Good news, I have a MCVE and precise conditions to trigger the bug with 100% success on my machine.
You need a QMainWindow, a custom application wide dark QPalette, a custom stylesheet "QMainWindow { background: palette(base); }" 1) Launch the application on a machine (via RDP or locally) 2) Connect to that desktop via RDP with Visual Styles disabled (this disables Aero) The window, which was dark, is now white. I'll file a bug of course 2016-04-20 12:04 GMT+02:00 Bo Thorsen <b...@vikingsoft.eu>: > Den 20-04-2016 kl. 10:56 skrev Etienne Sandré-Chardonnal: > >> Here are two screenshots: >> >> Normal display : http://www.eclat-digital.com/downloads/qtbug-normal.png >> Bugged display : http://www.eclat-digital.com/downloads/qtbug-issue.png >> > > This looks like a paint bug to me. The best way forward for you is to > create a small self contained application that shows the problem. In this > case, it should probably be possible to do it in 10 lines of code or so. > And then add a description on how to reproduce it. Create a bug report with > those two things. > > The good thing about the small test case is that you also make it very > clear if it really is a Qt bug or if you did something on your side that > triggers it. > > Bo Thorsen, > Director, Viking Software. > > -- > Viking Software > Qt and C++ developers for hire > http://www.vikingsoft.eu > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest >
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