Qt Reference Documentation

Contents

QML KeyNavigation Element

The KeyNavigation attached property supports key navigation by arrow keys. More...

This element was introduced in Qt 4.7.

Properties

Detailed Description

Key-based user interfaces commonly allow the use of arrow keys to navigate between focusable items. The KeyNavigation attached property enables this behavior by providing a convenient way to specify the item that should gain focus when an arrow or tab key is pressed.

The following example provides key navigation for a 2x2 grid of items:

 import QtQuick 1.0

 Grid {
     width: 100; height: 100
     columns: 2

     Rectangle {
         id: topLeft
         width: 50; height: 50
         color: focus ? "red" : "lightgray"
         focus: true

         KeyNavigation.right: topRight
         KeyNavigation.down: bottomLeft
     }

     Rectangle {
         id: topRight
         width: 50; height: 50
         color: focus ? "red" : "lightgray"

         KeyNavigation.left: topLeft
         KeyNavigation.down: bottomRight
     }

     Rectangle {
         id: bottomLeft
         width: 50; height: 50
         color: focus ? "red" : "lightgray"

         KeyNavigation.right: bottomRight
         KeyNavigation.up: topLeft
     }

     Rectangle {
         id: bottomRight
         width: 50; height: 50
         color: focus ? "red" : "lightgray"

         KeyNavigation.left: bottomLeft
         KeyNavigation.up: topRight
     }
 }

The top-left item initially receives focus by setting focus to true. When an arrow key is pressed, the focus will move to the appropriate item, as defined by the value that has been set for the KeyNavigation left, right, up or down properties.

Note that if a KeyNavigation attached property receives the key press and release events for a requested arrow or tab key, the event is accepted and does not propagate any further.

By default, KeyNavigation receives key events after the item to which it is attached. If the item accepts the key event, the KeyNavigation attached property will not receive an event for that key. Setting the priority property to KeyNavigation.BeforeItem allows the event to be used for key navigation before the item, rather than after.

If item to which the focus is switching is not enabled or visible, an attempt will be made to skip this item and focus on the next. This is possible if there are a chain of items with the same KeyNavigation handler. If multiple items in a row are not enabled or visible, they will also be skipped.

See also Keys attached property.

Property Documentation

left : Item

right : Item

up : Item

down : Item

tab : Item

backtab : Item

These properties hold the item to assign focus to when the left, right, up or down cursor keys, or the tab key are pressed.


priority : enumeration

This property determines whether the keys are processed before or after the attached item's own key handling.

  • KeyNavigation.BeforeItem - process the key events before normal item key processing. If the event is used for key navigation, it will be accepted and will not be passed on to the item.
  • KeyNavigation.AfterItem (default) - process the key events after normal item key handling. If the item accepts the key event it will not be handled by the KeyNavigation attached property handler.

tab : Item

backtab : Item

These properties hold the item to assign focus to when the Tab key or Shift+Tab key combination (Backtab) are pressed.