I found a way to keep two windows anchored: when the user moves a window, the other follows, keeping its relative position to the moved one.
It is a bit of a hack, because it assumes that the event QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonPress
is sent when the user left clicks on the title bar, holding it pressed while he moves the window, and releasing it at the end, so that QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonRelease
is sent.
The idea is to use the QWidget::moveEvent
event handler of each window to update the geometry of the other, using QWidget::setGeometry
.
But the documentation states that:
Calling setGeometry() inside resizeEvent() or moveEvent() can lead to infinite recursion.
So I needed to prevent the moveEvent
handler of the windows which was not moved directly by the user, to update the geometry of the other.
I achieved this with result via QObject::installEventFilter
, intercepting the summentioned events.
When the user clicks on the title bar of WindowOne
to start a move operation, WindowOne::eventFilter
catches its QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonPress
and sets the public attribute WindowTwo::skipevent_two
to true
.
While the user is moving WindowOne
, WindowTwo::moveEvent
is called upon the setGeometry
operation, performed on WindowTwo
from WindowOne::moveEvent
.
WindowTwo::moveEvent
checks WindowTwo::skipevent_two
, and if it is true
, returns without performing a setGeometry
operation on WindowOne
which would cause infinite recursion.
As soon as the user releases the left mouse button, ending the window move operation, WindowOne::eventFilter
catches QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonRelease
and sets back the public attribute WindowTwo::skipevent_two
to false
.
The same actions are performed if the user clicks the titlebar of WindowTwo
, this time causing WindowOne::skipevent_one
attribute to be set to true
and preventing WindowOne::moveEvent
to perform any setGeometry
operation on WindowTwo
.
I believe this solution is far from being clean and usable. Some problems:
- I am not sure when and why
QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonRelease
and QEvent::NonClientAreaMouseButtonRelease
are dispatched, apart from the case considered above.
- When/if one window is resized without user interaction or without the proper mouse clicks from the user, probably everything will go the infinite recursion way.
- There is no guarantee that those mouse events will be dispatched the same way in the future.
- Free space for more...
Proof of concept:
https://github.com/Shub77/DockedWindows