I am currently trying to create a main window that can interact with a dialog window, but I came across an issue I thought was interesting.
Basically, I'm trying to get test_1 to interact with test_2. When I test the code by itself, works, and does what it's supposed to do, but when I use Test_1 to interact with Test_2, the script regarding test 2 no longer has its full functionality.
Interestingly enough, when I go through the code, it's able to print "hello", and the function that I link to print("hello") isn't tied to a class. However, the function that doesn't work (the function where I just ask to insert "hello" into a text box) is tied to a class and that is the function that is not working. Also, the code works just fine if I use pdb within the Test_1.
Here is my code regarding test 1 and test 2 (you'll probably have to install PyQT5 if you haven't already):
Test_1
import test_2 as t2
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_Test_1(object):
def setupUi(self, Test_1):
Test_1.setObjectName("Test_1")
Test_1.resize(800, 600)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(Test_1)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(130, 120, 461, 281))
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
Test_1.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(Test_1)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 800, 21))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
Test_1.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(Test_1)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
Test_1.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(Test_1)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(Test_1)
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.connect_test_2)
def retranslateUi(self, Test_1):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
Test_1.setWindowTitle(_translate("Test_1", "MainWindow"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("Test_1", "Open Dialog"))
def connect_test_2(self):
#import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
self.t2 = QtWidgets.QDialog()
ui = t2.Ui_Test_2()
ui.setupUi(self.t2)
self.t2.show()
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_Test_1()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Test 2
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_Test_2(object):
def setupUi(self, Test_2):
Test_2.setObjectName("Test_2")
Test_2.resize(400, 300)
self.buttonBox = QtWidgets.QDialogButtonBox(Test_2)
self.buttonBox.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(290, 20, 81, 241))
self.buttonBox.setOrientation(QtCore.Qt.Vertical)
self.buttonBox.setStandardButtons(QtWidgets.QDialogButtonBox.Cancel|QtWidgets.QDialogButtonBox.Ok)
self.buttonBox.setObjectName("buttonBox")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(Test_2)
self.pushButton.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(20, 90, 341, 161))
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
self.textEdit = QtWidgets.QTextEdit(Test_2)
self.textEdit.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(20, 10, 104, 71))
self.textEdit.setObjectName("textEdit")
self.retranslateUi(Test_2)
#self.buttonBox.accepted.connect(Test_2.accept)
#self.buttonBox.rejected.connect(Test_2.reject)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(Test_2)
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.printHello)
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(dummyCode)
def printHello(self):
self.textEdit.setText("Hello")
def retranslateUi(self, Test_2):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
Test_2.setWindowTitle(_translate("Test_2", "Dialog"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("Test_2", "PushButton"))
def dummyCode():
print("Hello")
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_Test_2()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Related
I have two files, "main.py", "debugger.py".
On "debugger.py" I have a "textEdit" where I want to get/show messages.
On "main.py" I import and instantiate the class from "debugger.py" but instead of just sending/showing the messages, it opens the "debugger.py" window UI and shows the messages, i just need to send the message without opening the window, how can I do that?
"debugger.py".
