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Changing the QLabel frameshape

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  • JonBJ JonB

    @Stevolution
    This is a fragment of code which does not address my

    Then show me the constructor line you have in code for creating the QLabel() in the first place?

    You said my

    label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame) Throws up that I am not using QtWidgets (QWidget?)

    so I can't tell you what to put without knowing how you import your Qt stuff, your relevant from .. import ... presumably for PyQt5 or PySide2.

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Stevolution
    wrote on last edited by Stevolution
    #10

    @JonB said in Changing the Qlabel frameshape:

    @Stevolution
    This is a fragment of code which does not address my

    Then show me the constructor line you have in code for creating the QLabel() in the first place?

    You said my

    label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame) Throws up that I am not using QtWidgets (QWidget?)

    so I can't tell you what to put without knowing how you import your Qt stuff, your relevant from .. import ... presumably for PyQt5 or PySide2.

    Sorry - PyQt5

    Maybe I should post all the code once I have tidied it a little

    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • S Stevolution

      @JonB said in Changing the Qlabel frameshape:

      @Stevolution
      This is a fragment of code which does not address my

      Then show me the constructor line you have in code for creating the QLabel() in the first place?

      You said my

      label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame) Throws up that I am not using QtWidgets (QWidget?)

      so I can't tell you what to put without knowing how you import your Qt stuff, your relevant from .. import ... presumably for PyQt5 or PySide2.

      Sorry - PyQt5

      Maybe I should post all the code once I have tidied it a little

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by JonB
      #11

      @Stevolution said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

      Sorry - PyQt5

      So, to resolve your "Throws up that I am not using QtWidgets (QWidget?)", if you do not already have this, in the module where you want the line:

      label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
      

      you will need at the top of the file:

      from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
      

      (There are slightly different ways you can do what is needed, according to preference, but I don't want to over-complicate for now.)

      Damn it, while I'm here, I'd better give you the choices! It's not too hard to understand.

      Say you will want to access QLabel and QFrame in a module. You have two ways.

      from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
      ...
      label = QtWidgets.QLabel()
      label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
      

      The above way we import just QtWidgets, and every time we want to address a widget we have to go QtWidgets.QLabel, QtWidgets.QFrame etc.

      from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QLabel, QFrame, ...
      ...
      label = QLabel()
      label.setFrameShape(QFrame.NoFrame)
      

      The above way we import specific widget classes from QtWidgets, and when we want to address a widget we can just go QLabel, QFrame etc., not using the leasing QtWidgets..

      Pros/cons for each approach, a matter of personal style/preference.

      S 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • JonBJ JonB

        @Stevolution said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

        Sorry - PyQt5

        So, to resolve your "Throws up that I am not using QtWidgets (QWidget?)", if you do not already have this, in the module where you want the line:

        label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
        

        you will need at the top of the file:

        from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
        

        (There are slightly different ways you can do what is needed, according to preference, but I don't want to over-complicate for now.)

        Damn it, while I'm here, I'd better give you the choices! It's not too hard to understand.

        Say you will want to access QLabel and QFrame in a module. You have two ways.

        from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
        ...
        label = QtWidgets.QLabel()
        label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
        

        The above way we import just QtWidgets, and every time we want to address a widget we have to go QtWidgets.QLabel, QtWidgets.QFrame etc.

        from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QLabel, QFrame, ...
        ...
        label = QLabel()
        label.setFrameShape(QFrame.NoFrame)
        

        The above way we import specific widget classes from QtWidgets, and when we want to address a widget we can just go QLabel, QFrame etc., not using the leasing QtWidgets..

        Pros/cons for each approach, a matter of personal style/preference.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Stevolution
        wrote on last edited by Stevolution
        #12

        I get an error with that line

        NameError: name 'QtWidgets' is not defined

        Whats the difference between QtWidgets and QWidget?

        import sys                                                          # This imports the modules	
        import time
        
        from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget                   # PyQy5 is the GUI module.   QApplication is part of that module, and QWidget is the Windows interaction class (Keyboard, mouse etc)
        from PyQt5.QtGui import QIcon, QPixmap, QImage                      # QImage is a class of PyQt5 that allows image interaction
        from PyQt5.uic import loadUi
        
        
        import opr                                                          # Face tracking Python routine
        import comm_ard                                                     # Python routine to handle the serial communications to the Arduino
        import random                                                       # Random generator 
        import pickle                                                       # Allows you to send data between Python scripts using a byte data stream
        
        import cv2                                                          # Stands for COMPUTER VISION. Allows the code to take information from a visual source
        
