A Qt stylesheet designed to make your tools look native in Unreal Engine 5
Quickstart sample code:
import unreal_stylesheet
if __name__ == '__main__':
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
# style your QApp, requires a QApplication instance
unreal_stylesheet.setup() # <== Just 1 line of code to make the magic happen
# create & show your Qt widget
window = TestWindow()
window.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_()) PIP install the latest release from PYPi (recommended):
python -m pip install unreal-stylesheet
or install from the repo:
python -m pip install git+https://github.com/leixingyu/unrealStylesheet
The following .ui files for testing can be found inside the /ui folder.
| default (editor.ui) | ue.qss |
|---|---|
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| default (tree.ui) | ue.qss |
|---|---|
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| default (progress.ui) | ue.qss |
|---|---|
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Feel free to make a PR or issue if you find a bug, or want to request a feature.
Some guidelines to modify this stylesheet:
- Modify the CSS preprocessor
.scssfile - Re-compile the
.qss:
qtsass ue.scss -o ue.qss
.qss style sheet directly, your changes will be lost when the .qss is re-compiled in the future
Documentation about .scss can be found: Sass Official website
You'll also need to install a Qt specific Sass: qt-sass
The icons are handled with Qt's resource system (see the docs) (which is dropped in qt6)
- Modify the
.qrcfile - Re-compile the
.rcc:
rcc -binary icons.qrc -o icons.rcc
- Qt documentation:
- Github repo: Qt-Material
- Unreal has a different UI framework (Slate), future read on comparing Qt to Slate
- An example of this stylesheet in action: unrealScriptEditor






