Spin Box Delegate Example▲
The model/view framework provides a standard delegate that is used by default with the standard view classes. For most purposes, the selection of editor widgets available through this delegate is sufficient for editing text, boolean values, and other simple data types. However, for specific data types, it is sometimes necessary to use a custom delegate to either display the data in a specific way, or allow the user to edit it with a custom control.
This concepts behind this example are covered in the Delegate Classes chapter of the Model/View Programming overview.
SpinBoxDelegate Class Definition▲
The definition of the delegate is as follows:
class
SpinBoxDelegate : public
QStyledItemDelegate
{
Q_OBJECT
public
:
SpinBoxDelegate(QObject *
parent =
nullptr
);
QWidget *
createEditor(QWidget *
parent, const
QStyleOptionViewItem &
amp;option,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
override
;
void
setEditorData(QWidget *
editor, const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
override
;
void
setModelData(QWidget *
editor, QAbstractItemModel *
model,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
override
;
void
updateEditorGeometry(QWidget *
editor, const
QStyleOptionViewItem &
amp;option,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
override
;
}
;
The delegate class declares only those functions that are needed to create an editor widget, display it at the correct location in a view, and communicate with a model. Custom delegates can also provide their own painting code by reimplementing the paintEvent() function. Furthermore it is also possible to reuse (and avoid deleting) the editor widget by reimplementing the destroyEditor() function. A reused widget could be a mutable member created in the constructor and deleted in the destructor.
SpinBoxDelegate Class Implementation▲
Delegates are often stateless. The constructor only needs to call the base class's constructor with the parent QObject as its argument:
SpinBoxDelegate::
SpinBoxDelegate(QObject *
parent)
:
QStyledItemDelegate(parent)
{
}
Since the delegate is a subclass of QStyledItemDelegate, the data it retrieves from the model is displayed in a default style, and we do not need to provide a custom paintEvent().
The createEditor() function returns an editor widget, in this case a spin box that restricts values from the model to integers from 0 to 100 inclusive.
QWidget *
SpinBoxDelegate::
createEditor(QWidget *
parent,
const
QStyleOptionViewItem &
amp;/* option */
,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;/* index */
) const
{
QSpinBox *
editor =
new
QSpinBox(parent);
editor-&
gt;setFrame(false
);
editor-&
gt;setMinimum(0
);
editor-&
gt;setMaximum(100
);
return
editor;
}
We install an event filter on the spin box to ensure that it behaves in a way that is consistent with other delegates. The implementation for the event filter is provided by the base class.
The setEditorData() function reads data from the model, converts it to an integer value, and writes it to the editor widget.
void
SpinBoxDelegate::
setEditorData(QWidget *
editor,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
{
int
value =
index.model()-&
gt;data(index, Qt::
EditRole).toInt();
QSpinBox *
spinBox =
static_cast
&
lt;QSpinBox*&
gt;(editor);
spinBox-&
gt;setValue(value);
}
Since the view treats delegates as ordinary QWidget instances, we have to use a static cast before we can set the value in the spin box.
The setModelData() function reads the contents of the spin box, and writes it to the model.
void
SpinBoxDelegate::
setModelData(QWidget *
editor, QAbstractItemModel *
model,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;index) const
{
QSpinBox *
spinBox =
static_cast
&
lt;QSpinBox*&
gt;(editor);
spinBox-&
gt;interpretText();
int
value =
spinBox-&
gt;value();
model-&
gt;setData(index, value, Qt::
EditRole);
}
We call interpretText() to make sure that we obtain the most up-to-date value in the spin box.
The updateEditorGeometry() function updates the editor widget's geometry using the information supplied in the style option. This is the minimum that the delegate must do in this case.
void
SpinBoxDelegate::
updateEditorGeometry(QWidget *
editor,
const
QStyleOptionViewItem &
amp;option,
const
QModelIndex &
amp;/* index */
) const
{
editor-&
gt;setGeometry(option.rect);
}
More complex editor widgets may divide the rectangle available in option.rect between different child widgets if required.
The Main Function▲
This example is written in a slightly different way to many of the other examples supplied with Qt. To demonstrate the use of a custom editor widget in a standard view, it is necessary to set up a model containing some arbitrary data and a view to display it.
We set up the application in the normal way, construct a standard item model to hold some data, set up a table view to use the data in the model, and construct a custom delegate to use for editing:
int
main(int
argc, char
*
argv[])
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
QStandardItemModel model(4
, 2
);
QTableView tableView;
tableView.setModel(&
amp;model);
SpinBoxDelegate delegate;
tableView.setItemDelegate(&
amp;delegate);
The table view is informed about the delegate, and will use it to display each of the items. Since the delegate is a subclass of QStyledItemDelegate, each cell in the table will be rendered using standard painting operations.
We insert some arbitrary data into the model for demonstration purposes:
for
(int
row =
0
; row &
lt; 4
; ++
row) {
for
(int
column =
0
; column &
lt; 2
; ++
column) {
QModelIndex index =
model.index(row, column, QModelIndex());
model.setData(index, QVariant((row +
1
) *
(column +
1
)));
}
}
Finally, the table view is displayed with a window title, and we start the application's event loop:
tableView.setWindowTitle(QObject::
tr("Spin Box Delegate"
));
tableView.show();
return
app.exec();
}
Each of the cells in the table can now be edited in the usual way, but the spin box ensures that the data returned to the model is always constrained by the values allowed by the spin box delegate.