, so the style does not have control over
+ tab placement. However, while laying out its tabs, the bar asks
+ the style for PM_TabBarTabHSpace and PM_TabBarTabVSpace, which is
+ extra width and height over the minimum size of the tab bar tab
+ label (icon and text). The style can also further influence the
+ tab size before it is laid out, as the tab bar asks for
+ CT_TabBarTab. The bounding rectangle of the bar is decided by the
+ tab widget when it is part of the widget (still considering
+ CT_TabBarTab).
+
+ The tab bar is responsible for drawing the buttons that appear on
+ the tab bar when all tabs do not fit. Their placement is not
+ controlled by the style, but the buttons are \l{QToolButton}s
+ and are therefore drawn by the style.
+
+ Here is the style structure for QTabWidget and QTabBar:
+
+ \image javastyle/tab.png
+
+ The dotted lines indicate that the QTabWidget contains a tab bar,
+ but does not draw it itself, that QTabBar only draws its base line
+ when not part of a tab widget, and that the tab bar keeps two tool
+ buttons that scroll the bar when all tabs do not fit; see \l{Tool
+ Buttons} for their element tree. Also note that since the buttons
+ are children of the tab bar, they are drawn after the bar. The
+ tabs bounding rectangles overlap the base by PM_TabBarBaseOverlap.
+
+ Here is a tab widget in the java style:
+
+ \image javastyle/tabwidget.png
+
+ In the java style (and also windows), the tab bar shape and label
+ have the same bounding rectangle as CE_TabBarTab. Notice that the
+ tabs overlap with the tab widget frame. The base of the tab bar
+ (if drawn) is the area where the tabs and frame overlap.
+
+ The style option for tabs (QStyleOptionTab) contains the necessary
+ information for drawing tabs. The option contains the position of
+ the tab in the tab bar, the position of the selected tab, the
+ shape of the tab, the text, and icon. After Qt 4.1 the option
+ should be cast to a QStyleOptionTabV2, which also contains the
+ icons size.
+
+ As the java style tabs don't overlap, we also present an image of
+ a tab widget in the windows style. Note that if you want the tabs
+ to overlap horizontally, you do that when drawing the tabs in
+ CE_TabBarTabShape; the tabs bounding rectangles will not be
+ altered by the tab bar. The tabs are drawn from left to right in a
+ north tab bar shape, top to bottom in an east tab bar shape, etc.
+ The selected tab is drawn last, so that it is easy to draw it over
+ the other tabs (if it is to be bigger).
+
+ \image javastyle/windowstabimage.png
+
+ A table of the states a tab bar can set on its tabs follows:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o The tab is pressed on with the mouse.
+ \row
+ \o State_Selected
+ \o If it is the current tab.
+ \row
+ \o State_HasFocus
+ \o The tab bar has focus and the tab is selected
+ \endtable
+
+ Note that individual tabs may be disabled even if the tab bar
+ is not. The tab will be active if the tab bar is active.
+
+ Here follows a table of QStyleOptionTabV2's members:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o cornerWidgets
+ \o Is flags of the CornerWidget enum, which indicate
+ if and which corner widgets the tab bar has.
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o The QIcon of the tab
+ \row
+ \o iconSize
+ \o The QSize of the icon
+ \row
+ \o position
+ \o A TabPosition enum value that indicates the tabs
+ position on the bar relative to the other tabs.
+ \row
+ \o row
+ \o holds which row the tab is in
+ \row
+ \o selectedPosition
+ \o A value of the SelectedPosition enum that indicates
+ whether the selected tab is adjacent to or is the
+ tab.
+ \row
+ \o shape
+ \o A value of the QTabBar::Shape enum indication
+ whether the tab has rounded or triangular corners
+ and the orientation of the tab.
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o The tab text
+ \endtable
+
+ The frame for tab widgets use QStyleOptionTabWidgetFrame as
+ style option. We list its members here. It does not have
+ states set besides the common flags.
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o content
+ \row
+ \o leftCornerWidgetSize
+ \o The QSize of the left corner widget (if any).
