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400

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3

I create an instance of QDialog and on the left of 'x' (close) button i have also '?' button. How I can disable that '?' ?

+2  A: 

From the Qt 4.6 QDialog documentation:

QDialog::QDialog ( QWidget * parent = 0, Qt::WindowFlags f = 0 )

Constructs a dialog with parent parent.

A dialog is always a top-level widget, but if it has a parent, its default location is centered on top of the parent. It will also share the parent's taskbar entry.

The widget flags f are passed on to the QWidget constructor. If, for example, you don't want a What's This button in the title bar of the dialog, pass Qt::WindowTitleHint | Qt::WindowSystemMenuHint in f.

See also QWidget::setWindowFlags().

http://doc.qt.nokia.com/4.6/qdialog.html#QDialog

Matias Valdenegro
For QDialog Qt::WindowTitleHint | Qt::WindowSystemMenuHint flags cause an abnormal behaviour.
Narek
A: 

If you just want to disable the button, you can call setEnabled(bool), but I doubt that's what's being asked.

If you want to remove that button, see below:

QDialog is intended to use a QDialogButtonBox as the buttons that show up on the dialog. You can use accessors available in QDialogButtonBox in order to disable the buttons you don't want (as well as enable others).

For example (from the documentation linked to above):

findButton = new QPushButton(tr("&Find"));
findButton->setDefault(true);

moreButton = new QPushButton(tr("&More"));
moreButton->setCheckable(true);
moreButton->setAutoDefault(false);

buttonBox = new QDialogButtonBox(Qt::Vertical);
buttonBox->addButton(findButton, QDialogButtonBox::ActionRole);
buttonBox->addButton(moreButton, QDialogButtonBox::ActionRole);

If you're not aware of the button box, I'd guess that designer automatically added it for you and it should have a name that makes it accessible. There should also be properties (checkboxes) that you can check in order to control which buttons are accessible by default.

Kaleb Pederson
This is a well-written answer, but I think he was referring to buttons in the title bar for the dialog (window decorations).
Caleb Huitt - cjhuitt
Oh. I think you're right -- I definitely misunderstood that one :(.
Kaleb Pederson
+1  A: 

Change the window flags, for example in the constructor:

this->setWindowFlags(this->windowFlags() & ~Qt::WindowContextHelpButtonHint);
Roku
Thanks, this is what I need.
Narek
Trying to call setWindowFlags() directly did not work because the '~' was not applied. Another solution involves using the flags setWindowFlags(flags);</pre>
lallous