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The QMessageBox class provides a modal dialog with a short message, an icon, and some buttons. More...
#include <qmessagebox.h>
Inherits QDialog.
Message boxes are used to provide informative messages and to ask simple questions.
QMessageBox provides a range of different messages, arranged roughly along two axes: severity and complexity.
Severity is
Information | for message boxes that are part of normal operation | |
Warning | for message boxes that tell the user about unusual errors | |
Critical | for message boxes that tell the user about critical errors |
The message box has a different icon for each of the severity levels.
Complexity is one button (OK) for a simple messages, or two or even three buttons for questions.
There are static functions for common cases.
Examples:
If a program is unable to find a supporting file, but can do perfectly well without it:
QMessageBox::information( this, "Application name", "Unable to find the user preferences file.\n" "The factory default will be used instead." );
warning() can be used to tell the user about unusual errors, or errors which can't be easily fixed:
switch( QMessageBox::warning( this, "Application name", "Could not connect to the <mumble> server.\n" "This program can't function correctly " "without the server.\n\n", "Retry", "Quit", 0, 0, 1 ) ) case 0: // The user clicked the Retry again button or pressed Enter // try again break; case 1: // The user clicked the Quit or pressed Escape // exit break; }
The text part of all message box messages can be either rich text or plain text. If you specify a rich text formatted string, it will be rendered using the default stylesheet. See QStyleSheet::defaultSheet() for details. With certain strings that contain XML meta characters, the auto-rich text detection may fail, interpreting plain text incorrectly as rich text. In these rare cases, use QStyleSheet::convertFromPlainText() to convert your plain text string to a visually equivalent rich text string or set the text format explicitly with setTextFormat().
Note that the Microsoft Windows User Interface Guidelines strongly recommend using the application name as the window's caption.
Below are more examples of how to use the static member functions. After these examples you will find an overview of the non-static member functions.
Exiting a program is part of its normal operation. If there is unsaved data the user probably should be asked if they want to save the data. For example:
switch( QMessageBox::information( this, "Application name here", "The document contains unsaved changes\n" "Do you want to save the changes before exiting?", "&Save", "&Discard", "Cancel", 0, // Enter == button 0 2 ) ) { // Escape == button 2 case 0: // Save clicked or Alt+S pressed or Enter pressed. // save break; case 1: // Discard clicked or Alt+D pressed // don't save but exit break; case 2: // Cancel clicked or Alt+C pressed or Escape pressed // don't exit break; }
The application name is used as the window caption in accordance with the Microsoft recommendation. The Escape button cancels the entire exit operation, and pressing Enter causes the changes to be saved before the exit occurs.
Disk full errors are unusual (in a perfect world, they are) and they certainly can be hard to correct. This example uses predefined buttons instead of hard-coded button texts:
switch( QMessageBox::warning( this, "Application name here", "Could not save the user preferences,\n" "because the disk is full. You can delete\n" "some files and press Retry, or you can\n" "abort the Save Preferences operation.", QMessageBox::Retry | QMessageBox::Default, QMessageBox::Abort | QMessageBox::Escape )) { case QMessageBox::Retry: // Retry clicked or Enter pressed // try again break; case QMessageBox::Abort: // Abort clicked or Escape pressed // abort break; }
The critical() function should be reserved for critical errors. In this example errorDetails is a QString or const char*, and QString is used to concatenate several strings:
QMessageBox::critical( 0, "Application name here", QString("An internal error occurred. Please ") + "call technical support at 123456789 and report\n"+ "these numbers:\n\n" + errorDetails + "\n\n<Application> will now exit." );
In this example an OK button is displayed.
QMessageBox provides a very simple About box, which displays an appropriate icon and the string you provide:
QMessageBox::about( this, "About <Application>", "<Application> is a <one-paragraph blurb>\n\n" "Copyright 1951-2002 Such-and-such. " "<License words here.>\n\n" "For technical support, call 123456789 or see\n" "http://www.such-and-such.com/Application/\n" );
See about() for more information.
If you want your users to know that the application is built using Qt (so that they know you use high quality tools:) you might like to add an "About Qt" menu option under the Help menu to invoke aboutQt().
