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QtableView setSortingEnabled  forcing sortByColumn()

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  • J JonB
    9 Nov 2017, 08:48

    @mapuna
    I faced this irritating issue too. I don't think setSortingEnabled() helps any --- as in, it actively does a SELECT call with ORDER BY column0 ---, and I don't believe you can change the behaviour.

    I only call QTableView.sortByColumn() when I am ready to pass in both the desired column and the sort order. I never call setSortingEnabled, and only the single desired SELECT ... ORDER BY ... is sent to the database.

    As a concomitant observation, I have found it very unobvious from both the (lack of) Qt documentation and the names of the function calls which view and/or model calls actually issue a SELECT statement and which do not. This is important to me, as I track all calls to the database. There are indeed times when you write a seemingly harmless piece of code which you think is just setting a variable but turns out to actually be accessing the database, just like setSortingEnabled. I have had to track them all down --- which I did by tracing the actual calls at the MySQL Server side --- and then see which ones can be avoided. I do not like the way the (otherwise excellent) Qt implementation has quite non-obvious, implicit calls to the database when you have no idea it is doing it, especially when you set something in the view.

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    m.sue
    wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 08:55 last edited by m.sue 11 Sept 2017, 08:56
    #4

    Hi @JNBarchan

    You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem. And you could tell it by a flag that you define to do nothing. But it's quite a hassle if you do it just as a workaround for that.

    -Michael.

    J 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 08:57
    0
    • M m.sue
      9 Nov 2017, 08:55

      Hi @JNBarchan

      You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem. And you could tell it by a flag that you define to do nothing. But it's quite a hassle if you do it just as a workaround for that.

      -Michael.

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      JonB
      wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 08:57 last edited by JonB 11 Sept 2017, 09:04
      #5

      @m.sue said in QtableView setSortingEnabled forcing sortByColumn():

      Hi @JNBarchan

      You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem

      -Michael.

      And how would I do that given that I program in Python/PyQt? Plus, where is that documented, please?

      EDIT: Actually, I don't get that. The "comparison operator" should sort by the "sort column", whatever that is, and the problem is the QTableView has its own idea of what that is. It all works after QTableView.sortByColumn().

      I think the point/answer to the OP is that you simply do not want to do setSortingEnabled(), ever. And if I'm misunderstanding, and you do, you only want to do it after you have done QTableView.sortByColumn(column, order).

      M 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 09:07
      0
      • J JonB
        9 Nov 2017, 08:57

        @m.sue said in QtableView setSortingEnabled forcing sortByColumn():

        Hi @JNBarchan

        You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem

        -Michael.

        And how would I do that given that I program in Python/PyQt? Plus, where is that documented, please?

        EDIT: Actually, I don't get that. The "comparison operator" should sort by the "sort column", whatever that is, and the problem is the QTableView has its own idea of what that is. It all works after QTableView.sortByColumn().

        I think the point/answer to the OP is that you simply do not want to do setSortingEnabled(), ever. And if I'm misunderstanding, and you do, you only want to do it after you have done QTableView.sortByColumn(column, order).

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        m.sue
        wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 09:07 last edited by m.sue 11 Sept 2017, 09:09
        #6

        Hi @JNBarchan

        1. Nothing in the post says anything about PyQt.
        2. You could tell the items by a flag (that you define in a tableitem derived class) that do not want a sorting, no matter by what column that tableview thinks the sorting has to be done.

        -Michael.

        J 2 Replies Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 09:12
        0
        • M m.sue
          9 Nov 2017, 09:07

          Hi @JNBarchan

          1. Nothing in the post says anything about PyQt.
          2. You could tell the items by a flag (that you define in a tableitem derived class) that do not want a sorting, no matter by what column that tableview thinks the sorting has to be done.

          -Michael.

