I use Python bindings of Qt (PySide or PyQt4). They don't have QProxyStyle
.
I want to change the value of a style hint. For example change the SH_Menu_SubMenuPopupDelay
popup delay time of a submenu.
In native C++ Qt I would use a QProxyStyle
and override styleHint
and filter for the style hint of interest and return the value I like. It's done here for example.
But in the Python bindings I use QProxyStyle
is not available. So how can a style hint of an existing style be modified there?
The menu popup delay is not a fixed value, as it will depend on the current style. There is no way to set it programmatically.
The Qt way to modify style hints for existing styles is via
QProxyStyle
. However, even that is not guaranteed to work for user-defined or third-party styles, because they are not obliged to callQStyle.proxy()
. And even if they did, neither PyQt nor PySide wrap any classes that are based on plugins (which includesQProxyStyle
).The only way to get full control over the behaviour of style-hints is to write your own, application-specific style class. But, of course, you would then no longer be modifying the style-hints of an existing style, so that is beyond the scope of the current question.
That seems to leave one remaining option, which is to subclass
QMenu
and bypass the style-hint altogether. Grepping the Qt source code reveals that (disregarding the various style classes) the only places whereSH_Menu_SubMenuPopupDelay
is used is within themouseMoveEvent
ofQMenu
. So it might be possible to reimplement that to get the behaviour you want.UPDATE:
The
QProxyStyle
class is now available in PyQt5.