For the record, if you want to style a QHeaderView section, you'll have to do it either via the header data model (changing Qt::FontRole, etc.) or derive your own QHeaderView (don't forget to pass it to your table with "setVerticalHeader()") and overwrite the its paintSection()-function.
i.e.:
void YourCustomHeaderView::paintSection(QPainter* in_p_painter, const QRect& in_rect, int in_section) const
{
if (nullptr == in_p_painter)
return;
// Paint default sections
in_p_painter->save();
QHeaderView::paintSection(in_p_painter, in_rect, in_section);
in_p_painter->restore();
// Paint your custom section content OVER a specific, finished
// default section (identified by index in this case)
if (m_your_custom_section_index == in_section)
{
QPen pen = in_p_painter->pen();
pen.setWidthF(5.5);
pen.setColor(QColor(m_separator_color));
in_p_painter->setPen(pen);
in_p_painter->drawLine(in_rect.right(), in_rect.top(), in_rect.right(), in_rect.bottom());
}
}
This simplified example could of course easily be done via a stylesheet instead, but you could theoretically draw whatever you like using this method.