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          JonB
          wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 09:12 last edited by JonB 11 Sept 2017, 09:12
          #7

          @m.sue
          Hang on, this is all coming back to me, I think. Let me write up a new post of what I believe my findings were, and we'll take it from there.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • M m.sue
            9 Nov 2017, 09:07

            Hi @JNBarchan

            1. Nothing in the post says anything about PyQt.
            2. You could tell the items by a flag (that you define in a tableitem derived class) that do not want a sorting, no matter by what column that tableview thinks the sorting has to be done.

            -Michael.

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            JonB
            wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 09:28 last edited by JonB 11 Sept 2017, 09:42
            #8

            @m.sue
            For the "Python" bit, I meant this is a problem I too face, and I happen to be programming in Python/PyQt not C++. But never mind that.

            Here is what I believe I discovered:

            • QTableView.setSortingEnabled(True) is what is required to make the view's headers clickable. Unfortunately, and undocumented [hmm, it is in 5.9, I didn't think it used to be], this has a side-effect of issuing a SELECT statement to populate the model. IIRC, if this is the very first thing you do it issues SELECT ... FROM table with no ORDER BY at all.

            • QTableView.sortByColumn(column, direction) is what is required to set the sort column/direction, and it issues a SELECT ... FROM table ORDER BY <column> <direction>.

            • IIRC, if you call QTableView.setSortingEnabled(True) after you have called QTableView.sortByColumn(column, direction) it does know about the previous specification of column/direction, and issues its own SELECT ... FROM table ORDER BY <column> <direction>. This is better, but the problem is that you cannot suppress that second SELECT call, which is a waste, and unacceptable in my code.

            The upshot is, it is not possible to both choose a column/direction to sort by and to enable the QTableView's column headers without issuing 2 SELECT calls. Which is a nonsense.

            Assuming now that my findings are correct, would you be kind enough to offer some code --- or describe the necessary approach --- of whatever you are saying can achieve the objective but only issue a single SELECT ... ORDER BY ... call to the database, please? The "objective" is to start life --- i.e. before the user has a chance to click on a column header --- with clickable headers and the table populated sorted by some specified column with some specified direction?

            P.S.

            You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem. And you could tell it by a flag that you define to do nothing.

            The point is --- at least in the case of a database model for the table view --- it's too late once you are look at table items/rows. It is the issuing of the whole SELECT statement which is the problem. I now see that the OP does not actually state what his model is, my whole query/interest is in the case where it is indeed a database, maybe his is too, and I at least should be really obliged for an answer to this....

            M 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 09:41
            0
            • J JonB
              9 Nov 2017, 09:28

              @m.sue
              For the "Python" bit, I meant this is a problem I too face, and I happen to be programming in Python/PyQt not C++. But never mind that.

              Here is what I believe I discovered:

              • QTableView.setSortingEnabled(True) is what is required to make the view's headers clickable. Unfortunately, and undocumented [hmm, it is in 5.9, I didn't think it used to be], this has a side-effect of issuing a SELECT statement to populate the model. IIRC, if this is the very first thing you do it issues SELECT ... FROM table with no ORDER BY at all.

              • QTableView.sortByColumn(column, direction) is what is required to set the sort column/direction, and it issues a SELECT ... FROM table ORDER BY <column> <direction>.

              • IIRC, if you call QTableView.setSortingEnabled(True) after you have called QTableView.sortByColumn(column, direction) it does know about the previous specification of column/direction, and issues its own SELECT ... FROM table ORDER BY <column> <direction>. This is better, but the problem is that you cannot suppress that second SELECT call, which is a waste, and unacceptable in my code.

              The upshot is, it is not possible to both choose a column/direction to sort by and to enable the QTableView's column headers without issuing 2 SELECT calls. Which is a nonsense.

              Assuming now that my findings are correct, would you be kind enough to offer some code --- or describe the necessary approach --- of whatever you are saying can achieve the objective but only issue a single SELECT ... ORDER BY ... call to the database, please? The "objective" is to start life --- i.e. before the user has a chance to click on a column header --- with clickable headers and the table populated sorted by some specified column with some specified direction?

              P.S.

              You can influence the sorting. You will have to overwrite the operator< of the tablewigetitem. And you could tell it by a flag that you define to do nothing.

