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The QLabel widget provides a text or image display. More...
#include <QLabel>
Inherits QFrame.
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The QLabel widget provides a text or image display.
QLabel is used for displaying text or an image. No user interaction functionality is provided. The visual appearance of the label can be configured in various ways, and it can be used for specifying a focus mnemonic key for another widget.
A QLabel can contain any of the following content types:
Content | Setting |
---|---|
Plain text | Pass a QString to setText(). |
Rich text | Pass a QString that contains rich text to setText(). |
A pixmap | Pass a QPixmap to setPixmap(). |
A movie | Pass a QMovie to setMovie(). |
A number | Pass an int or a double to setNum(), which converts the number to plain text. |
Nothing | The same as an empty plain text. This is the default. Set by clear(). |
When the content is changed using any of these functions, any previous content is cleared.
By default, labels display left-aligned, vertically-centered text and images, where any tabs in the text to be displayed are automatically expanded. However, the look of a QLabel can be adjusted and fine-tuned in several ways.
The positioning of the content within the QLabel widget area can be tuned with setAlignment() and setIndent(). Text content can also wrap lines along word boundaries with setWordWrap(). For example, this code sets up a sunken panel with a two-line text in the bottom right corner (both lines being flush with the right side of the label):
QLabel *label = new QLabel(this); label->setFrameStyle(QFrame::Panel | QFrame::Sunken); label->setText("first line\nsecond line"); label->setAlignment(Qt::AlignBottom | Qt::AlignRight);
The properties and functions QLabel inherits from QFrame can also be used to specify the widget frame to be used for any given label.
A QLabel is often used as a label for an interactive widget. For this use QLabel provides a useful mechanism for adding an mnemonic (see QKeySequence) that will set the keyboard focus to the other widget (called the QLabel's "buddy"). For example:
QLineEdit* phoneEdit = new QLineEdit(this); QLabel* phoneLabel = new QLabel("&Phone:", this); phoneLabel->setBuddy(phoneEdit);
In this example, keyboard focus is transferred to the label's buddy (the QLineEdit) when the user presses Alt+P. If the buddy was a button (inheriting from QAbstractButton), triggering the mnemonic would emulate a button click.
A label shown in the Macintosh widget style. | |
A label shown in the Plastique widget style. | |
A label shown in the Windows XP widget style. |
See also QLineEdit, QTextEdit, QPixmap, QMovie, and GUI Design Handbook: Label.
This property holds the alignment of the label's contents.
By default, the contents of the label are left-aligned and vertically-centered.
Access functions:
See also text.
This property holds the label's text indent in pixels.
If a label displays text, the indent applies to the left edge if alignment() is Qt::AlignLeft, to the right edge if alignment() is Qt::AlignRight, to the top edge if alignment() is Qt::AlignTop, and to to the bottom edge if alignment() is Qt::AlignBottom.
If indent is negative, or if no indent has been set, the label computes the effective indent as follows: If frameWidth() is 0, the effective indent becomes 0. If frameWidth() is greater than 0, the effective indent becomes half the width of the "x" character of the widget's current font().
By default, the indent is -1, meaning that an effective indent is calculating in the manner described above.
Access functions:
See also alignment, margin, frameWidth(), and font().
This property holds the width of the margin.
The margin is the distance between the innermost pixel of the frame and the outermost pixel of contents.
The default margin is 0.
Access functions:
See also indent.
Specifies whether QLabel should automatically open links using QDesktopServices::openUrl() instead of emitting the linkActivated() signal.
Note: The textInteractionFlags set on the label need to include either LinksAccessibleByMouse or LinksAccessibleByKeyboard.
The default value is false.
This property was introduced in Qt 4.2.
Access functions:
See also textInteractionFlags().
This property holds the label's pixmap.
If no pixmap has been set this will return 0.
Setting the pixmap clears any previous content. The buddy shortcut, if any, is disabled.
Access functions:
This property holds whether the label will scale its contents to fill all available space.
When enabled and the label shows a pixmap, it will scale the pixmap to fill the available space.
This property's default is false.
Access functions:
This property holds the label's text.
If no text has been set this will return an empty string. Setting the text clears any previous content.
