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Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet

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  • C Offline
    C Offline
    CPPUIX
    wrote on 10 May 2023, 21:22 last edited by CPPUIX 5 Oct 2023, 21:23
    #3

    Hi,

    You should implement @SGaist's suggestion, it's way more efficient.

    But if you insist on your current approach, you just need to realize that the path is relative to your program's executable location, which you can find in your build folder (build-simpleclient-Desktop...), not your source folder (simpleclient).

    So you could either copy your icons into your build folder.

    Or you could use the icons where they currently are without changing there location like this:

    image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);

    ../ means parent folder.

    For more clarification, here's the equivalent to your relative paths:

    image: url(C:/Users/petrikas.lu/Desktop/WORK/QT/PTL/simpleclient/build-simpleclient-Desktop_Qt.../icons/green_circle.png);

    Which is wrong because such file does not exist, hence why it doesn't work.

    Again, I advice you to implement @SGaist's suggestion.

    Hope this helps!

    J 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 06:56
    0
    • C CPPUIX
      10 May 2023, 21:22

      Hi,

      You should implement @SGaist's suggestion, it's way more efficient.

      But if you insist on your current approach, you just need to realize that the path is relative to your program's executable location, which you can find in your build folder (build-simpleclient-Desktop...), not your source folder (simpleclient).

      So you could either copy your icons into your build folder.

      Or you could use the icons where they currently are without changing there location like this:

      image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);

      ../ means parent folder.

      For more clarification, here's the equivalent to your relative paths:

      image: url(C:/Users/petrikas.lu/Desktop/WORK/QT/PTL/simpleclient/build-simpleclient-Desktop_Qt.../icons/green_circle.png);

      Which is wrong because such file does not exist, hence why it doesn't work.

      Again, I advice you to implement @SGaist's suggestion.

      Hope this helps!

      J Offline
      J Offline
      JonB
      wrote on 11 May 2023, 06:56 last edited by JonB 5 Nov 2023, 06:56
      #4

      @Abderrahmene_Rayene said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

      Or you could use the icons where they currently are without changing there location like this:
      image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);
      ../ means parent folder.

      "Parent folder" from where is it interpreted as?? If it's parent from runtime working directory it's quite useless....

      C 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 07:59
      0
      • J JonB
        11 May 2023, 06:56

        @Abderrahmene_Rayene said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

        Or you could use the icons where they currently are without changing there location like this:
        image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);
        ../ means parent folder.

        "Parent folder" from where is it interpreted as?? If it's parent from runtime working directory it's quite useless....

        C Offline
        C Offline
        CPPUIX
        wrote on 11 May 2023, 07:59 last edited by
        #5

        @JonB sorry, I don't understand, could you rephrase?

        J 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 08:13
        0
        • C CPPUIX
          11 May 2023, 07:59

          @JonB sorry, I don't understand, could you rephrase?

          J Offline
          J Offline
          JonB
          wrote on 11 May 2023, 08:13 last edited by JonB 5 Nov 2023, 08:15
          #6

          @Abderrahmene_Rayene
          Not sure how to phrase it any clearer. You talk about using a relative path for url(...) argument, yours starts with ../. Which does indeed mean "parent directory". But I am asking you: parent directory from where?? Parent of which directory?

          Do you mean parent from "the current working directory at runtime of the program"? If so, since you have no idea what that might be when running the program I don't see how it helps or how I could ever use it for production. It might be useful if you are developing in Creator and cause that to set your runtime working directory to somewhere known when spawning your executable, but outside of that I cannot see that it helps. If it meant, say, "relative to the directory in which the executable is located" then it would be useful, but I don't think Qt treats it that way.

          C 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 08:29
          0
          • J JonB
            11 May 2023, 08:13

            @Abderrahmene_Rayene
            Not sure how to phrase it any clearer. You talk about using a relative path for url(...) argument, yours starts with ../. Which does indeed mean "parent directory". But I am asking you: parent directory from where?? Parent of which directory?

            Do you mean parent from "the current working directory at runtime of the program"? If so, since you have no idea what that might be when running the program I don't see how it helps or how I could ever use it for production. It might be useful if you are developing in Creator and cause that to set your runtime working directory to somewhere known when spawning your executable, but outside of that I cannot see that it helps. If it meant, say, "relative to the directory in which the executable is located" then it would be useful, but I don't think Qt treats it that way.