              The point is --- at least in the case of a database model for the table view --- it's too late once you are look at table items/rows. It is the issuing of the whole SELECT statement which is the problem. I now see that the OP does not actually state what his model is, my whole query/interest is in the case where it is indeed a database, maybe his is too, and I at least should be really obliged for an answer to this....

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              m.sue
              wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 09:41 last edited by
              #9

              Hi @JNBarchan

              Ok, if you need it to make the header columns clickable it's a nuisance. I did not remember it.

              I did not work with database derived tableviews, but just tableviews that I filled myself. And after I filled them they are static. Sorting was done by the tableview which asks the tableitems how to do it.

              Sorry, I have no experience about select statements that the tableview wants to deliver to the database and how to prohibit such statements.

              -Michael.

              J 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 09:45
              0
              • M m.sue
                9 Nov 2017, 09:41

                Hi @JNBarchan

                Ok, if you need it to make the header columns clickable it's a nuisance. I did not remember it.

                I did not work with database derived tableviews, but just tableviews that I filled myself. And after I filled them they are static. Sorting was done by the tableview which asks the tableitems how to do it.

                Sorry, I have no experience about select statements that the tableview wants to deliver to the database and how to prohibit such statements.

                -Michael.

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                JonB
                wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 09:45 last edited by
                #10

                @m.sue
                OK, thanks, if you have your own non-database, pre-populated model it doesn't really matter as you can control the sorting and it "takes no time" compared to a database call anyway. Yes, the issue being a problem is really for database model.

                I'd welcome any comment on this from a database-QTableView person...? :)

                M 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 10:22
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                • J JonB
                  9 Nov 2017, 09:45

                  @m.sue
                  OK, thanks, if you have your own non-database, pre-populated model it doesn't really matter as you can control the sorting and it "takes no time" compared to a database call anyway. Yes, the issue being a problem is really for database model.

                  I'd welcome any comment on this from a database-QTableView person...? :)

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                  m.sue
                  wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 10:22 last edited by
                  #11

                  Hi @JNBarchan

                  You probably use an SqlQueryModel whose void sort(int column, Qt::SortOrder order = Qt::AscendingOrder) function is virtual. So you could influence whether it calls the database or not.

                  -Michael.

                  J 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 10:30
                  0
                  • M m.sue
                    9 Nov 2017, 10:22

                    Hi @JNBarchan

                    You probably use an SqlQueryModel whose void sort(int column, Qt::SortOrder order = Qt::AscendingOrder) function is virtual. So you could influence whether it calls the database or not.

                    -Michael.

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                    JonB
                    wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 10:30 last edited by
                    #12

                    @m.sue
                    But the problem is, I think, detecting when/where it's called. Mostly we do, of course, want to do sorts from the model to the database; the problem is that we need to call QTableView.setSortingEnabled() and QTableView.sortByColumn(), but we don't want them both to do a database call, at least something like not one after the other.

                    OK, let me ask you (I am a Qt beginner), please: how can I robustly determine if QSqlQueryModel.sort() is being called from/as a result of QTableView.setSortingEnabled()? That might give me a start on a solution.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 10:42
                    0
                    • J JonB
                      9 Nov 2017, 10:30

                      @m.sue
                      But the problem is, I think, detecting when/where it's called. Mostly we do, of course, want to do sorts from the model to the database; the problem is that we need to call QTableView.setSortingEnabled() and QTableView.sortByColumn(), but we don't want them both to do a database call, at least something like not one after the other.

                      OK, let me ask you (I am a Qt beginner), please: how can I robustly determine if QSqlQueryModel.sort() is being called from/as a result of QTableView.setSortingEnabled()? That might give me a start on a solution.

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                      m.sue
                      wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 10:42 last edited by
                      #13

                      Hi @JNBarchan

                      I would set a flag in a model (derived class instance) before I call setSortingEnabled(true). The flag will make the sort function do nothing. After the call setSortingEnabled(true) I would set the flag back. So the next call of the sort function makes it work by default.

