PyQt5 is not compatibile with PyQt4 (although experience shows that the effort in porting applications from PyQt4 to PyQt5 is not great). This section describes the main differences between the two.
Versions of Python earlier than v2.6 are not supported.
PyQt5 does not support any parts of the Qt API that are marked as deprecated or obsolete in Qt v5.0. However it is possible that some of these have been included accidentaly. These are considered bugs and will be removed if found.
PyQt4 supports a number of different API versions (QString, QVariant etc.). With the exception of QVariant, PyQt5 only implements v2 of those APIs for all versions of Python. The changed support for QVariant, including the removal of QPyNullVariant, is described in Support for QVariant.
PyQt4’s old-style signals and slots are not supported. Therefore the following are not implemented in PyQt5:
All methods that had arguments that are usually the results of calls to SIGNAL() or SLOT() are no longer supported. There will always be an equivalent that takes a bound signal or callable respectively.
In addition the following methods have differences:
PyQt4’s QtDeclarative, QtScript and QtScriptTools modules are not supported. These have been replaced by PyQt5’s QtQml and QtQuick modules. Unlike PyQt4, PyQt5 supports the creation of Python objects from QML.
PyQt4’s QtGui module has been split into PyQt5’s QtGui, QtPrintSupport and QtWidgets modules.
Only the QGLContext, QGLFormat and QGLWidget classes are supported by PyQt5.
PyQt4’s QtWebKit module has been split into PyQt5’s QtWebKit and QtWebKitWidgets modules.
PyQt4’s QtXml module is not supported. Use either the QXMLStreamReader and QXMLStreamWriter classes or Python’s standard XML modules.
PyQt4’s pyqtconfig module is not supported. The section The PyQt5 Extension API describes the support that PyQt5 provides to third-party packages (e.g. QScintilla) that want to build on top of PyQt5.
PyQt4’s dbus.mainloop.qt module is called dbus.mainloop.pyqt5 in PyQt5. This allows them to be installed side by side. Their functionality is identical.
The readUInt8(), readInt8(), writeUInt8() and writeInt8() methods all interpret the values being read and written as numeric values. In PyQt4 they are interpreted as single character strings.
The getOpenFileNameAndFilter(), getOpenFileNamesAndFilter() and getSaveFileNameAndFilter() methods of PyQt4’s QFileDialog have now been renamed getOpenFileName(), getOpenFileNames() and getSaveFileName() respectively in PyQt5. PyQt4’s implementations of getOpenFileName(), getOpenFileNames() and getSaveFileName() are not supported in PyQt5.
Support for the deprecated QGraphicsItemAnimation class has been removed. If porting an existing PyQt4 application then consider first updating it to use QPropertyAnimation instead.
Support for the deprecated QMatrix class has been removed. If porting an existing PyQt4 application then consider first updating it to use QTransform instead.
PyQt4 implements the QPyTextObject as a workaround for the inability to define a Python class that is sub-classed from more than one Qt class. PyQt5 does support the ability to define a Python class that is sub-classed from more than one Qt class so long as all but one of the Qt classes are interfaces, i.e. they have been declared in C++ as such using Q_DECLARE_INTERFACE. Therefore QPyTextObject is not implemented in PyQt5.
In PyQt4, QSet was implemented as a list in Python v2 and a set in Python v3. In PyQt5 QSet is always implemented as a set.
pyuic5 does not support the --pyqt3-wrapper flag of pyuic4.
pyrcc5 does not support the -py2 and -py3 flags of pyrcc4. The output of pyrcc5 is compatible with all versions of Python starting with Python v2.6.
Unlike PyQt4, PyQt5 classes implement cooperative multi-inheritance. In other words PyQt5 classes always do the equivalent of the following Python v3 code in their __init__ methods (where kwds is a dictionary of unused keyword arguments):
super().__init__(**kwds)
This means that those unused keyword arguments are passed to the __init__ methods of any mixin classes. Those mixin classes must cooperate, i.e. they must make a similar call if they have their own __init__ implementations.
When using multiple inheritance in PyQt4 it is common to call the __init__ methods of the super-classes explicitly, for example:
class MyQObject(QObject, MyMixin):
def __init__(self, parent, mixin_arg):
QObject.__init__(self, parent)
MyMixin.__init__(self, mixin_arg)
# Other initialisation...
In PyQt5 the above would cause MyMixin.__init__ to be called twice. Instead it should be implemented as follows:
class MyQObject(QObject, MyMixin):
def __init__(self, **kwds):
super().__init__(**kwds)
# Other initialisation...
Note that if there is no other initialisation to do then the __init__ method isn’t actually needed.
The mixin class should be implemented as follows:
class MyMixin:
def __init__(self, mixin_arg, **kwds):
super().__init__(**kwds)
# Other initialisation...
If a class only inherits from a single class then it can still call the super-class’s __init__ method explicitly (although it is recommended to use super()).
The GIL is only released when it is known to be needed. PyQt4 always released the GIL when calling Qt.
When the Python interpreter exits PyQt4 (by default) calls the C++ destructor of all wrapped instances that it owns. This happens in a random order and can therefore cause the interpreter to crash. This behavior can be disabled by calling the sip.setdestroyonexit() function.
PyQt5 always calls sip.setdestroyonexit() automatically.