PySide6.QtDesigner.QAbstractFormBuilder¶
- class QAbstractFormBuilder¶
- The - QAbstractFormBuilderclass provides a default implementation for classes that create user interfaces at run-time. More…- Inherited by: - QFormBuilder- Synopsis¶- Methods¶- def - __init__()
- def - errorString()
- def - reset()
 - Virtual methods¶- def - addMenuAction()
- def - checkProperty()
- def - createAction()
- def - createLayout()
- def - createWidget()
- def - load()
- def - save()
 - Static functions¶- Note - This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE - Detailed Description¶- Warning - This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors. - QAbstractFormBuilderprovides a standard interface and a default implementation for constructing forms from user interface files. It is not intended to be instantiated directly. Use the- QFormBuilderclass to create user interfaces from UI files at run-time. For example:- MyForm::MyForm(QWidget parent) super().__init__(parent) builder = QFormBuilder() file = QFile(":/forms/myWidget.ui") file.open(QFile.ReadOnly) myWidget = builder.load(file, self) file.close() layout = QVBoxLayout(self) layout.addWidget(myWidget) - To override certain aspects of the form builder’s behavior, subclass - QAbstractFormBuilderand reimplement the relevant virtual functions:- load()handles reading of UI format files from arbitrary QIODevices, and construction of widgets from the XML data that they contain.
- save()handles saving of widget details in UI format to arbitrary QIODevices.
- workingDirectory()and- setWorkingDirectory()control the directory in which forms are held. The form builder looks for other resources on paths relative to this directory.
 - The - QFormBuilderclass is typically used by custom components and applications that embed Qt Widgets Designer. Standalone applications that need to dynamically generate user interfaces at run-time use the QUiLoader, found in the Qt UI Tools module.- See also - Qt UI Tools- __init__()¶
 - Constructs a new form builder. - applyPropertyInternally(o, propertyName, value)¶
- Parameters:
- o – - QObject
- propertyName – str 
- value – object 
 
- Return type:
- bool 
 
 - createLayout(layoutName, parent, name)¶
 - createWidget(widgetName, parentWidget, name)¶
 - errorString()¶
- Return type:
- str 
 
 - Returns a human-readable description of the last error occurred in - load().- See also - load(dev[, parentWidget=None])¶
 - Loads an XML representation of a widget from the given - device, and constructs a new widget with the specified- parent.- See also - reset()¶
 - Saves an XML representation of the given - widgetto the specified- devicein the standard UI file format.- Note - Unlike when saving a form in Qt Widgets Designer, all property values are written. This is because, the state of whether a property value was modified or not isn’t stored in the Qt property system. The widget that is being saved, could have been created dynamically, not loaded via - load(), so in this case the form builder isn’t aware of the list of changed properties. Also, there’s no generic way to do this for widgets that were created dynamically.- Therefore, you should remove properties that are not required from your resulting XML files, before loading them. Alternatively, if you already know which properties you want to save when you call this method, you can overload - computeProperties()and return a filtered list of required properties. Otherwise, unexpected behavior may occur as some of these properties may depend on each other.- See also - Sets the current working directory of the form builder to the specified - directory.- See also - Returns the current working directory of the form builder. - See also