Inherited by: Phonon.ObjectDescriptionModel, Phonon.EffectDescriptionModel, Phonon.AudioOutputDeviceModel, QAbstractNetworkCache, QNetworkDiskCache, QGLShaderProgram, QGLShader, QGraphicsTransform, QGraphicsRotation, QGraphicsScale, QStyle, QCommonStyle, QWindowsStyle, QPlastiqueStyle, QCleanlooksStyle, QGtkStyle, QMotifStyle, QCDEStyle, QButtonGroup, QDrag, QTcpServer, QValidator, QRegExpValidator, QDoubleValidator, QIntValidator, QGraphicsScene, QHelpSearchEngine, QLocalServer, QSettings, QUiLoader, QGraphicsItemAnimation, QHelpEngineCore, QHelpEngine, QFileSystemWatcher, QGraphicsAnchor, QSound, QShortcut, QSessionManager, QWebPluginFactory, QGesture, QTapAndHoldGesture, QTapGesture, QSwipeGesture, QPinchGesture, QPanGesture, QWebHistoryInterface, QClipboard, QWebPage, QThreadPool, QThread, QActionGroup, QAction, QWidgetAction, QPluginLoader, QSyntaxHighlighter, QAbstractAnimation, QVariantAnimation, QPropertyAnimation, QPauseAnimation, QAnimationGroup, QSequentialAnimationGroup, QParallelAnimationGroup, QAbstractUriResolver, QSvgRenderer, QInputContext, QTextObject, QTextFrame, QTextTable, QTextBlockGroup, QTextList, QAbstractTransition, QSignalTransition, QEventTransition, QMouseEventTransition, QKeyEventTransition, QAbstractTextDocumentLayout, QPlainTextDocumentLayout, QAbstractState, QState, QStateMachine, QHistoryState, QFinalState, QTimeLine, QSqlDriver, QDeclarativeExpression, QDataWidgetMapper, QDeclarativeEngine, QDeclarativeContext, QDeclarativeComponent, Phonon.BackendCapabilities.Notifier, QGraphicsEffect, QGraphicsOpacityEffect, QGraphicsBlurEffect, QGraphicsColorizeEffect, QGraphicsDropShadowEffect, QTranslator, QAbstractItemDelegate, QItemDelegate, QSqlRelationalDelegate, QStyledItemDelegate, QTimer, QDeclarativePropertyMap, QScriptEngineDebugger, QSocketNotifier, QItemSelectionModel, QSignalMapper, QMimeData, QUndoStack, QUndoGroup, QScriptEngine, QSystemTrayIcon, QCompleter, Phonon.MediaController, QAbstractItemModel, QFileSystemModel, QAbstractTableModel, QSqlQueryModel, QSqlTableModel, QSqlRelationalTableModel, QDirModel, QAbstractProxyModel, QSortFilterProxyModel, QStandardItemModel, QProxyModel, QHelpContentModel, QAbstractListModel, QStringListModel, QHelpIndexModel, QNetworkSession, QNetworkConfigurationManager, QIODevice, QLocalSocket, QFile, QTemporaryFile, QAbstractSocket, QProcess, QNetworkReply, QBuffer, QUdpSocket, QTcpSocket, QNetworkCookieJar, QAbstractEventDispatcher, Phonon.AbstractMediaStream, QEventLoop, QCoreApplication, QApplication, QNetworkAccessManager, QHttp, QFtp, QTextDocument, QSslSocket, QWebFrame, QAbstractMessageHandler, QMovie
The PySide.QtCore.QObject class is the base class of all Qt objects.
PySide.QtCore.QObject is the heart of the Qt Object Model . The central feature in this model is a very powerful mechanism for seamless object communication called signals and slots . You can connect a signal to a slot with PySide.QtCore.QObject.connect() and destroy the connection with PySide.QtCore.QObject.disconnect() . To avoid never ending notification loops you can temporarily block signals with PySide.QtCore.QObject.blockSignals() . The protected functions PySide.QtCore.QObject.connectNotify() and PySide.QtCore.QObject.disconnectNotify() make it possible to track connections.
QObjects organize themselves in object trees . When you create a PySide.QtCore.QObject with another object as parent, the object will automatically add itself to the parent’s PySide.QtCore.QObject.children() list. The parent takes ownership of the object; i.e., it will automatically delete its children in its destructor. You can look for an object by name and optionally type using PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChild() or PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChildren() .
