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I'm using the Qt Designer.

I want to create a QVBoxLayout which will automatically expand to fill the whole window.

The layout of the QVBoxLayout remains fixed.

How can I cause the QVBoxLayout to expand and fill the entire window through the designer?

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5 Answers 5

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After creating your QVBoxLayout in Qt Designer, right-click on the background of your widget/dialog/window (not the QVBoxLayout, but the parent widget) and select Lay Out -> Lay Out in a Grid from the bottom of the context-menu. The QVBoxLayout should now stretch to fit the window and will resize automatically when the entire window is resized.

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    Actually, you do not need to create the Grid layout at all. Instead of creating a QVBoxLayout yourself, deselect all items and click on the background of the widget. Then select Lay Out -> Lay Out Vertically. Jan 12, 2011 at 20:57
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    @Michal Kottman: That only works at design time. It will not change the layout when the user resizes the window at run time.
    – Jay
    Feb 4, 2013 at 21:26
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    Both grid and vertical layout work for me at design and runtime.
    – AndiDog
    Feb 19, 2013 at 8:15
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    I wish to add a little detail: if you wish to add a self-stretching layout to a QTabWidget page, you actually cannot right-click on the background of the page, as as you would select the QTabWidget and not the relevant tab. You have to right click on the tab label as shown in the designer window, and then select Lay Out -> Lay Out in a Grid Jul 19, 2014 at 9:06
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    I find it really weird that this worked. I already put my whole set of widgets inside a QGridLayout and I still had to put that in another grid to get the auto-resize feature to work... Looking at both grids, I just can't see any difference between either that would explain why my existing grid would not resize. (P.S. I am looking at the XML and just can't understand why things fail like that.) Nov 2, 2014 at 6:40
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According to the documentation, there needs to be a top level layout set.

A top level layout is necessary to ensure that your widgets will resize correctly when its window is resized. To check if you have set a top level layout, preview your widget and attempt to resize the window by dragging the size grip.

You can set one by clearing the selection and right clicking on the form itself and choosing one of the layouts available in the context menu.

Qt layouts

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I've tried to find a "fit to screen" property but there is no such.

But setting widget's "maximumSize" to a "some big number" ( like 2000 x 2000 ) will automatically fit the widget to the parent widget space.

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    What happens with this technique on a MacBook Pro with Retina Display (2880x1800)? Nov 20, 2012 at 4:57
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    Just set it to the maximum number it will accept (which Designer shows me is 16777215) and it should work on any monitor size.
    – andreb
    Aug 17, 2013 at 21:17
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Once you have add your layout with at least one widget in it, select your window and click the "Update" button of QtDesigner. The interface will be resized at the most optimized size and your layout will fit the whole window. Then when resizing the window, the layout will be resized in the same way.

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  • I ment that when the user resizes the entire window, the vertical layout (and thus its content) will stretch to fit it. I don't care how it looks in the Qt Designer. Aug 16, 2010 at 13:37
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Set the horizontalPolicy & VerticalPolicy for the controls/widgets to "Preferred".

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