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I am trying to build a GUI that has three horizontal sliders that control some probability. Each slider can range between 0 - 1.0 but all three together must equal 1.0 at all times. Here is a link I found that does what I want but with jQuery.

Is there any good way of doing this in Qt? PyQt more specifically but I think pseudo code will suffice.

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  • The plugin you linked is available under the MIT and GPL licenses- you can freely use the source for whatever purpose. If it already does what you want, why not just translate it to PyQt?
    – David Cain
    Jun 22, 2012 at 5:53

2 Answers 2

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class MainWindow(QWidget):
    def __init__(self):
        QWidget.__init__(self)
        layout = QGridLayout()
        self.sliders = []
        slider_amount = 3
        slider_precision = 10000 # sliders work only with ints, so large ints are used and mapped to floats
        for i in range(slider_amount):
            slider = QSlider(Qt.Horizontal)
            slider.setRange(0, slider_amount*slider_precision)
            slider.setSingleStep(slider.maximum()/100.0)
            slider.setPageStep(slider.maximum()/20.0)
            slider.valueChanged.connect(self.on_slider_value_changed)
            slider.float_value = (i+1)/((1+slider_amount)/2.0*slider_amount) # provide your own default values
            slider.label = QLabel()
            self.sliders.append(slider)
            layout.addWidget(slider, i, 0)
            layout.addWidget(slider.label, i, 1)
        self.update_slider_values()
        self.setLayout(layout)
        self.show()

    def on_slider_value_changed(self, value):
        changed_slider = self.sender()
        changed_slider.float_value = float(value)/changed_slider.maximum()
        delta = sum(slider.float_value for slider in self.sliders)-1
        while abs(delta)>0.00001:
            d = len(self.sliders)-1
            for slider in self.sliders:
                if slider is changed_slider:
                    continue
                old_value = slider.float_value
                slider.float_value = min(max(0, old_value-delta/d), 1)
                delta -= old_value-slider.float_value
                d -= 1
        self.update_slider_values()

    def update_slider_values(self):
        for slider in self.sliders:
            slider_signals_blocked = slider.blockSignals(True)
            slider.setValue(round(slider.float_value*slider.maximum()))
            slider.blockSignals(slider_signals_blocked)
            slider.label.setText('{:.2f}'.format(slider.float_value))

app = QApplication(sys.argv)
mw = MainWindow()
app.exec_()
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  • I don't know much about PyQt, but can't you just do self.sender().value = value instead of iterating and checking if item.slider is changed_slider? Jun 22, 2012 at 17:43
  • @KubaOber I store the real values separately as float numbers (sliders use ints and are not precise enough), but I think it would be better to store those values inside the existing objects... I'll edit the answer. Jun 22, 2012 at 18:38
  • Ohh, I see you've succumbed to floating point magical thinking ;) A 32 bit float has less bits of manitssa than a 32 bit int does. Besides, those sliders have the actual resolution of the screen they are shown on. When you move them around, the most accurate you can get in positioning one is one pixel. You can get down to the resolution of the underlying int only by using arrow keys. So your approach is pretty much pointless. You should scale the sliders so that their sum equals their shared maximum value. In integers. That's the straightforward way to do it. Anything else is cargo cult. Jun 22, 2012 at 19:53
  • @KubaOber You're wrong. Imagine this situation, for example: slider 1 is changed by 1, then slider 2 would be changed by 1 and slider 3 by 0. A similar error happens for any odd-number changes. Repeat this many times and you get completely wrong results. I did try to make this without floats, and something similar to my explanation happened. Also, float in Python actually has 64 bits... and int is unlimited. Jun 22, 2012 at 20:00
  • 1
    @BlaXpirit How do I accept it? And I meant to say thanks to you and not to Kuba for supplying the answer. Jun 24, 2012 at 15:12
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You would have to connect the valueChanged signal of the sliders to a slot you define yourself. In this slot (function) you can implement the calculation of the new values of all sliders and use the setValue slot to apply the new values.

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