Animating opacity of QTreeWidget
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I wonder if you could cheat.
You have all in a widget.
You could use the render() function to draw the widgets to a pixmap.
Then overlay this and fade it. when finished fading (there is signal) you can
show real widgets. -
@mrjj said in Animating opacity of QTreeWidget:
- But it works for other widgets like buttons and labels inside the main QWidget.
Without setting Effect on them?
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Yes without setting effects on individual widgets.
For a test, if possible, you can try creating a form in QtCreator designer mode withQDialog
as main window then addingQWidget
inside it and all the button, labels and TreeWidget inside this widget. Then in the contructor I just call the same code posted in my first post with the only change being setting effect forQWidget
instead if TreeWidget.so same code on win 7 give black area??
Yes but only for TreeWidget and not others.
- But it works for other widgets like buttons and labels inside the main QWidget.
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@mrjj said in Animating opacity of QTreeWidget:
I wonder if you could cheat.
You have all in a widget.
You could use the render() function to draw the widgets to a pixmap.
Then overlay this and fade it. when finished fading (there is signal) you can
show real widgets.May be my last resort.
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@mrjj Here is the complete code which shows the problem:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QDialog *dialog = new QDialog; dialog->resize(600, 400); QGridLayout *mainGrid = new QGridLayout(dialog); QWidget *widget = new QWidget(dialog); QGridLayout *innerGrid = new QGridLayout(widget); QHBoxLayout *hLayout = new QHBoxLayout(); QVBoxLayout *vLayout = new QVBoxLayout(); QRadioButton *radio = new QRadioButton(widget); radio->setText("RadioButton"); vLayout->addWidget(radio); QPushButton *button = new QPushButton(widget); button->setText("PushButton"); button->setCheckable(false); vLayout->addWidget(button); QLabel *label = new QLabel(widget); label->setText("MyLabel"); label->setStyleSheet("background-color: red;"); vLayout->addWidget(label); hLayout->addLayout(vLayout); QTreeWidget *tree = new QTreeWidget(widget); tree->headerItem()->setText(0, "Title"); for(QString row: {"One", "Two", "Three", "Four", "Five"}) { QTreeWidgetItem *item = new QTreeWidgetItem(tree); item->setText(0, row); item->setBackgroundColor(0, Qt::red); } hLayout->addWidget(tree); innerGrid->addLayout(hLayout, 0, 0, 1, 1); mainGrid->addWidget(widget, 0, 0, 1, 1); dialog->show(); QGraphicsOpacityEffect* effect = new QGraphicsOpacityEffect; widget->setGraphicsEffect(effect); // <- Effect set for whole widget QPropertyAnimation* animation = new QPropertyAnimation(effect, "opacity"); animation->setDuration(10000); animation->setStartValue(0.0); animation->setEndValue(1.0); animation->setEasingCurve(QEasingCurve::OutQuad); animation->start(); return app.exec(); }
This just animates opacity of other widgets except TreeWidget.
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@onesys
Ok it does some black stuff on win 10. The header is black not all of it.
The "One", "Two", "Three", "Four", "Five" that becomes items cannot be faded as they are not
QWidgets and do not have that ability.Also since it works for Button and Labels, I assume it does also affect the TableWidget but since
its a composite widget, the wrong parts are affected.So i do not think it will work as easy as the label etc.
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This works on windows 10. fading all in.
QPropertyAnimation* MakeAim( QGraphicsOpacityEffect * effect) { QPropertyAnimation* animation = new QPropertyAnimation(effect, "opacity"); animation->setDuration(10000); animation->setStartValue(0.0); animation->setEndValue(1.0); animation->setEasingCurve(QEasingCurve::OutQuad); animation->start(); return animation; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QDialog *dialog = new QDialog; dialog->resize(600, 400); QGridLayout *mainGrid = new QGridLayout(dialog); QWidget *widget = new QWidget(dialog); QGridLayout *innerGrid = new QGridLayout(widget); QHBoxLayout *hLayout = new QHBoxLayout(); QVBoxLayout *vLayout = new QVBoxLayout(); QRadioButton *radio = new QRadioButton(widget); radio->setText("RadioButton"); vLayout->addWidget(radio); QPushButton *button = new QPushButton(widget); button->setText("PushButton"); button->setCheckable(false); vLayout->addWidget(button); QLabel *label = new QLabel(widget); label->setText("MyLabel"); label->setStyleSheet("background-color: red;"); vLayout->addWidget(label); hLayout->addLayout(vLayout); QTreeWidget *tree = new QTreeWidget(widget); tree->headerItem()->setText(0, "Title"); for(QString row: {"One", "Two", "Three", "Four", "Five"}) { QTreeWidgetItem *item = new QTreeWidgetItem(tree); item->setText(0, row); item->setBackgroundColor(0, Qt::red); } hLayout->addWidget(tree); innerGrid->addLayout(hLayout, 0, 0, 1, 1); mainGrid->addWidget(widget, 0, 0, 1, 1); dialog->show(); QGraphicsOpacityEffect* effect = new QGraphicsOpacityEffect; widget->setGraphicsEffect(effect); // <- Effect set for whole widget QGraphicsOpacityEffect* effect2 = new QGraphicsOpacityEffect; tree->viewport()->setGraphicsEffect(effect2); const QObjectList& o = tree->header()->children(); for (int c = 0; c < o.size(); c++ ) { QWidget* w = qobject_cast<QWidget*>( o[c] ); if (w) w->setGraphicsEffect(effect2); } QPropertyAnimation* animation = MakeAim(effect); return app.exec(); }
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@onesys
No, that was the odd part.
First I did with 2 effects and 2 aims. It did not work.
For test I disabled anim2 and discovered that for some reason effect2 was also
faded. I do not know why it then works as no reason effect(1) should also fade effect2
My best guess is that the Parent effect to child we see working with QLabel might
suddenly also work for TableWidget due to extra effect. -
@mrjj This sounds like a very odd behavior and inconsistent because then we donot know for which widgets we should apply the effects individually. Being a naive user in Qt I think the desired way should be to apply the effects to the parent widget which will then animate all of its childrens opacity, isn't it ? Because it cascades to simple buttons, labels etc.. so should it be to more complex widgets too. I think a new user in Qt will totally be confused with this behavior as for (s)he these at the end are just widgets.
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@onesys
Hi
I think the cascading effect we see if purely random and it works for QLabel etc as they are using the same way
of painting the background as the widget that gets the effect and hence affected. For a composite widget like table,
its not affecting in same direct manner. However, setting an effect seems to change that and its suddenly affected same was as
the label.But I fully agree that effect2 is also faded being very strange and inconsistent.
I cannot find any mention in the docs that is supposed to affect all children so Im not sure if this
is a bug or simply how it works. The effect is owned by the widget and it cannot be shared by other widgets.
I see no mentioning of any cascading effect so while i fully agree it would be great if it did work with any widget+childs
im not sure it was meant to do so by the developers.