Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar
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I've been trying to get a custom icon I created to display in the top left corner title bar of all windows in a Qt application I've been writing, and no matter what I try, I cannot get it to display. It will only display the default icon no matter what I do. I created a test app to try and just get it to work without doing it in my app, but even that won't work.
I can get it to display the same icon within a window with QPixmap, so it's not a path issue. And as far as I can tell, it is finding my icon file and embedding it in the executable generated by the Makefile that is generated by qmake. It's just not displaying it, and is displaying the default/generic Qt icon instead.I've looked at https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/appicon.html that mentions setIcon() and I'm totally confused, as I don't understand what the difference between setIcon() and setWindowIcon() is, let alone which one I'm supposed to use.
I've even tried deleting the Makefile created by qmake and the .qmake.stash files and running
qmake test_icon.proagain. But it still will not display my icon no matter what I try.
I'm new to programming with Qt, so I have no idea what I'm doing wrong.
I'm using Manjaro Linux with Qt5.
My main.cpp file:
#include <QApplication> #include <QMainWindow> #include <QIcon> int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); // Set the application icon using the resource path (:/myicon.png) app.setWindowIcon(QIcon(":/myicon.png")); // Create main window (and any other windows) QMainWindow mainWindow; mainWindow.setWindowTitle("My App"); mainWindow.show(); // Any other top-level windows you create will automatically use this icon // unless you set a different icon on them individually using setWindowIcon() // on the widget instance itself. return app.exec(); }My resources.qrc file:
<!DOCTYPE RCC> <RCC version="1.0"> <qresource prefix="/"> <file>myicon.png</file> </qresource> </RCC>My test_icon.pro file:
###################################################################### # Automatically generated by qmake (3.1) Fri Jan 16 16:35:33 2026 ###################################################################### TEMPLATE = app TARGET = test_icon QT += widgets INCLUDEPATH += . RESOURCES += resources.qrc # You can make your code fail to compile if you use deprecated APIs. # In order to do so, uncomment the following line. # Please consult the documentation of the deprecated API in order to know # how to port your code away from it. # You can also select to disable deprecated APIs only up to a certain version of Qt. #DEFINES += QT_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_BEFORE=0x060000 # disables all the APIs deprecated before Qt 6.0.0 # Input SOURCES += main.cppWhat in the f**king hell am I missing?? I don't understand what I'm doing wrong. I'm at my wits end with this.
Can someone please tell me what I'm doing wrong in plain simple english? As clearly I'm too stupid to know what I'm doing wrong, or not doing that I should be doing/missing. I have no idea what I'm supposed to do at this point. Surely there must be a way to do this.I want to do this in code and not in Qt Creator, so please don't suggest I use Qt Creator. I'm not interested in getting it to work in Windows at this point. I just want to get this done in Linux at this point.
Thanks in advance for any help.
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This is working fine for me on windows with Qt6.11:
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { QApplication a(argc, argv); a.setWindowIcon(a.style()->standardIcon(QStyle::SP_MediaPlay)); QMainWindow mw; mw.show(); return a.exec(); }If this works also for you I would guess the resource file is not properly embedded. What does
QFile::exists(":/myicon.png")say? -
I've been trying to get a custom icon I created to display in the top left corner title bar of all windows in a Qt application I've been writing, and no matter what I try, I cannot get it to display. It will only display the default icon no matter what I do. I created a test app to try and just get it to work without doing it in my app, but even that won't work.
I can get it to display the same icon within a window with QPixmap, so it's not a path issue. And as far as I can tell, it is finding my icon file and embedding it in the executable generated by the Makefile that is generated by qmake. It's just not displaying it, and is displaying the default/generic Qt icon instead.I've looked at https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/appicon.html that mentions setIcon() and I'm totally confused, as I don't understand what the difference between setIcon() and setWindowIcon() is, let alone which one I'm supposed to use.
I've even tried deleting the Makefile created by qmake and the .qmake.stash files and running
qmake test_icon.proagain. But it still will not display my icon no matter what I try.
I'm new to programming with Qt, so I have no idea what I'm doing wrong.
I'm using Manjaro Linux with Qt5.
My main.cpp file:
#include <QApplication> #include <QMainWindow> #include <QIcon> int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); // Set the application icon using the resource path (:/myicon.png) app.setWindowIcon(QIcon(":/myicon.png")); // Create main window (and any other windows) QMainWindow mainWindow; mainWindow.setWindowTitle("My App"); mainWindow.show(); // Any other top-level windows you create will automatically use this icon // unless you set a different icon on them individually using setWindowIcon() // on the widget instance itself. return app.exec(); }My resources.qrc file:
<!DOCTYPE RCC> <RCC version="1.0"> <qresource prefix="/"> <file>myicon.png</file> </qresource> </RCC>My test_icon.pro file:
###################################################################### # Automatically generated by qmake (3.1) Fri Jan 16 16:35:33 2026 ###################################################################### TEMPLATE = app TARGET = test_icon QT += widgets INCLUDEPATH += . RESOURCES += resources.qrc # You can make your code fail to compile if you use deprecated APIs. # In order to do so, uncomment the following line. # Please consult the documentation of the deprecated API in order to know # how to port your code away from it. # You can also select to disable deprecated APIs only up to a certain version of Qt. #DEFINES += QT_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_BEFORE=0x060000 # disables all the APIs deprecated before Qt 6.0.0 # Input SOURCES += main.cppWhat in the f**king hell am I missing?? I don't understand what I'm doing wrong. I'm at my wits end with this.
