Creating a custom widget plugin for Qt Designer.
					In this example, the custom widget used is based on the 指针式时钟范例 , and does not provide any custom signals or slots.
To provide a custom widget that can be used with Qt Designer , we need to supply a self-contained implementation and provide a plugin interface. In this example, we reuse the 指针式时钟范例 for convenience.
Since custom widgets plugins rely on components supplied with Qt Designer , the project file that we use needs to contain information about Qt Designer 's library components:
CONFIG += plugin TEMPLATE = lib QT += widgets uiplugin
						The
						
TEMPLATE
						
						variable's value makes
						
qmake
						
						create the custom widget as a library. Later, we will ensure that the widget will be recognized as a plugin by Qt by using the
						
							Q_PLUGIN_METADATA
						
						() macro to export the relevant widget information.
					
						The
						
CONFIG
						
						variable is set to
						
plugin
						
						, which ensures that
						
qmake
						
						considers the custom widget a plugin library.
					
						The
						
QT
						
						variable contains the keyword
						
uiplugin
						
						. This plugin type provides a factory function for custom widget creation by implementing the abstract interfaces
						
							QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface
						
						or
						
							QDesignerCustomWidgetCollectionInterface
						
						, suitable for use with
						
							QUiLoader
						
						. It does not have a dependency on the
						
							Qt Designer
						
						libraries. Plugins accessing other interfaces of
						
							Qt Designer
						
						to implement container extensions or other
						
							Qt Designer
						
						specific functionality follow different rules and are covered by other examples.
					
The header and source files for the widget are declared in the usual way, and we provide an implementation of the plugin interface so that Qt Designer can use the custom widget:
HEADERS     = analogclock.h \
              customwidgetplugin.h
SOURCES     = analogclock.cpp \
              customwidgetplugin.cpp
OTHER_FILES += analogclock.json
					
					It is also important to ensure that the plugin is installed in a location that is searched by Qt Designer . We do this by specifying a target path for the project and adding it to the list of items to install:
target.path = $$[QT_INSTALL_PLUGINS]/designer INSTALLS += target
						The custom widget is created as a library, and will be installed alongside the other
						
							Qt Designer
						
						plugins when the project is installed (using
						
make install
						
						or an equivalent installation procedure). Later, we will ensure that it is recognized as a plugin by
						
							Qt Designer
						
						by using the
						
							Q_PLUGIN_METADATA
						
						() macro to export the relevant widget information.
					
						Note that if you want the plugins to appear in a Visual Studio integration, the plugins must be built in release mode and their libraries must be copied into the plugin directory in the install path of the integration (for an example, see
						
C:/program files/trolltech as/visual studio integration/plugins
						
						).
					
For more information about plugins, see the 如何创建 Qt 插件 文档编制。
						The
						
AnalogClock
						
						class is defined and implemented in exactly the same way as described in the
						
							指针式时钟范例
						
						. Since the class is self-contained, and does not require any external configuration, it can be used without modification as a custom widget in
						
							Qt Designer
						
						.
						
					
						The
						
AnalogClock
						
						class is exposed to
						
							Qt Designer
						
						透过
						
AnalogClockPlugin
						
						class. This class inherits from both
						
							QObject
						
						和
						
							QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface
						
						class, and implements an interface defined by
						
							QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface
						
						:
					
class AnalogClockPlugin : public QObject, public QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface { Q_OBJECT Q_PLUGIN_METADATA(IID "org.qt-project.Qt.QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface") Q_INTERFACES(QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface) public: explicit AnalogClockPlugin(QObject *parent = nullptr); bool isContainer() const override; bool isInitialized() const override; QIcon icon() const override; QString domXml() const override; QString group() const override; QString includeFile() const override; QString name() const override; QString toolTip() const override; QString whatsThis() const override; QWidget *createWidget(QWidget *parent) override; void initialize(QDesignerFormEditorInterface *core) override; private: bool initialized = false; };
						The functions provide information about the widget that
						
							Qt Designer
						
						can use in the
						
							widget box
						
						。
						
initialized
						
						private member variable is used to record whether the plugin has been initialized by
						
							Qt Designer
						
						.
					