            C Offline
            C Offline
            CPPUIX
            wrote on 11 May 2023, 08:29 last edited by
            #7

            @JonB said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

            relative to the directory in which the executable is located

            Yes that is what I meant, my post is based on OP's current folder hierarchy, their build folder is in their working directory.

            I know this is not production level, but OP seems to not understand how this works, like I was just 2 months ago, so I'm just providing an explanation based on their current situation, not a general one.

            The screenshot they shared shows their current hierarchy which I based my explanation to OP's specific situation on. I just thought they shouldn't move on from this without actually understanding what they did wrong.

            L J 2 Replies Last reply 11 May 2023, 08:39
            0
            • C CPPUIX
              11 May 2023, 08:29

              @JonB said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

              relative to the directory in which the executable is located

              Yes that is what I meant, my post is based on OP's current folder hierarchy, their build folder is in their working directory.

              I know this is not production level, but OP seems to not understand how this works, like I was just 2 months ago, so I'm just providing an explanation based on their current situation, not a general one.

              The screenshot they shared shows their current hierarchy which I based my explanation to OP's specific situation on. I just thought they shouldn't move on from this without actually understanding what they did wrong.

              L Offline
              L Offline
              lukutis222
              wrote on 11 May 2023, 08:39 last edited by lukutis222 5 Nov 2023, 08:40
              #8

              Thanks for the help. I have ended up using the QT resource system as you guys suggsted. I refer to this documentation:
              https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/resources.html

              and found this Youtube video to be very easy to follow and got it to work quite fast.
              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2urUjl03EY&ab_channel=MacDigia

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • C CPPUIX
                11 May 2023, 08:29

                @JonB said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                relative to the directory in which the executable is located

                Yes that is what I meant, my post is based on OP's current folder hierarchy, their build folder is in their working directory.

                I know this is not production level, but OP seems to not understand how this works, like I was just 2 months ago, so I'm just providing an explanation based on their current situation, not a general one.

                The screenshot they shared shows their current hierarchy which I based my explanation to OP's specific situation on. I just thought they shouldn't move on from this without actually understanding what they did wrong.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                JonB
                wrote on 11 May 2023, 08:45 last edited by JonB 5 Nov 2023, 08:46
                #9

                @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                I understand you are trying to help the OP, and my comment is not intended to "criticise" you. But you say

                you just need to realize that the path is relative to your program's executable location

                Although I have not tested, I think this incorrect. Unless you show otherwise or have a reference for that for a Qt url(), I see no evidence it takes the location of the executable into account at all. Rather I believe it is relative to the *runtime current directory", which could be anywhere at all, not related to the executable's location. Which means using a relative path is pretty useless to locate any existing file to read, and consequently we recommend people not to use a relative path. When building and running from Creator, that may set the program's current directory to the "build" folder where the executable is located, but that is just a Creator thing, and won't apply outside. Hence @SGaist's suggestion of using Qt's resources, whose paths always work.

                If the user tries from a terminal:

                cd /tmp
                /path/to/build/folder/executable-file
                

                does it then find the original ../icons/green_circle.png, or does it say it does not exist because it looks for /icons/green_circle.png?

                L C 2 Replies Last reply 11 May 2023, 09:10
                0
                • J JonB
                  11 May 2023, 08:45

                  @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                  I understand you are trying to help the OP, and my comment is not intended to "criticise" you. But you say

                  you just need to realize that the path is relative to your program's executable location

                  Although I have not tested, I think this incorrect. Unless you show otherwise or have a reference for that for a Qt url(), I see no evidence it takes the location of the executable into account at all. Rather I believe it is relative to the *runtime current directory", which could be anywhere at all, not related to the executable's location. Which means using a relative path is pretty useless to locate any existing file to read, and consequently we recommend people not to use a relative path. When building and running from Creator, that may set the program's current directory to the "build" folder where the executable is located, but that is just a Creator thing, and won't apply outside. Hence @SGaist's suggestion of using Qt's resources, whose paths always work.

                  If the user tries from a terminal:

                  cd /tmp
                  /path/to/build/folder/executable-file
                  

                  does it then find the original ../icons/green_circle.png, or does it say it does not exist because it looks for /icons/green_circle.png?

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  lukutis222
                  wrote on 11 May 2023, 09:10 last edited by lukutis222 5 Nov 2023, 09:15
                  #10

                  @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                  @JonB
                  @SGaist

                  This is a little out of topic but its relevant.