+ \row
+ \o rightCornerWidgetSize
+ \o The QSize of the right corner widget (if any).
+ \row
+ \o lineWidth
+ \o holds the line with for drawing the panel.
+ \row
+ \o midLineWith
+ \o this value is currently always 0.
+ \row
+ \o shape
+ \o The shape of the tabs on the tab bar.
+ \row
+ \o tabBarSize
+ \o The QSize of the tab bar.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Scroll Bars
+
+ Here is the style structure for scrollBars:
+
+ \image javastyle/scrollbar.png
+
+ QScrollBar simply creates its style option and then draws
+ CC_ScrollBar. Some styles draw the background of add page and sub
+ page with PE_PanelButtonBevel and also use indicator arrows to
+ draw the arrows in the nest and previous line indicators; we have
+ not included these in the tree as their use is up to the
+ individual style. The style's PM_MaximumDragDistance is the
+ maximum distance in pixels the mouse can move from the bounds
+ of the scroll bar and still move the handle.
+
+ Here is an image of a scrollbar in the java style:
+
+ \image javastyle/scrollbarimage.png
+
+ You may notice that the scrollbar is slightly different from
+ Java's as it has two line up indicators. We have done this to show
+ how that you can have two separate bounding rectangles for a
+ single sub control. The scroll bar is an example of a widget that
+ is entirely implemented by the java style - neither QWindowsStyle
+ nor QCommonStyle are involved in the drawing.
+
+ We have a look at the different states a scroll bar can set on
+ the style option:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Horizontal
+ \o The scroll bar is horizontal
+ \endtable
+
+ The style option of QScrollBar is QStyleOptionSlider. Its
+ members are listed in the following table. The option is used
+ by all \l{QAbstractSlider}s; we only describe the members
+ relevant for scroll bars here.
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o maximum
+ \o the maximum value of the scroll bar
+ \row
+ \o minimum
+ \o the minimum value of the scroll bar
+ \row
+ \o notchTarget
+ \o the number of pixels between notches
+ \row
+ \o orientation
+ \o a value of the Qt::Orientation enum that specifies
+ whether the scroll bar is vertical or horizontal
+ \row
+ \o pageStep
+ \o the number to increase or decrease the sliders
+ value (relative to the size of the slider and its value
+ range) on page steps.
+ \row
+ \o singleStep
+ \o the number to increase or decrease the sliders
+ value on single (or line) steps
+ \row
+ \o sliderValue
+ \o The value of the slider
+ \row
+ \o sliderPosition
+ \o the position of the slider handle. This is the same
+ as \c sliderValue if the scroll bar is
+ QAbstractSlider::tracking. If not, the scroll
+ bar does not update its value before the mouse
+ releases the handle.
+ \row
+ \o upsideDown
+ \o holds the direction in which the scroll bar
+ increases its value. This is used instead of
+ QStyleOption::direction for all abstract sliders.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Sliders
+
+ When calculating the sliders size hint, PM_SliderTickness and
+ PM_SliderLength is queried from the style. As with scroll bars,
+ the QSlider only lets the user move the handle if the mouse is
+ within PM_MaximumDragDistance from the slider bounds. When it
+ draws itself it creates the style option and calls \c
+ drawComplexControl() with CC_Slider:
+
+ \image javastyle/slider.png
+
+ We also show a picture of a slider in the java style. We show
+ the bounding rectangles of the sub elements as all drawing is done
+ in CC_Slider.
+
+ \image javastyle/sliderimage.png
+
+ QSlider uses QStyleOptionSlider as all \l{QAbstractSlider}s do. We
+ present a table with the members that affect QSlider:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o maximum
+ \o the maximum value of the slider
+ \row
+ \o minimum
+ \o the minimum value of the slider
+ \row
+ \o notchTarget
+ \o this is the number of pixels between each notch
+ \row
+ \o orientation
+ \o a Qt::Orientation enum value that gives whether the
+ slider is vertical or horizontal.
+ \row
+ \o pageStep
+ \o a number in slider value to increase or decrease
+ for page steps
+ \row
+ \o singleStep
+ \o the number to increase or decrease the sliders
+ value on single (or line) steps.
