3

I want a ListView to invert the order of its items, so that the most recent item is at the top. I tried to achieve this using verticalLayoutDirection: ListView.BottomToTop, but it makes the ListView fill up from the bottom (as to be expected, I guess).

I marked the actual bounds of said ListView in red. enter image description here

How can I invert the ListView's item order and still have it fill from top to bottom? The cleaner, the better.

As requested, a bit more info:

ListView
{
    id: theList

    anchors
    {
        left: parent.left
        top: theAboveList.bottom
        right: parent.right
        bottom: parent.bottom
    }

    model: theModel
    delegate: theDelegate {}
    verticalLayoutDirection: ListView.BottomToTop
    clip: true
}

The reason WHY I need it to be inverted, is so the delegate instances know when they are at the very bottom (I can do a index === 0 within the delegate), to set a certain state.

2
  • Well, it should be not that difficult to solve but really depends on your use case: how the list is populated, the model used and stuff like that. Just try to add some more info and the current code for the list.
    – BaCaRoZzo
    Feb 13, 2015 at 10:25
  • I updated the question with more info. Feb 13, 2015 at 10:59

4 Answers 4

2

If I understand you correctly, First idea came to my mind is to use models and manipulate model from C++ Qt side. But this task need more patience and gives little bit overhead.

Another way is to operate your model as typical JavaScript list -- fill it, and then manually reverse.

Code for this is quite simple:

function swap(a, b) {
    if (a < b) {
        move(a, b, 1)
        move (b-1, a, 1)
    } else if (a > b) {
        move(b, a, 1)
        move (a-1, b, 1)
    }
}

function reverse() {
    for (var i = 0; i < Math.floor(count/2); ++i) {
        swap(i, count-i-1)
    }
}

Here you can find source code for AdvancedListModel I wrote -- https://github.com/troyane/StackOverflow-pro/tree/master/AdvModel_qml.

2

Another solution would be to use the ListModel's insert method. Inserting a value in an already existing index does not squash the previous value. It shifts it.

Here's an example:

myModel.append({myValue: "Hello"})
myModel.insert(0, {myValue: "Goodbye"})

Output:

Goodbye
Hello
1

I've now solved it by setting the ListView's height-property to contentHeight. I originally wanted to avoid this solution due to possible layout issues (binding loops etc.), but it'll have to do for now.

1
  • This only works if the model is short enough that all the delegates fit into the view. Once contentHeight becomes larger than the parent of the ListView this falls apart. Did you devise a way to cope with this scenario?
    – Mark Ch
    Aug 26, 2017 at 7:37
1

Building on this other answer, but following it through so that it will work for any size of model, using a spacer in the header component to push the delegates up to the top if there are not enough to fill the view.

import QtQuick 2.7
import QtQuick.Controls 2.0
import QtQuick.Layouts 1.0

ApplicationWindow {
    visible: true
    width: 640
    height: 480

    property var theModel: 2

    Component {
        id: theDelegate
        Rectangle {
            height: 100
            border.width: 2
            border.color: "black"
            color: "red"
            width: ListView.view.width
            Text {
                width: parent.width
                text: index
                font.pointSize: 30
            }
        }
    }

    Item {
        id: theAboveList
        // component exists only to complete the example supplied in the question
    }

    ListView {
        id: theList

        anchors
        {
            left: parent.left
            top: theAboveList.bottom
            right: parent.right
            bottom: parent.bottom
        }

        model: theModel
        delegate: theDelegate
        verticalLayoutDirection: ListView.BottomToTop
        clip: true

        header: Item {}
        onContentHeightChanged: {
            if (contentHeight < height) {
                headerItem.height += (height - contentHeight)
            }
            currentIndex = count-1
            positionViewAtEnd()
        }
    }
}

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