If none of the standard message boxes is suitable, you can create a QMessageBox from scratch and with custom button texts:
QMessageBox mb( "Application name here", "Saving the file will overwrite the original file on the disk.\n" "Do you really want to save?", QMessageBox::Information, QMessageBox::Yes | QMessageBox::Default, QMessageBox::No, QMessageBox::Cancel | QMessageBox::Escape ); mb.setButtonText( QMessageBox::Yes, "Save" ); mb.setButtonText( QMessageBox::No, "Discard" ); switch( mb.exec() ) { case QMessageBox::Yes: // save and exit break; case QMessageBox::No: // exit without saving break; case QMessageBox::Cancel: // don't save and don't exit break; }
QMessageBox defines two enum types: Icon and an unnamed button type. Icon defines the Information, Warning, and Critical icons for each GUI style. It is used by the constructor and by the static member functions information(), warning() and critical(). A function called standardIcon() gives you access to the various icons.
The button types are:
Button types can be combined with two modifiers by using OR, '|':
The text(), icon() and iconPixmap() functions provide access to the current text and pixmap of the message box. The setText(), setIcon() and setIconPixmap() let you change it. The difference between setIcon() and setIconPixmap() is that the former accepts a QMessageBox::Icon and can be used to set standard icons, whereas the latter accepts a QPixmap and can be used to set custom icons.
setButtonText() and buttonText() provide access to the buttons.
QMessageBox has no signals or slots.
See also QDialog, Isys on error messages, GUI Design Handbook: Message Box, and Dialog Classes.
This enum includes provides the following values:
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
The parent and name arguments are passed to the QDialog constructor.
The icon must be one of the following:
Each button, button0, button1 and button2, can have one of the following values:
Use QMessageBox::NoButton for the later parameters to have fewer than three buttons in your message box. There has to be at least one button, otherwise QMessageBox adds an Ok button.
One of the buttons can be OR-ed with the QMessageBox::Default flag to make it the default button (clicked when Enter is pressed).
One of the buttons can be OR-ed with the QMessageBox::Escape flag to make it the cancel or close button (clicked when Escape is pressed).
Example:
QMessageBox mb( "Application Name", "Hardware failure.\n\nDisk error detected\nDo you want to stop?", QMessageBox::NoIcon, QMessageBox::Yes | QMessageBox::Default, QMessageBox::No | QMessageBox::Escape QMessageBox::NoButton ); if ( mb.exec() == QMessageBox::No ) // try again
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
If modal is TRUE the message becomes modal; otherwise it becomes modeless.
The parent, name, modal, and f arguments are passed to the QDialog constructor.
See also caption, text, and icon.
about() looks for a suitable icon in four locations:
The about box has a single button labelled OK.
See also QWidget::icon and QApplication::mainWidget().
Examples: action/application.cpp, application/application.cpp, chart/chartform.cpp, helpviewer/helpwindow.cpp, mdi/application.cpp, menu/menu.cpp, and themes/themes.cpp.
This is useful for inclusion in the Help menu. See the examples/menu/menu.cpp example.
Examples: action/application.cpp, application/application.cpp, chart/chartform.cpp, mdi/application.cpp, menu/menu.cpp, themes/themes.cpp, and trivial/trivial.cpp.
This function will not be called if the message box has been explicitly resized before showing it.
Reimplemented from QWidget.
See also setButtonText().
If you don't want all three buttons, set the last button, or last two buttons to QMessageBox::NoButton.
Returns the identity (QMessageBox::Ok, or QMessageBox::No, etc.) of the button that was clicked.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also information() and warning().
Examples: network/ftpclient/ftpmainwindow.ui.h, process/process.cpp, and xml/outliner/outlinetree.cpp.
Displays a critical error message box with a caption, a text, and 1, 2 or 3 buttons. Returns the number of the button that was clicked (0, 1 or 2).
button0Text is the text of the first button, and is optional. If button0Text is not supplied, "OK" (translated) will be used. button1Text is the text of the second button, and is optional, and button2Text is the text of the third button, and is optional. defaultButtonNumber (0, 1 or 2) is the index of the default button; pressing Return or Enter is the same as clicking the default button. It defaults to 0 (the first button). escapeButtonNumber is the index of the Escape button; pressing Escape is the same as clicking this button. It defaults to -1 (pressing Escape does nothing); supply 0, 1, or 2 to make pressing Escape equivalent to clicking the relevant button.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also information() and warning().
Returns the message box's icon. See the "icon" property for details.
Returns the current icon. See the "iconPixmap" property for details.
If you don't want all three buttons, set the last button, or last two buttons to QMessageBox::NoButton.
Returns the identity (QMessageBox::Ok, or QMessageBox::No, etc.) of the button that was clicked.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also warning() and critical().