+ \row
+ \o sliderValue
+ \o the value of the slider.
+ \row
+ \o sliderPosition
+ \o the position of the slider given as a slider value.
+ This will be equal to the \c sliderValue if the
+ slider is \l{QAbstractSlider::}{tracking}; if
+ not, the sliders value will not change until the handle is
+ released with the mouse.
+ \row
+ \o upsideDown
+ \o this member is used instead of QStyleOption::direction
+ for all abstract sliders.
+ \endtable
+
+ You should note that the slider does not use direction for
+ reverse layouts; it uses \c upsideDown.
+
+ \section3 Spin Boxes
+
+ When QSpinBox paints itself it creates a QStyleOptionSpinBox and
+ asks the style to draw CC_SpinBox. The edit field is a line
+ edit that is a child of the spin box. The dimensions of the
+ field is calculated by the style with SC_SpinBoxEditField.
+
+ Here follows the style tree for spin boxes. It is not
+ required that a style uses the button panel primitive to paint
+ the indicator backgrounds. You can see an image below the tree
+ showing the sub elements in QSpinBox in the java style.
+
+ \image javastyle/spinbox.png
+
+ \image javastyle/spinboximage.png
+
+ The QStyleOptionSpinBox, which is the style option for spin
+ boxes. It can set the following states on the spin box.:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o State Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o Is set if one of the sub controls CC_SpinUp or
+ CC_SpinDown is pressed on with the mouse.
+ \endtable
+
+ The rest of the members in the spin boxes style options are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Property
+ \o Function
+ \row
+ \o frame
+ \o boolean that is true if the spin box is to draw a
+ frame.
+ \row
+ \o buttonSymbols
+ \o Value of the ButtonSymbols enum that decides the
+ symbol on the up/down buttons.
+ \row
+ \o stepEnabled
+ \o A value of the StepEnabled indication which of the
+ spin box buttons are pressed down.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Title Bar
+
+ The title bar complex control, CC_TitleBar, is used to draw
+ the title bars of internal windows in QMdiArea. It typically
+ consists of a window title and close, minimize, system menu, and
+ maximize buttons. Some styles also provide buttons for shading
+ the window, and a button for context sensitive help.
+
+ The bar is drawn in CC_TitleBar without using any sub elements.
+ How the individual styles draw their buttons is individual, but
+ there are standard pixmaps for the buttons that the style should
+ provide.
+
+ \image javastyle/titlebar.png
+
+ In an image over a title bar in the java style, we show the
+ bounding rectangles of the sub elements supported by the java style
+ (all of which are drawn with standard pixmaps). It is usual to
+ draw the button backgrounds using PE_PanelButtonTool, but it's no
+ rule.
+
+ \image javastyle/titlebarimage.png
+
+ The style option for title bars is QStyleOptionTitleBar. It's
+ members are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o The title bars icon
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text for the title bar's label
+ \row
+ \o windowFlags
+ \o flags of the Qt::WindowFlag enum. The window flags
+ used by QMdiArea for window management.
+ \row
+ \o titleBarState
+ \o this is the QWidget::windowState() of the window
+ that contains the title bar.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Combo Box
+
+ A QComboBox uses the style to draw the button and label of
+ non-editable boxes with CC_ComboBox and CE_ComboBoxLabel.
+
+ The list that pops up when the user clicks on the combo box is
+ drawn by a \l{Delegate Classes}{delegate}, which we do not cover
+ in this overview. You can, however, use the style to control the
+ list's size and position with the sub element
+ SC_ComboBoxListBoxPopup. The style also decides where the edit
+ field for editable boxes should be with SC_ComboBoxEditField; the
+ field itself is a QLineEdit that is a child of the combo box.
+
+ \image javastyle/combobox.png
+
+ We show an image over a java style combo box in which we have
+ outlined its sub elements and sub element rectangles:
+
+ \image javastyle/comboboximage.png
+
+ Java combo boxes do not use the focus rect; it changes its
+ background color when it has focus. The SC_ComboBoxEdit field is
+ used both by QComboBox to calculate the size of the edit field and
+ the style for calculating the size of the combo box label.
