Your problem is because you aren't really taking advantage of object oriented programming properly.
All rows in your example call the same instance of the method contntDel
. This method uses self.contentDelete
which always contains a reference to the last row added.
What you need to do is separate out everything related to a row to a new class. When you add a row, create a new instance of this class and pass in the contentTabVBox
. That way each row (or instance of the new class you will write) will have it's own delete method.
Without a complete code example, I can't provide a complete solution, but this should give you a rough idea:
class MyRow(object):
def __init__(self,contentTabVBox, rows):
self.contentTabVBox = contentTabVBox
self.my_list_of_rows = rows
self.addContent()
def addContent(self):
# The code for your existing addContent method here
def contntDel(self):
# code from your existing contntDel function here
# also add (if Ok button clicked):
self.my_list_of_rows.remove(self)
class MyExistingClass(??whatever you have here normally??):
def __init__(....):
self.addContentButton = QtGui.QPushButton('Add')
self.addContentButton.clicked.connect(self.addContent)
self.my_list_of_rows = []
def addContent(self):
my_new_row = MyRow(self.contentTabVBox,self.my_list_of_rows)
# You mustsave a reference to my_new_row in a list or else it will get garbage collected.
self.my_list_of_rows.append(my_new_row)
Hope that helps!