        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • S Stevolution

          I get an error with that line

          NameError: name 'QtWidgets' is not defined

          Whats the difference between QtWidgets and QWidget?

          import sys                                                          # This imports the modules	
          import time
          
          from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget                   # PyQy5 is the GUI module.   QApplication is part of that module, and QWidget is the Windows interaction class (Keyboard, mouse etc)
          from PyQt5.QtGui import QIcon, QPixmap, QImage                      # QImage is a class of PyQt5 that allows image interaction
          from PyQt5.uic import loadUi
          
          
          import opr                                                          # Face tracking Python routine
          import comm_ard                                                     # Python routine to handle the serial communications to the Arduino
          import random                                                       # Random generator 
          import pickle                                                       # Allows you to send data between Python scripts using a byte data stream
          
          import cv2                                                          # Stands for COMPUTER VISION. Allows the code to take information from a visual source
          
          JonBJ Offline
          JonBJ Offline
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by JonB
          #13

          @Stevolution said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

          I get an error with that line
          NameError: name 'QtWidgets' is not defined

          Show me the line you typed, copied & pasted! Since I use from PyQt5 import QtWidgets all the time...

          In the way you now show, it is using my "second approach". You have

          from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget
          

          so to add references to, say QLabel & QFrame you can either modify to:

          from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame
          

          or add a brand new line

          from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QLabel, QFrame
          

          Don't forget to read what I wrote earlier about when you use this method,

          label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
          

          becomes

          label.setFrameShape(QFrame.NoFrame)
          

          Whats the difference between QtWidgets and QWidget?

          PyQt5.QtWidgets is a module (like a namespace if you're familiar with that term). That module contains many classes. QWidget is a class in the module QtWidgets. That module contains other additional widget-y classes, such as QFrame.

          S 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • JonBJ JonB

            @Stevolution said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

            I get an error with that line
            NameError: name 'QtWidgets' is not defined

            Show me the line you typed, copied & pasted! Since I use from PyQt5 import QtWidgets all the time...

            In the way you now show, it is using my "second approach". You have

            from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget
            

            so to add references to, say QLabel & QFrame you can either modify to:

            from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame
            

            or add a brand new line

            from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QLabel, QFrame
            

            Don't forget to read what I wrote earlier about when you use this method,

            label.setFrameShape(QtWidgets.QFrame.NoFrame)
            

            becomes

            label.setFrameShape(QFrame.NoFrame)
            

            Whats the difference between QtWidgets and QWidget?

            PyQt5.QtWidgets is a module (like a namespace if you're familiar with that term). That module contains many classes. QWidget is a class in the module QtWidgets. That module contains other additional widget-y classes, such as QFrame.

            S Offline
            S Offline
            Stevolution
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            @JonB said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

            PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame

            PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame has fixed the issue.
            I didn't realise I needed to add those to the declared list.

            Thank you very much for your time and patience

            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • S Stevolution

              @JonB said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

              PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame

              PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QWidget, QLabel, QFrame has fixed the issue.
              I didn't realise I needed to add those to the declared list.

              Thank you very much for your time and patience

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #15

              @Stevolution
              As I wrote earlier, if you go for the from PyQt5.QtWidgets import Q... route, which is fine, you must now add to that list each time you want to access a specific class, like QWidget or QFrame or QPushButton, and then you can address those by their plain class name, QWidget or QFrame, instead of QtWidgets.QWidget, QtWidgets.QFrame etc.

              You may also shortcut having to spell out each class name by going

              from PyQt5.QtWidgets import *
              

              This imports as QWidget, QFrame, QPushButton and everything else (non-underscore) in the QtWidgets module, in one go. However, this is usually regarded as poor Python practice [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/modules.html].

              1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • S Offline
                S Offline
                Stevolution
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                Yes. Many thanks for your excellent assistance

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Stevolution
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  Without appearing to be totally thick... it's frustrating that I have sorted out all the comms to the Arduino, camera importing etc...

                  but cannot get my head around this formatting to change text properties.

                  How would I change the font size of a label? All my efforts have failed.
                  I had to import the class QFrame to change the frame, but QFont gives a syntax

                  This is clearly wrong...

                  self.COMConnectLabel.setFontSize(14);

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • S Offline
                    S Offline
                    Stevolution
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    I think I need to walk away for a while. Made great progress today....

