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Export QTableView to PDF

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  • mrjjM Offline
    mrjjM Offline
    mrjj
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    Hi
    I made a fast version of raw html output here
    https://forum.qt.io/topic/52652/solved-pdf-print-in-multiple-pages/22
    It fast becomes a bit messy if you want to use lots of formatting for good looks.

    Constructing a Text Document using its api should be much cleaner :)

    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • mrjjM mrjj

      Hi
      I made a fast version of raw html output here
      https://forum.qt.io/topic/52652/solved-pdf-print-in-multiple-pages/22
      It fast becomes a bit messy if you want to use lots of formatting for good looks.

      Constructing a Text Document using its api should be much cleaner :)

      JonBJ Online
      JonBJ Online
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      @mrjj
      Thanks. Yep, that was one of the posts I looked at (the stackoverflow one, I mean).

      Using the QTextDocument looks cleaner, and relieves me of producing the HTML, so I'll give that a go. If you're saying it won't look as good as the hand-crafted HTML, I'll think again when I get there.

      Meanwhile neither of you is suggesting #2:

      I read, say, https://forum.qt.io/topic/30728/how-to-turn-a-qtableview-to-a-pdf

      You write code to paint the data from the model underlying the table view to a QPrinter set to output PDF. How you access the data and format it is entirely up to you.

      the "Paint" approach. Which is fine by me! Though now I'm curious as to how you actually do that, as I said I haven't gone near painting?

      mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • JonBJ JonB

        @mrjj
        Thanks. Yep, that was one of the posts I looked at (the stackoverflow one, I mean).

        Using the QTextDocument looks cleaner, and relieves me of producing the HTML, so I'll give that a go. If you're saying it won't look as good as the hand-crafted HTML, I'll think again when I get there.

        Meanwhile neither of you is suggesting #2:

        I read, say, https://forum.qt.io/topic/30728/how-to-turn-a-qtableview-to-a-pdf

        You write code to paint the data from the model underlying the table view to a QPrinter set to output PDF. How you access the data and format it is entirely up to you.

        the "Paint" approach. Which is fine by me! Though now I'm curious as to how you actually do that, as I said I haven't gone near painting?

        mrjjM Offline
        mrjjM Offline
        mrjj
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by mrjj
        #6

        @JonB
        Hi, im saying it will be easier to make it look better than handcrafted as
        you can use higher level classes like
        http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtexttableformat.html
        and CharFormat etc and its easier to scale/resize
        My main point is that constructing HTML was not super nice in terms of readability and
        reuse of html parts/styling etc. Just my feeling though. If you are master at html you might produce cleaner html than my run at it :)

        The pure paint way would to create a drawTable function and something to draw the cell text/style and
        set properties on QPainter for bold font etc. For a very plain table, its not very complex but
        for varying cell widths and extra formatting, you suddenly have to have a small structure to keep that info and
        it slowly becomes big(ger)
        Also, you would have to keep a YPos for newPage handling and other small details.

        For full blown printing, something like
        https://sourceforge.net/projects/qtrpt/
        is also very useful :)

        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • mrjjM mrjj

          @JonB
          Hi, im saying it will be easier to make it look better than handcrafted as
          you can use higher level classes like
          http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtexttableformat.html
          and CharFormat etc and its easier to scale/resize
          My main point is that constructing HTML was not super nice in terms of readability and
          reuse of html parts/styling etc. Just my feeling though. If you are master at html you might produce cleaner html than my run at it :)

          The pure paint way would to create a drawTable function and something to draw the cell text/style and
          set properties on QPainter for bold font etc. For a very plain table, its not very complex but
          for varying cell widths and extra formatting, you suddenly have to have a small structure to keep that info and
          it slowly becomes big(ger)
          Also, you would have to keep a YPos for newPage handling and other small details.

          For full blown printing, something like
          https://sourceforge.net/projects/qtrpt/
          is also very useful :)

          JonBJ Online
          JonBJ Online
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by JonB
          #7

          @mrjj said in Export QTableView to PDF:

          The pure paint way would to create a drawTable function and something to draw the cell text/style and
          [...]

          I certainly would not want to do any styling, bolding, drawing at all! I thought the way the guy said that meant that you could somehow just tell QTableView to output to a QPrinter set to output PDF instead of to the screen, and it just handled all the drawing itself?

          mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • JonBJ JonB

            @Gojir4
            Thank you, this is very interesting. (I'm a Qt noob, so didn't know about QTextDocument.)

