QPushButton in QMessageBox missing key shortcut underline on initial display
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I'm under Windows, and I add several QPushButtons to a QMessageBox. A shortcut key is specified by an ampersand before the preferred character in each text.
When the message box is initially displayed, the shortcut keys of all buttons are not marked by an underline, but :
- The button does execute if I type the shortcut key in spite of the missing underline.
- If I press the Alt key, the shortcut underline appears on all buttons and stays displayed after I release the Alt key.
This lack of an initial visual cue may cause the end-user to assume that shortcuts were not provided.
Is there something I should do to force the display of the shortcut underlines when the message box is initially displayed ?
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Hi
I think its default on windows NOT to show underscore.
At least all other new programs I have - does this.
This is win 7.This settings seems to be controlled via
Open Control Panel / Ease of Access Center / Make the Keyboard easier to use.
Underline keyboard shortcuts and access keys. -
I don't know if there is a default. Most programs display underlines in dialogs but some don't.
For example wordpad and notepad and Word do have them on the "save before exit" dialog (Windows 7).
It might be something to do with how one calls the Windows API. -
it is.
found setting.This settings seems to be controlled via
Open Control Panel / Ease of Access Center / Make the Keyboard easier to use.
Underline keyboard shortcuts and access keys. -
You are right that this setting forces the initial display of the underlines in QMessageBox buttons.
However, for most programs underlines are displayed with or without this setting.Without this setting, I have tried out several program of mine that display dialogs, and find that some display underlines and some don't.
Weirder and weirder.
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well My word 2010 did change for fileopen dialog.
Also my notepad++.But there must be a way to show always in windows API as
some of my programs always show it. Even same buttons.http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14054036/show-hotkeys-at-all-times
here they use sendmessage to turn it on. Should also be possible in
Qt if no Qt way exists. -
Yes, my thought exactly.
My code now works and displays the underlines.
It looks like this :QKeyEvent event(QEvent::KeyPress, Qt::Key_Alt, Qt::NoModifier); QApplication::sendEvent(msgBox, &event); msgBox->exec();
However, I would prefer a solution which is less of a kludge, if anyone has a better idea.
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This is definitely a Qt design decision to by default paint buttons without shortcut underlines.
I have searched in the sources and found that
QWindowsStyle::eventFilter()
in qwindowsstyle.cpp does check forQt::Key_Alt
and then repaints all children, all this after calling an internal function namedseenAlt()
.As it skips all QWidgets having the styleHint of
QStyle::SH_UnderlineShortcut
, it seems like this is what is missing from my QPushButtons.How do I add this styleHint to my buttons when creating them ?
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@Harry123 said:
aha. that is good digging around.
QStyle::SH_UnderlineShortcut seems to belong to the style used by the application.Im really not sure how to set for a buttons as such. Normally you use a QStyle
in paintEvent for a custom button/widget.I guess one would have to provide a custom QStyle that somehow altered
this setting.
http://doc.qt.io/qt-5.5/qapplication.html#setStyle -
@Harry123
Try the qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic function.Kind regards.
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qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic is not found by the linker.
In which library is it supposed to be ?
I have both Qt5Gui and Qt5Core in the link. -
kshegunov Moderatorsreplied to Harry123 on 10 Mar 2016, 12:22 last edited by kshegunov 3 Oct 2016, 13:10
@Harry123
My guess would be in the gui module, but I have never used it so I'm not 100% sure. I checked and on my 5.6 build I found it inlibQt5Gui.so
:0000000000138d02 T _Z29qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonicb
So, the answer is: it is located in the gui module.
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Unfortunately it seems to be missing from the Windows build.
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@Harry123
Your claim seemed somewhat dubious, so even if I don't actively develop on windows I've loaded the gui module and searched through it with the dependency walker. The symbol is there (Qt 5.5.1 installed with Qt maintenance tool), see the screenshot, and it is exported.
I don't know what error exactly you're getting but you should be able to use the function if declared properly (as mentioned in the documentation I sourced in my previous post). -
Sorry, my claim was more than dubious - unfortunately I put the call in a section of extern "C".
Stupid mistake, but this is a complicated body of code.Results: calling qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic with the parameters of either true or false did not restore the underlines.
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Results: calling qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic with the parameters of either true or false did not restore the underlines.
That's unfortunate. Another thing you could try is to set a global proxy style for your application and manually force the
QStyle::SH_UnderlineShortcut
flag.Kind regards.
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This works. I modified the example in the link with :
if (hint == QStyle::SH_UnderlineShortcut) return 1;
I now have underlines. Much better than faking an Alt key and it works for all future dialogs.
Very many thanks.
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faking an Alt key
Well, this could also have unforeseeable side effects as well (if for example some widget has a shortcut bound to that key), so it's a bit hackish.
Very many thanks.
You're most welcome.
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The only question that is left, is why isn't
QStyle::SH_UnderlineShortcut
the default . -
@Harry123
I'd say the default is determined by the OS settings, and Qt simply wouldn't presume to override it. That'd explain why when you change the settings systemwide the behavior changes accordingly.
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