                  What is the best way to display an icon without any additional widgets.
                  I have noticed that not all widgets support setIcon method.
                  bbbc1b37-0be5-4a2c-aca5-d354ce023176-image.png

                  For example , for my particular application, I now have the following:

                  void MainWindow::on_pushButton_clicked()
                  {
                      if(ui->status_checkbox_test->checkState() == Qt::Unchecked){
                          ui->status_checkbox_test->setCheckState(Qt::Checked);
                          ui->status_checkbox_test->setIcon(QIcon(":/icons/green_circle.png"));
                  
                          return;
                      }
                      else if(ui->status_checkbox_test->checkState() == Qt::Checked){
                          ui->status_checkbox_test->setCheckState(Qt::Unchecked);
                          ui->status_checkbox_test->setIcon(QIcon(":/icons/red_circle.png"));
                  
                          return;
                      }
                  }
                  

                  Checkbox toggled:
                  8b671a5c-6ad6-410e-aab0-2e792606fcea-image.png

                  Checkbox not toggled:
                  77540016-2dee-4961-a6cd-a19249e0804d-image.png

                  My issue

                  Since I am using QCheckBox, even after setting the icon using setIcon I am seeing the checkbox text and the actual checkbox. However, in my case I would only like to display icon without anything else. Is there a widget in QT that is dedicated just for icon?

                  Simply said:

                  What if I want to simply insert an icon somewhere on the screen. What widget would I choose since I need a widget to use setIcon property?

                  J 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 09:20
                  0
                  • L lukutis222
                    11 May 2023, 09:10

                    @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                    @JonB
                    @SGaist

                    This is a little out of topic but its relevant.

                    What is the best way to display an icon without any additional widgets.
                    I have noticed that not all widgets support setIcon method.
                    bbbc1b37-0be5-4a2c-aca5-d354ce023176-image.png

                    For example , for my particular application, I now have the following:

                    void MainWindow::on_pushButton_clicked()
                    {
                        if(ui->status_checkbox_test->checkState() == Qt::Unchecked){
                            ui->status_checkbox_test->setCheckState(Qt::Checked);
                            ui->status_checkbox_test->setIcon(QIcon(":/icons/green_circle.png"));
                    
                            return;
                        }
                        else if(ui->status_checkbox_test->checkState() == Qt::Checked){
                            ui->status_checkbox_test->setCheckState(Qt::Unchecked);
                            ui->status_checkbox_test->setIcon(QIcon(":/icons/red_circle.png"));
                    
                            return;
                        }
                    }
                    

                    Checkbox toggled:
                    8b671a5c-6ad6-410e-aab0-2e792606fcea-image.png

                    Checkbox not toggled:
                    77540016-2dee-4961-a6cd-a19249e0804d-image.png

                    My issue

                    Since I am using QCheckBox, even after setting the icon using setIcon I am seeing the checkbox text and the actual checkbox. However, in my case I would only like to display icon without anything else. Is there a widget in QT that is dedicated just for icon?

                    Simply said:

                    What if I want to simply insert an icon somewhere on the screen. What widget would I choose since I need a widget to use setIcon property?

                    J Offline
                    J Offline
                    JonB
                    wrote on 11 May 2023, 09:20 last edited by
                    #11

                    @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                    What if I want to simply insert an icon somewhere on the screen. What widget would I choose since I need a widget to use setIcon property?

                    QLabel has setPixmap(const QPixmap &), which accepts more than setIcon() would, but can take icons too.

                    L 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 09:57
                    0
                    • J JonB
                      11 May 2023, 09:20

                      @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                      What if I want to simply insert an icon somewhere on the screen. What widget would I choose since I need a widget to use setIcon property?

                      QLabel has setPixmap(const QPixmap &), which accepts more than setIcon() would, but can take icons too.

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      lukutis222
                      wrote on 11 May 2023, 09:57 last edited by lukutis222 5 Nov 2023, 10:02
                      #12

                      @JonB
                      Sure, I can use QPixmap to dispaly an icon:
                      b8c50e31-4ffa-4f49-8749-d880ff56ded5-image.png

                      This method uses QLabel to replace with icon:

                          QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                          ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                          ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);
                      

                      Is this a common way to do this in QT? If I just want to display an Icon, I would create a label widget and just replace it icon?

                      Additionally, My image does not actually seem to have transparent background even though when I open it using image editor it shows as transparent.

