BreezeStyleSheets
Configurable Breeze and BreezeDark-like stylesheets for Qt Applications.
BreezeStyleSheets is a set of beautiful light and dark stylesheets that render consistently across platforms, including high DPI screens. Each stylesheet is generated from a theme file and can be extended with a extension system, simplifying the generation custom stylesheets for your application. The stylesheets are comprehensively tested with most Qt widgets and widget properties, providing a consistent, stylish feel on any platform, including different operating systems, desktop environments, and Qt versions.
Table of Contents
- Gallery
- Customization
- Features
- Extending Stylesheets
- Installing
- Debugging
- Development Guide
- Known Issues and Workarounds
- License
- Contributing
- Acknowledgements
- Contact
Gallery
Breeze/BreezeDark
Example user interface using the Breeze and BreezeDark stylesheets side-by-side.
For an extensive view of screenshots of the theme, see the gallery.
Customization
It's easy to design your own themes using configure.py
. First, add the styles you want into theme, then run configure with a list of styles you want to include.
Theme
Here is a sample theme, with the color descriptions annotated. Please note that although there are nearly 40 possibilities, for most applications, you should use less than 20, and ~10 different hues.
// NOTE: This is a custom JSON file, where lines leading
// with `//` are removed. No other comments are valid.
{
// Main foreground color.
"foreground": "#eff0f1",
// Lighter foreground color for selected items.
"foreground-light": "#ffffff",
// Main background color.
"background": "#31363b",
// Alternate background color for styles.
"background:alternate": "#31363b",
// Main color to highlight widgets, such as on hover events.
"highlight": "#3daee9",
// Color for selected widgets so hover events can change widget color.
"highlight:dark": "#2a79a3",
// Alternate highlight color for hovered widgets in QAbstractItemViews.
"highlight:alternate": "#369cd1",
// Main midtone color, such as for borders.
"midtone": "#76797c",
// Lighter color for midtones, such as for certain disabled widgets.
"midtone:light": "#b0b0b0",
// Darker midtone, such as for the background of QPushButton and QSlider.
"midtone:dark": "#626568",
// Lighter midtone for separator hover events.
"midtone:hover": "#8a8d8f",
// Color for checked widgets in QAbstractItemViews.
"view:checked": "#334e5e",
// Hover background color in QAbstractItemViews.
// This should be fairly transparent.
"view:hover": "rgba(61, 173, 232, 0.1)",
// Background for a horizontal QToolBar.
"toolbar:horizontal:background": "#31363b",
// Background for a vertical QToolBar.
"toolbar:vertical:background": "#31363b",
// Background color for the corner widget in a QAbstractItemView.
"view:corner": "#31363b",
// Border color between items in a QHeaderView.
"view:header:border": "#76797c",
// Background color for a QHeaderView.
"view:header": "#31363b",
// Border color Between items in a QAbstractItemView.
"view:border": "#31363b",
// Background for QAbstractItemViews.
"view:background": "#1d2023",
// Background for widgets with text input.
"text:background": "#1d2023",
// Background for the currently selected tab.
"tab:background:selected": "#31363b",
// Background for non-selected tabs.
"tab:background": "#2c3034",
// Color for the branch/arrow icons in a QTreeView.
"tree": "#afafaf",
// Color for the chunk of a QProgressBar, the active groove
// of a QSlider, and the border of a hovered QSlider handle.
"slider:foreground": "#3daee9",
// Background color for the handle of a QSlider.
"slider:handle:background": "#1d2023",
// Color for a disabled menubar/menu item.
"menu:disabled": "#76797c",
// Color for a checked/hovered QCheckBox or QRadioButton.
"checkbox:light": "#58d3ff",
// Color for a disabled or unchecked/unhovered QCheckBox or QRadioButton.
"checkbox:disabled": "#c8c9ca",
// Color for the handle of a scrollbar. Due to limitations of
// Qt stylesheets, any handle of a scrollbar must be treated
// like it's hovered.
"scrollbar:hover": "#3daee9",
// Background for a non-hovered scrollbar.
"scrollbar:background": "#1d2023",
// Background for a hovered scrollbar.
"scrollbar:background:hover": "#76797c",
// Default background for a QPushButton.
