In this article we will see how we can get the vertical resolution of the QCalendarWidget. In order to do this we use logicalDpiY method, it returns the vertical resolution of the device in dots per inch, which is used when computing font sizes. For X11, this is usually the same as could be computed from heightMM().
In order to do this we will use logicalDpiY method with the QCalendarWidget object.
Syntax : calendar.logicalDpiY()
Argument : It takes no argument
Return : It return integer
Below is the implementation
Python3
# importing libraries from PyQt5.QtWidgets import * from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtGui from PyQt5.QtGui import * from PyQt5.QtCore import * import sys # QCalendarWidget Class class Calendar(QCalendarWidget): # constructor def __init__( self , parent = None ): super (Calendar, self ).__init__(parent) class Window(QMainWindow): def __init__( self ): super ().__init__() # setting title self .setWindowTitle("Python ") # setting geometry self .setGeometry( 100 , 100 , 650 , 400 ) # calling method self .UiComponents() # showing all the widgets self .show() # method for components def UiComponents( self ): # creating a QCalendarWidget object # as Calendar class inherits QCalendarWidget self .calendar = Calendar( self ) # setting geometry to the calendar self .calendar.setGeometry( 50 , 10 , 400 , 250 ) # setting cursor self .calendar.setCursor(Qt.PointingHandCursor) # creating label to show the properties self .label = QLabel( self ) # setting geometry to the label self .label.setGeometry( 100 , 280 , 250 , 60 ) # making label multi line self .label.setWordWrap( True ) # getting layout value = self .calendar.logicalDpiY() # setting text to the label self .label.setText("Logical DPI Y : " + str (value)) # create pyqt5 app App = QApplication(sys.argv) # create the instance of our Window window = Window() # start the app sys.exit(App. exec ()) |
Output :