MessageDialog QML Type

Dialog component for displaying popup messages. More...

Import Statement: import QtQuick.Dialogs 1.3
Since: Qt 5.2

Properties

Signals

Methods

Detailed Description

The most basic use case for a MessageDialog is a popup alert. It also allows the user to respond in various ways depending on which buttons are enabled. The dialog is initially invisible. You need to set the properties as desired first, then set visible to true or call open().

Here is a minimal example to show an alert and exit after the user responds:

 import QtQuick 2.2
 import QtQuick.Dialogs 1.1

 MessageDialog {
     id: messageDialog
     title: "May I have your attention please"
     text: "It's so cool that you are using Qt Quick."
     onAccepted: {
         console.log("And of course you could only agree.")
         Qt.quit()
     }
     Component.onCompleted: visible = true
 }

There are several possible handlers depending on which standardButtons the dialog has and the ButtonRole of each. For example, the onRejected handler will be called if the user presses a Cancel, Close or Abort button.

A MessageDialog window is automatically transient for its parent window. So whether you declare the dialog inside an Item or inside a Window, the dialog will appear centered over the window containing the item, or over the Window that you declared.

The implementation of MessageDialog will be a platform message dialog if possible. If that isn't possible, then it will try to instantiate a QMessageBox. If that also isn't possible, then it will fall back to a QML implementation, DefaultMessageDialog.qml. In that case you can customize the appearance by editing this file. DefaultMessageDialog.qml contains a Rectangle to hold the dialog's contents, because certain embedded systems do not support multiple top-level windows. When the dialog becomes visible, it will automatically be wrapped in a Window if possible, or simply reparented on top of the main window if there can only be one window.

Property Documentation

clickedButton : StandardButton

This property holds the button pressed by the user. Its value is one of the flags set for the standardButtons property.


detailedText : string

The text to be displayed in the details area, which is hidden by default. The user will then be able to press the Show Details... button to make it visible.

See also text.


icon : QQuickStandardIcon::Icon

The icon of the message box can be specified with one of these values:

no iconStandardIcon.NoIconFor an unadorned text alert.
"Question icon"StandardIcon.QuestionFor asking a question during normal operations.

StandardIcon.InformationFor reporting information about normal operations.

StandardIcon.WarningFor reporting non-critical errors.

StandardIcon.CriticalFor reporting critical errors.

The default is StandardIcon.NoIcon.

The enum values are the same as in QMessageBox::Icon.


informativeText : string

The informative text that provides a fuller description for the message.

Informative text can be used to supplement the text to give more information to the user. Depending on the platform, it may appear in a smaller font below the text, or simply appended to the text.

See also text.


modality : Qt::WindowModality

Whether the dialog should be shown modal with respect to the window containing the dialog's parent Item, modal with respect to the whole application, or non-modal.

By default it is Qt.WindowModal.

Modality does not mean that there are any blocking calls to wait for the dialog to be accepted or rejected; it's only that the user will be prevented from interacting with the parent window and/or the application windows until the dialog is dismissed.


standardButtons : StandardButtons

The MessageDialog has a row of buttons along the bottom, each of which has a ButtonRole that determines which signal will be emitted when the button is pressed. You can also find out which specific button was pressed after the fact via the clickedButton property. You can control which buttons are available by setting standardButtons to a bitwise-or combination of the following flags:

ConstantDescription
StandardButton.OkAn OK button defined with the AcceptRole.
StandardButton.OpenAn Open button defined with the AcceptRole.
StandardButton.SaveA Save button defined with the AcceptRole.
StandardButton.CancelA Cancel button defined with the RejectRole.
StandardButton.CloseA Close button defined with the RejectRole.
StandardButton.DiscardA Discard or Don't Save button, depending on the platform, defined with the DestructiveRole.
StandardButton.ApplyAn Apply button defined with the ApplyRole.
StandardButton.ResetA Reset button defined with the ResetRole.
StandardButton.RestoreDefaultsA Restore Defaults button defined with the ResetRole.
StandardButton.HelpA Help button defined with the HelpRole.
StandardButton.SaveAllA Save All button defined with the AcceptRole.
StandardButton.YesA Yes button defined with the YesRole.
StandardButton.YesToAllA Yes to All button defined with the YesRole.
StandardButton.NoA No button defined with the NoRole.
StandardButton.NoToAllA No to All button defined with the NoRole.
StandardButton.AbortAn Abort button defined with the RejectRole.
StandardButton.RetryA Retry button defined with the AcceptRole.
StandardButton.IgnoreAn Ignore button defined with the AcceptRole.

For example the following dialog will ask a question with 5 possible answers:

 import QtQuick 2.2
 import QtQuick.Dialogs 1.1

 MessageDialog {
     title: "Overwrite?"
     icon: StandardIcon.Question
     text: "file.txt already exists.  Replace?"
     detailedText: "To replace a file means that its existing contents will be lost. " +
         "The file that you are copying now will be copied over it instead."
     standardButtons: StandardButton.Yes | StandardButton.YesToAll |
         StandardButton.No | StandardButton.NoToAll | StandardButton.Abort
     Component.onCompleted: visible = true
     onYes: console.log("copied")
     onNo: console.log("didn't copy")
     onRejected: console.log("aborted")
 }

The default is StandardButton.Ok.

The enum values are the same as in QMessageBox::StandardButtons.


text : string

The primary text to be displayed.


title : string

The title of the dialog window.


visible : bool

This property holds whether the dialog is visible. By default this is false.

See also modality.


Signal Documentation

accepted()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed any button which has the AcceptRole: OK, Open, Save, Save All, Retry or Ignore.

The corresponding handler is onAccepted.

Note: The corresponding handler is onAccepted.


apply()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed the Apply button.

The corresponding handler is onApply.

Note: The corresponding handler is onApply.


discard()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed the Discard button.

The corresponding handler is onDiscard.

Note: The corresponding handler is onDiscard.


help()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed the Help button. Depending on platform, the dialog may not be automatically dismissed because the help that your application provides may need to be relevant to the text shown in this dialog in order to assist the user in making a decision. However on other platforms it's not possible to show a dialog and a help window at the same time. If you want to be sure that the dialog will close, you can set visible to false in your handler.

The corresponding handler is onHelp.

Note: The corresponding handler is onHelp.


no()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed any button which has the NoRole: No or No to All.

The corresponding handler is onNo.

Note: The corresponding handler is onNo.


rejected()

This signal is emitted when the user has dismissed the dialog, by closing the dialog window, by pressing a Cancel, Close or Abort button on the dialog, or by pressing the back button or the escape key.

The corresponding handler is onRejected.

Note: The corresponding handler is onRejected.


reset()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed any button which has the ResetRole: Reset or Restore Defaults.

The corresponding handler is onReset.

Note: The corresponding handler is onReset.


yes()

This signal is emitted when the user has pressed any button which has the YesRole: Yes or Yes to All.

The corresponding handler is onYes.

Note: The corresponding handler is onYes.


Method Documentation

void close()

Closes the dialog.


void open()

Shows the dialog to the user. It is equivalent to setting visible to true.