"button:background": "#31363b",
// Background for a pressed QPushButton.
"button:background:pressed": "#454a4f",
// Border for a non-hovered QPushButton.
"button:border": "#76797c",
// Background for a disabled QPushButton, or fallthrough
// for disabled QWidgets.
"button:disabled": "#454545",
// Color of a dock/tab close icon when hovered.
"close:hover": "#b37979",
// Color of a dock/tab close icon when pressed.
"close:pressed": "#b33e3e",
// Default background color for QDockWidget and title.
"dock:background": "#31363b",
// Color for the float icon for QDockWidgets.
"dock:float": "#a2a2a2",
// Background color for the QMessageBox critical icon.
"critical": "#80404a",
// Background color for the QMessageBox information icon.
"information": "#406880",
// Background color for the QMessageBox question icon.
"question": "#634d80",
// Background color for the QMessageBox warning icon.
"warning": "#99995C"
}
Once you've saved your custom theme, you can then build the stylesheet, icons, and resource file with:
python configure.py --styles=dark,light,<custom> --resource custom.qrc
Then, you can use custom.qrc
, along with the generated icons and stylesheets in each folder, in place of breeze.qrc
for any style.
The --styles
command flag takes a comma-separated list of values, or all
, which will configure every theme present in the themes directory.
Generating Colors
As a reference point, see the pre-generated themes. In general, to create a good theme, modify only the highlight colors (blues, greens, purples) to a new color, such that the saturation and lightness stay the same (only the hue changes). For example, the color rgba(51, 164, 223, 0.5)
becomes rgba(164, 51, 223, 0.5)
.
Extensions
We also allow customizable extensions to extend the default stylesheets with additional style rules, using the colors defined in your theme. This also enables the integration of third-party Qt extensions/widgets into the generated stylesheets.
For example, to configure with extensions for the Advanced Docking System, run:
python configure.py --extensions=advanced-docking-system --resource custom.qrc
Like with styles, --extensions
takes a comma-separated list of values, or all
, which will add every extension present in the extensions directory. For a detailed introduction to creating your own extensions, see the extensions tutorial.
Features
- Complete stylesheet for all Qt widgets, including esoteric widgets like
QCalendarWidget
. - Customizable, beautiful light and dark themes.
- Cross-platform icon packs for standard icons.
- Extensible stylesheets: add your own extensions or rules and automatically configure them using the same configuration syntax.
Extensions
The supported extensions can be found in the extensions directory and include theme support for:
Extending Stylesheets
There are some limitations of using Qt stylesheets in general, which cannot be solved by stylesheets. To get more fine-grained style control, you should subclass QCommonStyle
:
class ApplicationStyle: public QCommonStyle
{
...
}
The limitations of stylesheets include:
- Using custom standard icons.
- Scaling icons with the theme size.
- QToolButton cannot control the icon size without also affecting the arrow size.
- Close and dock float icon sizes scale poorly with font size.
For an example of using QCommonStyle to override standard icons in a PyQt application, see standard_icons.py. An extensive reference can be found here. A reference of QStyle, and the default styles Qt provides can be found here.
Installing
Here are detailed instructions on how to install Breeze Style Sheets for a variety of build systems and programming languages.
Configuring
By default, BreezeStyleSheets comes with the dark
and light
themes pre-built. In order to build all pre-packaged themes including PyQt5 and PyQt6 support, run:
python configure.py --styles=all --extensions=all --pyqt6 \
--resource breeze.qrc --compiled-resource breeze_resources.py
All generated themes will be in the dist subdirectory, and the compiled Python resource will be in breeze_resouces.py
. Note that using the --compiled-resource
flag requires pyrcc5
to be installed.
