Yes/No message box using QMessageBox

You would use QMessageBox::question for that.

Example in a hypothetical widget's slot:

#include <QApplication>
#include <QMessageBox>
#include <QDebug>

// ...

void MyWidget::someSlot() {
  QMessageBox::StandardButton reply;
  reply = QMessageBox::question(this, "Test", "Quit?",
                                QMessageBox::Yes|QMessageBox::No);
  if (reply == QMessageBox::Yes) {
    qDebug() << "Yes was clicked";
    QApplication::quit();
  } else {
    qDebug() << "Yes was *not* clicked";
  }
}

Should work on Qt 4 and 5, requires QT += widgets on Qt 5, and CONFIG += console on Win32 to see qDebug() output.

See the StandardButton enum to get a list of buttons you can use; the function returns the button that was clicked. You can set a default button with an extra argument (Qt "chooses a suitable default automatically" if you don't or specify QMessageBox::NoButton).


You can use the QMessage object to create a Message Box then add buttons :

QMessageBox msgBox;
msgBox.setWindowTitle("title");
msgBox.setText("Question");
msgBox.setStandardButtons(QMessageBox::Yes);
msgBox.addButton(QMessageBox::No);
msgBox.setDefaultButton(QMessageBox::No);
if(msgBox.exec() == QMessageBox::Yes){
  // do something
}else {
  // do something else
}