Can someone please tell me what I'm doing wrong in plain simple english? As clearly I'm too stupid to know what I'm doing wrong, or not doing that I should be doing/missing. I have no idea what I'm supposed to do at this point. Surely there must be a way to do this.I want to do this in code and not in Qt Creator, so please don't suggest I use Qt Creator. I'm not interested in getting it to work in Windows at this point. I just want to get this done in Linux at this point.
Thanks in advance for any help.
@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
I've looked at https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/appicon.html that mentions setIcon() and I'm totally confused, as I don't understand what the difference between setIcon() and setWindowIcon() is, let alone which one I'm supposed to use.
setIcon() is for QWindow, which we usually don't use directly.
setWindowIcon() is for QApplication, it will call QWindow::setIcon() internally for every window.As for the linked documentation, it is actually for changing the icon of the executable file, so it need to be configured in the project file, instead of in the code, and need to be certain icon format, instead of any picture format.
When the executable file icon is set successfully, it should become the default window icon for QApplication, so there would be no need to call QApplication::setWindowIcon() or QWindow::setIcon() if you only have one icon to show. (This is my experience on Windows, not sure if Linux is the same case.) -
This is working fine for me on windows with Qt6.11:
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { QApplication a(argc, argv); a.setWindowIcon(a.style()->standardIcon(QStyle::SP_MediaPlay)); QMainWindow mw; mw.show(); return a.exec(); }If this works also for you I would guess the resource file is not properly embedded. What does
QFile::exists(":/myicon.png")say?QFile::exists() does find it.
But even trying your example, it still shows the default icon. The qrc_resources.cpp source file is being generated.
So I don't understand why it will not show. What's the problem?
Again, there must be a way to do this and I'm once again not interested in Windows, so can we please just forget about Windows.I posted a screenshot of what I'm talking about below.
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QFile::exists() does find it.
But even trying your example, it still shows the default icon. The qrc_resources.cpp source file is being generated.
So I don't understand why it will not show. What's the problem?
Again, there must be a way to do this and I'm once again not interested in Windows, so can we please just forget about Windows.I posted a screenshot of what I'm talking about below.
@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
So I don't understand why it will not show. What's the problem?
Since this icon is only a hint to the window manager - the problem is the window manager not honoring this hint.
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QFile::exists() does find it.
But even trying your example, it still shows the default icon. The qrc_resources.cpp source file is being generated.
So I don't understand why it will not show. What's the problem?
Again, there must be a way to do this and I'm once again not interested in Windows, so can we please just forget about Windows.I posted a screenshot of what I'm talking about below.
@why_bother
The first thing in your situation is to temporarily get rid of trying to use a resource. Put the icon in an external file at fixed location, verify it's good and pass the full, absolute path when creating the icon. Now you don't have to worry about resources, paths or build procedures. You can also use bothsetIcon()&setWindowIcon()so you don't have to wonder which one is appropriate while you test. That is how I approach a situation like this. I assume that does not resolve for you?Which then perhaps leaves you as @Christian-Ehrlicher says: perhaps your Manjaro or its window manager just does not do what you want? Do you have a choice of window managers/interfaces --- like xcb or wayland or whatever desktop--- which you could check?
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@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
I've looked at https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/appicon.html that mentions setIcon() and I'm totally confused, as I don't understand what the difference between setIcon() and setWindowIcon() is, let alone which one I'm supposed to use.
setIcon() is for QWindow, which we usually don't use directly.
setWindowIcon() is for QApplication, it will call QWindow::setIcon() internally for every window.As for the linked documentation, it is actually for changing the icon of the executable file, so it need to be configured in the project file, instead of in the code, and need to be certain icon format, instead of any picture format.
When the executable file icon is set successfully, it should become the default window icon for QApplication, so there would be no need to call QApplication::setWindowIcon() or QWindow::setIcon() if you only have one icon to show. (This is my experience on Windows, not sure if Linux is the same case.)Thank you Bonnie.
So to be clear; I use setWindowIcon() to set the icon for the icon at the top left side of the window title bar? Please just answer yes or no. And if no, then how exactly do I do it?
