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I've been trying to close a QDialog window that is branching off of my main window. The following have not worked for me so far:

self.close()
QDialog.close()

I tried other commands such as exit and exec_() with no luck. The most common error I get is

[className] object has no attribute 'close'

# Creating our window
class Ui_MainWindow(object):

    # Sets up GUI
    def setupUi(self, MainWindow):

        [GUI CODE]      

    # Sets text for parts of GUI
    def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):

        [MORE GUI CODE]

    # Function handling screencap on click and metadata for filenames
    def cap_on_Click(arg1,arg2):

        popup = QDialog()
        popup_ui = Ui_Dialog()
        popup_ui.setupUi(popup)
        popup.show()
        sys.exit(popup.exec_())

The above is my main window

class Ui_Dialog(object):

    def setupUi(self, Dialog):

        [GUI CODE]

    def retranslateUi(self, Dialog):

        [MORE GUI CODE]

    def button_click(self, arg1):

        self.close()

The second block is the dialog window code. How do I close this dialog window?

2

4 Answers 4

7

First of all, sorry for the links related to C++, but Python has the same concept.

You can try using the reject or accept or done function to close the dialog box. By doing this, you're setting the return value appropriately (Rejected, Accepted or the one you specify as the argument).

All in all, you should try calling YourDialog.done(n) to close the dialog and return n and YourDialog.accept() or YourDialog.reject() when you want it accepted/rejected.

7
  • I've tried analogs like that, but for some reason my dialog isn't defined there.
    – C Snyder
    Jul 1, 2015 at 13:32
  • 1
    @CSnyder, it isn't defined where?
    – ForceBru
    Jul 1, 2015 at 14:28
  • In the Ui_Dialog class, which is where i try to call the self.close() function.
    – C Snyder
    Jul 1, 2015 at 17:38
  • 2
    @CSnyder, have you tried calling self.done() or something like this?
    – ForceBru
    Jul 2, 2015 at 16:47
  • 1
    @CSnyder: how are you supposed to call close() on Ui_Dialog if it inherits from object? The code generated with Qt Designer should stay unmodified. What you do is you have to use multiple inheritance and make your dialog inherit both from QDialog and (untampered with) Ui_Dialog. Then you have access both to what was generated and what ships with QDialog
    – z33k
    Jan 7, 2019 at 15:11
4

I guess the problem is that Ui_Dialog does not inherit QDialog, so reject(), accept() and done() is not defined. I think

class Ui_Dialog(object):

should be changed to

class Ui_Dialog(QDialog):

But I can not test it because minimal working example is not provided.

3
  • i got this right. but in my case, still it doesn't work using dialog.close() nor dialog.done().the window still open
    – greendino
    Jun 24, 2020 at 11:15
  • Please provide minimal, reproducible example.
    – cges30901
    Jun 25, 2020 at 12:31
  • Chances are that Ui_Dialog is automatically generated through pyuic or similar. You shouldn't manually edit that file. I found a good practise to just create a custom class that inherits the QWidget / QDialog (or analog) and Ui_Dialog
    – Buzz
    May 24, 2022 at 14:03
3

Since a QDialog is a QWidget, and a QWidget has the close() method, I don't understand how it can not work. You should never invoke popup.exec_() though, since it will happily require a lot of your code to be reentrant without you realizing it. It is unnecessary - you already have the application event loop running and on the call stack when cap_on_Click is executing.

After popup.show(), the dialog will be visible and usable until it gets accepted or rejected by the user. Hopefully your design for the dialog connects the button box's accepted() and rejected() signals to the dialog's accept() and reject() slots. That is the default behavior of a QDialog template provided with Qt Creator and perhaps Qt Designer as well, but you should check it by going into the signal/slot editor mode while viewing the Ui file.

2
  • 2
    Yeah, I don't understand how either. I can tell you however that by omitting popup.exec_(), my dialog window does not appear at all.
    – C Snyder
    Jul 1, 2015 at 13:35
  • @CSnyder Something else is broken, then. Your code as shown seems fine. Jul 1, 2015 at 18:09
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I know it's over 5months but I choose to drop this comment here, it might be of help to others tomorrow. To be able to close or cancel an opened dialog box, using only self.close would close the entire program. use this example:

self.dlg = QDialog(self)
self.dlg.setWindowTitle("Admin")
self.dlg.setGeometry(100,100,300,200)
btnBox = QDialogButtonBox()
btnBox.setStandardButtons(QDialogButtonBox.Ok | QDialogButtonBox.Cancel)

btnBox.rejected.connect(self.close1)
def close1():
    self.dlg.close()

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