            This approach is similar in principle to my #1, or https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3147030/qtableview-printing. However, instead of having to directly generate the HTML for my table myself, this is a "structured" document, which offers objects like QTextTable, QTextTableCell etc. which I can use to construct the desired structure. I can then print from that and (hopefully!) get a layout somewhat similar to the QTableView.

            I also note that there is even a http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtextdocument.html#toHtml method to get an HTML equivalent (which I presume will use <TABLE> etc.) Which is nice. If I want to, I could even doubtless poke that at QWebEnginePage to use its printToPdf(), which I already employ elsewhere :)

            So --- unless someone else wants to tell me about approach #2 instead --- I think I'll shortly give this a go and see how it comes out...!

            Gojir4G Offline
            Gojir4G Offline
            Gojir4
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            @JonB They are several advantages, at my opinion, to use QTextDocument:

            • You can preview/edit in a QTextEdit or QPlainTextEdit
            • You can export content to Open Document Format (Open Office Writer), HTML, PDF and plaintext of course.
            • You can customize everything (font, table, cells, etc..).
            1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • JonBJ JonB

              @mrjj said in Export QTableView to PDF:

              The pure paint way would to create a drawTable function and something to draw the cell text/style and
              [...]

              I certainly would not want to do any styling, bolding, drawing at all! I thought the way the guy said that meant that you could somehow just tell QTableView to output to a QPrinter set to output PDF instead of to the screen, and it just handled all the drawing itself?

              mrjjM Offline
              mrjjM Offline
              mrjj
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              @JonB
              Well you can use render() to make it draw it self to QPrinter
              This sample paint to pixmap but idea is the same.
              However, this is only nice if all rows are visible as it wont paint all of them. only how Widget looks on screen.
              Since QPrinter have much higher DPI/pixels, you can scale the widget to use all space but any rows
              not visible are not handled.
              Im not aware of anything else in terms of directly printing the TableView.

              void MainWindow::PrintWidget(QWidget* widget) {
              
                QPixmap pix(widget->size());
                QPainter painter(&pix);
                widget->render(&painter);
                painter.end();
                QPrinter printer(QPrinter::HighResolution);
                printer.setOrientation(QPrinter::Landscape);
                printer.setOutputFormat(QPrinter::PdfFormat);
                printer.setPaperSize(QPrinter::A4);
                printer.setOutputFileName("test.pdf"); // will be in build folder
              
                painter.begin(&printer);
                double xscale = printer.pageRect().width() / double(pix.width());
                double yscale = printer.pageRect().height() / double(pix.height());
                double scale = qMin(xscale, yscale);
                painter.translate(printer.paperRect().x() + printer.pageRect().width() / 2,
                                  printer.paperRect().y() + printer.pageRect().height() / 2);
                painter.scale(scale, scale);
                painter.translate(-widget->width() / 2, -widget->height() / 2);
                painter.drawPixmap(0, 0, pix);
              
              QTextDocument doc;
              
              doc.setHtml("htmlcontent");
              doc.drawContents(&painter);
              
                painter.end();
              }
              
              
              JonBJ I 2 Replies Last reply
              3
              • mrjjM mrjj

                @JonB
                Well you can use render() to make it draw it self to QPrinter
                This sample paint to pixmap but idea is the same.
                However, this is only nice if all rows are visible as it wont paint all of them. only how Widget looks on screen.
                Since QPrinter have much higher DPI/pixels, you can scale the widget to use all space but any rows
                not visible are not handled.
                Im not aware of anything else in terms of directly printing the TableView.

                void MainWindow::PrintWidget(QWidget* widget) {
                
                  QPixmap pix(widget->size());
                  QPainter painter(&pix);
                  widget->render(&painter);
                  painter.end();
                  QPrinter printer(QPrinter::HighResolution);
                  printer.setOrientation(QPrinter::Landscape);
                  printer.setOutputFormat(QPrinter::PdfFormat);
                  printer.setPaperSize(QPrinter::A4);
                  printer.setOutputFileName("test.pdf"); // will be in build folder
                
                  painter.begin(&printer);
                  double xscale = printer.pageRect().width() / double(pix.width());
                  double yscale = printer.pageRect().height() / double(pix.height());
                  double scale = qMin(xscale, yscale);
                  painter.translate(printer.paperRect().x() + printer.pageRect().width() / 2,
                                    printer.paperRect().y() + printer.pageRect().height() / 2);
                  painter.scale(scale, scale);
                  painter.translate(-widget->width() / 2, -widget->height() / 2);
                  painter.drawPixmap(0, 0, pix);
                