Every object has an PySide.QtCore.QObject.objectName() and its class name can be found via the corresponding PySide.QtCore.QObject.metaObject() (see QMetaObject.className() ). You can determine whether the object’s class inherits another class in the PySide.QtCore.QObject inheritance hierarchy by using the PySide.QtCore.QObject.inherits() function.
When an object is deleted, it emits a PySide.QtCore.QObject.destroyed() signal. You can catch this signal to avoid dangling references to QObjects .
QObjects can receive events through PySide.QtCore.QObject.event() and filter the events of other objects. See PySide.QtCore.QObject.installEventFilter() and PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() for details. A convenience handler, PySide.QtCore.QObject.childEvent() , can be reimplemented to catch child events.
Events are delivered in the thread in which the object was created; see Thread Support in Qt and PySide.QtCore.QObject.thread() for details. Note that event processing is not done at all for QObjects with no thread affinity ( PySide.QtCore.QObject.thread() returns zero). Use the PySide.QtCore.QObject.moveToThread() function to change the thread affinity for an object and its children (the object cannot be moved if it has a parent).
Last but not least, PySide.QtCore.QObject provides the basic timer support in Qt; see PySide.QtCore.QTimer for high-level support for timers.
Notice that the Q_OBJECT() macro is mandatory for any object that implements signals, slots or properties. You also need to run the Meta Object Compiler on the source file. We strongly recommend the use of this macro in all subclasses of PySide.QtCore.QObject regardless of whether or not they actually use signals, slots and properties, since failure to do so may lead certain functions to exhibit strange behavior.
All Qt widgets inherit PySide.QtCore.QObject . The convenience function PySide.QtCore.QObject.isWidgetType() returns whether an object is actually a widget. It is much faster than qobject_cast() < PySide.QtGui.QWidget *>(obj ) or obj -> PySide.QtCore.QObject.inherits() (” PySide.QtGui.QWidget ”).
Some PySide.QtCore.QObject functions, e.g. PySide.QtCore.QObject.children() , return a QObjectList . QObjectList is a typedef for QList < PySide.QtCore.QObject *>.
PySide.QtCore.QObject has neither a copy constructor nor an assignment operator. This is by design. Actually, they are declared, but in a private section with the macro Q_DISABLE_COPY() . In fact, all Qt classes derived from PySide.QtCore.QObject (direct or indirect) use this macro to declare their copy constructor and assignment operator to be private. The reasoning is found in the discussion on Identity vs Value on the Qt Object Model page.
The main consequence is that you should use pointers to PySide.QtCore.QObject (or to your PySide.QtCore.QObject subclass) where you might otherwise be tempted to use your PySide.QtCore.QObject subclass as a value. For example, without a copy constructor, you can’t use a subclass of PySide.QtCore.QObject as the value to be stored in one of the container classes. You must store pointers.
Qt’s meta-object system provides a mechanism to automatically connect signals and slots between PySide.QtCore.QObject subclasses and their children. As long as objects are defined with suitable object names, and slots follow a simple naming convention, this connection can be performed at run-time by the QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName() function.
uic generates code that invokes this function to enable auto-connection to be performed between widgets on forms created with Qt Designer . More information about using auto-connection with Qt Designer is given in the Using a Designer UI File in Your Application section of the Qt Designer manual.
From Qt 4.2, dynamic properties can be added to and removed from PySide.QtCore.QObject instances at run-time. Dynamic properties do not need to be declared at compile-time, yet they provide the same advantages as static properties and are manipulated using the same API - using PySide.QtCore.QObject.property() to read them and PySide.QtCore.QObject.setProperty() to write them.
From Qt 4.3, dynamic properties are supported by Qt Designer , and both standard Qt widgets and user-created forms can be given dynamic properties.
All PySide.QtCore.QObject subclasses support Qt’s translation features, making it possible to translate an application’s user interface into different languages.
To make user-visible text translatable, it must be wrapped in calls to the PySide.QtCore.QObject.tr() function. This is explained in detail in the Writing Source Code for Translation document.
See also
PySide.QtCore.QMetaObject QPointer QObjectCleanupHandler Q_DISABLE_COPY() Object Trees & Ownership
Parameters: | parent – PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Constructs an object with parent object parent .
The parent of an object may be viewed as the object’s owner. For instance, a dialog box is the parent of the OK and Cancel buttons it contains.
The destructor of a parent object destroys all child objects.
Setting parent to 0 constructs an object with no parent. If the object is a widget, it will become a top-level window.
