On OS X 10.9 with Qt 5.2 and the following application code
#include "mywindow.h"
#include <QApplication>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
QApplication a(argc, argv);
MyWindow w();
w.show();
return a.exec(); }
where MyWindow
derives from QMainWindow
and overwrites the closeEvent(QCloseEvent*)
method, this method is called when I close the application window (e.g. click the windows (x) close button), but it is not invoked when I close the application via the main Menu -> "Quit " or via the "CMD + Q" key shortcut.
From looking around the web and numerous question I got the impression that closing the application should invoke the closeEvent for all top level windows. Is this not the case, or is something going wrong here?
Edit: In addition to the above ways of closing the application, are there any other instances that I in general should handle that would result in QApplication::quit
rather than invoking the window's close
event? What about a system shutdown for example?
When handling a close
event, I'm confirming that the user really wants to quit and I make sure cleanup like writing back changed settings is happening. Should I maybe move cleanup / saving settings to the destructor instead and do the confirmation query in closeEvent
?