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80 lines
3.4 KiB
80 lines
3.4 KiB
//Auto-generated by kalyptus. DO NOT EDIT.
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package org.kde.koala;
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import org.kde.qt.Qt;
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import org.kde.qt.TQMetaObject;
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import org.kde.qt.QtSupport;
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import org.kde.qt.TQObject;
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import org.kde.qt.TQObject;
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/**
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If you develop a library that is to be loaded dynamically at runtime, then
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you should return a pointer to your factory. The K_EXPORT_COMPONENT_FACTORY
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macro is provided for this purpose:
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<pre>
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K_EXPORT_COMPONENT_FACTORY( libkspread, KSpreadFactory )
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</pre>
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The first macro argument is the name of your library, the second specifies the name
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of your factory.
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NOTE: you probably want to use KGenericFactory<PluginClassName>
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instead of writing your own factory.
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In the constructor of your factory you should create an instance of TDEInstance
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like this:
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<pre>
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s_global = new TDEInstance( "kspread" );
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</pre>
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This TDEInstance is comparable to TDEGlobal used by normal applications.
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It allows you to find resource files (images, XML, sound etc.) belonging
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to the library.
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If you want to load a library, use KLibLoader. You can query KLibLoader
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directly for a pointer to the libraries factory by using the KLibLoader.factory()
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function.
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The KLibFactory is used to create the components, the library has to offer.
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The factory of KSpread for example will create instances of KSpreadDoc,
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while the Konqueror factory will create KonqView widgets.
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All objects created by the factory must be derived from TQObject, since TQObject
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offers type safe casting.
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KLibFactory is an abstract class. Reimplement the
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createObject() method to give it functionality.
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See {@link KLibFactorySignals} for signals emitted by KLibFactory
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@author Torben Weis <weis@kde.org>
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@short If you develop a library that is to be loaded dynamically at runtime, then you should return a pointer to your factory.
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*/
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public class KLibFactory extends TQObject {
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protected KLibFactory(Class dummy){super((Class) null);}
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public native TQMetaObject metaObject();
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public native String className();
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/**
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Create a new factory.
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@param parent the parent of the TQObject, 0 for no parent
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@param name the name of the TQObject, 0 for no name
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@short Create a new factory.
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*/
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/**
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Creates a new object. The returned object has to be derived from
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the requested classname.
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It is valid behavior to create different kinds of objects
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depending on the requested <code>classname.</code> For example a koffice
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library may usually return a pointer to KoDocument. But
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if asked for a "TQWidget", it could create a wrapper widget,
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that encapsulates the Koffice specific features.
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create() automatically emits a signal objectCreated to tell
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the library about its newly created object. This is very
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important for reference counting, and allows unloading the
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library automatically once all its objects have been destroyed.
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@param parent the parent of the TQObject, 0 for no parent
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@param name the name of the TQObject, 0 for no name
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@param classname the name of the class
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@param args a list of arguments
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@short Creates a new object.
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*/
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public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name, String classname, String[] args);
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public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name, String classname);
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public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name);
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public native TQObject create(TQObject parent);
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public native TQObject create();
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}
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