Here's another possible solution, calling the existing QApplication.widgetAt
multiple times.
import sys
from PySide import QtGui, QtCore
def widgets_at(pos):
"""Return ALL widgets at `pos`
Arguments:
pos (QPoint): Position at which to get widgets
"""
widgets = []
widget_at = QtGui.qApp.widgetAt(pos)
while widget_at:
widgets.append(widget_at)
# Make widget invisible to further enquiries
widget_at.setAttribute(QtCore.Qt.WA_TransparentForMouseEvents)
widget_at = QtGui.qApp.widgetAt(pos)
# Restore attribute
for widget in widgets:
widget.setAttribute(QtCore.Qt.WA_TransparentForMouseEvents, False)
return widgets
Example
class Overlay(QtGui.QWidget):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(Overlay, self).__init__(parent)
self.setAttribute(QtCore.Qt.WA_StyledBackground)
self.setStyleSheet("QWidget { background-color: rgba(0, 255, 0, 50) }")
def mousePressEvent(self, event):
pos = QtGui.QCursor.pos()
print [w.objectName() for w in widgets_at(pos)]
return super(Overlay, self).mousePressEvent(event)
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
window = QtGui.QWidget()
window.setObjectName("Window")
window.setFixedSize(200, 100)
button = QtGui.QPushButton("Button 1", window)
button.setObjectName("Button 1")
button.move(10, 10)
button = QtGui.QPushButton("Button 2", window)
button.setObjectName("Button 2")
button.move(50, 15)
overlay = Overlay(window)
overlay.setObjectName("Overlay")
overlay.setFixedSize(window.size())
window.show()
app.exec_()
Here is some output.
[u'Overlay', u'Window'] # Clicking an empty area
[u'Overlay', u'Button 1', u'Window'] # Button 1
[u'Overlay', u'Button 2', u'Window'] # Button 2
[u'Overlay', u'Button 2', u'Button 1', u'Window'] # Overlap
It looks like the results are O(1), with the added benefit of returning each widget in the order in which they overlap. It does however cause overlapping windows to flash (Windows 8) as their attribute is changed and restored.