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qtutils

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Utilities for providing concurrent access to Qt objects, simplified QSettings storage, and dynamic widget promotion when loading UI files, in Python Qt applications. Includes the Fugue icon set, free to use with attribution to Yusuke Kamiyamane, and the Ubuntu font family (available under the Ubuntu font license).

Installation

  • To install the latest release version, run pip install qtutils.

  • To install latest development version, clone the GitHub repository and run pip install . to install, or pip install -e . to install in 'editable' mode.

Summary

qtutils is a Python library that provides some convenient features to Python applications using the PyQt5/PyQt6/PySide6 widget library.

qtutils 4.0 dropped support for PySide2. If you need to use PySide2, you may use qtutils 3.1.0 or earlier.

qtutils contains the following components:

  • invoke_in_main: This provides some helper functions to interact with Qt from threads.

  • UiLoader: This provides a simplified means of promoting widgets in *.ui files to a custom widget of your choice.

  • qsettings_wrapper: A wrapper around QSettings which allows you to access keys of QSettings as instance attributes. It also performs automatic type conversions.

  • icons: An icon set as a QResource file and corresponding Python module. The resulting resource file can be used by Qt designer, and the python module imported by applications to make the icons available to them. The Fugue icon set was made by Yusuke Kamiyamane, and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. If you can't or don't want to provide attribution, please purchase a royalty-free license from http://p.yusukekamiyamane.com/

  • qt: a PyQt5/PyQt6/PySide6 agnostic interface to Qt that allows you to do e.g from qtutils.qt import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets instead of specifying PySide6 or PyQt5/PyQt6, and have your code use whichever Qt library is available, with some convenience aliases to make it easier to write code that works with the different libraries. Note that this is not a comprehensive abstraction layer like QtPy and your code will still need to be written in a way generally compatible with the libraries you want to support. qtutils does provide aliases for short enums in PyQt6, however, which is one of the most singificant differences between PyQt6 and PySide6/PyQt5. qtutils.qt will choose which Qt library to use based on a) if the QT_ENV environment variable is set to PyQt5, PySide6, or PyQt6, otherwise whichever library has already been imported, or if none, whichever is installed, with order of priority PyQt5, PySide6, then PyQt6.

  • outputbox: a QTextEdit widget for displaying log/output text of an application, either by calling methods or by sending data to it over zeromq.

  • fonts: bundled fonts from the Ubuntu font family - call qtutils.fonts.load_fonts() after instantiating a QApplication to add them to the Qt font database and make them available to your application.

Using icons with Qt designer

To use the icons from Qt designer, clone this repository, and point Qt designer to the .qrc file for the icons set: icons/icons.qrc. Unfortunately Qt desginer saves the absolute path to this file in the resulting .ui file, so if the .ui file is later edited by someone on another system, they will see an error at startup saying the .qrc file cannot be found. This can be ignored and the .ui file will still function correctly, but Qt designer will need to be told the local path to the .qrc file before it can display the icons within its interface.

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Utilities for providing concurrent access to Qt objects, simplified QSettings storage, and dynamic widget promotion when loading UI files, in Python Qt applications.

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