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QTextEdit start text one tab in?

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  • L Offline
    L Offline
    legitnameyo
    wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 09:48 last edited by
    #5

    Where do I append this "class" and "public" code? I've tried accessing setViewportMargin directly but the class is private. I can't access through QTextEdit nor through QAbstractScrollArea. Again, where do I add it?

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    • L legitnameyo
      6 Feb 2019, 07:18
       // starts text with indent (tab)
          QTextBlockFormat bf;
          bf.setIndent(1);
      
          QTextCursor tc;
          tc.setBlockFormat(bf);
      
          ui->note->textCursor().setBlockFormat(bf);
      

      This is the code I use to create a tab when the program starts. This works fine until my user presses backspace on the actual tab, then the text gets aligned along the left side as usual again. I don't see how reacting to empty text would solve my problem, could you please elaborate @SGaist?

      J Online
      J Online
      JonB
      wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 10:18 last edited by
      #6

      @legitnameyo

      This works fine until my user presses backspace on the actual tab, then the text gets aligned along the left side as usual again. I don't see how reacting to empty text would solve my problem, could you please elaborate @SGaist?

      Going down @SGaist's simple route, clearly just reacting to "empty" text is not good enough. But the principle still holds: in your slot for textChanged you actually should test whether the first character of the text is a tab, and insert one if it is not. Simplez!

      Alternatively, you could place a validator on the text edit which returns anything without a leading tab as "positively invalid". the way Qt text edits validation work, this should prevent the user from deleting the tab at the beginning at all. I don't know whether you prefer that to textChanged signal or not.

      Having said the above, just why do you want the text to start with a tab? If you genuinely want a tab in the data returned then go down the above route(s). However, if you want it simply for some kind of visual/layout reason only, I would not force insertion of a character into the widget, rather I would use @mrjj's suggestion of inserting some margin/padding into the widget.

      Think about the logic of your data, and do whatever is appropriate tab-wise to whatever you want the data returned to actually be.

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      • L Offline
        L Offline
        legitnameyo
        wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 10:47 last edited by
        #7

        The text needs to be more to the left since I'll actually add a button ON the QTextEdit and it will be disastrous to have the button overlap the text, for obvious reasons. I am not yet sure about the whole "if you were to print then the viewport wont add those indent changes" thingy, but I would like to have the option to be able to print and have the format intact!

        tl;dr having a viewport margin would in my case be better than actually adding a tab into the document.

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        • M Offline
          M Offline
          mrjj
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 11:30 last edited by mrjj 2 Jun 2019, 11:34
          #8
          • Where do I append this "class" and "public" code? I've tried accessing setViewportMargin directly but the class is private. I can't -access through QTextEdit nor through QAbstractScrollArea. Again, where do I add it?

          Its a new class. a so called subclass. setViewportMargins can only be called by
          inheriting from QTextEdit.
          To use it:
          Add it to its own .h file. also add some #includes
          And that .h file to the project.
          then read
          http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/designer-using-custom-widgets.html
          To have be your text edit when run. ( if you use Designer)
          else you just have to new it your self.

          The promotion feature is very easy to use.
          if your new h file is called MyTextEdit.h
          then you just give TextEdit as classname and
          MyTextEdit.h for the file
          then when run, its your class instead.
          so its nto worse then right clicking your existing TextEdit,
          and select promote. then fill out info, press Add button, then promote button.

          L 1 Reply Last reply 6 Feb 2019, 11:40
          0
          • M mrjj
            6 Feb 2019, 11:30
            • Where do I append this "class" and "public" code? I've tried accessing setViewportMargin directly but the class is private. I can't -access through QTextEdit nor through QAbstractScrollArea. Again, where do I add it?

            Its a new class. a so called subclass. setViewportMargins can only be called by
            inheriting from QTextEdit.
            To use it:
            Add it to its own .h file. also add some #includes
            And that .h file to the project.
            then read
            http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/designer-using-custom-widgets.html
            To have be your text edit when run. ( if you use Designer)
            else you just have to new it your self.

            The promotion feature is very easy to use.
            if your new h file is called MyTextEdit.h
            then you just give TextEdit as classname and
            MyTextEdit.h for the file
            then when run, its your class instead.
            so its nto worse then right clicking your existing TextEdit,
            and select promote. then fill out info, press Add button, then promote button.

            L Offline
            L Offline
            legitnameyo
            wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 11:40 last edited by
            #9

            @mrjj I have not idea what you're talking about. I've tried adding a new .c and .h with a custom name and then "promoting" my QTextEdit to that same name, but that results in about 50 different errors regarding ui_myProject.h and other files. You continually wrote "Add it to its own .h file ..." what is "it"? Why do I need to add a .h file to the project, can't I just create one directly?