+
+ The style option for combo boxes is QStyleOptionComboBox. It
+ can set the following states:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Selected
+ \o The box is not editable and has focus
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o SC_ComboBoxArrow is active
+ \row
+ \o State_on
+ \o The container (list) of the box is visible
+ \endtable
+
+ The style options other members are:
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o currentIcon
+ \o the icon of the current (selected) item of the
+ combo box.
+ \row
+ \o currentText
+ \o the text of the current item in the box.
+ \row
+ \o editable
+ \o holds whether the combo box is editable or not
+ \row
+ \o frame
+ \o holds whether the combo box has a frame or not
+ \row
+ \o iconSize
+ \o the size of the current items icon.
+ \row
+ \o popupRect
+ \o the bounding rectangle of the combo box's popup
+ list.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Group Boxes
+
+ When calculating the size hint, QGroupBox fetches three pixel
+ metrics from the style: PM_IndicatorWidth,
+ PM_CheckBoxLabelSpacing, and PM_IndicatorHeight. QGroupBox has
+ the following style element tree:
+
+ \image javastyle/groupbox.png
+
+ Qt does not impose restrictions on how the check box is drawn; the
+ java style draws it with CE_IndicatorCheckBox. See \l{Check and
+ Radio Buttons} for the complete tree.
+
+ We also give an image of the widget with the sub controls and
+ sub control rectangles drawn:
+
+ \image javastyle/groupboximage.png
+
+ The style option for group boxes are QStyleOptionGroupBox. The
+ following states can be set on it:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_On
+ \o The check box is checked
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o The checkbox is pressed down
+ \row
+ \o State_Off
+ \o The check box is unchecked (or there is no check box)
+ \endtable
+
+ The remaining members of QStyleOptionGroupBox are:
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o features
+ \o flags of the QStyleOptionFrameV2::FrameFeatures
+ enum describing the frame of the group box.
+ \row
+ \o lineWidth
+ \o the line width with which to draw the panel. This
+ is always 1.
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text of the group box.
+ \row
+ \o textAlignment
+ \o the alignment of the group box title
+ \row
+ \o textColor
+ \o the QColor of the text
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Splitters
+
+ As the structure of splitters are simple and do not contain any
+ sub elements, we do not include image of splitters. CE_Splitter
+ does not use any other elements or metrics.
+
+ For its style option, Splitters uses the base class QStyleOption.
+ It can set the following state flags on it:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Horizontal
+ \o Set if it is a horizontal splitter
+ \endtable
+
+ QSplitter does not use \l{QStyleOption::}{initFrom()} to set up its
+ option; it sets the State_MouseOver and State_Disabled flags
+ itself.
+
+ \section3 Progress Bar
+
+ The CE_ProgressBar element is used by QProgressBar, and it is the
+ only element used by this widget. We start with looking at the
+ style structure:
+
+ \image javastyle/progressbar.png
+
+ Here is a progress bar in the windows style (the java style
+ bounding rectangles are equal):
+
+ \image javastyle/progressbarimage.png
+
+ The style option for QProgressBar is QStyleOptionProgressBarV2.
+ The bar does not set any state flags, but the other members of the
+ option are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o minimum
+ \o The minimum value of the bar
+ \row
+ \o maximum
+ \o The maximum value of the bar
+ \row
+ \o progress
+ \o The current value of the bar
+ \row
+ \o textAlignment
+ \o How the text is aligned in the label
+ \row
+ \o textVisible
+ \o Whether the label is drawn
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o The label text
+ \row
+ \o orientation
+ \o Progress bars can be vertical or horizontal
+ \row
+ \o invertedAppearance
+ \o The progress is inverted (i.e., right to left in a
+ horizontal bar)
+ \row
+ \o bottomToTop
+ \o Boolean that if true, turns the label of vertical
+ progress bars 90 degrees.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Tool Buttons
+
+ Tool buttons exist either independently or as part of tool bars.
