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09:11
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Q: PyQt: How to reset the cursor to whatever it's hovering over

Michael ClerxVery small issue: I've written a small IDE with a text editing widget based on a QPlainTextEdit. When you move the mouse over it the cursor becomes a caret/text cursor as expected. If you hit F5 the window is disabled and a small script runs after which the window is re-enabled and the text area...

Can't reproduce the bug on Qt 4.8.6, PyQt 4.11.3, Python 2.7, Windows 7. Seems to be Linux specific. Here is some things you can try to bypass this bug. First, try changing the entire app cursor with QtGui.QApplication.setOverrideCursor(QtGui.QCursor(Qt.WaitCursor)) when you call action_run(). When it's over, restore to your original mouse cursor with QtGui.QApplication.restoreOverrideCursor().
Secondly, when creating your UI, does self._editor.setCursor(Qt.UpArrowCursor) changes anything? On my computer, this is not working as I expect, the cursor is only changed for the "borders" of the widget. I suspect QPlainTextEdit to overwrite the mouse cursor on the editor. However, when I create the same UI in Qt Designer and change the cursor in it, the mouse cursor is properly overwrited, weird. You can restore the original cursor with self._editor.unsetCursor().
Thanks for the feedback. Using an override cursor works fine, but it then "restores" the cursor back to the wrong cursor shape (an arrow not a caret).
self._editor.setCursor() works as you describe: only at the very edges of the editor field.
Mhhh, I'll look at it a bit more to see if there is no other way to fix this.
Found this in PySide doc (PySide doc is far superior than PyQt's one): The shape of the mouse cursor on a PySide.QtGui.QPlainTextEdit is Qt.IBeamCursor by default. It can be changed through the PySide.QtGui.QAbstractScrollArea.viewport() ‘s cursor property. Maybe an interesting track to follow.
Ok, what about: self._editor.viewport().setCursor(Qt.UpArrowCursor) ? First try using it in your UI creation without the global QApplication mouse cursor overwrite. If it's not working as expected, try mixing everything.
Yup, that changes the cursor properly. The original bug still stands though :-)
Here is my full script : pastebin.com/FD14ests
09:37
After running, it still only changes the cursor after you move it off & back on to the editor area.
With or without the override cursor, no difference
Interestingly, the same happens in PySide
Maybe I'll just report this as a bug...
Sorry, got busy at work
09:55
An other test: pastebin.com/Y709fRS4
Implemented a mouse move event which is triggered everytime you move your mouse over the editor.
I'm running out of idea to be honest. Report this as a bug, maybe you'll have an answer.
Cheers, thanks for the help!
You're welcome

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