                      -Michael.

                      J 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 11:26
                      1
                      • M m.sue
                        9 Nov 2017, 08:37

                        Hi @mapuna

                        Hmm, tableView->setSortingEnabled(true); sorts immediately. So, isn't it just enabled by pressing the appropiate column header by the user? I would think sorting is always possible but not done, by default. When the user presses a column header then sorting happens and the (sortingEnabled property is set to true). But no need to set it on your own.

                        -Michael.

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                        mapuna
                        wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 10:48 last edited by
                        #14

                        @m.sue While workig with the QtableView I found out that , if I am not explicitly setting the tableView->setSortingEnabled(true); during model/view initializations then just clicking on the column header do not sorts the table.

                        Its only when in init part I explicitly set sortingenabled flag then only the clicking on columns sorts the data.I am using Qt5.9, can you tell me what wrong can I be doing.

                        J 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2017, 11:11
                        0
                        • M mapuna
                          9 Nov 2017, 10:48

                          @m.sue While workig with the QtableView I found out that , if I am not explicitly setting the tableView->setSortingEnabled(true); during model/view initializations then just clicking on the column header do not sorts the table.

                          Its only when in init part I explicitly set sortingenabled flag then only the clicking on columns sorts the data.I am using Qt5.9, can you tell me what wrong can I be doing.

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                          JonB
                          wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 11:11 last edited by JonB 11 Sept 2017, 11:11
                          #15

                          @mapuna
                          I don't see you are doing anything "wrong". The whole point of the discussion above is that you do need to call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to enable column header sorting, and then as you have reported that will itself cause a sort to be executed at that point, just exactly as you said.

                          Could you also kindly tell me, at least, what type of model you are using for the view --- is it a database (e.g. QSqlQuery), or is it your own in-memory data? Thank you.

                          M 1 Reply Last reply 10 Nov 2017, 07:22
                          0
                          • M m.sue
                            9 Nov 2017, 10:42

                            Hi @JNBarchan

                            I would set a flag in a model (derived class instance) before I call setSortingEnabled(true). The flag will make the sort function do nothing. After the call setSortingEnabled(true) I would set the flag back. So the next call of the sort function makes it work by default.

                            -Michael.

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                            J Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 11:26 last edited by JonB 11 Sept 2017, 11:28
                            #16

                            @m.sue said in QtableView setSortingEnabled forcing sortByColumn():

                            Hi @JNBarchan

                            I would set a flag in a model (derived class instance) before I call setSortingEnabled(true). The flag will make the sort function do nothing. After the call setSortingEnabled(true) I would set the flag back. So the next call of the sort function makes it work by default.

                            -Michael.

                            Let me see if I understand what you are suggesting, with the flag on the model. Here is some pseudo-C++/C# :) :

                            DerivedSqlQueryModel() : QSqlQueryModel()
                            {
                                bool doSort = true;
                            
                                override void sort(...)
                                {
                                    if (doSort)
                                        base.sort(...);
                                }
                            }
                            
                            DerivedTableView(model) : QTableView(model)
                            {
                                override void setSortingEnabled(bool enabled)
                                {
                                    model.doSort = false;
                                    base.setSortingEnabled(enabled);
                                    model.doSort = true;
                                }
                            }
                            

                            Right? Thank you.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • SGaistS Offline
                              SGaistS Offline
                              SGaist
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on 9 Nov 2017, 22:34 last edited by
                              #17

                              Hi,

                              Maybe QSortFilterProxyModel might be of interest ?

                              Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                              Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • J JonB
                                9 Nov 2017, 11:11

                                @mapuna
                                I don't see you are doing anything "wrong". The whole point of the discussion above is that you do need to call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to enable column header sorting, and then as you have reported that will itself cause a sort to be executed at that point, just exactly as you said.

                                Could you also kindly tell me, at least, what type of model you are using for the view --- is it a database (e.g. QSqlQuery), or is it your own in-memory data? Thank you.

