Window QML Type
Creates a new top-level window. More...
Import Statement: | import QtQuick 2.2 |
Instantiates: | QQuickWindow |
Properties
- active : bool
- activeFocusItem : Item
- color : color
- contentItem : Item
- contentOrientation : Qt::ScreenOrientation
- data : list<Object>
- flags : Qt::WindowFlags
- height : int
- maximumHeight : int
- maximumWidth : int
- minimumHeight : int
- minimumWidth : int
- modality : Qt::WindowModality
- opacity : real
- palette : Palette
- screen : variant
- title : string
- transientParent : QWindow
- visibility : QWindow::Visibility
- visible : bool
- width : int
- x : int
- y : int
Attached Properties
- active : bool
- activeFocusItem : Item
- contentItem : Item
- height : int
- visibility : QWindow::Visibility
- width : int
- window : Window
Signals
- afterAnimating()
- closing(CloseEvent close)
- frameSwapped()
- sceneGraphError(SceneGraphError error, QString message)
Methods
- alert(int msec)
- close()
- hide()
- lower()
- raise()
- requestActivate()
- show()
- showFullScreen()
- showMaximized()
- showMinimized()
- showNormal()
Detailed Description
The Window object creates a new top-level window for a Qt Quick scene. It automatically sets up the window for use with QtQuick
graphical types.
To use this type, you will need to import the module with the following line:
import QtQuick
Omitting this import will allow you to have a QML environment without access to window system features.
A Window can be declared inside an Item or inside another Window; in that case the inner Window will automatically become "transient for" the outer Window: that is, most platforms will show it centered upon the outer window by default, and there may be other platform-dependent behaviors, depending also on the flags. If the nested window is intended to be a dialog in your application, you should also set flags to Qt.Dialog, because some window managers will not provide the centering behavior without that flag. You can also declare multiple windows inside a top-level QtObject, in which case the windows will have no transient relationship.
Alternatively you can set or bind x and y to position the Window explicitly on the screen.
When the user attempts to close a window, the closing signal will be emitted. You can force the window to stay open (for example to prompt the user to save changes) by writing an onClosing
handler and setting close.accepted = false
.
Property Documentation
Defines the window's maximum size.
This is a hint to the window manager to prevent resizing above the specified width and height.
This QML property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
Defines the window's minimum size.
This is a hint to the window manager to prevent resizing below the specified width and height.
This QML property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
[since 5.1] active : bool |
The active status of the window.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
See also requestActivate().
[since 5.1] activeFocusItem : Item |
The item which currently has active focus or null
if there is no item with active focus.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
color : color |
The background color for the window.
Setting this property is more efficient than using a separate Rectangle.
[read-only] contentItem : Item |
The invisible root item of the scene.
[since 5.1] contentOrientation : Qt::ScreenOrientation |
This is a hint to the window manager in case it needs to display additional content like popups, dialogs, status bars, or similar in relation to the window.
The recommended orientation is Screen.orientation, but an application doesn't have to support all possible orientations, and thus can opt to ignore the current screen orientation.
The difference between the window and the content orientation determines how much to rotate the content by.
The default value is Qt::PrimaryOrientation.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
See also Screen.
[default] data : list<Object> |
The data property allows you to freely mix visual children, resources and other Windows in a Window.
If you assign another Window to the data list, the nested window will become "transient for" the outer Window.
If you assign an Item to the data list, it becomes a child of the Window's contentItem, so that it appears inside the window. The item's parent will be the window's contentItem, which is the root of the Item ownership tree within that Window.
If you assign any other object type, it is added as a resource.
It should not generally be necessary to refer to the data
property, as it is the default property for Window and thus all child items are automatically assigned to this property.
See also QWindow::transientParent().
flags : Qt::WindowFlags |
The window flags of the window.
The window flags control the window's appearance in the windowing system, whether it's a dialog, popup, or a regular window, and whether it should have a title bar, etc.