+ They are drawn equally either way. The QToolButton draws only one
+ style element: CC_ToolButton.
+
+ As you must be used to by now (at least if you have read this
+ document sequentially), we have a tree of the widget's style
+ structure:
+
+ \image javastyle/toolbutton.png
+
+ Note that PE_FrameButtonTool and PE_IndicatorArrowDown are
+ included in the tree as the java style draws them, but they can
+ safely be omitted if you prefer it. The structure may also be
+ different. QWindowsStyle, for instance, draws both
+ PE_IndicatorButtonDropDown and PE_IndicatorArrowDown in
+ CE_ToolButton.
+
+ We also have an image of a tool button where we have outlined
+ the sub element bounding rectangles and sub controls.
+
+ \image javastyle/toolbuttonimage.png
+
+ Here is the states table for tool buttons:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_AutoRise
+ \o the tool button has the autoRise property set
+ \row
+ \o State_raised
+ \o the button is not sunken (i.e., by being checked or
+ pressed on with the mouse).
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o the button is down
+ \row
+ \o State_On
+ \o the button is checkable and checked.
+ \endtable
+
+ QStyleOptionToolButton also contains the following members:
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o arrowType
+ \o a Qt::ArrowType enum value, which contains the
+ direction of the buttons arrow (if an arrow is to
+ be used in place of an icon)
+ \row
+ \o features
+ \o flags of the QStyleOptionToolButton::ButtonFeature
+ enum describing if the button has an arrow, a menu,
+ and/or has a popup-delay.
+ \row
+ \o font
+ \o the QFont of the buttons label
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o the QIcon of the tool button
+ \row
+ \o iconSize
+ \o the icon size of the button's icon
+ \row
+ \o pos
+ \o the position of the button, as given by
+ QWidget::pos()
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text of the button
+ \row
+ \o toolButtonStyle
+ \o a Qt::ToolButtonStyle enum value which decides
+ whether the button shows the icon, the text, or both.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Toolbars
+
+ Toolbars are part of the \l{QMainWindow}{main window framework}
+ and cooperates with the QMainWindow to which it belongs while it
+ builds its style option. A main window has 4 areas that toolbars
+ can be placed in. They are positioned next to the four sides of
+ the window (i.e., north, south, west, and east). Within each area
+ there can be more than one line of toolbars; a line consists of
+ toolbars with equal orientation (vertical or horizontal) placed
+ next to each other.
+
+ \l{QToolbar}{QToolbar}s in Qt consists of three elements
+ CE_ToolBar, PE_IndicatorToolBarHandle, and
+ PE_IndicatorToolBarSeparator. It is QMainWindowLayout that
+ calculates the bounding rectangles (i.e., position and size of the
+ toolbars and their contents. The main window also uses the \c
+ sizeHint() of the items in the toolbars when calculating the size
+ of the bars.
+
+ Here is the element tree for QToolBar:
+
+ \image javastyle/toolbar.png
+
+ The dotted lines indicate that the QToolBar keeps an instance of
+ QToolBarLayout and that QToolBarSeparators are kept by
+ QToolBarLayout. When the toolbar is floating (i.e., has its own
+ window) the PE_FrameMenu element is drawn, else QToolbar draws
+ CE_ToolBar.
+
+ Here is an image of a toolbar in the java style:
+
+ \image javastyle/toolbarimage.png
+
+ QToolBarSaparator uses QStyleOption for their style option. It
+ sets the State_horizontal flag if the toolbar they live in is
+ horizontal. Other than that, they use \l{QStyleOption::}{initFrom()}.
+
+ The style option for QToolBar is QStyleOptionToolBar. The only
+ state flag set (besides the common flags) is State_Horizontal
+ if the bar is horizontal (i.e., in the north or south toolbar area).
+ The member variables of the style option are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o features
+ \o Holds whether the bar is movable in a value of the
+ ToolBarFeature, which is either Movable or None.
+ \row
+ \o lineWidth
+ \o The width of the tool bar frame.
+ \row
+ \o midLineWidth
+ \o This variable is currently not used and is always
+ 0.
