Listenansichten
Listviews can help you display objects from a model in an attractive way. To use a list view, you have to keep track of three things:
- The model, which contains the data you want your list view to display
- The delegate, which defines how each element in the model will be displayed
- The list view itself, which will display information from the model according to the delegate
If you would like further clarification, the Qt documentation has an informative page on the topic.
Creating a basic listview
A list view has two essential properties we must pay attention to:
- model, which accepts the data or the
id
of the object that holds the data - delegate, which accepts the component we will use to display the data in the model
import QtQuick 2.15
import QtQuick.Controls 2.15 as Controls
import QtQuick.Layouts 1.15
import org.kde.kirigami 2.20 as Kirigami
Kirigami.Page {
ListView {
id: myList
// Providing a number for the model property will generate that number of data entries
// starting from 0.
model: 200
delegate: Kirigami.BasicListItem {
label: "Item " + modelData
}
}
}

In cases where your model data only contain a single piece of data, like in the example above, you can just grab the data in the model by referencing modelData.
A note on delegates: if your model contains objects with data in named properties, the name of these properties will be automatically exposed to your delegate and you will only need to use these names in your delegate.
ListModel {
id: myModel
ListElement { type: "Item"; number: 0 }
ListElement { type: "Item"; number: 1 }
ListElement { type: "Item"; number: 2 }
ListElement { type: "Item"; number: 3 }
}
ListView {
id: myList
model: myModel
delegate: Kirigami.BasicListItem {
label: type + " " + number
}
}
Kirigami offers a number of components that have been designed specifically for use in list views, such as Kirigami.BasicListItem , Kirigami.CheckableListItem and Kirigami.SwipeListItem , all of which build upon Kirigami.AbstractListItem . There are also Kirigami.CheckDelegate , Kirigami.RadioDelegate , and Kirigami.SwitchDelegate , which are designed to take advantage of those specific controls.
However, you are not limited to using these components and you can choose whichever ones you wish. This may require some tweaking of your layout.
Placeholder messages
In some cases, you might want to use a list view that is empty until the user does something. In these situations, using a Kirigami.PlaceholderMessage can be an attractive way of telling your user that the list is empty and that they can do something about it.
You will generally want to place a placeholder message in the center of the ListView and you will likely not want it to span the entire width of the ListView. You will obviously also want it to be hidden once the ListView's model becomes populated with data. Thankfully, ListViews have a property named count that makes doing this quite easy.
You might also want to add a helpful action to your placeholder message. This can be done by attaching an action to the PlaceholderMessage.helpfulAction property.
ListView {
id: myList
model: ListModel { id: myModel }
delegate: Kirigami.BasicListItem {
label: text
}
Kirigami.PlaceholderMessage {
anchors.centerIn: parent
width: parent.width - Kirigami.Units.largeSpacing * 4
visible: myList.count === 0
text: "Add something to me!"
helpfulAction: Kirigami.Action {
icon.name: "list-add"
text: "Add"
onTriggered: myModel.append({"text": "Hello!!"})
}
}
}
