Question

I'm trying to develop a custom QProgressBar that will look like the following image :

enter image description here

I created a class that extends QProgressBar and implemented the paintEvent() :

void CircularProgressBar::paintEvent(QPaintEvent*) {

int progress = this->value();
int progressInDegrees = (double)(progress*360)/100;

int barWidth = 20;

QPainter painter(this);
painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing, true);

painter.setPen(QPen(Qt::black, barWidth, Qt::SolidLine,Qt::RoundCap));

painter.drawArc(barWidth/2, barWidth/2, this->width() - barWidth, this->height() - barWidth,
                90*16, progressInDegrees*-16);}

This works great to draw the circular progress bar, but I'm having trouble with the linear gradient color of the bar. I tried creating a QPen with a QLinearGradient object and I tried setting the QPainter brush to a QLinearGradient object, but neither strategy worked. Is it possible to draw an arc with QPainter that has a linear gradient color?

Was it helpful?

Solution

I know this is an old question but I came across it some days ago and I think I have a solution. What you want is to create a conical gradient and clip the disk you want to use as circular loading bar. Here is an example:

widget.h:

#ifndef WIDGET_H
#define WIDGET_H

#include <QWidget>

class QPaintEvent;

class Widget : public QWidget
{
    Q_OBJECT

public:
    explicit Widget(QWidget *parent = 0);
    ~Widget();

    void setLoadingAngle(int loadingAngle);
    int loadingAngle() const;

    void setDiscWidth(int width);
    int discWidth() const;

protected:
    void paintEvent(QPaintEvent *);

private:
    int m_loadingAngle;
    int m_width;
};

#endif // WIDGET_H

widget.cpp:

#include "widget.h"

#include <QPaintEvent>
#include <QPainter>
#include <QConicalGradient>
#include <QPen>

Widget::Widget(QWidget *parent) :
    QWidget(parent),
    m_loadingAngle(0),
    m_width(0)
{
}

Widget::~Widget()
{
}

void Widget::setLoadingAngle(int loadingAngle)
{
    m_loadingAngle = loadingAngle;
}

int Widget::loadingAngle() const
{
    return m_loadingAngle;
}

void Widget::setDiscWidth(int width)
{
    m_width = width;
}

int Widget::discWidth() const
{
    return m_width;
}

void Widget::paintEvent(QPaintEvent *)
{
    QRect drawingRect;
    drawingRect.setX(rect().x() + m_width);
    drawingRect.setY(rect().y() + m_width);
    drawingRect.setWidth(rect().width() - m_width * 2);
    drawingRect.setHeight(rect().height() - m_width * 2);

    QPainter painter(this);
    painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing);

    QConicalGradient gradient;
    gradient.setCenter(drawingRect.center());
    gradient.setAngle(90);
    gradient.setColorAt(0, QColor(178, 255, 246));
    gradient.setColorAt(1, QColor(5, 44, 50));

    int arcLengthApproximation = m_width + m_width / 3;
    QPen pen(QBrush(gradient), m_width);
    pen.setCapStyle(Qt::RoundCap);
    painter.setPen(pen);
    painter.drawArc(drawingRect, 90 * 16 - arcLengthApproximation, -m_loadingAngle * 16);
}

main.cpp:

#include "widget.h"
#include <QApplication>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QApplication a(argc, argv);

    Widget w;
    w.setDiscWidth(20);
    w.setLoadingAngle(270);
    w.show();

    return a.exec();
}

And the result is:

enter image description here

Of course, it is not the complete and exact solution but I think it is everything you need to know in order to achieve what you want. The rest are details not hard to implement.

OTHER TIPS

This solution is not exactly what you're after; the gradient goes from top to bottom, rather than around the circle:

#include <QtWidgets>

class Widget : public QWidget
{
public:
    Widget() {
        resize(200, 200);
    }

    void paintEvent(QPaintEvent *) {
        QPainter painter(this);
        painter.setRenderHint(QPainter::Antialiasing);

        const QRectF bounds(0, 0, width(), height());
        painter.fillRect(bounds, "#1c1c1c");

        QPen pen;
        pen.setCapStyle(Qt::RoundCap);
        pen.setWidth(20);

        QLinearGradient gradient;
        gradient.setStart(bounds.width() / 2, 0);
        gradient.setFinalStop(bounds.width() / 2, bounds.height());
        gradient.setColorAt(0, "#1c1c1c");
        gradient.setColorAt(1, "#28ecd6");

        QBrush brush(gradient);
        pen.setBrush(brush);
        painter.setPen(pen);

        QRectF rect = QRectF(pen.widthF() / 2.0, pen.widthF() / 2.0, width() - pen.widthF(), height() - pen.widthF());
        painter.drawArc(rect, 90 * 16, 0.65 * -360 * 16);
    }
};

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QApplication app(argc, argv);

    Widget w;
    w.show();

    return app.exec();
}

However, it is an arc with a linear gradient! :p

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