            J 1 Reply Last reply 6 Feb 2019, 11:45
            0
            • L legitnameyo
              6 Feb 2019, 11:40

              @mrjj I have not idea what you're talking about. I've tried adding a new .c and .h with a custom name and then "promoting" my QTextEdit to that same name, but that results in about 50 different errors regarding ui_myProject.h and other files. You continually wrote "Add it to its own .h file ..." what is "it"? Why do I need to add a .h file to the project, can't I just create one directly?

              J Offline
              J Offline
              jsulm
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 11:45 last edited by
              #10

              @legitnameyo said in QTextEdit start text one tab in?:

              Why do I need to add a .h file to the project, can't I just create one directly?

              It's the same.
              If you have errors then show the errors and your code.

              https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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              • L Offline
                L Offline
                legitnameyo
                wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 12:06 last edited by
                #11

                @mrjj said in QTextEdit start text one tab in?:

                Q_OBJECT

                #ifndef CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                #define CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                
                #include <QWidget>
                #include <QTextEdit>
                
                
                class customQTextEdit
                {
                public:
                    customQTextEdit();
                
                    customQTextEdit(QWidget *p = 0): customQTextEdit(p) {
                       setViewportMargins(30, 30, 30, 30); // add 30 pixels area around text
                       setStyleSheet("TextEdit { background: white; }"); // make the new "border" white
                    }
                };
                
                #endif // CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                

                Gives me

                error: use of undeclared identifier 'setViewportMargins'
                error: use of undeclared identifier 'setStyleSheet'
                error: constructor for 'customQTextEdit' creates a delegation cycle
                
                M 1 Reply Last reply 6 Feb 2019, 12:07
                0
                • L legitnameyo
                  6 Feb 2019, 12:06

                  @mrjj said in QTextEdit start text one tab in?:

                  Q_OBJECT

                  #ifndef CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                  #define CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                  
                  #include <QWidget>
                  #include <QTextEdit>
                  
                  
                  class customQTextEdit
                  {
                  public:
                      customQTextEdit();
                  
                      customQTextEdit(QWidget *p = 0): customQTextEdit(p) {
                         setViewportMargins(30, 30, 30, 30); // add 30 pixels area around text
                         setStyleSheet("TextEdit { background: white; }"); // make the new "border" white
                      }
                  };
                  
                  #endif // CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                  

                  Gives me

                  error: use of undeclared identifier 'setViewportMargins'
                  error: use of undeclared identifier 'setStyleSheet'
                  error: constructor for 'customQTextEdit' creates a delegation cycle
                  
                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  mrjj
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 12:07 last edited by mrjj 2 Jun 2019, 12:10
                  #12

                  @legitnameyo
                  you dont inherit QTextEdit.
                  So that is why :)

                  class customQTextEdit : public QTextEdit

                  Also your constructor seems odd.
                  make SURE you init base class.
                  TextEdit(QWidget *p = 0): QTextEdit(p) ...

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                  • L Offline
                    L Offline
                    legitnameyo
                    wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 12:16 last edited by
                    #13

                    Now I get

                    /error: out-of-line definition of 'customQTextEdit' does not match any declaration in 'customQTextEdit'
                    

                    for the code

                    #ifndef CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                    #define CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                    
                    #include <QWidget>
                    #include <QTextEdit>
                    
                    
                    class customQTextEdit: public QTextEdit
                    {
                        customQTextEdit(QWidget *p = 0): QTextEdit(p) {
                                setViewportMargins(30, 30, 30, 30); // add 30 pixels area around text
                                setStyleSheet("TextEdit { background: white; }"); // make the new "border" white
                            }
                    };
                    
                    
                    #endif // CUSTOMQTEXTEDIT_H
                    
                    
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                    • L Offline
                      L Offline
                      legitnameyo
                      wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 12:26 last edited by
                      #14

                      Solved it by removing the function in the class of customQTextEdit and adding "public" right after the first {

                      M 1 Reply Last reply 6 Feb 2019, 12:28
                      0
                      • L legitnameyo
                        6 Feb 2019, 12:26

                        Solved it by removing the function in the class of customQTextEdit and adding "public" right after the first {

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        mrjj
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 12:28 last edited by
                        #15

                        @legitnameyo
                        So finally it runs ?

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • L Offline
                          L Offline
                          legitnameyo
                          wrote on 6 Feb 2019, 14:33 last edited by
                          #16

                          Yes, and works perfectly

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          1

                          14/16

                          6 Feb 2019, 12:26

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