Parameters: | b – PySide.QtCore.bool |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
If block is true, signals emitted by this object are blocked (i.e., emitting a signal will not invoke anything connected to it). If block is false, no such blocking will occur.
The return value is the previous value of PySide.QtCore.QObject.signalsBlocked() .
Note that the PySide.QtCore.QObject.destroyed() signal will be emitted even if the signals for this object have been blocked.
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QChildEvent |
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This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive child events. The event is passed in the event parameter.
QEvent.ChildAdded and QEvent.ChildRemoved events are sent to objects when children are added or removed. In both cases you can only rely on the child being a PySide.QtCore.QObject , or if PySide.QtCore.QObject.isWidgetType() returns true, a PySide.QtGui.QWidget . (This is because, in the ChildAdded case, the child is not yet fully constructed, and in the ChildRemoved case it might have been destructed already).
QEvent.ChildPolished events are sent to widgets when children are polished, or when polished children are added. If you receive a child polished event, the child’s construction is usually completed. However, this is not guaranteed, and multiple polish events may be delivered during the execution of a widget’s constructor.
For every child widget, you receive one ChildAdded event, zero or more ChildPolished events, and one ChildRemoved event.
The ChildPolished event is omitted if a child is removed immediately after it is added. If a child is polished several times during construction and destruction, you may receive several child polished events for the same child, each time with a different virtual table.
See also
Return type: |
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Returns a list of child objects. The QObjectList class is defined in the <QObject> header file as the following:
The first child added is the QList.first() object in the list and the last child added is the QList.last() object in the list, i.e. new children are appended at the end.
Note that the list order changes when PySide.QtGui.QWidget children are raised or lowered . A widget that is raised becomes the last object in the list, and a widget that is lowered becomes the first object in the list.
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: | signal – str |
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This virtual function is called when something has been connected to signal in this object.
If you want to compare signal with a specific signal, use QLatin1String and the SIGNAL() macro as follows:
if QLatin1String(signal) == SIGNAL('valueChanged()'):
# signal is valueChanged()
If the signal contains multiple parameters or parameters that contain spaces, call QMetaObject.normalizedSignature() on the result of the SIGNAL() macro.
Warning
This function violates the object-oriented principle of modularity. However, it might be useful when you need to perform expensive initialization only if something is connected to a signal.
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QEvent |
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This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive custom events. Custom events are user-defined events with a type value at least as large as the QEvent.User item of the QEvent.Type enum, and is typically a PySide.QtCore.QEvent subclass. The event is passed in the event parameter.
Schedules this object for deletion.
The object will be deleted when control returns to the event loop. If the event loop is not running when this function is called (e.g. PySide.QtCore.QObject.deleteLater() is called on an object before QCoreApplication.exec() ), the object will be deleted once the event loop is started.
Note that entering and leaving a new event loop (e.g., by opening a modal dialog) will not perform the deferred deletion; for the object to be deleted, the control must return to the event loop from which PySide.QtCore.QObject.deleteLater() was called.
Note
It is safe to call this function more than once; when the first deferred deletion event is delivered, any pending events for the object are removed from the event queue.
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.destroyed() QPointer
Parameters: | object – PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
This function overloads PySide.QtCore.QObject.disconnect() .
Disconnects signal from method of receiver .
A signal-slot connection is removed when either of the objects involved are destroyed.
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Disconnects signal in object sender from method in object receiver . Returns true if the connection is successfully broken; otherwise returns false.
A signal-slot connection is removed when either of the objects involved are destroyed.
PySide.QtCore.QObject.disconnect() is typically used in three ways, as the following examples demonstrate.
0 may be used as a wildcard, meaning “any signal”, “any receiving object”, or “any slot in the receiving object”, respectively.
The sender may never be 0. (You cannot disconnect signals from more than one object in a single call.)
If signal is 0, it disconnects receiver and method from any signal. If not, only the specified signal is disconnected.
If receiver is 0, it disconnects anything connected to signal . If not, slots in objects other than receiver are not disconnected.
If method is 0, it disconnects anything that is connected to receiver . If not, only slots named method will be disconnected, and all other slots are left alone. The method must be 0 if receiver is left out, so you cannot disconnect a specifically-named slot on all objects.
See also
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
This function overloads PySide.QtCore.QObject.disconnect() .
Disconnects all signals in this object from receiver ‘s method .
A signal-slot connection is removed when either of the objects involved are destroyed.
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: | signal – str |
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This virtual function is called when something has been disconnected from signal in this object.