Note that the only part of the class definition that is specific to this particular custom widget is the class name.
						The class constructor simply calls the
						
							QObject
						
						base class constructor and sets the
						
initialized
						
						变量到
						
false
						
						.
					
AnalogClockPlugin::AnalogClockPlugin(QObject *parent) : QObject(parent) { }
						
							Qt Designer
						
						will initialize the plugin when it is required by calling the
						
initialize()
						
						函数:
					
void AnalogClockPlugin::initialize(QDesignerFormEditorInterface * /* core */) { if (initialized) return; initialized = true; }
						在此范例中,
						
initialized
						
						private variable is tested, and only set to
						
true
						
						if the plugin is not already initialized. Although, this plugin does not require any special code to be executed when it is initialized, we could include such code after the test for initialization.
					
						The
						
isInitialized()
						
						function lets
						
							Qt Designer
						
						know whether the plugin is ready for use:
					
bool AnalogClockPlugin::isInitialized() const { return initialized; }
						Instances of the custom widget are supplied by the
						
createWidget()
						
						function. The implementation for the analog clock is straightforward:
					
QWidget *AnalogClockPlugin::createWidget(QWidget *parent) { return new AnalogClock(parent); }
						In this case, the custom widget only requires a
						
parent
						
						to be specified. If other arguments need to be supplied to the widget, they can be introduced here.
					
						The following functions provide information for
						
							Qt Designer
						
						to use to represent the widget in the widget box. The
						
name()
						
						function returns the name of class that provides the custom widget:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::name() const { return QStringLiteral("AnalogClock"); }
						The
						
group()
						
						function is used to describe the type of widget that the custom widget belongs to:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::group() const { return QStringLiteral("Display Widgets [Examples]"); }
						The widget plugin will be placed in a section identified by its group name in
						
							Qt Designer
						
						's widget box. The icon used to represent the widget in the widget box is returned by the
						
icon()
						
						函数:
					
QIcon AnalogClockPlugin::icon() const { return QIcon(); }
In this case, we return a null icon to indicate that we have no icon that can be used to represent the widget.
						A tool tip and "What's This?" help can be supplied for the custom widget's entry in the widget box. The
						
toolTip()
						
						function should return a short message describing the widget:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::toolTip() const { return QString(); }
						The
						
whatsThis()
						
						function can return a longer description:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::whatsThis() const { return QString(); }
						The
						
isContainer()
						
						function tells
						
							Qt Designer
						
						whether the widget is supposed to be used as a container for other widgets. If not,
						
							Qt Designer
						
						will not allow the user to place widgets inside it.
					
bool AnalogClockPlugin::isContainer() const { return false; }
						Most widgets in Qt can contain child widgets, but it only makes sense to use dedicated container widgets for this purpose in
						
							Qt Designer
						
						. By returning
						
false
						
						, we indicate that the custom widget cannot hold other widgets; if we returned true,
						
							Qt Designer
						
						would allow other widgets to be placed inside the analog clock and a layout to be defined.
					
						The
						
domXml()
						
						function provides a way to include default settings for the widget in the standard XML format used by
						
							Qt Designer
						
						. In this case, we only specify the widget's geometry:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::domXml() const { return "<ui language=\"c++\">\n" " <widget class=\"AnalogClock\" name=\"analogClock\">\n" " <property name=\"geometry\">\n" " <rect>\n" " <x>0</x>\n" " <y>0</y>\n" " <width>100</width>\n" " <height>100</height>\n" " </rect>\n" " </property>\n" " <property name=\"toolTip\" >\n" " <string>The current time</string>\n" " </property>\n" " <property name=\"whatsThis\" >\n" " <string>The analog clock widget displays the current time.</string>\n" " </property>\n" " </widget>\n" "</ui>\n"; }
						If the widget provides a reasonable size hint, it is not necessary to define it here. In addition, returning an empty string instead of a
						
<widget>
						
						element will tell
						
							Qt Designer
						
						not to install the widget in the widget box.
					
						To make the analog clock widget usable by applications, we implement the
						
includeFile()
						
						function to return the name of the header file containing the custom widget class definition:
					
QString AnalogClockPlugin::includeFile() const { return QStringLiteral("analogclock.h"); }