The flags which you read from this property might differ from the ones that you set if the requested flags could not be fulfilled.
See also Qt::WindowFlags.
modality : Qt::WindowModality |
The modality of the window.
A modal window prevents other windows from receiving input events. Possible values are Qt.NonModal (the default), Qt.WindowModal, and Qt.ApplicationModal.
[since 5.1] opacity : real |
The opacity of the window.
If the windowing system supports window opacity, this can be used to fade the window in and out, or to make it semitransparent.
A value of 1.0 or above is treated as fully opaque, whereas a value of 0.0 or below is treated as fully transparent. Values inbetween represent varying levels of translucency between the two extremes.
The default value is 1.0.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
[since 6.0] palette : Palette |
This property holds the palette currently set for the window.
The default palette depends on the system environment. QGuiApplication maintains a system/theme palette which serves as a default for all application windows. You can also set the default palette for windows by passing a custom palette to QGuiApplication::setPalette(), before loading any QML.
ApplicationWindow propagates explicit palette properties to child controls. If you change a specific property on the window's palette, that property propagates to all child controls in the window, overriding any system defaults for that property.
This property was introduced in Qt 6.0.
See also Item::palette, Popup::palette, and ColorGroup.
[since 5.9] screen : variant |
The screen with which the window is associated.
If specified before showing a window, will result in the window being shown on that screen, unless an explicit window position has been set. The value must be an element from the Qt.application.screens array.
Note: To ensure that the window is associated with the desired screen when the underlying native window is created, make sure this property is set as early as possible and that the setting of its value is not deferred. This can be particularly important on embedded platforms without a windowing system, where only one window per screen is allowed at a time. Setting the screen after a window has been created does not move the window if the new screen is part of the same virtual desktop as the old screen.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.9.
See also QWindow::setScreen(), QWindow::screen(), QScreen, and Qt.application.
title : string |
The window's title in the windowing system.
The window title might appear in the title area of the window decorations, depending on the windowing system and the window flags. It might also be used by the windowing system to identify the window in other contexts, such as in the task switcher.
[since 5.13] transientParent : QWindow |
The window for which this window is a transient pop-up.
This is a hint to the window manager that this window is a dialog or pop-up on behalf of the transient parent. It usually means that the transient window will be centered over its transient parent when it is initially shown, that minimizing the parent window will also minimize the transient window, and so on; however results vary somewhat from platform to platform.
Normally if you declare a Window inside an Item or inside another Window, this relationship is deduced automatically. In that case, if you declare this window's visible property true
, it will not actually be shown until the transientParent
window is shown.
However if you set this property, then Qt Quick will no longer wait until the transientParent
window is shown before showing this window. If you want to to be able to show a transient window independently of the "parent" Item or Window within which it was declared, you can remove that relationship by setting transientParent
to null
:
import QtQuick.Window 2.13 Window { // visible is false by default Window { transientParent: null visible: true } }
In order to cause the window to be centered above its transient parent by default, depending on the window manager, it may also be necessary to set the Window::flags property with a suitable Qt::WindowType (such as Qt::Dialog
).
This property was introduced in Qt 5.13.
[since 5.1] visibility : QWindow::Visibility |
The screen-occupation state of the window.
Visibility is whether the window should appear in the windowing system as normal, minimized, maximized, fullscreen or hidden.
To set the visibility to AutomaticVisibility means to give the window a default visible state, which might be FullScreen or Windowed depending on the platform. However when reading the visibility property you will always get the actual state, never AutomaticVisibility
.
When a window is not visible its visibility is Hidden, and setting visibility to Hidden is the same as setting visible to false
.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.1.
See also visible.
visible : bool |
Whether the window is visible on the screen.
Setting visible to false is the same as setting visibility to Hidden.
See also visibility.
Attached Property Documentation
These attached properties hold the size of the item's window. The Window attached property can be attached to any Item.
This QML property was introduced in Qt 5.5.
