21

I have a QMainWindow in a Qt application. When I close it I want it to store its current restore size (the size of the window when it is not maximized). This works well when I close the window in restore mode (that is, not maximized). But if I close the window if it is maximized, then next time i start the application and restore the application (because it starts in maximized mode), then it does not remember the size it should restore to. Is there a way to do this?

4 Answers 4

20

I found that a combination of all the previous answers here was necessary on Fedora 14. Be careful not to save the size and position when the window is maximized!

void MainWindow::writePositionSettings()
{
    QSettings qsettings( "iforce2d", "killerapp" );

    qsettings.beginGroup( "mainwindow" );

    qsettings.setValue( "geometry", saveGeometry() );
    qsettings.setValue( "savestate", saveState() );
    qsettings.setValue( "maximized", isMaximized() );
    if ( !isMaximized() ) {
        qsettings.setValue( "pos", pos() );
        qsettings.setValue( "size", size() );
    }

    qsettings.endGroup();
}

void MainWindow::readPositionSettings()
{
    QSettings qsettings( "iforce2d", "killerapp" );

    qsettings.beginGroup( "mainwindow" );

    restoreGeometry(qsettings.value( "geometry", saveGeometry() ).toByteArray());
    restoreState(qsettings.value( "savestate", saveState() ).toByteArray());
    move(qsettings.value( "pos", pos() ).toPoint());
    resize(qsettings.value( "size", size() ).toSize());
    if ( qsettings.value( "maximized", isMaximized() ).toBool() )
        showMaximized();

    qsettings.endGroup();
}

In main(), the position settings are read before showing the window the first time...

MainWindow mainWindow;
mainWindow.readPositionSettings();
mainWindow.show();

...and these event handlers update the settings as necessary. (This causes a writes to the settings file for every mouse movement during the move and resize which is not ideal.)

void MainWindow::moveEvent( QMoveEvent* )
{
    writePositionSettings();
}

void MainWindow::resizeEvent( QResizeEvent* )
{
    writePositionSettings();
}

void MainWindow::closeEvent( QCloseEvent* )
{
    writePositionSettings();
}

Still, the vertical component of the position is not quite right, it seems to be ignoring the height of the window title bar... if anyone knows how to deal with that let me know :)

2
  • great answer - this code works like a charm on Mac OSX! :-) doing a few settings up front removes code duplication when accessing settings from many places, see developer.qt.nokia.com/doc/qt-4.8/qsettings.html#basic-usage
    – ssc
    Feb 16, 2012 at 1:29
  • I tried to get it right but didn't bother with spending so much time on it, until I found your sample code which works like a charm. :)
    – Devolus
    May 1, 2014 at 14:37
18

Use the QWidget::saveGeometry feature to write the current settings into the registry.(The registry is accessed using QSettings). Then use restoreGeometry() upon startup to return to the previous state.

3
  • 2
    If you also want to save the positions and status of dockwidgets, not just size, you should use QWidget::saveState()
    – mtbkrdave
    Feb 28, 2011 at 13:56
  • 1
    Unfortunately, this way doesn't work for a case when you have a maximized window on a second monitor (at least in Windows 7). The geometry after restoring maximizes the window on the first monitor. I use the approach similar to iforce2d's answer to solve this. Apr 11, 2013 at 8:56
  • 1
    Note: there is no QWidget::saveState() any more. At least, it isn't in Qt 4.8 or 5.7. saveState() appears to only be present on QMainWindow.
    – Len
    Jan 24, 2017 at 1:01
4

I've encountered this problem as well.

What you can do: in addition to the window's size, save whether it's maximized or not (QWidget::isMaximized()).

Then next time you start the application, first set the size (QWidget::resize()) and then maximize it if appropriate (QWidget::showMaximized()). When it's restored, it should return to the correct size.

1
  • Works fine for me no matter if maximized or not. Since the question is 5 years old, I assume it's because of Qt updates. Aug 4, 2013 at 18:08
0

The image at http://qt-project.org/doc/qt-4.8/application-windows.html shows, that geometry.x() and geometry.y() are not equal to x() and y(), which are the same as pos().

In my case, I use:

x()
y()
width()
height()

and restore these successfully with:

move()
resize()

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.