QRubberBand Class

The QRubberBand class provides a rectangle or line that can indicate a selection or a boundary. More...

Header: #include <QRubberBand>
qmake: QT += widgets
Inherits: QWidget

Public Types

enum Shape { Line, Rectangle }

Public Functions

QRubberBand(Shape s, QWidget *p = nullptr)
virtual ~QRubberBand()
void move(int x, int y)
void move(const QPoint &p)
void resize(int width, int height)
void resize(const QSize &size)
void setGeometry(const QRect &rect)
void setGeometry(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Shape shape() const

Protected Functions

void initStyleOption(QStyleOptionRubberBand *option) const

Reimplemented Protected Functions

virtual void changeEvent(QEvent *e) override
virtual bool event(QEvent *e) override
virtual void moveEvent(QMoveEvent *) override
virtual void paintEvent(QPaintEvent *) override
virtual void resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *) override
virtual void showEvent(QShowEvent *e) override

Detailed Description

A rubber band is often used to show a new bounding area (as in a QSplitter or a QDockWidget that is undocking). Historically this has been implemented using a QPainter and XOR, but this approach doesn't always work properly since rendering can happen in the window below the rubber band, but before the rubber band has been "erased".

You can create a QRubberBand whenever you need to render a rubber band around a given area (or to represent a single line), then call setGeometry(), move() or resize() to position and size it. A common pattern is to do this in conjunction with mouse events. For example:

 void Widget::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
 {
     origin = event->pos();
     if (!rubberBand)
         rubberBand = new QRubberBand(QRubberBand::Rectangle, this);
     rubberBand->setGeometry(QRect(origin, QSize()));
     rubberBand->show();
 }

 void Widget::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
 {
     rubberBand->setGeometry(QRect(origin, event->pos()).normalized());
 }

 void Widget::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *event)
 {
     rubberBand->hide();
     // determine selection, for example using QRect::intersects()
     // and QRect::contains().
 }

If you pass a parent to QRubberBand's constructor, the rubber band will display only inside its parent, but stays on top of other child widgets. If no parent is passed, QRubberBand will act as a top-level widget.

Call show() to make the rubber band visible; also when the rubber band is not a top-level. Hiding or destroying the widget will make the rubber band disappear. The rubber band can be a Rectangle or a Line (vertical or horizontal), depending on the shape() it was given when constructed.

Member Type Documentation

enum QRubberBand::Shape

This enum specifies what shape a QRubberBand should have. This is a drawing hint that is passed down to the style system, and can be interpreted by each QStyle.

ConstantValueDescription
QRubberBand::Line0A QRubberBand can represent a vertical or horizontal line. Geometry is still given in rect() and the line will fill the given geometry on most styles.
QRubberBand::Rectangle1A QRubberBand can represent a rectangle. Some styles will interpret this as a filled (often semi-transparent) rectangle, or a rectangular outline.

Member Function Documentation

QRubberBand::QRubberBand(Shape s, QWidget *p = nullptr)

Constructs a rubber band of shape s, with parent p.

By default a rectangular rubber band (s is Rectangle) will use a mask, so that a small border of the rectangle is all that is visible. Some styles (e.g., native macOS) will change this and call QWidget::setWindowOpacity() to make a semi-transparent filled selection rectangle.

[virtual] QRubberBand::~QRubberBand()

Destructor.

[override virtual protected] void QRubberBand::changeEvent(QEvent *e)

Reimplements: QWidget::changeEvent(QEvent *event).

[override virtual protected] bool QRubberBand::event(QEvent *e)

Reimplements: QWidget::event(QEvent *event).

[protected] void QRubberBand::initStyleOption(QStyleOptionRubberBand *option) const

Initialize option with the values from this QRubberBand. This method is useful for subclasses when they need a QStyleOptionRubberBand, but don't want to fill in all the information themselves.

See also QStyleOption::initFrom().

void QRubberBand::move(int x, int y)

Moves the rubberband to point (x, y).

See also resize().

void QRubberBand::move(const QPoint &p)

This is an overloaded function.

Moves the rubberband to point p.

See also resize().

[override virtual protected] void QRubberBand::moveEvent(QMoveEvent *)

Reimplements: QWidget::moveEvent(QMoveEvent *event).

[override virtual protected] void QRubberBand::paintEvent(QPaintEvent *)

Reimplements: QWidget::paintEvent(QPaintEvent *event).

void QRubberBand::resize(int width, int height)

Resizes the rubberband so that its width is width, and its height is height.

See also move().

void QRubberBand::resize(const QSize &size)

This is an overloaded function.

Resizes the rubberband so that its new size is size.

See also move().

[override virtual protected] void QRubberBand::resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *)

Reimplements: QWidget::resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *event).

void QRubberBand::setGeometry(const QRect &rect)

Sets the geometry of the rubber band to rect, specified in the coordinate system of its parent widget.

See also QWidget::geometry.

void QRubberBand::setGeometry(int x, int y, int width, int height)

This is an overloaded function.

Sets the geometry of the rubberband to the rectangle whose top-left corner lies at the point (x, y), and with dimensions specified by width and height. The geometry is specified in the parent widget's coordinate system.

Shape QRubberBand::shape() const

Returns the shape of this rubber band. The shape can only be set upon construction.

[override virtual protected] void QRubberBand::showEvent(QShowEvent *e)

Reimplements: QWidget::showEvent(QShowEvent *event).