+ \row
+ \o positionOfLine
+ \o The position of the toolbar line within the toolbar
+ area to which it belongs.
+ \row
+ \o positionWithinLine
+ \o The position of the toolbar within the toolbar line.
+ \row
+ \o toolBarArea
+ \o The toolbar area in which the toolbar lives.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Menus
+
+ Menus in Qt are implemented in QMenu. The QMenu keeps a list of
+ action, which it draws as menu items. When QMenu receives paint
+ events ,it calculates the size of each menu item and draws them
+ individually with CE_MenuItem. (Menu items do not have a separate
+ element for their label (contents), so all drawing is done in
+ CE_MenuItem. The menu also draws the frame of the menu with
+ PE_FrameMenu. It also draws CE_MenuScroller if the style supports
+ scrolling. CE_MenuTearOff is drawn if the menu is to large for its
+ bounding rectangle.
+
+ In the style structure tree, we also include QMenu as it also does
+ styling related work. The bounding rectangles of menu items are
+ calculated for the menus size hint and when the menu is displayed
+ or resized.
+
+ \image javastyle/menu.png
+
+ The CE_MenuScroller and CE_MenuTearOff elements are handled by
+ QCommonStyle and are not shown unless the menu is to large to fit
+ on the screen. PE_FrameMenu is only drawn for pop-up menus.
+
+ QMenu calculates rectangles based on its actions and calls
+ CE_MenuItem and CE_MenuScroller if the style supports that.
+
+ It is also usual to use PE_IndicatorCheckBox (instead of using
+ PE_IndicatorMenuCheckMark) and PE_IndicatorRadioButton for drawing
+ checkable menu items; we have not included them in the style tree
+ as this is optional and varies from style to style.
+
+ \image javastyle/menuimage.png
+
+ The style option for menu items is QStyleOptionMenuItem. The
+ following tables describe its state flags and other members.
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Selected
+ \o The mouse is over the action and the action is not
+ a separator.
+ \row
+ \o State_Sunken
+ \o The mouse is pressed down on the menu item.
+ \row
+ \o State_DownArrow
+ \o Set if the menu item is a menu scroller and it scrolls
+ the menu downwards.
+ \endtable
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o checkType
+ \o A value of the \l{QStyleOptionMenuItem::}{CheckType} enum,
+ which is either NotCheckable, Exclusive, or
+ NonExclusive.
+ \row
+ \o checked
+ \o Boolean that is true if the menu item is checked.
+ \row
+ \o font
+ \o The QFont to use for the menu item's text.
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o the QIcon of the menu item.
+ \row
+ \o maxIconWidth
+ \o The maximum width allowed for the icon
+ \row
+ \o menuHasChecableItem
+ \o Boolean which is true if at least one item in the
+ menu is checkable.
+ \row
+ \o menuItemType
+ \o The type of the menu item. This a value of the
+ \l{QStyleOptionMenuItem::}{MenuItemType}.
+ \row
+ \o menuRect
+ \o The bounding rectangle for the QMenu that the menu
+ item lives in.
+ \row
+ \o tabWidth
+ \o This is the distance between the text of the menu
+ item and the shortcut.
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o The text of the menu item.
+ \endtable
+
+ The setup of the style option for CE_MenuTearOff and
+ CE_MenuScroller also uses QStyleOptionMenuItem; they only set the
+ \c menuRect variable in addition to the common settings with
+ QStyleOption's \l{QStyleOption::}{initFrom()}.
+
+ \section3 Menu Bar
+
+ QMenuBar uses the style to draw each menu bar item and the empty
+ area of the menu bar. The pull-down menus themselves are
+ \l{QMenu}s (see \l{Menus}). The style element tree for the menu
+ bar follows:
+
+ \image javastyle/menubar.png
+
+ The panel and empty area is drawn after the menu items. The
+ QPainter that the QMenuBar sends to the style has the bounding
+ rectangles of the items clipped out (i.e., clip region), so you
+ don't need to worry about drawing over the items. The pixel
+ metrics in QMenuBar is used when the bounding rectangles of the
+ menu bar items are calculated.