                QTextDocument doc;
                
                doc.setHtml("htmlcontent");
                doc.drawContents(&painter);
                
                  painter.end();
                }
                
                
                JonBJ Online
                JonBJ Online
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                @mrjj
                Thanks. I think:

                Well you can use render() to make it draw it self to QPrinter

                is what I was trying to find, QTableView::render(&QPrinter). I understand your example too. Understand about "it wont paint all of them", have a look at https://stackoverflow.com/a/9784152/489865 for one guy's solution to that.

                I understand enough now to prefer to go down the QTextDocument route for my situation. I have a table of values here, I'm not tied to the physical QTableView visuals, and I'm already offering export to CSV file, so export to PDF via a structured document with a table is good. Plus I get text or HTML too if I want them :)

                mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • JonBJ JonB

                  @mrjj
                  Thanks. I think:

                  Well you can use render() to make it draw it self to QPrinter

                  is what I was trying to find, QTableView::render(&QPrinter). I understand your example too. Understand about "it wont paint all of them", have a look at https://stackoverflow.com/a/9784152/489865 for one guy's solution to that.

                  I understand enough now to prefer to go down the QTextDocument route for my situation. I have a table of values here, I'm not tied to the physical QTableView visuals, and I'm already offering export to CSV file, so export to PDF via a structured document with a table is good. Plus I get text or HTML too if I want them :)

                  mrjjM Offline
                  mrjjM Offline
                  mrjj
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  @JonB
                  Going QTextDocument also gives free page overflow handling or at least very easy so
                  im sure you wont regret it.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  2
                  • mrjjM mrjj

                    @JonB
                    Well you can use render() to make it draw it self to QPrinter
                    This sample paint to pixmap but idea is the same.
                    However, this is only nice if all rows are visible as it wont paint all of them. only how Widget looks on screen.
                    Since QPrinter have much higher DPI/pixels, you can scale the widget to use all space but any rows
                    not visible are not handled.
                    Im not aware of anything else in terms of directly printing the TableView.

                    void MainWindow::PrintWidget(QWidget* widget) {
                    
                      QPixmap pix(widget->size());
                      QPainter painter(&pix);
                      widget->render(&painter);
                      painter.end();
                      QPrinter printer(QPrinter::HighResolution);
                      printer.setOrientation(QPrinter::Landscape);
                      printer.setOutputFormat(QPrinter::PdfFormat);
                      printer.setPaperSize(QPrinter::A4);
                      printer.setOutputFileName("test.pdf"); // will be in build folder
                    
                      painter.begin(&printer);
                      double xscale = printer.pageRect().width() / double(pix.width());
                      double yscale = printer.pageRect().height() / double(pix.height());
                      double scale = qMin(xscale, yscale);
                      painter.translate(printer.paperRect().x() + printer.pageRect().width() / 2,
                                        printer.paperRect().y() + printer.pageRect().height() / 2);
                      painter.scale(scale, scale);
                      painter.translate(-widget->width() / 2, -widget->height() / 2);
                      painter.drawPixmap(0, 0, pix);
                    
                    QTextDocument doc;
                    
                    doc.setHtml("htmlcontent");
                    doc.drawContents(&painter);
                    
                      painter.end();
                    }
                    
                    
                    I Offline
                    I Offline
                    imene
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    @mrjj said in Export QTableView to PDF:

                    QWidget

                    Why #include <QPrinter> is not recognized in my qt5?

                    mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • I imene

                      @mrjj said in Export QTableView to PDF:

                      QWidget

                      Why #include <QPrinter> is not recognized in my qt5?

                      mrjjM Offline
                      mrjjM Offline
                      mrjj
                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      @imene

                      Hi
                      you need
                      QT += printsupport

                      in the .pro file

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • I Offline
                        I Offline
                        imene
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        Solved Thanks @mrjj

                        mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • I imene

                          Solved Thanks @mrjj

                          mrjjM Offline
                          mrjjM Offline
                          mrjj
                          Lifetime Qt Champion
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          @imene
                          Hi
                          Good :)
                          Please notice that such info is listed in the top of the docs if you
                          run into such a thing again.

                          alt text

                          1 Reply Last reply
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