Color priority between stylesheets and QBrush.
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Hi. I have code that greys out the ui, including a QTableWidget. This is the sequence of the code:
fillCurrentTable(); ui_name::setEnabled(!greyState); ui->tableWidget->setEnabled(!greyState); ui->calibrationValue->setEnabled(!greyState); ui->tableWidget->setStyleSheet("font: 22px; color: grey;"); void ResistanceCalibration::fillCurrentTable(){ QBrush stableColor; stableMessage->setForeground(Qt::darkGreen); ui->tableWidget->setItem(x, 3, stableMessage); }QBrush is run before setStyleSheet in the code. Therefore I would have thought sSS would override QBrush and paint everything in the QTable grey. However, this did not happen.
The result:

Does QBrush take priority under most circumstances? Please let me know if more information is required.
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I would have guessed the same as @Christian-Ehrlicher. Probably the style sheet overrides the palette brushes.
My currently best explanation is that it is not the QBrush in itself, but the setForeground method which takes precedence. I first thought that setForeground is a general QWidget method or something. This is not the case. If you have a look at the documentation of QTableWidgetItem::setForeground (https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qtablewidgetitem.html#setForeground) it specifically states:
Sets the item's foreground brush to the specified brush. Setting a default-constructed brush will let the view use the default color from the style.
So: Yes, for a QTableWidgetItem setForeground overrides any previous style.
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As written in the documentation, style sheet always wins.
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As written in the documentation, style sheet always wins.
@Christian-Ehrlicher Thanks. In that case, what are some potential reasons that my QBrush seems to have taken priority? There are no other stylesheets taking priority over the QTable.
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I would have guessed the same as @Christian-Ehrlicher. Probably the style sheet overrides the palette brushes.
My currently best explanation is that it is not the QBrush in itself, but the setForeground method which takes precedence. I first thought that setForeground is a general QWidget method or something. This is not the case. If you have a look at the documentation of QTableWidgetItem::setForeground (https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qtablewidgetitem.html#setForeground) it specifically states:
Sets the item's foreground brush to the specified brush. Setting a default-constructed brush will let the view use the default color from the style.
So: Yes, for a QTableWidgetItem setForeground overrides any previous style.
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I would have guessed the same as @Christian-Ehrlicher. Probably the style sheet overrides the palette brushes.
My currently best explanation is that it is not the QBrush in itself, but the setForeground method which takes precedence. I first thought that setForeground is a general QWidget method or something. This is not the case. If you have a look at the documentation of QTableWidgetItem::setForeground (https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qtablewidgetitem.html#setForeground) it specifically states:
Sets the item's foreground brush to the specified brush. Setting a default-constructed brush will let the view use the default color from the style.
So: Yes, for a QTableWidgetItem setForeground overrides any previous style.
@SimonSchroeder Thank you. In that case, I have two followup questions.
1: Are there any other ways to change the color of a QTableWidgetItem's text without using setForeground? I have not yet been able to find any on the QTableWidgetItem documentation and I don't see any on the document.
2: Are there ways of changing the stylesheets of individual rows/colums/cells? I'm assuming there aren't since I wasn't able to find any but I may be wrong. -
@SimonSchroeder Thank you. In that case, I have two followup questions.
1: Are there any other ways to change the color of a QTableWidgetItem's text without using setForeground? I have not yet been able to find any on the QTableWidgetItem documentation and I don't see any on the document.
2: Are there ways of changing the stylesheets of individual rows/colums/cells? I'm assuming there aren't since I wasn't able to find any but I may be wrong.@Dummie1138
I feel there is some confusion here, which requires clarification. Qt stylesheet rules can only be applied toQWidgets, andQTableWidgetItemis not aQWidget. So it cannot be addressed via any stylesheet rule.QTableWidgetis, of course, aQWidget, so that can be stylesheeted, and it draws the items. You cannot do any stylesheeting to individual items. You can use aQStyledItemDelegatefor void QAbstractItemView::setItemDelegate(QAbstractItemDelegate *delegate) to control items' appearance. -
@Dummie1138
I feel there is some confusion here, which requires clarification. Qt stylesheet rules can only be applied toQWidgets, andQTableWidgetItemis not aQWidget. So it cannot be addressed via any stylesheet rule.QTableWidgetis, of course, aQWidget, so that can be stylesheeted, and it draws the items. You cannot do any stylesheeting to individual items. You can use aQStyledItemDelegatefor void QAbstractItemView::setItemDelegate(QAbstractItemDelegate *delegate) to control items' appearance.@JonB said in Color priority between stylesheets and QBrush.:
Qt stylesheet rules can only be applied to QWidgets, and QTableWidgetItem is not a QWidget. So it cannot be addressed via any stylesheet rule.
This is only partially correct. Yes, QTableWidgetItem is not a QWidget. However, when drawn Qt still applies a QWidget (or similar) internally. You can apply a stylesheet for
QTableWidgetItems by addressingQTableWidget::itemin the stylesheet. Though I am not aware that you can create a stylesheet per row/column/cell. This actually means you should use a QStyleItemDelegate as suggested.@JonB Maybe I misread your statement and need to apologize. Probably a better wording is: "So it cannot be addressed individually via any stylesheet rule."
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@JonB said in Color priority between stylesheets and QBrush.:
Qt stylesheet rules can only be applied to QWidgets, and QTableWidgetItem is not a QWidget. So it cannot be addressed via any stylesheet rule.
This is only partially correct. Yes, QTableWidgetItem is not a QWidget. However, when drawn Qt still applies a QWidget (or similar) internally. You can apply a stylesheet for
QTableWidgetItems by addressingQTableWidget::itemin the stylesheet. Though I am not aware that you can create a stylesheet per row/column/cell. This actually means you should use a QStyleItemDelegate as suggested.@JonB Maybe I misread your statement and need to apologize. Probably a better wording is: "So it cannot be addressed individually via any stylesheet rule."
@SimonSchroeder said in Color priority between stylesheets and QBrush.:
"So it cannot be addressed individually via any stylesheet rule."
Indeed. The OP was asking:
: Are there ways of changing the stylesheets of individual rows/colums/cells? I'm assuming there aren't since I wasn't able to find any but I may be wrong.
Each item is not a widget, cannot be individually addressed, cannot have, say, a dynamic property assigned to it so that you could alter it that way, etc.
::itemis documented as a "sub-control", with same standing as e.g.::iconor::tab.