                    But still can't change that text font size!

                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • S Stevolution

                      I think I need to walk away for a while. Made great progress today....

                      But still can't change that text font size!

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      Stevolution
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      @Stevolution Thank you Denni. I will have another look at that in a while.

                      Just trying to work out why my routine is throwing up an exception when I transfer 6 bytes of data from my Arduino to my Python process.

                      I can print all six bytes correctly in the decoding routine (called Comm_ard.py), but when I use bytes 5 or 6 in the Python code, it throws up an exception error. Hmm

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Stevolution
                        wrote on last edited by Stevolution
                        #20

                        OK. Fixed the exception issue.

                        NOTHING I try will let me change the font size. Spent so much time on this. You suggestions Denni didin't work.
                        It's clearly me, but no idea what I am doing wrong. Declared QFont at the start etc.

                        It's maddening how something so stupid takes so long

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • S Offline
                          S Offline
                          Stevolution
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          @Denni-0

                          Yes, but I need to implement it in my code. That is a lot of code just to change a font size! Thank you Denni... I do appreciate it.

                          I don't really understand why it's so complicated. Why can you not just say: self.COMConnectLabel.setFontSize(14);

                          Anyway, I will sort it out

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • S Stevolution

                            @Denni-0

                            Yes, but I need to implement it in my code. That is a lot of code just to change a font size! Thank you Denni... I do appreciate it.

                            I don't really understand why it's so complicated. Why can you not just say: self.COMConnectLabel.setFontSize(14);

                            Anyway, I will sort it out

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by JonB
                            #22

                            @Stevolution

                            That is a lot of code just to change a font size!
                            I don't really understand why it's so complicated. Why can you not just say: self.COMConnectLabel.setFontSize(14);

                            You only need the lines @Denni-0 gave you earlier:

                            MyFont = QFont()
                            MyFont.setPointSize(14)
                            
                            MyLabel = QLabel()
                            MyLabel.setFont(MyFont)
                            

                            That's 3 lines to change the label's font. That's just what calls Qt has provided. If you wanted to be able to go self.COMConnectLabel.setFontSize(14) you could subclass your labels to add setFontSize(size) as an available method.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Stevolution
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              S0..

                                      MyFont = QFont()
                                      MyFont.setPointSize(18)
                              
                                      self.COMConnectLabel = QLabel()
                                      self.COMConnectLabel.setFont(MyFont)
                              

                              This freezes my routine

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Stevolution
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                Ha ... thanks Denni
                                Yes, using QT Designer. Got nearly everything working except this and a ProgressBar that keeps throwing up an exception.

                                I will see if I can make a smaller bit of code and either get it working, or post it for your advice.
                                Thanks

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • S Offline
                                  S Offline
                                  Stevolution
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  Thanks Denni, that is a very kind offer.

                                  The reason I started with QT Designer, is I started with a project that someone else designed using QT Designer, and I have adapted it to my needs.
                                  I don't know Python. I have come from Arduino programming and its pretty different.

                                  I have reverse engineered the code, and made far more progress than I thought I would have in a few days.

                                  I have some fundamental issue somewhere. I have links to the labels, tick boxes, buttons etc all working fine.

                                  But, I just cannot get the font size to change or the ProgressBar to work.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    Stevolution
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #26

                                    GOT IT

                                            font = self.COMConnectLabel.font()                                                         
                                            font.setPointSize(14)
                                            self.COMConnectLabel.setFont(font)
                                    

                                    This worked. Trial and error.

                                    Now it I need to fix the progress bar

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • S Offline
                                      S Offline
                                      Stevolution
                                      wrote on last edited by Stevolution
                                      #27

                                      Right, the problem with the progressbar is the co-ords.

                                      In QT Designer, it shows 480,60 20x191 as the co-ords for the Progressbar

                                      But i declare:

                                          self.Temp_bar = QProgressBar(self)
                                          self.Temp_bar.setGeometry(480, 60, 20 , 191)
                                          self.Temp_bar.setValue(350)
                                      

                                      and the Progress bar is way off the screen (so it was working - just not visible).

                                      The actual co-ords to get it anywhere near the position in QT Designer are (502, 820, 50 , 191) And they are not exact.
                                      Also, its going from top to bottom instead of as stated in QT Designer, and it's the wrong colour.