import os, time
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
from PyQt5.QtGui import QTextCursor
class Debugger_MainWindow(object):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
#def print_text(self):
#self.txtEdit_debugger.insertPlainText('hi')
def Debugger_setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(800, 600)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.lbl_info = QtWidgets.QLabel(self.centralwidget)
self.lbl_info.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(90, 450, 451, 61))
self.lbl_info.setObjectName("lbl_info")
self.lbl_tittle = QtWidgets.QLabel(self.centralwidget)
self.lbl_tittle.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(280, 40, 56, 15))
self.lbl_tittle.setObjectName("lbl_tittle")
self.txtEdit_debugger = QtWidgets.QTextEdit(self.centralwidget)
#self.txtEdit_debugger.setEnabled(False)
self.txtEdit_debugger.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(70, 80, 481, 361))
self.txtEdit_debugger.setObjectName("txtEdit_debugger")
self.txtEdit_debugger.setReadOnly(True)
##Check box on/off
self.chkb_on_off_debugger = QtWidgets.QCheckBox(self.centralwidget)
self.chkb_on_off_debugger.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(90, 500, 30, 20))
self.chkb_on_off_debugger.setObjectName("chkb_on_off_debugger")
#self.chkb_on_off_debugger.stateChanged.connect(self.print_text)#Show logger messages
self.chkb_on_off_debugger.setCheckable(True)
self.lbl_on_off_debugger = QtWidgets.QLabel(self.centralwidget)
self.lbl_on_off_debugger.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(110, 500, 60, 20))
self.lbl_on_off_debugger.setObjectName("lbl_on_off_debugger")
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.lbl_info.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "This is read only mode. "))
self.lbl_tittle.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Debugger"))
self.lbl_on_off_debugger.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Show messages"))
self.lbl_on_off_debugger.adjustSize()
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Debugger_MainWindow()
ui.Debugger_setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
"main.py"
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import *
from PyQt5.QtCore import pyqtSlot, QThreadPool, QTimer
from PyQt5.QtGui import QColor, QKeySequence, QIcon, QTextCursor
from Debugger import Debugger_MainWindow
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
###### Methods
#this method opens a new window, i just want to send the message
def print_text(self):
self.ui_debugger = Debugger_MainWindow()
self.ui_debugger.Debugger_setupUi(MainWindow)
self.ui_debugger.txtEdit_debugger.insertPlainText('hi')
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(500, 500)
MainWindow.setStyleSheet(open("styles.qss", "r").read())
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
##Group box
self.gpb_spell_main = QtWidgets.QGroupBox(self.centralwidget)
self.gpb_spell_main.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(10, 5, 290, 230))
self.gpb_spell_main.setObjectName("gpb_spell_main")
self.gpb_spell_main.setCheckable(True)
self.gpb_spell_main.setChecked(False)
##Button
spell_main_color = QColor(255, 0, 255)
self.btn_spell_main = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.gpb_spell_main)
self.btn_spell_main.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(10, 35, 85, 27))
self.btn_spell_main.setObjectName("btn_spell_main")
self.btn_spell_main.clicked.connect(self.print_text)
#self.btn_spell_main.setEnabled(False)
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.gpb_spell_main.setTitle(_translate("HeallingWindow", "Spell Main"))
self.btn_spell_main.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Click Here"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Note: I couldn't fix my issue reading similar questions. PyQt5 - Show QDialog from a different class
I don't know if I understand problem but you may have to create new QtWidgets.QMainWindow() to create separated Debug Window. If you use existing MainWindow then it replaces widgets in existing window.
You may also set None to Debug Window in __init__ and later check if Debug Window is not None - to create only one window.
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.DebugWindow = None
def print_text(self):
if self.DebugWindow is None:
self.DebugWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
self.ui_debugger = Debugger_MainWindow()
self.ui_debugger.Debugger_setupUi(self.DebugWindow)
self.DebugWindow.show()
self.ui_debugger.txtEdit_debugger.insertPlainText('hi\n')
Other problem cam be when you close Debug Window because it will not opne it again. It may need to change code in Debug Window and assign function which will hide it instead of destroing it.
My question will be used in two .py:
main.py:
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import *
from PyQt5.QtCore import *
from PyQt5.QtGui import *
from tag_pivot import *
from mainWindow import Ui_MainWindow
import sys
a = 'tag_'
b = 'pivot_'
c = 'STP_'
d = '_'
e = 'MTD_Level'
f = '()'
g = a+b+c+d+e+f
print(g)
class MainApp(QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow):
def slot_method(self):
combo = self.comboBox.currentText()//combo is local variable as it is from self the GUI
combo2 = self.comboBox_2.currentText()
eval(a + b + combo + d + combo2 + f)
def __init__(self):
super(MainApp, self).__init__()
self.setupUi(self)
self.init_connections()
def init_connections(self):
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.slot_method)
def main():
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
ex = MainApp()
ex.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
mainWindow.py:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Form implementation generated from reading ui file 'mainWindow.ui'