The text will be interpreted either as plain text or as rich text, depending on the text format setting; see setTextFormat(). The default setting is Qt::AutoText; i.e. QLabel will try to auto-detect the format of the text set.
If a buddy has been set, the buddy mnemonic key is updated from the new text.
Note that QLabel is well-suited to display small rich text documents, such as small documents that get their document specific settings (font, text color, link color) from the label's palette and font properties. For large documents, use QTextEdit in read-only mode instead. QTextEdit can also provide a scroll bar when necessary.
Note: This function enables mouse tracking if text contains rich text.
Access functions:
See also setTextFormat(), setBuddy(), and alignment.
This property holds the label's text format.
See the Qt::TextFormat enum for an explanation of the possible options.
The default format is Qt::AutoText.
Access functions:
See also text().
Specifies how the label should interact with user input if it displays text.
If the flags contain Qt::LinksAccessibleByKeyboard the focus policy is also automatically set to Qt::StrongFocus. If Qt::TextSelectableByKeyboard is set then the focus policy is set to Qt::ClickFocus.
The default value is Qt::LinksAccessibleByMouse.
This property was introduced in Qt 4.2.
Access functions:
This property holds the label's word-wrapping policy.
If this property is true then label text is wrapped where necessary at word-breaks; otherwise it is not wrapped at all.
By default, word wrap is disabled.
Access functions:
See also text.
Constructs an empty label.
The parent and widget flag f, arguments are passed to the QFrame constructor.
See also setAlignment(), setFrameStyle(), and setIndent().
Constructs a label that displays the text, text.
The parent and widget flag f, arguments are passed to the QFrame constructor.
See also setText(), setAlignment(), setFrameStyle(), and setIndent().
Destroys the label.
Returns this label's buddy, or 0 if no buddy is currently set.
See also setBuddy().
Clears any label contents.
This signal is emitted when the user clicks a link. The URL referred to by the anchor is passed in link.
This function was introduced in Qt 4.2.
See also linkHovered().
This signal is emitted when the user hovers over a link. The URL referred to by the anchor is passed in link.
This function was introduced in Qt 4.2.
See also linkActivated().
Returns a pointer to the label's movie, or 0 if no movie has been set.
See also setMovie().
Returns the label's picture or 0 if the label doesn't have a picture.
See also setPicture().
Sets this label's buddy to buddy.
When the user presses the shortcut key indicated by this label, the keyboard focus is transferred to the label's buddy widget.
The buddy mechanism is only available for QLabels that contain text in which one character is prefixed with an ampersand, '&'. This character is set as the shortcut key. See the QKeySequence::mnemonic() documentation for details (to display an actual ampersand, use '&&').
In a dialog, you might create two data entry widgets and a label for each, and set up the geometry layout so each label is just to the left of its data entry widget (its "buddy"), for example:
QLineEdit *nameEd = new QLineEdit(this);
QLabel *nameLb = new QLabel("&Name:", this);
nameLb->setBuddy(nameEd);
QLineEdit *phoneEd = new QLineEdit(this);
QLabel *phoneLb = new QLabel("&Phone:", this);
phoneLb->setBuddy(phoneEd);
// (layout setup not shown)
With the code above, the focus jumps to the Name field when the user presses Alt+N, and to the Phone field when the user presses Alt+P.
To unset a previously set buddy, call this function with buddy set to 0.
See also buddy(), setText(), QShortcut, and setAlignment().
Sets the label contents to movie. Any previous content is cleared. The label does NOT take ownership of the movie.
The buddy shortcut, if any, is disabled.
See also movie() and setBuddy().
Sets the label contents to plain text containing the textual representation of integer num. Any previous content is cleared. Does nothing if the integer's string representation is the same as the current contents of the label.
The buddy shortcut, if any, is disabled.
See also setText(), QString::setNum(), and setBuddy().
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.
Sets the label contents to plain text containing the textual representation of double num. Any previous content is cleared. Does nothing if the double's string representation is the same as the current contents of the label.
The buddy shortcut, if any, is disabled.
See also setText(), QString::setNum(), and setBuddy().
Sets the label contents to picture. Any previous content is cleared.
The buddy shortcut, if any, is disabled.
See also picture() and setBuddy().
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