Task panel/es

Introducción
The task panel appears in the tab of the combo view, one of the important panels of the interface. It is a customizable space that is able to contain any type of graphical widget like collapsible sub-windows, tables, input fields, checkboxes, spinboxes, selector boxes, text boxes, buttons, labels, images, and other elements, depending on the currently active workbench, and the currently active tool.



Trabajando con el panel de tareas
A task panel normally opens when a tool that requires user input is activated, either by pressing a toolbar button or double clicking on an object. If the tool doesn't need user input, it will produce its result or terminate, but won't display a task panel.

The user input may be anything such as text, 3D point coordinates, elements from a list, faces from a shape, or options to modify the way the tool operates.



There are many commands that require selection of shapes or objects present in the document; for such cases the task panel will wait for the user to select the appropriate objects from the tree view or the 3D view. When a task panel is open, it is possible to switch to the tab to display the tree view to choose an object; once this is done, it is possible to switch back to the  tab to proceed with the command. The task panel is usually closed by clicking an or a  button, or pressing the  key on the keyboard to abort the command.



Note: Please notice that switching from the tab to the  tab does not terminate the active command; the task will still be running in the background. The user is responsible for properly terminating or aborting the active command before starting a different task; leaving a task running may produce errors when trying to launch other tools.

Guión
See forum thread Call that a Task Dialog widget can use to close the Task View. It can be closed with "this->close", but that only closes the lower part of the view, not that view itself.

Using python:

Using c++: