If you are selecting the entire row, you can do this by changing the SelectionBehavior
of your widget. This will automatically select the entire row, instead of a single cell.
self.setSelectionBehavior(QtGui.QAbstractItemView.SelectRows)
After that is set, in your 'itemSelectionChanged' signal, you need to print the row for each item:
def __init__(self):
...
self.itemSelectionChanged.connect(self.selection_changed)
def selection_changed(self):
rows=[idx.row() for idx in self.selectionModel().selectedRows()]
print(rows) # or return rows
This will return the following for a table that looks like this (with this selection)
Shows a selection of:
[1, 2]
If you do not want to select every column using the SelectionBehavior
, you need to change your signal a bit. selectedRows
will only return a row if the entire row is selected. If you are selecting individual cells, but still only want the row, change your signal to this:
def selection_changed(self):
rows=[idx.row() for idx in self.selectionModel().selectedIndexes()]
rows = set(rows)
print(rows) # or return rows
This changes selectedRows
to selectedIndexes
. The important thing that you've noticed is that it will return an entry for every cell selected, even if they are on the same row. The solution to that is the line
rows = set(rows)
This will return only unique entries. Thus, the same selection as above returns
set([1,2])