#
# Created by: PyQt5 UI code generator 5.15.1
#
# WARNING: Any manual changes made to this file will be lost when pyuic5 is
# run again. Do not edit this file unless you know what you are doing.
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
import sys
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(800, 600)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.comboBox = QtWidgets.QComboBox(self.centralwidget)
self.comboBox.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(100, 160, 111, 51))
self.comboBox.setObjectName("comboBox")
self.comboBox.addItem("")
self.comboBox.addItem("")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(410, 152, 151, 51))
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
self.comboBox_2 = QtWidgets.QComboBox(self.centralwidget)
self.comboBox_2.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(88, 281, 151, 71))
self.comboBox_2.setObjectName("comboBox_2")
self.comboBox_2.addItem("")
self.comboBox_2.addItem("")
self.comboBox_2.addItem("")
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 800, 21))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.comboBox.setItemText(0, _translate("MainWindow", "STP_"))
self.comboBox.setItemText(1, _translate("MainWindow", "MM_"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "PushButton"))
self.comboBox_2.setItemText(0, _translate("MainWindow", "Intra_Level"))
self.comboBox_2.setItemText(1, _translate("MainWindow", "MTD_Level"))
self.comboBox_2.setItemText(2, _translate("MainWindow", "YTD_Level"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
my question is can I make the combo (come from self.comboBox.currentText()) from local variable to global variable as I want to assign the combo which is a string to another functions outside the class MainAPP. I am not sure how to make it happen, I assume others may have the same problem, so I post it here.
if I try to use ex.combo in main():
def main():
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
ex = MainApp()
gg = ex.combo
ex.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
the sys told me:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:/Users/Michael Su/Desktop/Michael_python/Tag_pivot/main.py", line 86, in <module>
main()
File "C:/Users/Michael Su/Desktop/Michael_python/Tag_pivot/main.py", line 80, in main
gg = ex.combo
AttributeError: 'MainApp' object has no attribute 'combo'
Process finished with exit code 1
Although I'm not sure why the tag_pivot part of the functions is necessary, if all you are trying to do is print specific values, why not print them directly from main instead of the long eval statement and different functions?
print(f"{c}{e}") # prints STP_MTD
Or if you prefer a function, specifically for printing:
def printer_function(*args):
print("".join(args))
This function can then be called from main and given any variables you want printed together. e.g.
printer_function(c, e) # prints STP_MTD
I hope this helps, but if printing is not the only function you had in mind, let me know.
This is a sample code with just a push button and a textedit, i need to write line x line using a loop in a textedit when button is clicked.
The problem is that i need to implement threads because without them the program crashes or it doesn't write line x line, but all together when the loop ends;
and i need to implement in my application a textedit that shows info while the program loads "something".
So my question is, how to rewrite this code using threads to write in textedit when button is clicked?
The method i should run when the button is clicked is "write"
it should work like a print inside a for loop , it would print not all at once
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(640, 480)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.textEdit = QtWidgets.QTextEdit(self.centralwidget)
self.textEdit.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(150, 220, 321, 71))
self.textEdit.setObjectName("textEdit")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(240, 100, 75, 23))
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 640, 21))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "PushButton"))
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.write)
def write(self):
string=""
for i in range(1000):
string="\n"+str(i)
self.textEdit.insertPlainText(string)
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
First of all it is recommended not to modify the class generated by Qt Designer so you must regenerate the file and assume that it is called mainwindow.py: pyuic5 your_file.ui -o mainwindow.py -x.
Considering the above, the logic is to generate the information in another thread and send it to the GUI to modify it:
main.py
import threading
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
from mainwindow import Ui_MainWindow
class WriterWorker(QtCore.QObject):
textChanged = QtCore.pyqtSignal(str)
def start(self):
threading.Thread(target=self._execute, daemon=True).start()
def _execute(self):
string = ""
for i in range(1000):
string = "\n"+str(i)
self.textChanged.emit(string)
class MainWindow(QtWidgets.QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(MainWindow, self).__init__(parent)
self.setupUi(self)
self.writer_worker = WriterWorker()
self.writer_worker.textChanged.connect(self.on_text_changed)
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.writer_worker.start)
#QtCore.pyqtSlot(str)
def on_text_changed(self, text):
self.textEdit.insertPlainText(text)
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
w = MainWindow()
w.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
I'm facing the problem with Threads. I'm displaying current CPU usage with progress bar and it seems to be working well but the performance of whole window is terrible. Can't even click the button without laggy behavior. Is there any simple solution to fix it?
