QExtensionManager#
The QExtensionManager
class provides extension management facilities for Qt Designer. More…
Note
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Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
In Qt Designer the extensions are not created until they are required. For that reason, when implementing an extension, you must also create a QExtensionFactory
, i.e a class that is able to make an instance of your extension, and register it using Qt Designer's extension manager.
The registration of an extension factory is typically made in the initialize()
function:
def initialize(self, formEditor): if initialized: return manager = formEditor.extensionManager() Q_ASSERT(manager != None) manager.registerExtensions(MyExtensionFactory(manager), Q_TYPEID(QDesignerTaskMenuExtension)) initialized = True
The QExtensionManager
is not intended to be instantiated directly. You can retrieve an interface to Qt Designer's extension manager using the extensionManager()
function. A pointer to Qt Designer's current QDesignerFormEditorInterface
object (formEditor
in the example above) is provided by the initialize()
function’s parameter. When implementing a custom widget plugin, you must subclass the QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface
to expose your plugin to Qt Designer.
Then, when an extension is required, Qt Designer's extension manager will run through all its registered factories calling createExtension()
for each until the first one that is able to create the requested extension for the selected object, is found. This factory will then make an instance of the extension.
There are four available types of extensions in Qt Designer: QDesignerContainerExtension
, QDesignerMemberSheetExtension
, QDesignerPropertySheetExtension
and QDesignerTaskMenuExtension
. Qt Designer's behavior is the same whether the requested extension is associated with a container, a member sheet, a property sheet or a task menu.
For a complete example using the QExtensionManager
class, see the Task Menu Extension example . The example shows how to create a custom widget plugin for Qt Designer, and how to use the QDesignerTaskMenuExtension
class to add custom items to Qt Designer's task menu.
See also
QExtensionFactory
QAbstractExtensionManager
- class PySide6.QtDesigner.QExtensionManager([parent=None])#
- Parameters:
parent –
PySide6.QtCore.QObject
Constructs an extension manager with the given parent
.