                                      So... have I made my own progress bar that has nothing to do with the design I made in QT Designer, or and I missing something that links them together? Hmm

                                      Edit/update.

                                      OK, its all incorrect. From what I understand, for some reason... all the settings in QT Designer are lost.
                                      I would need to set up a new style sheet to reproduce the one I made in QT Designer. That seems pointless.

                                      Is there a simpler way to directly draw a progressbar style 'box' that goes vertically up the screen dependant on a variable (I know there will be... I just don't know it yet).

                                      I do have to say the mixed/incorrect/random information about implementing these functions in QT Designer is very frustrating.

                                      jsulmJ JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • S Stevolution

                                        Right, the problem with the progressbar is the co-ords.

                                        In QT Designer, it shows 480,60 20x191 as the co-ords for the Progressbar

                                        But i declare:

                                            self.Temp_bar = QProgressBar(self)
                                            self.Temp_bar.setGeometry(480, 60, 20 , 191)
                                            self.Temp_bar.setValue(350)
                                        

                                        and the Progress bar is way off the screen (so it was working - just not visible).

                                        The actual co-ords to get it anywhere near the position in QT Designer are (502, 820, 50 , 191) And they are not exact.
                                        Also, its going from top to bottom instead of as stated in QT Designer, and it's the wrong colour.

                                        So... have I made my own progress bar that has nothing to do with the design I made in QT Designer, or and I missing something that links them together? Hmm

                                        Edit/update.

                                        OK, its all incorrect. From what I understand, for some reason... all the settings in QT Designer are lost.
                                        I would need to set up a new style sheet to reproduce the one I made in QT Designer. That seems pointless.

                                        Is there a simpler way to directly draw a progressbar style 'box' that goes vertically up the screen dependant on a variable (I know there will be... I just don't know it yet).

                                        I do have to say the mixed/incorrect/random information about implementing these functions in QT Designer is very frustrating.

                                        jsulmJ Offline
                                        jsulmJ Offline
                                        jsulm
                                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #28

                                        @Stevolution said in Changing the QLabel frameshape:

                                        In QT Designer, it shows 480,60 20x191 as the co-ords for the Progressbar
                                        But i declare:

                                        One moment: you have one progress bar in designer, but then you add one in code? Why don't you use the one from designer?

                                        https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • S Stevolution

                                          Right, the problem with the progressbar is the co-ords.

                                          In QT Designer, it shows 480,60 20x191 as the co-ords for the Progressbar

                                          But i declare:

                                              self.Temp_bar = QProgressBar(self)
                                              self.Temp_bar.setGeometry(480, 60, 20 , 191)
                                              self.Temp_bar.setValue(350)
                                          

                                          and the Progress bar is way off the screen (so it was working - just not visible).

                                          The actual co-ords to get it anywhere near the position in QT Designer are (502, 820, 50 , 191) And they are not exact.
                                          Also, its going from top to bottom instead of as stated in QT Designer, and it's the wrong colour.

                                          So... have I made my own progress bar that has nothing to do with the design I made in QT Designer, or and I missing something that links them together? Hmm

                                          Edit/update.

                                          OK, its all incorrect. From what I understand, for some reason... all the settings in QT Designer are lost.
                                          I would need to set up a new style sheet to reproduce the one I made in QT Designer. That seems pointless.

                                          Is there a simpler way to directly draw a progressbar style 'box' that goes vertically up the screen dependant on a variable (I know there will be... I just don't know it yet).

                                          I do have to say the mixed/incorrect/random information about implementing these functions in QT Designer is very frustrating.

                                          JonBJ Offline
                                          JonBJ Offline
                                          JonB
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #29

                                          @Stevolution
                                          Just to say: there is absolutely nothing wrong with using Qt Designer to design your UI, and auto-generate the Python code which implements it, as you have been doing. The code it generates is easy to understand (if you choose to look at it, you don't have to), and essentially does what you would have to do yourself if you choose to do it manually instead. Especially if you are a beginner, it can ease you into Qt programming without having to learn everything about the classes from the outset. As you have discovered, you can mix static design-time elements with dynamically-created run-time elements as you please.

                                          Plenty of other toolsets have a visual designer as well as run-time coding. It is largely a matter of personal preference which you choose to use, and there are pros & cons of each approach. Many, but not all, Qt developers use Designer. This applies whether you use C++ or Python. So feel free to follow your chosen path either way.

                                          S 1 Reply Last reply
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