See PySide.QtCore.QObject.connectNotify() for an example of how to compare signal with a specific signal.
Warning
This function violates the object-oriented principle of modularity. However, it might be useful for optimizing access to expensive resources.
Dumps information about signal connections, etc. for this object to the debug output.
This function is useful for debugging, but does nothing if the library has been compiled in release mode (i.e. without debugging information).
Dumps a tree of children to the debug output.
This function is useful for debugging, but does nothing if the library has been compiled in release mode (i.e. without debugging information).
Return type: |
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Returns the names of all properties that were dynamically added to the object using PySide.QtCore.QObject.setProperty() .
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QEvent |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
This virtual function receives events to an object and should return true if the event e was recognized and processed.
The PySide.QtCore.QObject.event() function can be reimplemented to customize the behavior of an object.
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.installEventFilter() PySide.QtCore.QObject.timerEvent() QApplication.sendEvent() QApplication.postEvent() QWidget.event()
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Filters events if this object has been installed as an event filter for the watched object.
In your reimplementation of this function, if you want to filter the event out, i.e. stop it being handled further, return true; otherwise return false.
Example:
class MainWindow(QMainWindow):
def __init__(self):
self.textEdit = QTextEdit()
setCentralWidget(self.textEdit)
textEdit.installEventFilter(self)
def eventFilter(self, obj, event):
if obj == textEdit:
if event.type() == QEvent.KeyPress:
keyEvent = event
print "Ate key press", keyEvent.key()
return true
else:
return false
else:
# pass the event on to the parent class
return QMainWindow.eventFilter(self, obj, event)
Notice in the example above that unhandled events are passed to the base class’s PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() function, since the base class might have reimplemented PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() for its own internal purposes.
Warning
If you delete the receiver object in this function, be sure to return true. Otherwise, Qt will forward the event to the deleted object and the program might crash.
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PyObject |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySequence |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySequence |
Parameters: | classname – str |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Returns true if this object is an instance of a class that inherits className or a PySide.QtCore.QObject subclass that inherits className ; otherwise returns false.
A class is considered to inherit itself.
Example:
timer = QTimer() # QTimer inherits QObject
timer.inherits("QTimer") # returns true
timer.inherits("QObject") # returns true
timer.inherits("QAbstractButton") # returns false
# QLayout inherits QObject and QLayoutItem
layout = QLayout()
layout.inherits("QObject") # returns true
layout.inherits("QLayoutItem") # returns false
If you need to determine whether an object is an instance of a particular class for the purpose of casting it, consider using qobject_cast<Type *>(object) instead.
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.metaObject() qobject_cast()
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Installs an event filter filterObj on this object. For example:
monitoredObj.installEventFilter(filterObj)
An event filter is an object that receives all events that are sent to this object. The filter can either stop the event or forward it to this object. The event filter filterObj receives events via its PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() function. The PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() function must return true if the event should be filtered, (i.e. stopped); otherwise it must return false.
If multiple event filters are installed on a single object, the filter that was installed last is activated first.
Here’s a KeyPressEater class that eats the key presses of its monitored objects:
class KeyPressEater(QObject):
def eventFilter(self, obj, event):
if event.type() == QEvent.KeyPress:
print "Ate key press", event.key()
return True
else:
# standard event processing
return QObject.eventFilter(self, obj, event)
And here’s how to install it on two widgets:
keyPressEater = KeyPressEater(self)
pushButton = QPushButton(self)
listView = QListView(self)
pushButton.installEventFilter(keyPressEater)
listView.installEventFilter(keyPressEater)
The PySide.QtGui.QShortcut class, for example, uses this technique to intercept shortcut key presses.
Warning
If you delete the receiver object in your PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() function, be sure to return true. If you return false, Qt sends the event to the deleted object and the program will crash.
Note that the filtering object must be in the same thread as this object. If filterObj is in a different thread, this function does nothing. If either filterObj or this object are moved to a different thread after calling this function, the event filter will not be called until both objects have the same thread affinity again (it is not removed).
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
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Returns true if the object is a widget; otherwise returns false.
Calling this function is equivalent to calling inherits(” PySide.QtGui.QWidget ”), except that it is much faster.
Parameters: | id – PySide.QtCore.int |
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Kills the timer with timer identifier, id .
The timer identifier is returned by PySide.QtCore.QObject.startTimer() when a timer event is started.
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.QMetaObject |
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Returns a pointer to the meta-object of this object.