CMake Installation
Using CMake, you can download, configure, and compile the resources as part part of the build process. The following configurations are provided by @ruilvo. First, save the following as BreezeThemes.cmake
# Setup Qt: this works with both Qt5 and Qt6
set(CMAKE_AUTOMOC ON)
set(CMAKE_AUTORCC ON)
set(CMAKE_AUTOUIC ON)
find_package(
QT NAMES Qt6 Qt5
COMPONENTS Core
REQUIRED)
find_package(
Qt${QT_VERSION_MAJOR}
COMPONENTS ${AE_REQUIRED_QT_COMPONENTS}
REQUIRED)
# -------------------
# Get Python to compile the stylesheets.
# Fetch the repository, configure, compile the stylesheets.
find_package(Python COMPONENTS Interpreter)
include(FetchContent)
set(FETCHCONTENT_QUIET
OFF
CACHE BOOL "Silence fetch content" FORCE)
FetchContent_Declare(
breeze_stylesheets
GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/Alexhuszagh/BreezeStyleSheets.git
GIT_TAG origin/main
GIT_PROGRESS ON
USES_TERMINAL_DOWNLOAD TRUE)
FetchContent_GetProperties(breeze_stylesheets)
if(NOT breeze_stylesheets_POPULATED)
FetchContent_Populate(breeze_stylesheets)
add_library(breeze_themes STATIC "${breeze_stylesheets_SOURCE_DIR}/dist/qrc/breeze.qrc")
add_custom_target(
run_python_breeze ALL
COMMAND ${Python_EXECUTABLE} configure.py --extensions=<EXTENSIONS>
--styles=<STYLES> --resource breeze.qrc
WORKING_DIRECTORY ${breeze_stylesheets_SOURCE_DIR}
BYPRODUCTS "${breeze_stylesheets_SOURCE_DIR}/dist/qrc/breeze.qrc"
COMMENT "Generating themes")
add_dependencies(breeze_themes run_python_breeze)
endif()
Next, make sure the path to breeze_themes.cmake
is in your module search path, and add the following to your CMakeLists.txt:
include(BreezeThemes)
add_executable(myapp WIN32 MACOSX_BUNDLE "main.cpp")
target_link_libraries(myapp PRIVATE Qt${QT_VERSION_MAJOR}::Widgets breeze_themes)
And then in your application start point, add the following:
int main()
{
// ...
QApplication app(argc, argv);
// Need to initialize the resource, since we're using an external
// build system and this isn't automatically handled by CMake.
Q_INIT_RESOURCE(breeze_themes);
QFile file(":/dark-green/stylesheet.qss");
file.open(QFile::ReadOnly | QFile::Text);
QTextStream stream(&file);
app.setStyleSheet(stream.readAll());
// ...
}
QMake Installation
Copy the contents of the dist/qrc
subdirectory into your project directory and add the qrc file to your project file.
For example:
TARGET = app
SOURCES = main.cpp
RESOURCES = breeze.qrc
To load the stylesheet in C++, load the file using QFile and read the data. For example, to load BreezeDark, run:
#include <QApplication>
#include <QFile>
#include <QTextStream>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
// set stylesheet
QFile file(":/dark/stylesheet.qss");
file.open(QFile::ReadOnly | QFile::Text);
QTextStream stream(&file);
app.setStyleSheet(stream.readAll());
// code goes here
return app.exec();
}
PyQt5 Installation
To compile the stylesheet for use with PyQt5, ensure you configure with the --compiled-resource
flag (which requires pyrcc5
installed). The compiled resource Python file now contains all the stylesheet data. To load and set the stylesheet in a PyQt5 application, import that file, load the contents using QFile and read the data. For example, to load BreezeDark, first configure using:
python configure.py --compiled-resource breeze_resources.py
Then load the stylesheet and run the application using:
from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
from PyQt5.QtCore import QFile, QTextStream
import breeze_resources
def main():
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
# set stylesheet
file = QFile(":/dark/stylesheet.qss")
file.open(QFile.ReadOnly | QFile.Text)
stream = QTextStream(file)
app.setStyleSheet(stream.readAll())
# code goes here
app.exec_()
PyQt6 Installation
Since pyrcc is no longer being maintained, using local Python paths is the preferable solution. For a detailed description on how to package these resources, see this StackOverflow answer.
