I am having troubles to display the icon of a QAction selected from the current icon theme. I made the ui with Qt designer and exported it with pyuic4 sample.ui > sample.py
. After setting the icon from the theme with self.actionSample.setIcon(QtGui.QIcon.fromTheme(_fromUtf8("document-open")))
, I get the following source code :
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
import sys
try:
_fromUtf8 = QtCore.QString.fromUtf8
except AttributeError:
_fromUtf8 = lambda s: s
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("MainWindow"))
MainWindow.resize(800, 600)
self.centralwidget = QtGui.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("centralwidget"))
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.statusbar = QtGui.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("statusbar"))
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.toolBar = QtGui.QToolBar(MainWindow)
self.toolBar.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("toolBar"))
MainWindow.addToolBar(QtCore.Qt.TopToolBarArea, self.toolBar)
self.actionSample = QtGui.QAction(MainWindow)
self.actionSample.setObjectName(_fromUtf8("actionSample"))
self.actionSample.setIcon(QtGui.QIcon.fromTheme(_fromUtf8("document-open")))
self.toolBar.addAction(self.actionSample)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
window = QtGui.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(window)
window.show()
app.exec_()
When I execute it, the toolbar does not display the icon 'document-open'. Is it a bug or am I doing something wrong ?
Thanks
The icon lookup process used by QIcon.fromTheme
is somewhat complex.
Icon themes are only directly supported on the X11 platform for the GNOME and KDE desktop environments. For other platforms/desktops, it will be necessary to either install a theme along with the application, or tweak the user's environment in various ways.
To find the current system theme for GNOME, Qt will query gconf (if the gtk style is available), and otherwise default to the "gnome" theme. For KDE, Qt will examine the kdeglobals
settings file(s), and otherwise default to "oxygen" (or "crystalsvg" for earlier versions of KDE). In addition, the "hicolor" theme can always be used as a fallback.
Once the system theme name has been determined, Qt will look for the directory containing the icons in various pre-determined places, which again depend on both the platform and desktop being used. On X11, this includes $HOME/.icons
and $XDG_DATA_DIRS/icons
. The only location common to all platforms/desktops is the resource path :/icons
.
Icon theme directories must include an index.theme
file, which (amongst other things) specifies the subdirectories that can contain icons. Only icon files with a png
or svg
extension are used.
The QIcon
class has some static methods which will show exactly where Qt is looking for themed icons:
>>> from PyQt4 import QtGui
>>> app = QtGui.QApplication([])
>>> for path in QtGui.QIcon.themeSearchPaths():
... print "%s/%s" % (path, QtGui.QIcon.themeName())
...
/home/ekhumoro/.icons/hicolor
/usr/local/share/icons/hicolor
/usr/share/icons/hicolor
:/icons/hicolor
If the "document-open" icon isn't being displayed, Qt is either looking in the "wrong" place, or the icon is missing altogether.
UPDATE:
As I said above: by default, Qt only supports GNOME and KDE on the X11 platform. It doesn't know anything about FluxBox WM, and so cannot detect the current icon theme. This means it will fall back to using a minimal "hicolor" theme, which may not have all the required icons.
One way to solve this issue, is to create a "hicolor" symlink that points to the theme you want to use. Ideally, this should go in the location that is first in Qt's list of search paths:
$ ln -s icon/theme/directory $HOME/.icons/hicolor
UPDATE 2:
Qt5 still only supports kde and gnome by default, but the Qt Platform Abstraction layer at least makes it possible to create custom theme plugins (LXQT is one desktop environment that takes advantage of this). There are also several more DE's that are now treated as gtk/gnome: X-CINNAMON, UNITY, MATE, XFCE and LXDE.