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                                mapuna
                                wrote on 10 Nov 2017, 07:22 last edited by
                                #18

                                @JNBarchan May be I am not clear about my problem, below is the summary for my issue:

                                • I want to enable sorting for QtableView so I call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) in init
                                • But beacuse of above my View/Table gets sorted by first column (calling tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) makes immediate
                                  call to sortbycolumn)
                                • I do not want the sorting to be done by default , I want the tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to just set the flag and not call the sortByColumn so when I view the table data is not sorted by any column instead the user can then choose which column to use for sorting
                                • Is it possible that I do not need to tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) do in init just to enable the sorting in table/view ?Withouth setting this flag will clicking on header of column be able to sort the tableview?
                                • I use Qt5.9 with Class myModel : public QAbstractTableModel
                                J 1 Reply Last reply 10 Nov 2017, 08:19
                                0
                                • M mapuna
                                  10 Nov 2017, 07:22

                                  @JNBarchan May be I am not clear about my problem, below is the summary for my issue:

                                  • I want to enable sorting for QtableView so I call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) in init
                                  • But beacuse of above my View/Table gets sorted by first column (calling tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) makes immediate
                                    call to sortbycolumn)
                                  • I do not want the sorting to be done by default , I want the tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to just set the flag and not call the sortByColumn so when I view the table data is not sorted by any column instead the user can then choose which column to use for sorting
                                  • Is it possible that I do not need to tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) do in init just to enable the sorting in table/view ?Withouth setting this flag will clicking on header of column be able to sort the tableview?
                                  • I use Qt5.9 with Class myModel : public QAbstractTableModel
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                                  JonB
                                  wrote on 10 Nov 2017, 08:19 last edited by JonB 11 Oct 2017, 08:21
                                  #19

                                  @mapuna
                                  On the contrary, I am saying: I do understand your issue, and yes it is a problem, for me too! I will try to be brief here, as we have already covered the detail if you read through above responses.

                                  It boils down to:

                                  • Yes, you do need to call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) (somewhere) to enable sorting on the table.
                                  • No, it is not possible for tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to just "set a flag" and not call sortByColumn(), it always calls that, unfortunately.

                                  Depending on your concrete implementation of QAbstractTableModel, it may or may not be an important issue that this extra sort call matters. In my case, since I am using QSqlQueryModel(), the unavoidable sort call does an actual call to a database SELECT, which is "slow" and therefore "bad". If your data is all in-memory, it probably doesn't actually matter that much, but it does to me.

                                  To resolve, what @m-sue is suggesting is that I (you?) override both QTableView::setSortingEnabled() and QAbstractItemModel::sort() along the lines shown in my pseudo-code above. The effect being that setSortingEnabled() will set a flag to cause sort() to do nothing while it is being called from setSortingEnabled() (which calls sortByColumn() which in turn calls sort()). The approach is "ugly", but seems to be what will work if you want to avoid the implicit sort() caused by setSortingEnabled(), which is what I want and seems to be what you want too.

                                  M 1 Reply Last reply 10 Nov 2017, 10:18
                                  1
                                  • J JonB
                                    10 Nov 2017, 08:19

                                    @mapuna
                                    On the contrary, I am saying: I do understand your issue, and yes it is a problem, for me too! I will try to be brief here, as we have already covered the detail if you read through above responses.

                                    It boils down to:

                                    • Yes, you do need to call tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) (somewhere) to enable sorting on the table.
                                    • No, it is not possible for tableView->setSortingEnabled(true) to just "set a flag" and not call sortByColumn(), it always calls that, unfortunately.

                                    Depending on your concrete implementation of QAbstractTableModel, it may or may not be an important issue that this extra sort call matters. In my case, since I am using QSqlQueryModel(), the unavoidable sort call does an actual call to a database SELECT, which is "slow" and therefore "bad". If your data is all in-memory, it probably doesn't actually matter that much, but it does to me.