+
+ \image javastyle/menubarimage.png
+
+ QStyleOptionMenuItem is used for menu bar items. The members that
+ are used by QMenuBar is described in the following table:
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o menuRect
+ \o the bounding rectangle of the entire menu bar to
+ which the item belongs.
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text of the item
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o the icon of the menu item (it is not common that
+ styles draw this icon)
+ \endtable
+
+ QStyleOptionMenuItem is also used for drawing CE_EmptyMenuBarArea.
+
+ QStyleOptionFrame is used for drawing the panel frame The
+ \l{QStyleOptionFrame::}{lineWidth} is set to PM_MenuBarPanelWidth.
+ The \l{QStyleOptionFrame::}{midLineWidth} is currently always set
+ to 0.
+
+ \section3 Item View Headers
+
+ It is the style that draws the headers of Qt's item views. The
+ item views keeps the dimensions on individual sections. Also
+ note that the delegates may use the style to paint decorations
+ and frames around items. QItemDelegate, for instance, draws
+ PE_FrameFocusRect and PE_IndicatorViewItemCheck.
+
+ \image javastyle/header.png
+
+ Here is a QTableWidget showing the bounding rects of a Java
+ header:
+
+ \image javastyle/headerimage.png
+
+ The QHeaderView uses CT_HeaderSection, PM_HeaderMargin and
+ PM_HeaderGripMargin for size and hit test calculations. The
+ PM_HeaderMarkSize is currently not used by Qt. QTableView draws
+ the button in the top-left corner (i.e., the area where the
+ vertical and horizontal headers intersect) as a CE_Header.
+
+ The style option for header views is QStyleOptionHeader. The view
+ paints one header section at a time, so the data is for the
+ section being drawn. Its contents are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o the icon of the header (for section that is being
+ drawn).
+ \row
+ \o iconAlignment
+ \o the alignment (Qt::Alignment) of the icon in the header.
+ \row
+ \o orientation
+ \o a Qt::Orientation value deciding whether the header
+ is the horizontal header above the view or the
+ vertical header on the left.
+ \row
+ \o position
+ \o a QStyleOptionHeader::SectionPosition value
+ giving the header section's position relative to
+ the other sections.
+ \row
+ \o section
+ \o holds the section that is being drawn.
+ \row
+ \o selectedPosition
+ \o a QStyleOptionHeader::SelectedPosition value giving
+ the selected section's position relative to the
+ section that is being painted.
+ \row
+ \o sortIndicator
+ \o a QStyleOptionHeader::SortIndicator value that
+ describes the direction in which the section's sort
+ indicator should be drawn.
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text of the currently drawn section.
+ \row
+ \o textAlignment
+ \o the Qt::Alignment of the text within the
+ headersection.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Tree Branch Indicators
+
+ The branch indicators in a tree view is drawn by the style with
+ PE_IndicatorBranch. We think of indicators here as the indicators
+ that describe the relationship of the nodes in the tree. The
+ generic QStyleOption is sent to the style for drawing this
+ elements. The various branch types are described by states. Since
+ there are no specific style option, we simply present the states
+ table:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o State
+ \o Set When
+ \row
+ \o State_Sibling
+ \o the node in the tree has a sibling (i.e., there is
+ another node in the same column).
+ \row
+ \o State_Item
+ \o this branch indicator has an item.
+ \row
+ \o State_Children
+ \o the branch has children (i.e., a new sub-tree can
+ be opened at the branch).
+ \row
+ \o State_Open
+ \o the branch indicator has an opened sub-tree.
+ \endtable
+
+ The tree view (and tree widget) use the style to draw the branches
+ (or nodes if you will) of the tree.
+
+ QStyleOption is used as the style for PE_IndicatorBranch has state
+ flags set depending on what type of branch it is.
+
+ Since there is no tree structure for branch indicators, we only
+ present an image of a tree in the java style. Each state is marked
+ in the image with a rectangle in a specific color (i.e., these
+ rectangles are not bounding rectangles). All combinations of
+ states you must be aware of are represented in the image.