First, package your code using setuptools. Make sure zip_safe
is off, so we can properly load the files from a search path, and include the necessary package directories to your MANIFEST.in
file.
from setuptools import setup
setup(
# Either option is valid here.
# Either use `package_data` with enumerating the values, or
# set `include_package_data=True`.
include_package_data=True,
package_data={
'breeze_theme': ['dist/pyqt6/*'],
},
zip_safe=False,
)
Then, you can import the resources as follows:
import importlib.resources
from Qt6 import QtWidgets, QtCore
from Qt6.QtCore import QFile, QTextStream
def main():
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
# set stylesheet
# Note that the search path name must be the theme name.
# dark => dark, light => light, dark-purple => dark-purple, ...
breeze_theme = importlib_resources.files('breeze_theme.dark')
QtCore.QDir.addSearchPath('dark', breeze_theme)
file = QFile("dark:stylesheet.qss")
file.open(QFile.OpenModeFlag.ReadOnly | QFile.OpenModeFlag.Text)
stream = QTextStream(file)
app.setStyleSheet(stream.readAll())
# code goes here
app.exec()
Debugging
Have an issue with the styles? Here's a few suggestions, prior to filing a bug report:
- Modified the application font? Make sure you do before setting the application stylesheet.
- Modified the application style? Make sure you do after you creating a
QApplication instance
but before you show the window or add widgets.
Development Guide
Configuring
To configure the assets and the stylesheets, run python configure.py
. To compile the assets and stylesheets for PyQt5, ensure pyrcc5
is installed and run:
python configure.py --compiled-resource breeze_resources.py
Testing
The unittest suite is ui.py. By default, the suite runs every test, so to test changes to a specific widget, pass the --widget $widget
flag. To test other configurations, see the options for --stylesheet
, --widget
, --font-size
, and --font-family
, and then run the tests with the complete UI in widgets.py. If the widget you fixed the style for does not exist in the test suite or widgets.py, please add it.
# Test all widgets
$ python test/ui.py --stylesheet $theme
# Test only a single widget.
$ python test/ui.py --widget $widget --stylesheet $theme
# Get the help options.
$ python test/ui.py --help
usage: ui.py [-h] [--widget WIDGET] [--stylesheet STYLESHEET] [--style STYLE]
[--font-size FONT_SIZE] [--font-family FONT_FAMILY] [--width WIDTH]
[--height HEIGHT] [--alignment ALIGNMENT] [--compress] [--scale SCALE] [--pyqt6]
[--use-x11]
Configurations for the Qt application.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--widget WIDGET widget to test. can provide `all` to test all widgets
--stylesheet STYLESHEET
stylesheet name (`dark`, `light`, `native`, ...)
--style STYLE application style (`Fusion`, `Windows`, `native`, ...)
--font-size FONT_SIZE
font size for the application
--font-family FONT_FAMILY
the font family
--width WIDTH the window width
--height HEIGHT the window height
--alignment ALIGNMENT
the layout alignment
--compress add stretch on both sides
--scale SCALE scale factor for the UI
--pyqt6 use PyQt6 rather than PyQt5.
--use-x11 force the use of x11 on compatible systems
--print-tests print all available tests (widget names).
# Get a complete list of available tests.
$ python test/ui.py --print-tests
aero_wizard
all_focus_tree
alpha_colordialog
...
wizard
yes_button
To see the complete list of Qt widgets covered by the unittests, see Test Coverage.
Distribution Files
When pushing changes, only the light
and dark
themes should be configured, without any extensions. To reset the built resource files to the defaults (this requires pyrcc5
to be installed), run:
python configure.py --clean --pyqt6 \
--compiled-resource breeze_resources.py
If no changes are being made to the icons or stylesheets, you may want to ensure that the dist
directory is assumed to be unchanged in git, no longer tracking changes to these files. You can turn tracking distribution files off with:
python vcs.py --no-track-dist
To turn back on tracking, run:
python vcs.py --track-dist
Git Ignore
Note that the .gitignore
is auto-generated via vcs.py
, and the scripts to track or untrack distribution files turn off .gitignore
tracking. Any changes should be made in vcs.py
, and ensure that .gitignore
is tracked, and commit any changes:
python vcs.py --track-gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m "..."
Known Issues and Workarounds
For known issues and workarounds, see issues.
License
MIT, see license.
Contributing
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in BreezeStyleSheets by you shall be licensed under the MIT license without any additional terms or conditions.
Acknowledgements
BreezeStyleSheets is a fork of QDarkStyleSheet. Some of the icons are modified from Material UI and Material Design Icons (both of which use an Apache 2.0 license), and are redistributed under the MIT license.
Contact
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: KardOnIce