A meta-object contains information about a class that inherits PySide.QtCore.QObject , e.g. class name, superclass name, properties, signals and slots. Every PySide.QtCore.QObject subclass that contains the Q_OBJECT() macro will have a meta-object.
The meta-object information is required by the signal/slot connection mechanism and the property system. The PySide.QtCore.QObject.inherits() function also makes use of the meta-object.
If you have no pointer to an actual object instance but still want to access the meta-object of a class, you can use staticMetaObject .
Example:
obj = QPushButton()
obj.metaObject().className() # returns "QPushButton"
QPushButton.staticMetaObject.className() # returns "QPushButton"
See also
staticMetaObject
Parameters: | thread – PySide.QtCore.QThread |
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Changes the thread affinity for this object and its children. The object cannot be moved if it has a parent. Event processing will continue in the targetThread .
To move an object to the main thread, use QApplication.instance() to retrieve a pointer to the current application, and then use QApplication.thread() to retrieve the thread in which the application lives. For example:
myObject.moveToThread(QApplication.instance().thread())
If targetThread is zero, all event processing for this object and its children stops.
Note that all active timers for the object will be reset. The timers are first stopped in the current thread and restarted (with the same interval) in the targetThread . As a result, constantly moving an object between threads can postpone timer events indefinitely.
A QEvent.ThreadChange event is sent to this object just before the thread affinity is changed. You can handle this event to perform any special processing. Note that any new events that are posted to this object will be handled in the targetThread .
Warning
This function is not thread-safe; the current thread must be same as the current thread affinity. In other words, this function can only “push” an object from the current thread to another thread, it cannot “pull” an object from any arbitrary thread to the current thread.
See also
Return type: | unicode |
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This property holds the name of this object.
You can find an object by name (and type) using PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChild() . You can find a set of objects with PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChildren() .
print "MyClass::setPrecision(): (%s) invalid precision %f" % \
(qPrintable(objectName()), newPrecision)
By default, this property contains an empty string.
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Returns a pointer to the parent object.
Parameters: | name – str |
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Return type: | object |
Returns the value of the object’s name property.
If no such property exists, the returned variant is invalid.
Information about all available properties is provided through the PySide.QtCore.QObject.metaObject() and PySide.QtCore.QObject.dynamicPropertyNames() .
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.setProperty() QVariant.isValid() PySide.QtCore.QObject.metaObject() PySide.QtCore.QObject.dynamicPropertyNames()
Parameters: | signal – str |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.int |
Returns the number of receivers connected to the signal .
Since both slots and signals can be used as receivers for signals, and the same connections can be made many times, the number of receivers is the same as the number of connections made from this signal.
When calling this function, you can use the SIGNAL() macro to pass a specific signal:
if receivers(SIGNAL('valueChanged()')) > 0:
data = get_the_value() # expensive operation
self.valueChanged(data)
As the code snippet above illustrates, you can use this function to avoid emitting a signal that nobody listens to.
Warning
This function violates the object-oriented principle of modularity. However, it might be useful when you need to perform expensive initialization only if something is connected to a signal.
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.uint |
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Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Removes an event filter object obj from this object. The request is ignored if such an event filter has not been installed.
All event filters for this object are automatically removed when this object is destroyed.
It is always safe to remove an event filter, even during event filter activation (i.e. from the PySide.QtCore.QObject.eventFilter() function).
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Returns a pointer to the object that sent the signal, if called in a slot activated by a signal; otherwise it returns 0. The pointer is valid only during the execution of the slot that calls this function from this object’s thread context.
The pointer returned by this function becomes invalid if the sender is destroyed, or if the slot is disconnected from the sender’s signal.
Warning
This function violates the object-oriented principle of modularity. However, getting access to the sender might be useful when many signals are connected to a single slot.
Warning
As mentioned above, the return value of this function is not valid when the slot is called via a Qt.DirectConnection from a thread different from this object’s thread. Do not use this function in this type of scenario.
See also
Parameters: | name – unicode |
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This property holds the name of this object.
You can find an object by name (and type) using PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChild() . You can find a set of objects with PySide.QtCore.QObject.findChildren() .
print "MyClass::setPrecision(): (%s) invalid precision %f" % \
(qPrintable(objectName()), newPrecision)
By default, this property contains an empty string.
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QObject |
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Makes the object a child of parent .
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.parent() QWidget.setParent()
Parameters: |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
Sets the value of the object’s name property to value .
