I like using Qt to develop desktop applications, but I also like applications that I use to have dark mode. I could write a custom stylesheet for each of my applications, but how do I make sure they're consistent?
I could use a stylesheet like QBreezeStyle, but what if my application is only a few widgets? I want their stylesheets to be as minimal as possible.
Enter qstyleshaker
, a very basic tool for tree shaking Qt css files.
Usage: qstyleshaker [options]
Tree shaker for Qt Stylesheets
Options:
-h, --help Displays help on commandline options.
--help-all Displays help including Qt specific options.
-d, --directory <directory> Use source files in <directory>.
-f, --footer <footer> Print <footer>'s content at the bottom of
output.
-p, --prefix <prefix> Add <prefix> to *all* selectors.
-t, --top <header> Print <header>'s content at the top of output.
-s, --stylesheet <stylesheet> Use <stylesheet> as a source.
This tool works by analyzing the Qt header includes found in .cpp
and .h
files. It does not perform any analysis of your code. If, for example, your
code includes QTreeWidget
, then all QTreeView
rules are kept.
Aside from removing rules for classes not included, the tool provides simple merging for adjacent rules:
QComboBox | QComboBox,
{ | QPushButton
color: black; | {
} | color: black;
QPushButton | }
{ |
color: black; |
} |
QComboBox | QComboBox
{ | {
color: white; | background: black;
} | color: white;
QComboBox | }
{ |
background: black; |
} |
The tool is focused on not altering the resulting output, so non-adjacent rules are not merged together.
The tool is not recognize custom classes or selectors that work by identity.
I want my Qt projects to have a consistent style, but I don't want them to have stylesheet rules they don't use.