[since 5.4] Window.active : bool |
This attached property tells whether the window is active. The Window attached property can be attached to any Item.
Here is an example which changes a label to show the active state of the window in which it is shown:
import QtQuick 2.4 import QtQuick.Window 2.2 Text { text: Window.active ? "active" : "inactive" }
This property was introduced in Qt 5.4.
[since 5.4] Window.activeFocusItem : Item |
This attached property holds the item which currently has active focus or null
if there is no item with active focus. The Window attached property can be attached to any Item.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.4.
[since 5.4] Window.contentItem : Item |
This attached property holds the invisible root item of the scene or null
if the item is not in a window. The Window attached property can be attached to any Item.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.4.
[since 5.4] Window.visibility : QWindow::Visibility |
This attached property holds whether the window is currently shown in the windowing system as normal, minimized, maximized, fullscreen or hidden. The Window
attached property can be attached to any Item. If the item is not shown in any window, the value will be Hidden.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.4.
See also visible and visibility.
[since 5.7] Window.window : Window |
This attached property holds the item's window. The Window attached property can be attached to any Item.
This property was introduced in Qt 5.7.
Signal Documentation
|
This signal is emitted on the GUI thread before requesting the render thread to perform the synchronization of the scene graph.
You can implement onAfterAnimating to do additional processing after each animation step.
Note: The corresponding handler is onAfterAnimating
.
This signal was introduced in Qt 5.3.
|
This signal is emitted when the user tries to close the window.
This signal includes a close parameter. The close.accepted
property is true by default so that the window is allowed to close; but you can implement an onClosing
handler and set close.accepted = false
if you need to do something else before the window can be closed.
Note: The corresponding handler is onClosing
.
This signal was introduced in Qt 5.1.
frameSwapped() |
This signal is emitted when a frame has been queued for presenting. With vertical synchronization enabled the signal is emitted at most once per vsync interval in a continuously animating scene.
Note: The corresponding handler is onFrameSwapped
.
|
This signal is emitted when an error occurred during scene graph initialization.
You can implement onSceneGraphError(error, message) to handle errors, such as graphics context creation failures, in a custom way. If no handler is connected to this signal, Quick will print the message, or show a message box, and terminate the application.
Note: The corresponding handler is onSceneGraphError
.
This signal was introduced in Qt 5.3.
Method Documentation
|
Causes an alert to be shown for msec milliseconds. If msec is 0
(the default), then the alert is shown indefinitely until the window becomes active again.
In alert state, the window indicates that it demands attention, for example by flashing or bouncing the taskbar entry.
This method was introduced in Qt 5.1.
close() |
Closes the window.
When this method is called, or when the user tries to close the window by its title bar button, the closing signal will be emitted. If there is no handler, or the handler does not revoke permission to close, the window will subsequently close. If the QGuiApplication::quitOnLastWindowClosed property is true
, and there are no other windows open, the application will quit.
hide() |
lower() |
Lowers the window in the windowing system.
Requests that the window be lowered to appear below other windows.
raise() |
Raises the window in the windowing system.
Requests that the window be raised to appear above other windows.
|
Requests the window to be activated, i.e. receive keyboard focus.
This method was introduced in Qt 5.1.
show() |
Shows the window.
This is equivalent to calling showFullScreen(), showMaximized(), or showNormal(), depending on the platform's default behavior for the window type and flags.
See also showFullScreen(), showMaximized(), showNormal(), hide(), and QQuickItem::flags().
showFullScreen() |
Shows the window as fullscreen.
Equivalent to setting visibility to FullScreen.
showMaximized() |
Shows the window as maximized.
Equivalent to setting visibility to Maximized.
showMinimized() |
Shows the window as minimized.
Equivalent to setting visibility to Minimized.
showNormal() |
Shows the window as normal, i.e. neither maximized, minimized, nor fullscreen.
Equivalent to setting visibility to Windowed.