If the property is defined in the class using Q_PROPERTY then true is returned on success and false otherwise. If the property is not defined using Q_PROPERTY, and therefore not listed in the meta-object, it is added as a dynamic property and false is returned.
Information about all available properties is provided through the PySide.QtCore.QObject.metaObject() and PySide.QtCore.QObject.dynamicPropertyNames() .
Dynamic properties can be queried again using PySide.QtCore.QObject.property() and can be removed by setting the property value to an invalid PySide.QtCore.QVariant . Changing the value of a dynamic property causes a PySide.QtCore.QDynamicPropertyChangeEvent to be sent to the object.
Note
Dynamic properties starting with “_q_” are reserved for internal purposes.
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.bool |
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Returns true if signals are blocked; otherwise returns false.
Signals are not blocked by default.
See also
Parameters: | interval – PySide.QtCore.int |
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Return type: | PySide.QtCore.int |
Starts a timer and returns a timer identifier, or returns zero if it could not start a timer.
A timer event will occur every interval milliseconds until PySide.QtCore.QObject.killTimer() is called. If interval is 0, then the timer event occurs once every time there are no more window system events to process.
The virtual PySide.QtCore.QObject.timerEvent() function is called with the PySide.QtCore.QTimerEvent event parameter class when a timer event occurs. Reimplement this function to get timer events.
If multiple timers are running, the QTimerEvent.timerId() can be used to find out which timer was activated.
Example:
class MyObject(QObject):
def __init__(self, parent):
QObject.__init__(self, parent)
self.startTimer(50) # 50-millisecond timer
self.startTimer(1000) # 1-second timer
self.startTimer(60000) # 1-minute timer
def timerEvent(self, event):
print "Timer ID:", event.timerId()
Note that PySide.QtCore.QTimer ‘s accuracy depends on the underlying operating system and hardware. Most platforms support an accuracy of 20 milliseconds; some provide more. If Qt is unable to deliver the requested number of timer events, it will silently discard some.
The PySide.QtCore.QTimer class provides a high-level programming interface with single-shot timers and timer signals instead of events. There is also a PySide.QtCore.QBasicTimer class that is more lightweight than PySide.QtCore.QTimer and less clumsy than using timer IDs directly.
Return type: | PySide.QtCore.QThread |
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Returns the thread in which the object lives.
See also
Parameters: | arg__1 – PySide.QtCore.QTimerEvent |
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This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receive timer events for the object.
PySide.QtCore.QTimer provides a higher-level interface to the timer functionality, and also more general information about timers. The timer event is passed in the event parameter.
Parameters: |
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Return type: | unicode |
Returns a translated version of sourceText , optionally based on a disambiguation string and value of n for strings containing plurals; otherwise returns sourceText itself if no appropriate translated string is available.
Example:
def createMenus(self):
fileMenu = menuBar().addMenu("&File")
...
If the same sourceText is used in different roles within the same context, an additional identifying string may be passed in disambiguation (0 by default). In Qt 4.4 and earlier, this was the preferred way to pass comments to translators.
Example:
def __init__(self):
senderLabel = QLabel(self.tr("Name:"))
recipientLabel = QLabel(self.tr("Name:", "recipient"))
# ...
...
See Writing Source Code for Translation for a detailed description of Qt’s translation mechanisms in general, and the Disambiguation section for information on disambiguation.
Warning
This method is reentrant only if all translators are installed before calling this method. Installing or removing translators while performing translations is not supported. Doing so will probably result in crashes or other undesirable behavior.
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.trUtf8() QApplication.translate() QTextCodec.setCodecForTr() Internationalization with Qt
Parameters: |
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Return type: | unicode |
Parameters: |
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Return type: | unicode |
Returns a translated version of sourceText , or QString::fromUtf8(sourceText ) if there is no appropriate version. It is otherwise identical to tr(sourceText , disambiguation , n ).
Note that using the Utf8 variants of the translation functions is not required if CODECFORTR is already set to UTF-8 in the qmake project file and QTextCodec::setCodecForTr(“UTF-8”) is used.
Warning
This method is reentrant only if all translators are installed before calling this method. Installing or removing translators while performing translations is not supported. Doing so will probably result in crashes or other undesirable behavior.
Warning
For portability reasons, we recommend that you use escape sequences for specifying non-ASCII characters in string literals to PySide.QtCore.QObject.trUtf8() . For example:
label.setText(self.tr("F\374r \310lise"))
See also
PySide.QtCore.QObject.tr() QApplication.translate() Internationalization with Qt