                      I have set QLabel background color to test it out:
                      851a6686-7243-4128-9b5d-972a68fb7ee4-image.png

                      The result:
                      857bfd87-91b1-4521-aaf4-3709792abaad-image.png

                      I would have expected to see green circle in yellow background

                      S J 2 Replies Last reply 11 May 2023, 11:14
                      0
                      • L lukutis222
                        11 May 2023, 09:57

                        @JonB
                        Sure, I can use QPixmap to dispaly an icon:
                        b8c50e31-4ffa-4f49-8749-d880ff56ded5-image.png

                        This method uses QLabel to replace with icon:

                            QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                            ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                            ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);
                        

                        Is this a common way to do this in QT? If I just want to display an Icon, I would create a label widget and just replace it icon?

                        Additionally, My image does not actually seem to have transparent background even though when I open it using image editor it shows as transparent.

                        I have set QLabel background color to test it out:
                        851a6686-7243-4128-9b5d-972a68fb7ee4-image.png

                        The result:
                        857bfd87-91b1-4521-aaf4-3709792abaad-image.png

                        I would have expected to see green circle in yellow background

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        SGaist
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:14 last edited by
                        #13

                        @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                        QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                        ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                        ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);

                        Don't create the QPixmap on the heap, there's no need for that.

                        As for your other question, QLabel is a class made to show text or images so yes, it's pretty common to use it to show images like that. You could also implement your own subclass that paints the image but there would not be much benefit from that.

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                        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                        L 2 Replies Last reply 11 May 2023, 11:18
                        0
                        • L lukutis222
                          11 May 2023, 09:57

                          @JonB
                          Sure, I can use QPixmap to dispaly an icon:
                          b8c50e31-4ffa-4f49-8749-d880ff56ded5-image.png

                          This method uses QLabel to replace with icon:

                              QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                              ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                              ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);
                          

                          Is this a common way to do this in QT? If I just want to display an Icon, I would create a label widget and just replace it icon?

                          Additionally, My image does not actually seem to have transparent background even though when I open it using image editor it shows as transparent.

                          I have set QLabel background color to test it out:
                          851a6686-7243-4128-9b5d-972a68fb7ee4-image.png

                          The result:
                          857bfd87-91b1-4521-aaf4-3709792abaad-image.png

                          I would have expected to see green circle in yellow background

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          JonB
                          wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:17 last edited by
                          #14

                          @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                          I would have expected to see green circle in yellow background

                          Does your green_circle.png have transparent background?

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • S SGaist
                            11 May 2023, 11:14

                            @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                            QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                            ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                            ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);

                            Don't create the QPixmap on the heap, there's no need for that.

                            As for your other question, QLabel is a class made to show text or images so yes, it's pretty common to use it to show images like that. You could also implement your own subclass that paints the image but there would not be much benefit from that.

                            L Offline
                            L Offline
                            lukutis222
                            wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:18 last edited by lukutis222 5 Nov 2023, 11:18
                            #15

                            @SGaist
                            Okay. Thanks for clarifying :)

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • S SGaist
                              11 May 2023, 11:14

                              @lukutis222 said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                              QPixmap* pixmap =new QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                              ui->test_label->setPixmap(*pixmap);
                              ui->test_label->setScaledContents(true);

                              Don't create the QPixmap on the heap, there's no need for that.

                              As for your other question, QLabel is a class made to show text or images so yes, it's pretty common to use it to show images like that. You could also implement your own subclass that paints the image but there would not be much benefit from that.

                              L Offline
                              L Offline
                              lukutis222
                              wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:18 last edited by lukutis222 5 Nov 2023, 11:19
                              #16

                              @SGaist I am pretty sure it does. But it does not seem transparent when I use it as icon in QT.
                              657c8c26-0d41-4d75-bf80-9fba3e947948-image.png

                              I was expecting it to inherit whatever the background the QLabel is set to.

                              C 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 12:49
                              0
                              • J JonB
                                11 May 2023, 08:45

                                @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                                I understand you are trying to help the OP, and my comment is not intended to "criticise" you. But you say

                                you just need to realize that the path is relative to your program's executable location

                                Although I have not tested, I think this incorrect. Unless you show otherwise or have a reference for that for a Qt url(), I see no evidence it takes the location of the executable into account at all. Rather I believe it is relative to the *runtime current directory", which could be anywhere at all, not related to the executable's location. Which means using a relative path is pretty useless to locate any existing file to read, and consequently we recommend people not to use a relative path. When building and running from Creator, that may set the program's current directory to the "build" folder where the executable is located, but that is just a Creator thing, and won't apply outside. Hence @SGaist's suggestion of using Qt's resources, whose paths always work.

