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Printing with Qt
Qt provides extensive cross-platform support for printing. Using the printing systems on each platform, Qt applications can print to attached
printers and across networks to remote printers. Qt's printing system also enables PostScript and PDF files to be generated, providing the
foundation for basic report generation facilities.

Classes Supporting Printing


The following classes support the selecting and setting up of printers and printing output.

QAbstractPrintDialog Base implementation for print dialogs used to configure printers

QPageSetupDialog Configuration dialog for the page-related options on a printer

QPrintDialog Dialog for specifying the printer's configuration

QPrintEngine Defines an interface for how QPrinter interacts with a given printing subsystem

QPrintPreviewDialog Dialog for previewing and configuring page layouts for printer output

QPrintPreviewWidget Widget for previewing page layouts for printer output

QPrinter Paint device that paints on a printer

QPrinterInfo Gives access to information about existing printers

Paint Devices and Printing


In Qt, printers are represented by QPrinter, a paint device that provides functionality specific to printing, such as support for multiple pages and
double-sided output. As a result, printing involves using a QPainter to paint onto a series of pages in the same way that you would paint onto a
custom widget or image.

Creating a QPrinter

Although QPrinter objects can be constructed and set up without requiring user input, printing is often performed as a result of a request by the
user; for example, when the user selects the File|Print... menu item in a GUI application. In such cases, a newly-constructed QPrinter object is
supplied to a QPrintDialog, allowing the user to specify the printer to use, paper size, and other printing properties.
QPrinter printer;

QPrintDialog *dialog = new QPrintDialog(&printer, this);


dialog->setWindowTitle(tr("Print Document"));
if (editor->textCursor().hasSelection())
dialog->addEnabledOption(QAbstractPrintDialog::PrintSelection);
if (dialog->exec() != QDialog::Accepted)
return;

It is also possible to set certain default properties by modifying the QPrinter before it is supplied to the print dialog. For example, applications
that generate batches of reports for printing may set up the QPrinter to write to a local file by default rather than to a printer.

Painting onto a Page


Once a QPrinter object has been constructed and set up, a QPainter can be used to perform painting operations on it. We can construct and
set up a painter in the following way:
QPrinter printer(QPrinter::HighResolution);
printer.setOutputFileName("print.ps");
QPainter painter;
painter.begin(&printer);

for (int page = 0; page < numberOfPages; ++page) {

// Use the painter to draw on the page.


if (page != lastPage)
printer.newPage();
}

painter.end();

Since the QPrinter starts with a blank page, we only need to call the newPage() function after drawing each page, except for the last page.

The document is sent to the printer, or written to a local file, when we call end().

Coordinate Systems

QPrinter provides functions that can be used to obtain information about the dimensions of the paper (the paper rectangle) and the dimensions
of the printable area (the page rectangle). These are given in logical device coordinates that may differ from the physical coordinates used by
the device itself, indicating that the printer is able to render text and graphics at a (typically higher) resolution than the user's display.

Although we do not need to handle the conversion between logical and physical coordinates ourselves, we still need to apply transformations
to painting operations because the pixel measurements used to draw on screen are often too small for the higher resolutions of typical printers.

Printer and Painter Coordinate Systems

The paperRect() and pageRect() functions provide information about the


size of the paper used for printing and the area on it that can be painted
on.

The rectangle returned by pageRect() usually lies inside the rectangle


returned by paperRect(). You do not need to take the positions and sizes
of these area into account when using a QPainter with a QPrinter as the
underlying paint device; the origin of the painter's coordinate system will
coincide with the top-left corner of the page rectangle, and painting
operations will be clipped to the bounds of the drawable part of the
page.

The paint system automatically uses the correct device metrics when painting text but, if you need to position text using information obtained
from font metrics, you need to ensure that the print device is specified when you construct QFontMetrics and QFontMetricsF objects, or ensure
that each QFont used is constructed using the form of the constructor that accepts a QPaintDevice argument.

Printing Widgets
To print a widget, you can use the QWidget::render() function. As mentioned, the printer's resolution is usually higher than the screen resolution,
so you will have to scale the painter. You may also want to position the widget on the page. The following code sample shows how this may
look.
QPainter painter;
painter.begin(&printer);
double xscale = printer.pageRect().width()/double(myWidget->width());
double yscale = printer.pageRect().height()/double(myWidget->height());
double scale = qMin(xscale, yscale);
painter.translate(printer.paperRect().x() + printer.pageRect().width()/2,
printer.paperRect().y() + printer.pageRect().height()/2);
painter.scale(scale, scale);
painter.translate(-width()/2, -height()/2);

myWidget->render(&painter);

This will center the widget on the page and scale it so that it fits the page.

Printing from Complex Widgets


Certain widgets, such as QTextEdit and QGraphicsView, display rich content that is typically managed by instances of other classes, such as
QTextDocument and QGraphicsScene. As a result, it is these content handling classes that usually provide printing functionality, either via a
function that can be used to perform the complete task, or via a function that accepts an existing QPainter object. Some widgets provide
convenience functions to expose underlying printing features, avoiding the need to obtain the content handler just to call a single function.

The following table shows which class and function are responsible for printing from a selection of different widgets. For widgets that do not
expose printing functionality directly, the content handling classes containing this functionality can be obtained via a function in the
corresponding widget's API.

Widget Printing function Accepts


QGraphicsView QGraphicsView::render() QPainter
QSvgWidget QSvgRenderer::render() QPainter
QTextEdit QTextDocument::print() QPrinter
QTextLayout QTextLayout::draw() QPainter
QTextLine QTextLine::draw() QPainter

QTextEdit requires a QPrinter rather than a QPainter because it uses information about the configured page dimensions in order to insert
page breaks at the most appropriate places in printed documents.

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