If you mean to use a QStandardItem per cell then yes. Also for storing values that you want to display, use the Qt.DisplayRole as role.
Cheers, Tibold Kandrai ------------------------------ From: Frank Rueter | OHUfx <[email protected]> Sent: 11/10/2013 14:35 To: Tibold Kandrai <[email protected]> Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [PySide] simple QTableView example one more silly question if I may: So if I have a task like this: newTask = {'title':'new task', 'priority':1, 'status':False} and need to store the data in one row in the model I should use three different items, one for each value, right?! e.g.: newTask = {'title':'new task', 'priority':1, 'status':False} row = self.model.rowCount() for column, attr in enumerate(['title', 'priority', 'status']): newItem = QtGui.QStandardItem(newTask[attr]) self.model.setItem(row, column, newItem) then juggle delegates or widgets to use a spin box for the integer and a checkbox for the boolean... Thanks for the help! Cheers, frank On 10/10/13 11:44 PM, Tibold Kandrai wrote: Hey, I’m not sure I understand the problem correctly. If you want to store data in a cell or a QStandardItem, then you need to use setData() and data(). Generally you shouldn’t need to subclass QStandardItem or QStandardItemModel. Here is an example how: # Define roles FINISHED_ROLE = QtCore.Qt.UserRole + 1 PRIORITY_ROLE = QtCore.Qt.UserRole + 2 # Create model model = QtGui.QStandardItemModel() item = QtGui.QStandarItem() model.appendRow(item) item_index = item.index() # Store data using the item item.setData(finished, FINISHED_ROLE) item.setData(priority, PRIORITY_ROLE) # Store data using the model model.setData(item_index, finished, FINISHED_ROLE) model.setData(item_index, priority, PRIORITY_ROLE) # Retrieve data using the item finished = item.data(FINISHED_ROLE) priority = item.data(PRIORITY_ROLE) # Retrieve data using the model finished = model.data(item_index, FINISHED_ROLE) priority = model.data(item_index, PRIORITY_ROLE) In some cases like click event handlers, you have the model and the item index, there it’s easier to use the model methods instead of finding the item and then getting the data. 😉 Hope it helps. Cheers, Tibold *From:* Frank Rueter | OHUfx *Sent:* 2013 October 10, Thursday 19:37 *To:* [email protected] After looking at some more examples I think my approach of storing multiple values in one item is fundamentally flawed. Instead I should be using one item per cell and assign the respective data, right?! I shall re-write the example accordingly, sorry for the noise. frank On 10/10/13 6:34 PM, Frank Rueter | OHUfx wrote: I meant QTableView not QStandardTableView :/ On 10/10/13 6:33 PM, Frank Rueter | OHUfx wrote: Hi all, after a bit of a break from PySide I am trying to wrap my head around the model/view stuff again and am trying to understand how a very simple example would work where a QStandarItem has properties "title", "priority" and "finished" which are displayed via a QStandardTableView. I am struggling with understanding how to properly display the above three properties in the table's columns. I tried setting the data() method on the model like this: * def data(self, index, role=QtCore.Qt.DisplayRole):** ** '''Return data based on index and role'''** ** item = self.itemFromIndex(index)** ** if index.column() == 0:** ** return item.title** ** elif index.column() == 1:** ** return item.finished** ** elif index.column() == 2:** ** return item.priority* but for some reason it errors saying item does not have attribute "finished" even though my item object s declared like this: *class TaskItem(QtGui.QStandardItem):** ** '''Item to hold a task for the todo list'''** ** ** ** def __init__(self, title, finished=False, priority=1):** ** super(TaskItem, self).__init__(title)** ** self.title = title** ** self.finished = finished** ** self.priority = priority* When printing the item's attributes via dir() I see that, when the model is populated, the last item it attempts to call is not my custom item object, but something else with less attributes and methods. Clearly there is something I haven't quite understood about this process. Also, if I use the models data() method as pointed out above, I get checkboxes in the cells which I don't want at this stage. Can somebody please help me understand where I go wrong? Attached is the whole test code. Cheers, frank P.S.: I am aware that the controller code shouldn't necessarily live in the QWidget's methods, this is just for testing which I will clean up once I get how it all connects again _______________________________________________ PySide mailing [email protected]http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside _______________________________________________ PySide mailing [email protected]http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside
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