+
+ \image javastyle/branchindicatorimage.png
+
+ \section3 Tool Boxes
+
+ PM_SmallIconSize for sizeHints.
+
+ QToolBox is a container that keeps a collection of widgets. It has
+ one tab for each widget and display one of them at a time. The
+ tool box lays the components it displays (the tool box buttons
+ and selected widget) in a QVBoxLayout. The style tree for tool
+ boxes looks like this:
+
+ \image javastyle/toolbox.png
+
+ We show an image of a tool box in the Plastique style:
+
+ \image javastyle/toolboximage.png
+
+ All elements have the same bounding rectangles in the
+ Plastique as well as the other Qt built-in styles.
+
+ The style option for tool boxes is QStyleOptionToolBox. It
+ contains the text and icon of the tool box contents. The only
+ state set by QToolBox is State_Sunken, which is set when the user
+ presses a tab down with the mouse. The rest of the
+ QStyleOptionToolBox members are:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o icon
+ \o the icon on the toolbox tab
+ \row
+ \o text
+ \o the text on the toolbox tab
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Size Grip
+
+ The size grip calculates its size hint with CT_SizeGrip. The pixel
+ metric PM_SizeGripSize is currently unused by Qt. The element tree
+ for and an image in the Plastique style of QSizeGrip follows:
+
+ \image javastyle/sizegrip.png
+
+ \image javastyle/sizegripimage.png
+
+ We show the size grip in a \l{QMainWindow}'s bottom right
+ corner.
+
+ The size grip style option, QStyleOptionSizeGrip, have one
+ member except the common members from QStyleOption:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o corner
+ \o a Qt::Corner value that describe which corner in a
+ window (or equivalent) the grip is located.
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Rubber Band
+
+ The \l{QRubberBand}'s style tree consists of two nodes.
+
+ \image javastyle/rubberband.png
+
+ We present an image of a Java style window being moved in a
+ QMdiArea with a rubber band:
+
+ \image javastyle/rubberbandimage.png
+
+ The style option for rubber bands is QStyleOptionRubberBand.
+ Its members are:
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o opaque
+ \o boolean that is true if the rubber band must be
+ drawn in an opaque style (i.e., color)
+ \row
+ \o shape
+ \o a QRubberBand::Shape enum value that holds the
+ shape of the band (which is either a rectangle or a
+ line)
+ \endtable
+
+ \section3 Dock Widgets
+
+ When the dock widget lays out its contents it asks the style for
+ these pixel metrics: PM_DockWidgetSeparatorExtent,
+ PM_DockWidgetTitleBarButtonMargin, PM_DockWidgetFrameWidth, and
+ PM_DockWidgetTitleMargin. It also calculates the bounding
+ rectangles of the float and close buttons with
+ SE_DockWidgetCloseButton and SE_DockWidgetFloatButton.
+
+ \image javastyle/dockwidget.png
+
+ The dotted lines indicate that the sender keeps instances of the
+ recipient of the arrow (i.e., it is not a style element to draw).
+ The dock widget only draws PE_frameDockWidget when it is detached
+ from its main window (i.e., it is a top level window). If it is
+ docked it draws the indicator dock widget resize handle. We show a
+ dock widget in both docked and floating state in the plastique
+ style:
+
+ \image javastyle/dockwidgetimage.png
+
+ The style option is QStyleOptionDockWidget:
+
+ \table 90%
+ \header
+ \o Member
+ \o Content
+ \row
+ \o closeable
+ \o boolean that holds whether the dock window can be
+ closed
+ \row
+ \o floatable
+ \o boolean that holds whether the dock window can
+ float (i.e., detach from the main window in which
+ it lives)
+ \row
+ \o movable
+ \o boolean that holds whether the window is movable
+ (i.e., can move to other dock widget areas)
+ \row
+ \o title
+ \o the title text of the dock window
+ \endtable
+
+ For the buttons, QStyleOptionButton is used (see \l{Tool Buttons}
+ for content description). The dock widget resize handle has a
+ plain QStyleOption.
+*/