Examples: action/application.cpp, application/application.cpp, dirview/dirview.cpp, fileiconview/qfileiconview.cpp, picture/picture.cpp, qwerty/qwerty.cpp, and sql/sqltable/main.cpp.
Displays an information message box with caption caption, text text and one, two or three buttons. Returns the index of the button that was clicked (0, 1 or 2).
button0Text is the text of the first button, and is optional. If button0Text is not supplied, "OK" (translated) will be used. button1Text is the text of the second button, and is optional. button2Text is the text of the third button, and is optional. defaultButtonNumber (0, 1 or 2) is the index of the default button; pressing Return or Enter is the same as clicking the default button. It defaults to 0 (the first button). escapeButtonNumber is the index of the Escape button; pressing Escape is the same as clicking this button. It defaults to -1 (pressing Escape does nothing); supply 0, 1 or 2 to make pressing Escape equivalent to clicking the relevant button.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also warning() and critical().
Opens a modal message box directly using the specified parameters.
Please use information(), warning() or critical() instead.
Example: grapher/grapher.cpp.
Queries the user using a modal message box with two buttons. Note that caption is not always shown, it depends on the window manager.
Please use information(), warning() or critical() instead.
See also buttonText().
Sets the message box's icon. See the "icon" property for details.
Sets the current icon. See the "iconPixmap" property for details.
Sets the message box text to be displayed. See the "text" property for details.
Sets the format of the text displayed by the message box. See the "textFormat" property for details.
Returns the pixmap used for a standard icon. This allows the pixmaps to be used in more complex message boxes. icon specifies the required icon, e.g. QMessageBox::Information, QMessageBox::Warning or QMessageBox::Critical.
style is unused.
Returns the message box text to be displayed. See the "text" property for details.
Returns the format of the text displayed by the message box. See the "textFormat" property for details.
If you don't want all three buttons, set the last button, or last two buttons to QMessageBox::NoButton.
Returns the identity (QMessageBox::Ok, or QMessageBox::No, etc.) of the button that was clicked.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also information() and critical().
Examples: chart/chartform.cpp, i18n/main.cpp, network/mail/smtp.cpp, qwerty/qwerty.cpp, showimg/showimg.cpp, and sound/sound.cpp.
Displays a warning message box with a caption, a text, and 1, 2 or 3 buttons. Returns the number of the button that was clicked (0, 1, or 2).
button0Text is the text of the first button, and is optional. If button0Text is not supplied, "OK" (translated) will be used. button1Text is the text of the second button, and is optional, and button2Text is the text of the third button, and is optional. defaultButtonNumber (0, 1 or 2) is the index of the default button; pressing Return or Enter is the same as clicking the default button. It defaults to 0 (the first button). escapeButtonNumber is the index of the Escape button; pressing Escape is the same as clicking this button. It defaults to -1 (pressing Escape does nothing); supply 0, 1, or 2 to make pressing Escape equivalent to clicking the relevant button.
If parent is 0, the message box becomes an application-global modal dialog box. If parent is a widget, the message box becomes modal relative to parent.
See also information() and critical().
This property holds the message box's icon.
The icon of the message box can be one of the following predefined icons:
The actual pixmap used for displaying the icon depends on the current GUI style. You can also set a custom pixmap icon using the QMessageBox::iconPixmap property. The default icon is QMessageBox::NoIcon.
See also iconPixmap.
Set this property's value with setIcon() and get this property's value with icon().
This property holds the current icon.
The icon currently used by the message box. Note that it's often hard to draw one pixmap that looks appropriate in both Motif and Windows GUI styles; you may want to draw two pixmaps.
See also icon.
Set this property's value with setIconPixmap() and get this property's value with iconPixmap().
This property holds the message box text to be displayed.
The text will be interpreted either as a plain text or as rich text, depending on the text format setting (QMessageBox::textFormat). The default setting is AutoText, i.e. the message box will try to auto-detect the format of the text.
The default value of this property is QString::null.
See also textFormat.
Set this property's value with setText() and get this property's value with text().
This property holds the format of the text displayed by the message box.
The current text format used by the message box. See the Qt::TextFormat enum for an explanation of the possible options.
The default format is AutoText.
See also text.
Set this property's value with setTextFormat() and get this property's value with textFormat().
This file is part of the Qt toolkit. Copyright © 1995-2003 Trolltech. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2003 Trolltech | Trademarks | Qt version 3.1.2
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