> Okay so create a button-group for each of the sets of buttons you need. > Hide them all by calling their hide() methods. As each set of buttons > is needed, call its show() method (after re-positioning it if necessary > by calling its move() method). There should be no need to keep creating > and destroying widgets to achieve what you want.
Ahhh.. Ok I see. Yeah thats a much better way. I just had my head around it wrong. I don't know that I'm going to be able to fully determine _all_ the various permutations possible and have that number of groupboxes handy but I should be able to figure out most of them. I still think I'll have to re-create one or two since you can't shrink a grid once created but we will see. > provides the three methods mentioned above). Its quite important to > familiarize yourself with Qt's documentation for this class: Over the past few nights I've spent a _lot_ of time buried in the Qt docs and googleing for things. I did read and look at most of those tutorials. The problem was that I was looking for the wrong stuff and examples of trying to do the wrong things. I just needed knowledgeable person like yourself to enlighten me with a slight smack up side the head and show me the Qt way. *grin* Thats one of the reasons I continued to post my findings on this thread as it seemed like what I was trying to do was just way too hard. Hopefully the archives will help the next soul who trys to head down my same path. > more geared towards the sorts of questions you are asking. You can find > it here: > > http://www.qtforum.org Thanks. I'll check it out. When I started this thread I was thinking that I just wasn't doing somthing right in pyQt but now I see it was totally a Qt thing. -- Richard A. Smith _______________________________________________ PyKDE mailing list [email protected] http://mats.imk.fraunhofer.de/mailman/listinfo/pykde