Here is my main code
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
from PyQt5.QtCore import QThread, pyqtSignal
import progressBarUI
import sys
import sysnfo
class MainWindow(QtWidgets.QMainWindow, progressBarUI.Ui_MainWindow):
def __init__(self, parent = None):
super(MainWindow, self).__init__(parent)
self.setupUi(self)
self.threadclass = ThreadClass()
self.threadclass.start()
self.threadclass.signal.connect(self.updateProgressBar)
def updateProgressBar(self):
current_percentage = sysnfo.getCpuPercentage()
self.progressBar.setValue(current_percentage)
class ThreadClass(QThread):
signal = pyqtSignal(int)
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(ThreadClass, self).__init__(parent)
def run(self):
while True:
current_percentage = sysnfo.getCpuPercentage()
self.signal.emit(current_percentage)
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
mainAppWin = MainWindow()
mainAppWin.show()
app.exec_()
Here is sysnfo module:
import psutil as ps
def getCpuPercentage():
return ps.cpu_percent(interval=1)
And UI file (converted to .py file):
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(787, 203)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.progressBar = QtWidgets.QProgressBar(self.centralwidget)
self.progressBar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(370, 20, 381, 111))
self.progressBar.setProperty("value", 0)
self.progressBar.setObjectName("progressBar")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(20, 50, 151, 41))
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 787, 21))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Click me"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
When you use the "interval" parameter you are indicating that it measures the information during that time and calculates the average causing the execution of that function to take "interval" seconds, and the correct thing is to execute it in another thread, but you make the mistake of executing it too in the updateProgressBar method that lives in the main thread blocking it, instead use the information that sends you the signal:
#QtCore.pyqtSlot(int)
def updateProgressBar(self, percentage):
self.progressBar.setValue(percentage)
Code has been edited per requests
I have a program where one menu will link to another menu and then you can perform functions from there.
When I add a hide MainWindow function to the second window, so it goes into the background while you follow the prompts, it will crash, IF you run the whole script.
Ex: Run the main script, click on investigations and then click on any of the menu items.
If I run the script by itself, without going through the main menu, it will run with no issues.
The issue lies within the Mainwindow.hide(), because I can comment this out in the second menu- InvMenu, and I can run the program from the MainMenu and follow the prompts with no issues.
I'm not sure how to fix this. I've ran through quite a few things online and none seem to work.
Here's the code-
Test.py
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
from Test2 import *
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def ipDombtn(self):
self.window=QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
self.ui=Ui_MainWindow1()
self.ui.setup(self.window)
self.window.show()
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(412, 440)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.verticalLayout = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout(self.centralwidget)
self.verticalLayout.setObjectName("verticalLayout")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
self.verticalLayout.addWidget(self.pushButton)
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.ipDombtn)
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 412, 31))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Investigation"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Here is the second menu's code. It's set to call specific functions based on what they select. If I comment out the MainWindow.hide() I can run the MainMenu, select investigations and then click on one of the options and they work. If I run this code without running the main menu, and nothing commented out, it works just fine.
Is it an issue with two menus, even though they are renamed?
Test2.py
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_MainWindow1(object):
def exIpDomInv_clicked(self):
MainWindow1.hide()
print("You clicked a button...")
MainWindow1.show()
def setup(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(412, 440)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.verticalLayout = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout(self.centralwidget)
self.verticalLayout.setObjectName("verticalLayout")
self.exIpDomInv = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.exIpDomInv.setObjectName("exIpDomInv")
self.verticalLayout.addWidget(self.exIpDomInv)
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.Menu = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.Menu.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 412, 31))
self.Menu.setObjectName("Menu")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.Menu)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
self.exIpDomInv.clicked.connect(self.exIpDomInv_clicked)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "Investigation"))
MainWindow.setAccessibleName(_translate("MainWindow", "InvestigationMenu"))
self.exIpDomInv.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "External IP/ Domain Investigation"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow1 = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui2 = Ui_MainWindow1()
ui2.setup(MainWindow1)
MainWindow1.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Note that the program is broken does not help, you are probably using some IDE, many times the IDEs do not handle these types of errors correctly so I recommend you execute it in a CMD, if you do so you will get the following message:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/path/of/Test2.py", line 6, in exIpDomInv_clicked
MainWindow1.hide()
NameError: name 'MainWindow1' is not defined
Aborted (core dumped)
Well, more or less, it gives us an idea of the problem, it tells us that MainWindow1 is not defined, and this leads me to think that you are not clear about some concepts:
The expression if __name__ == "__main__": can have all the files but only the first one is observed so that the if __name__ == "__main__": of Test2.py will not run and therefore the MainWindow1 that you assume exists will not exist.