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(sorry for the delay in posting screenshot, but it kept saying I had to wait 600 seconds to post)
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@why_bother
The first thing in your situation is to temporarily get rid of trying to use a resource. Put the icon in an external file at fixed location, verify it's good and pass the full, absolute path when creating the icon. Now you don't have to worry about resources, paths or build procedures. You can also use bothsetIcon()&setWindowIcon()so you don't have to wonder which one is appropriate while you test. That is how I approach a situation like this. I assume that does not resolve for you?Which then perhaps leaves you as @Christian-Ehrlicher says: perhaps your Manjaro or its window manager just does not do what you want? Do you have a choice of window managers/interfaces --- like xcb or wayland or whatever desktop--- which you could check?
@JonB said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
The first thing in your situation is to temporarily get rid of trying to use a resource.
Please see his last post. Even my testcase with an internal icon does not work. It's the wm...
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@JonB said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
The first thing in your situation is to temporarily get rid of trying to use a resource.
Please see his last post. Even my testcase with an internal icon does not work. It's the wm...
@Christian-Ehrlicher
Yes you may well be right. My post was really intended for OP to have tested earlier, so that next time they might break a similar problem down before getting lost in considerations which could be eliminated. -
@why_bother
The first thing in your situation is to temporarily get rid of trying to use a resource. Put the icon in an external file at fixed location, verify it's good and pass the full, absolute path when creating the icon. Now you don't have to worry about resources, paths or build procedures. You can also use bothsetIcon()&setWindowIcon()so you don't have to wonder which one is appropriate while you test. That is how I approach a situation like this. I assume that does not resolve for you?Which then perhaps leaves you as @Christian-Ehrlicher says: perhaps your Manjaro or its window manager just does not do what you want? Do you have a choice of window managers/interfaces --- like xcb or wayland or whatever desktop--- which you could check?
While Christian is correct; I already did try it without using the resource file and it made no difference whatsoever.
So no, it doesn't resolve anything.
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@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
So I don't understand why it will not show. What's the problem?
Since this icon is only a hint to the window manager - the problem is the window manager not honoring this hint.
I don't understand what you mean by "hint". What does that mean? I don't understand your comment at all.
In any case, I know it is embedding my icon in the executable (using the resource file), so that isn't the problem. But that said, since I'm using KDE and as far as I know KDE uses Qt itself, and all other graphical apps I have installed do have their icons show up in the top left hand corner of the their window title bar; I don't understand why it's not working in my app (or even in a simple test case as above)? I can get it to display the same icon in a QMessageBox using QPixmap(). So again, I don't understand.
Without trying to be rude, can you just tell me what in the hell I have to do to get the bloody thing to actually display in the top left corner of the window's title bar (for all windows)?
Again, I'm new to programming with Qt, so I really have no idea how to get this bloody thing to just display the icon in the top left corner of the window's title bar. Can I just have a simple example of what I need to do? I literally have no idea what to do next.
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I don't understand what you mean by "hint". What does that mean? I don't understand your comment at all.
In any case, I know it is embedding my icon in the executable (using the resource file), so that isn't the problem. But that said, since I'm using KDE and as far as I know KDE uses Qt itself, and all other graphical apps I have installed do have their icons show up in the top left hand corner of the their window title bar; I don't understand why it's not working in my app (or even in a simple test case as above)? I can get it to display the same icon in a QMessageBox using QPixmap(). So again, I don't understand.
Without trying to be rude, can you just tell me what in the hell I have to do to get the bloody thing to actually display in the top left corner of the window's title bar (for all windows)?
Again, I'm new to programming with Qt, so I really have no idea how to get this bloody thing to just display the icon in the top left corner of the window's title bar. Can I just have a simple example of what I need to do? I literally have no idea what to do next.
@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
I don't understand what you mean by "hint". What does that mean? I don't understand your comment at all.
The window decoration is part of the window manager, Qt just can say it wants an icon or e.g. the close button upper left. But if the window manager ignores this Qt can not do anything against.
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While Christian is correct; I already did try it without using the resource file and it made no difference whatsoever.
So no, it doesn't resolve anything.
@why_bother said in Set icon for top left title bar of all windows and taskbar:
So no, it doesn't resolve anything.
I know that. It was intended as a helpful suggestion for the future, as I know you said you are new.
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(sorry for the delay in posting screenshot, but it kept saying I had to wait 600 seconds to post)
@why_bother Ah you are on Wayland. Wayland does not allow windows to set their own icons, because security or something.
There is an experimental upcoming extension protocol for setting window icons from within the application which is not widely implemented. Until then, any API you can call will do exactly nothing.
The correct way to set a window icon under Wayland, is to install a desktop file with the 'Icon' key set to a name of an installed icon, and make sure the compositor knows how to associate your app with the desktop file. It is usually automatic for installed applications, but you might need to fiddle with
QGuiApplication::setDesktopFileName.The orange W icon is the stock fallback most compositors use when they can't figure out the right desktop entry.