- class QMimeDatabase#
The
QMimeDatabase
class maintains a database of MIME types. More…Synopsis#
Methods#
def
__init__()
def
allMimeTypes()
def
mimeTypeForUrl()
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
The MIME type database is provided by the freedesktop.org shared-mime-info project. If the MIME type database cannot be found on the system, as is the case on most Windows, macOS, and iOS systems, Qt will use its own copy of it.
Applications which want to define custom MIME types need to install an XML file into the locations searched for MIME definitions. These locations can be queried with
QStandardPaths.locateAll(QStandardPaths.GenericDataLocation, "mime/packages", QStandardPaths.LocateDirectory)
On a typical Unix system, this will be /usr/share/mime/packages/, but it is also possible to extend the list of directories by setting the environment variable
XDG_DATA_DIRS
. For instance adding /opt/myapp/share toXDG_DATA_DIRS
will result in /opt/myapp/share/mime/packages/ being searched for MIME definitions.Here is an example of MIME XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <mime-info xmlns="http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/shared-mime-info"> <mime-type type="application/vnd.qt.qmakeprofile"> <comment xml:lang="en">Qt qmake Profile</comment> <glob pattern="*.pro" weight="50"/> </mime-type> </mime-info>
For more details about the syntax of XML MIME definitions, including defining “magic” in order to detect MIME types based on data as well, read the Shared Mime Info specification at http://standards.freedesktop.org/shared-mime-info-spec/shared-mime-info-spec-latest.html
On Unix systems, a binary cache is used for more performance. This cache is generated by the command “update-mime-database path”, where path would be /opt/myapp/share/mime in the above example. Make sure to run this command when installing the MIME type definition file.
db = QMimeDatabase() mime = db.mimeTypeForFile(fileName) if mime.inherits("text/plain"): # The file is plain text, we can display it in a QTextEdit
See also
QMimeType
MIME Type Browser- class MatchMode#
This enum specifies how matching a file to a MIME type is performed.
Constant
Description
QMimeDatabase.MatchDefault
Both the file name and content are used to look for a match
QMimeDatabase.MatchExtension
Only the file name is used to look for a match
QMimeDatabase.MatchContent
The file content is used to look for a match
- __init__()#
Constructs a
QMimeDatabase
object.It is perfectly OK to create an instance of
QMimeDatabase
every time you need to perform a lookup. The parsing of mimetypes is done on demand (when shared-mime-info is installed) or when the very first instance is constructed (when parsing XML files directly).Returns the list of all available MIME types.
This can be useful for showing all MIME types to the user, for instance in a MIME type editor. Do not use unless really necessary in other cases though, prefer using the
mimeTypeForXxx()
methods for performance reasons.Returns a MIME type for the data in
device
.A valid MIME type is always returned. If the data in
device
doesn’t match any known MIME type data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.- mimeTypeForData(data)
- Parameters:
data –
QByteArray
- Return type:
Returns a MIME type for
data
.A valid MIME type is always returned. If
data
doesn’t match any known MIME type data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.- mimeTypeForFile(fileInfo[, mode=QMimeDatabase.MatchMode.MatchDefault])#
Returns a MIME type for
fileInfo
.A valid MIME type is always returned.
The default matching algorithm looks at both the file name and the file contents, if necessary. The file extension has priority over the contents, but the contents will be used if the file extension is unknown, or matches multiple MIME types. If
fileInfo
is a Unix symbolic link, the file that it refers to will be used instead. If the file doesn’t match any known pattern or data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.When
mode
is set toMatchExtension
, only the file name is used, not the file contents. The file doesn’t even have to exist. If the file name doesn’t match any known pattern, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned. If multiple MIME types match this file, the first one (alphabetically) is returned.When
mode
is set toMatchContent
, and the file is readable, only the file contents are used to determine the MIME type. This is equivalent to callingmimeTypeForData
with aQFile
as input device.fileInfo
may refer to an absolute or relative path.See also
- mimeTypeForFile(fileName[, mode=QMimeDatabase.MatchMode.MatchDefault])
Returns a MIME type for the file named
fileName
usingmode
.This is an overloaded function.
- mimeTypeForFileNameAndData(fileName, device)#
Returns a MIME type for the given
fileName
anddevice
data.This overload can be useful when the file is remote, and we started to download some of its data in a device. This allows to do full MIME type matching for remote files as well.
If the device is not open, it will be opened by this function, and closed after the MIME type detection is completed.
A valid MIME type is always returned. If
device
data doesn’t match any known MIME type data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.This method looks at both the file name and the file contents, if necessary. The file extension has priority over the contents, but the contents will be used if the file extension is unknown, or matches multiple MIME types.
- mimeTypeForFileNameAndData(fileName, data)
- Parameters:
fileName – str
data –
QByteArray
- Return type:
Returns a MIME type for the given
fileName
and devicedata
.This overload can be useful when the file is remote, and we started to download some of its data. This allows to do full MIME type matching for remote files as well.
A valid MIME type is always returned. If
data
doesn’t match any known MIME type data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.This method looks at both the file name and the file contents, if necessary. The file extension has priority over the contents, but the contents will be used if the file extension is unknown, or matches multiple MIME types.
Returns a MIME type for
nameOrAlias
or an invalid one if none found.Returns a MIME type for
url
.If the URL is a local file, this calls
mimeTypeForFile
.Otherwise the matching is done based on the file name only, except for schemes where file names don’t mean much, like HTTP. This method always returns the default mimetype for HTTP URLs, use QNetworkAccessManager to handle HTTP URLs properly.
A valid MIME type is always returned. If
url
doesn’t match any known MIME type data, the default MIME type (application/octet-stream) is returned.Returns the MIME types for the file name
fileName
.If the file name doesn’t match any known pattern, an empty list is returned. If multiple MIME types match this file, they are all returned.
This function does not try to open the file. To also use the content when determining the MIME type, use
mimeTypeForFile()
ormimeTypeForFileNameAndData()
instead.See also
- suffixForFileName(fileName)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
- Return type:
str
Returns the suffix for the file
fileName
, as known by the MIME database.This allows to pre-select “tar.bz2” for foo.tar.bz2, but still only “txt” for my.file.with.dots.txt.