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Qt Quick 3D - HelloCube Example

Demonstrates how to render 2D and 3D objects together in Qt Quick 3D.

HelloCube demonstrates how to render a 3D cube with 2D items in Qt Quick 3D.

Draw 2D Items

We set up the entire scene in the main.qml file.

To be able to use the types in the QtQuick3D module, we must import it:

import QtQuick3D

We define simple QtQuick Items with an Image and a Text on a Rectangle.

Image {
    anchors.fill: parent
    source: "qt_logo.png"
}
Text {
    anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
    anchors.left: parent.left
    color: "white"
    font.pixelSize: 17
    text: qsTr("The Future is Written with Qt")
}

This simple rectangle has two animations for flipping vertically.

transform: Rotation {
    id: rotation
    origin.x: qt_logo.width / 2
    origin.y: qt_logo.height / 2
    axis { x: 1; y: 0; z: 0 }
}

PropertyAnimation {
    id: flip1
    target: rotation
    property: "angle"
    duration: 600
    to: 180
    from: 0
}
PropertyAnimation {
    id: flip2
    target: rotation
    property: "angle"
    duration: 600
    to: 360
    from: 180
}

Draw a 3D Cube

Drawing a cube is very simple. After defining a Camera, and a Light, we make a cube with a built-in Model. In this example, we render the previous 2D Rectangle on this cube surface as a diffuse Texture. In our Rectangle, we set layer.enabled to true.

layer.enabled: true

When enabled, this property makes the 2D item render into a offscreen surface, which we then use as a texture for our cube.

id: cube
source: "#Cube"
materials: DefaultMaterial {
    diffuseMap: Texture {
        sourceItem: qt_logo
    }
}
eulerRotation.y: 90

Files:

Images:

Qt_Technology_Partner_RGB_475 Qt_Service_Partner_RGB_475_padded