                                    To resolve, what @m-sue is suggesting is that I (you?) override both QTableView::setSortingEnabled() and QAbstractItemModel::sort() along the lines shown in my pseudo-code above. The effect being that setSortingEnabled() will set a flag to cause sort() to do nothing while it is being called from setSortingEnabled() (which calls sortByColumn() which in turn calls sort()). The approach is "ugly", but seems to be what will work if you want to avoid the implicit sort() caused by setSortingEnabled(), which is what I want and seems to be what you want too.

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                                    mapuna
                                    wrote on 10 Nov 2017, 10:18 last edited by
                                    #20

                                    @JNBarchan Thanks a lot for helping me, I just wanted to know I more thing (I ma newbie in QT ).As suggested by you to subcalss the QTableView, following is my question regarding the same:

                                    • When I make DerivedTableView(model) : QTableView(model), how can I add this new View in the QTCreator or do you suggest to add this new view programmatic ally or is there any other away to do so.

                                    • I have a tableview added in a complex layout in QtCreator and in the code I add models/delegates to it using
                                      ui->tableView_name->setModel(myProxy) etc... can I typecast ui->tableView_name at runtime to DerivedTableView is this also possible and then use DerivedTableView to set models/etc

                                    • I also could not find some working example where the Custom View is added in code and used if you can provide some reference it would help.

                                    Thanks in advance.

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply 10 Nov 2017, 11:28
                                    0
                                    • M mapuna
                                      10 Nov 2017, 10:18

                                      @JNBarchan Thanks a lot for helping me, I just wanted to know I more thing (I ma newbie in QT ).As suggested by you to subcalss the QTableView, following is my question regarding the same:

                                      • When I make DerivedTableView(model) : QTableView(model), how can I add this new View in the QTCreator or do you suggest to add this new view programmatic ally or is there any other away to do so.

                                      • I have a tableview added in a complex layout in QtCreator and in the code I add models/delegates to it using
                                        ui->tableView_name->setModel(myProxy) etc... can I typecast ui->tableView_name at runtime to DerivedTableView is this also possible and then use DerivedTableView to set models/etc

                                      • I also could not find some working example where the Custom View is added in code and used if you can provide some reference it would help.

                                      Thanks in advance.

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                                      JonB
                                      wrote on 10 Nov 2017, 11:28 last edited by JonB 11 Oct 2017, 11:28
                                      #21

                                      @mapuna
                                      I'm afraid I'm not the right person to ask really:

                                      • I don't use QtCreator, so I don't know.

                                      • I'm not sure just what you mean. You cannot just dynamically/run-time cast an object to another type/derived type because "you feel like it", when the object was constructed it must actually have been of the type you are casting to. So your QTableView must actually have been created as a DerivedTableView (including if that's done in QtCreator). But then wherever you can use a QTableView you can use your DerivedTableView, e.g. for setModel() call.

                                      • No example from me. I don't even use C++, I use Python! :(

                                      But I'm sure someone else can clarify the above.....

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • SGaistS Offline
                                        SGaistS Offline
                                        SGaist
                                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                                        wrote on 10 Nov 2017, 22:12 last edited by
                                        #22

                                        Hi,

                                        1. http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/designer-using-custom-widgets.html
                                        2. You don't need to, just call setModel like you are doing currently
                                        3. Do you mean something like:
                                        MyView *view = new MyView;
                                        ui->layout_name->add(view);
                                        

                                        ?

                                        Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                                        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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                                        • V Offline
                                          V Offline
                                          Vitaliy Sapronenko
                                          wrote on 27 Mar 2019, 16:28 last edited by
                                          #23

                                          You could set default sorting column to -1 by QHeaderView::setSortIndicator like this

                                          yourTableView->horizontalHeader()->setSortIndicator(-1, Qt::AscendingOrder);
                                          

                                          before running

                                          yourTableView->setSortingEnabled(true);
                                          

                                          because QTableView::setSortingEnabled uses QHeaderView::sortIndicatorOrder and QHeaderView::sortIndicatorSection to identify by which column should model be sorted.

                                          Note that documentation of QHeaderView::setSortIndicator tells that not all models support setting sort column to -1 and may even crash in this case.

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