15

I am trying to draw basic shapes on a QGLWidget. I am trying to enable antialiasing to smooth out the lines, but it is not working.

This is what I am trying at the moment:

QGLWidget *widget = ui->renderWidget;

QPainter painter;

widget->makeCurrent();
glEnable(GL_MULTISAMPLE);
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);

painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing);
painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing);

painter.begin(widget);

However, anything drawn with this painter still has jagged edges. What else do I need to do?

3
  • Does your system support multisample framebuffers?
    – cmannett85
    Jun 10, 2012 at 20:14
  • Yes, it's windows 7, and I've gotten it to work on another Qt project that used QGLWidget without a QPainter, by just enabling GL_MULTISAMPLE.
    – Elliott
    Jun 10, 2012 at 20:19
  • The fact that it's Windows 7 is irrelevant, it's whether or not your GPU and drivers support them - but if another project on the same machine worked correctly then it must be OK. Your example seems to be hinting that you're trying to draw on the widget outside of a paintEvent(QPaintEvent* event), or is it just confusing pseudo-code!?
    – cmannett85
    Jun 11, 2012 at 6:41

4 Answers 4

18

I found the solution. When debugging a different issue, I found messages in my debug output to the effect that you can't set renderhints before the call to begin().

The following works:

QGLWidget *widget = ui->renderWidget;

QPainter painter;

widget->makeCurrent();
glEnable(GL_MULTISAMPLE);
glEnable(GL_LINE_SMOOTH);

painter.begin(widget);

painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing);
painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::HighQualityAntialiasing);
10

You can try to enable the antialiasing on the complete Widget :

QGLWidget::setFormat(QGLFormat(QGL::SampleBuffers));

1
  • 2
    Works perfectly. Note, you still need setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing).
    – Timmmm
    May 17, 2017 at 9:08
6

This question is quite old but I still found it on Google. You shouldn't use QGLWidget any more. Use the newer QOpenGLWidget. This renders the scene off-screen rather than creating a native OpenGL window which causes all sorts of issues with resizing layouts. This code works for me. Put it in your QGraphicsView constructor:

QOpenGLWidget* gl = new QOpenGLWidget;
QSurfaceFormat fmt;
fmt.setSamples(8);
gl->setFormat(fmt);
setViewport(gl);
setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing);
0
1

If you work on PyQt5, you will typically subclass QOpenGLWidget() to build your own GPU-powered widget. To turn on anti-aliasing, have a look at the code snippet below:

from PyQt5.QtWidgets import *
from PyQt5.QtGui import *
from PyQt5.QtCore import *

class MyFigureClass(QOpenGLWidget):
    def __init__(self, parent):
        super().__init__(parent)
        fmt = QSurfaceFormat()    # -╷
        fmt.setSamples(8)         #  > anti-aliasing
        self.setFormat(fmt)       # -╵
        [...]

    def paintEvent(self, event):
        qp = QPainter()
        qp.begin(self)
        qp.setRenderHint(QPainter.Antialiasing)
        [...]
        qp.end()

Note: Thank you @Timmmm for your answer. I found the PyQt5 solution when looking at your C++ code snippets.

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