Classes are abstractions ie they describe a behavior of their objects, besides they only access the members of their scope, that is, it is like a black box, if the object is not defined within the class it can not be accessed, so if you want to access the Ui_MainWindow of Test.py you can not do it directly as it is, there are several methods to achieve it but it is based on the above.
On the other hand the classes that generate Qt Designer are recommended not to edit them because if you modify something in the .ui and recompile it will erase all the changes, besides they are not widgets so you have limitations such as overwriting of the methods. For more information read this.
Considering the above, I am going to divide it into several files:
ui_mainwindow1.py
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_MainWindow1(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(412, 440)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.verticalLayout = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout(self.centralwidget)
self.verticalLayout.setObjectName("verticalLayout")
self.exIpDomInv = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.exIpDomInv.setObjectName("exIpDomInv")
self.verticalLayout.addWidget(self.exIpDomInv)
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.Menu = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.Menu.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 412, 31))
self.Menu.setObjectName("Menu")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.Menu)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "Investigation"))
MainWindow.setAccessibleName(_translate("MainWindow", "InvestigationMenu"))
self.exIpDomInv.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "External IP/ Domain Investigation"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow1 = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui2 = Ui_MainWindow1()
ui2.setup(MainWindow1)
MainWindow1.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
ui_mainwindow.py
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui, QtWidgets
class Ui_MainWindow(object):
def setupUi(self, MainWindow):
MainWindow.setObjectName("MainWindow")
MainWindow.resize(412, 440)
self.centralwidget = QtWidgets.QWidget(MainWindow)
self.centralwidget.setObjectName("centralwidget")
self.verticalLayout = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout(self.centralwidget)
self.verticalLayout.setObjectName("verticalLayout")
self.pushButton = QtWidgets.QPushButton(self.centralwidget)
self.pushButton.setObjectName("pushButton")
self.verticalLayout.addWidget(self.pushButton)
MainWindow.setCentralWidget(self.centralwidget)
self.menubar = QtWidgets.QMenuBar(MainWindow)
self.menubar.setGeometry(QtCore.QRect(0, 0, 412, 31))
self.menubar.setObjectName("menubar")
MainWindow.setMenuBar(self.menubar)
self.statusbar = QtWidgets.QStatusBar(MainWindow)
self.statusbar.setObjectName("statusbar")
MainWindow.setStatusBar(self.statusbar)
self.retranslateUi(MainWindow)
QtCore.QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName(MainWindow)
def retranslateUi(self, MainWindow):
_translate = QtCore.QCoreApplication.translate
MainWindow.setWindowTitle(_translate("MainWindow", "MainWindow"))
self.pushButton.setText(_translate("MainWindow", "Investigation"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
MainWindow = QtWidgets.QMainWindow()
ui = Ui_MainWindow()
ui.setupUi(MainWindow)
MainWindow.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
main.py
from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
from ui_mainwindow1 import Ui_MainWindow1
from ui_mainwindow import Ui_MainWindow
class MainWindow1(QtWidgets.QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow1):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(MainWindow1, self).__init__(parent)
self.setupUi(self)
class MainWindow(QtWidgets.QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(MainWindow, self).__init__(parent)
self.setupUi(self)
self.other_window = MainWindow1()
self.pushButton.clicked.connect(self.other_window.show)
self.other_window.exIpDomInv.clicked.connect(self.hide)
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
w = MainWindow()
w.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
As you see the object other_window is in the same scope of the class so it can be accessed and therefore all the elements are defined. Also each file has its if __name__ == "__main__":, these serve to test the operation of each class, but only the one in the main.py will be executed, the others will be ignored.