                                If the user tries from a terminal:

                                cd /tmp
                                /path/to/build/folder/executable-file
                                

                                does it then find the original ../icons/green_circle.png, or does it say it does not exist because it looks for /icons/green_circle.png?

                                C Offline
                                C Offline
                                CPPUIX
                                wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:46 last edited by
                                #17

                                @JonB said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                                my comment is not intended to "criticise" you.

                                I appreciate any feedback I can get, thank you!

                                I can see your point, which made me doubt my past experiments and understandings, as I'm still at the beginning of my learning journey.

                                So I made a little experiment. I created a new project with a check box, used OP's styelsheet, with my suggested relative path:

                                image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);

                                I then made a whole new directory separated from the project folder, and created a folder called executableFolder, and one called icons. When I run the executable (copied from the build directory), the stylesheet works.

                                Here are the directories:

                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ ls
                                executableFolder  icons
                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ cd executableFolder/
                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder$ ls
                                relativePath
                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder$ cd ../
                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ cd icons/
                                user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/icons$ ls
                                green_circle.png  red_circle.png
                                

                                relativePath is the executable.

                                Also, I made sure those images exist nowhere but in icons folder in the UnrelatedDir directory.

                                Is this the correct experiment to demonstrate how relative paths work? If not, what should I change or try, in order to properly understand how it works? And is there something I should be aware of, that I seem to be ignorant about?

                                J 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 11:54
                                0
                                • C CPPUIX
                                  11 May 2023, 11:46

                                  @JonB said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                                  my comment is not intended to "criticise" you.

                                  I appreciate any feedback I can get, thank you!

                                  I can see your point, which made me doubt my past experiments and understandings, as I'm still at the beginning of my learning journey.

                                  So I made a little experiment. I created a new project with a check box, used OP's styelsheet, with my suggested relative path:

                                  image: url(../icons/green_circle.png);

                                  I then made a whole new directory separated from the project folder, and created a folder called executableFolder, and one called icons. When I run the executable (copied from the build directory), the stylesheet works.

                                  Here are the directories:

                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ ls
                                  executableFolder  icons
                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ cd executableFolder/
                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder$ ls
                                  relativePath
                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder$ cd ../
                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir$ cd icons/
                                  user@user:~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/icons$ ls
                                  green_circle.png  red_circle.png
                                  

                                  relativePath is the executable.

                                  Also, I made sure those images exist nowhere but in icons folder in the UnrelatedDir directory.

                                  Is this the correct experiment to demonstrate how relative paths work? If not, what should I change or try, in order to properly understand how it works? And is there something I should be aware of, that I seem to be ignorant about?

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  JonB
                                  wrote on 11 May 2023, 11:54 last edited by
                                  #18

                                  @Abderrahmene_Rayene said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                                  Is this the correct experiment to demonstrate how relative paths work?

                                  No! This demonstrates what you already have/know from Creator. Because of your cd executableFolder/ you are precisely making sure the current directory HAPPENS to be where the executable lives. This is also how Creator runs your app. So ../icons/green_circle.png is correct just for this case.

                                  But you don't know where the user might be when they run your app. All you have to do to test is what I wrote above:

                                  cd /tmp
                                  ~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder/relativePath
                                  

                                  Now does it still pick up the green_circle.png?

                                  C 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 12:08
                                  1
                                  • J JonB
                                    11 May 2023, 11:54

                                    @Abderrahmene_Rayene said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                                    Is this the correct experiment to demonstrate how relative paths work?

                                    No! This demonstrates what you already have/know from Creator. Because of your cd executableFolder/ you are precisely making sure the current directory HAPPENS to be where the executable lives. This is also how Creator runs your app. So ../icons/green_circle.png is correct just for this case.

                                    But you don't know where the user might be when they run your app. All you have to do to test is what I wrote above:

                                    cd /tmp
                                    ~/Desktop/UnrelatedDir/executableFolder/relativePath
                                    

                                    Now does it still pick up the green_circle.png?

                                    C Offline
                                    C Offline
                                    CPPUIX
                                    wrote on 11 May 2023, 12:08 last edited by
                                    #19

                                    @JonB No it does not, and I get it now.

                                    In my case I made the executable's directory the working directory by navigating towards it and executing it by clicking on it in a file manager.

                                    To demonstrate that I understood, I copied the icons folder into tmp, and ran your command again, and it found green_circle.png.

                                    I think I understand now, Thank you!

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply 11 May 2023, 12:30
                                    1
                                    • C CPPUIX
                                      11 May 2023, 12:08

                                      @JonB No it does not, and I get it now.

                                      In my case I made the executable's directory the working directory by navigating towards it and executing it by clicking on it in a file manager.

                                      To demonstrate that I understood, I copied the icons folder into tmp, and ran your command again, and it found green_circle.png.

                                      I think I understand now, Thank you!

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      JonB
                                      wrote on 11 May 2023, 12:30 last edited by JonB 5 Nov 2023, 12:44
                                      #20

                                      @Abderrahmene_Rayene said in Using relative path for image:url in stylesheet:

                                      by navigating towards it and executing it by clicking on it in a file manager

                                      Indeed, but that probably depends on your File Manager/OS. And after a while you/the user may set up a "shortcut" icon for the executable on the desktop and double-click that. Now what is the current directory when it is launched? Each OS/File Manager has its own settings or rules.

                                      So how can we locate supplied external files? One possibility that suits your case is to use QString QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath() to find where the executable is. If you installed the icons directory there or thereabouts you might append icons/ or ../icons/ to that path to locate the .png. That is OK from code, but you can't pass anything suitable to the original stylesheet's url(...) for this case. You might cd there from within your application's code, so that relative works like it does from Creator, but that has consequences, plus it can break QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath().... [Oh, and also it won't for Qt Python applications.]

                                      The upshot is, especially for this url(...) syntax, you are probably best off switching to Qt's resources to supply your icons instead of as external files, as @SGaist suggested and @lukutis222 has now adopted.

                                      P.S.
                                      What would really be better is if Qt "QSS" stylesheets either defined where url(...) sought relative paths somehow relative to where the executable is or some environment variable specifies, or added an extra syntax in url(...) to refer to the executable directory. If we were in HTML with CSS sheets, I believe relative paths are from where the page being viewed is located, and/or an absolute URL /... refers to the virtual root directory of the application, so one can work with that.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • L lukutis222
                                        11 May 2023, 11:18

                                        @SGaist I am pretty sure it does. But it does not seem transparent when I use it as icon in QT.
                                        657c8c26-0d41-4d75-bf80-9fba3e947948-image.png

                                        I was expecting it to inherit whatever the background the QLabel is set to.

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        CPPUIX
                                        wrote on 11 May 2023, 12:49 last edited by CPPUIX 5 Nov 2023, 12:52
                                        #21

                                        @lukutis222 Could you share green_circle.png file? and the style sheet you're applying to your label?

                                        I tested with a random green circle icon with a transparent background, and a yellow background for the label, and it works.

                                        Here's how it looks:

                                        greenyellow.png

                                        and here's the image I used, and its link:

                                        green.png

                                        L 1 Reply Last reply 12 May 2023, 04:48
                                        1
                                        • C CPPUIX
                                          11 May 2023, 12:49

                                          @lukutis222 Could you share green_circle.png file? and the style sheet you're applying to your label?

                                          I tested with a random green circle icon with a transparent background, and a yellow background for the label, and it works.

                                          Here's how it looks:

                                          greenyellow.png

                                          and here's the image I used, and its link:

                                          green.png

                                          L Offline
                                          L Offline
                                          lukutis222
                                          wrote on 12 May 2023, 04:48 last edited by lukutis222 5 Dec 2023, 04:58
                                          #22

                                          @Abderrahmene_Rayene
                                          Sure. The image is attached:
                                          green_circle.png

                                          You should be able save it as image.

                                          Regarrding the label:
                                          I have simply created a label, adjusted its size and added stylesheet background color:
                                          ded6475c-86ff-4a39-bf89-25c89585f0be-image.png

                                          af0a1a92-db2d-4b67-8c35-243a7ca9e69a-image.png

                                          In the code I do:

                                              QPixmap pixmap = QPixmap (":/icons/green_circle.png");
                                              ui->label_5->setPixmap(pixmap);
                                              ui->label_5->setScaledContents(true);
                                          

                                          Result

                                          20b8adac-59d1-4b54-95cc-28942c50e225-image.png

                                          I have then tried the same thing again just instead using my green_circle, I used your green_circle. That seems to work fine!
                                          9b4780e0-2afc-4f95-8fb0-01eb65b74100-image.png .

                                          I wonder what is exactly t=the problem with my image. It seems transparent but its not!

                                          It is also worth mentioning that this is not just one image that I have issues with. I use many transparent images that does not actually seem to be transparent. Another example is this icon:
                                          ping.png

                                          C 1 Reply Last reply 12 May 2023, 07:19
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