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/****************************************************************************
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**
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** Application example documentation
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**
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** Copyright (C) 1992-2008 Trolltech ASA. All rights reserved.
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**
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** This file is part of the TQt GUI Toolkit.
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**
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** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU General
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** Public License versions 2.0 or 3.0 as published by the Free
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** Software Foundation and appearing in the files LICENSE.GPL2
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** and LICENSE.GPL3 included in the packaging of this file.
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** Alternatively you may (at your option) use any later version
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** of the GNU General Public License if such license has been
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** publicly approved by Trolltech ASA (or its successors, if any)
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** and the KDE Free TQt Foundation.
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**
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** Please review the following information to ensure GNU General
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** Public Licensing requirements will be met:
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** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/opensource/.
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** If you are unsure which license is appropriate for your use, please
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** review the following information:
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** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/licensingoverview
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** or contact the sales department at sales@trolltech.com.
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**
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** This file may be used under the terms of the Q Public License as
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** defined by Trolltech ASA and appearing in the file LICENSE.QPL
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** included in the packaging of this file. Licensees holding valid Qt
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** Commercial licenses may use this file in accordance with the Qt
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** Commercial License Agreement provided with the Software.
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**
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** This file is provided "AS IS" with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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** INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF DESIGN, MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
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** A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Trolltech reserves all rights not granted
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** herein.
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**
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**********************************************************************/
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/*!
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\page simple-application.html
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\ingroup step-by-step-examples
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\title Walkthrough: A Simple Application
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This walkthrough shows simple use of \l TQMainWindow, \l TQMenuBar, \l
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TQPopupMenu, \l TQToolBar and \l TQStatusBar - classes that every
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modern application window tends to use. (See also \link tutorial2.html
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Tutorial #2\endlink.)
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It also illustrates some aspects of \l TQWhatsThis (for simple help) and a
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typical \c main() using \l QApplication.
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Finally, it shows a typical print function based on \l TQPrinter.
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\section1 The declaration of ApplicationWindow
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Here's the header file in full:
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\include application/application.h
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It declares a class that inherits \l TQMainWindow, with slots and private
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variables. The class pre-declaration of \l TQTextEdit at the beginning
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(instead of an include) helps to speed up compilation. With this
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trick, \c{make depend} won't insist on recompiling every \c .cpp file that
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includes \c application.h when \c tqtextedit.h changes.
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\target simplemain
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\section1 A simple main()
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Here is \c main.cpp in full:
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\include application/main.cpp
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Now we'll look at \c main.cpp in detail.
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\quotefile application/main.cpp
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\skipto argc
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\printline argc
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\printline QApplication
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With the above line, we create a QApplication object with the usual
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constructor and let it
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parse \e argc and \e argv. QApplication itself takes care of X11-specific
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command-line options like \e -geometry, so the program will automatically
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behave the way X clients are expected to.
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\printline ApplicationWindow
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\printline setCaption
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\printline show
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We create an \e ApplicationWindow as a top-level widget, set its window
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system caption to "Document 1", and \e show() it.
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\target close
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\printline connect
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When the application's last window is closed, it should quit. Both
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the signal and the slot are predefined members of QApplication.
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\printline exec
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Having completed the application's initialization, we start the main
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event loop (the GUI), and eventually return the error code
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that QApplication returns when it leaves the event loop.
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\printline }
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\target ApplicationWindow
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\section1 The Implementation of ApplicationWindow
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\quotefile application/application.cpp
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Since the implementation is quite large (almost 300 lines) we
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won't list the whole thing. (The source code is included in the
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examples/application directory.) Before we start with the constructor
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there are three \c{#include}s worth mentioning:
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\skipto "filesave.xpm"
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\printuntil "fileprint.xpm"
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The tool buttons in our application wouldn't look good without icons!
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These icons can be found in the XPM files included above. If you ever
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moved a program to a different location and wondered why icons were
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missing afterwards you will probably agree that it is a good idea to
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compile them into the binary. This is what we are doing here.
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\skipto ApplicationWindow::ApplicationWindow
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\printline ApplicationWindow::ApplicationWindow
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\printuntil {
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\e ApplicationWindow inherits TQMainWindow, the TQt class that provides
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typical application main windows, with menu bars, toolbars, etc.
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\printuntil TQPrinter
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The application example can print things, and we chose to have a
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TQPrinter object lying around so that when the user changes a setting
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during one printing, the new setting will be the default next time.
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\printline TQPixmap
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For the sake of simplicity, our example only has a few commands in the
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toolbar. The above variables are used to hold an icon for each of
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them.
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\printline TQToolBar
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We create a toolbar in \e this window ...
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\printline "File Operations"
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... and define a title for it. When a user drags the toolbar out of
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its location and floats it over the desktop, the toolbar-window will
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show "File Operations" as caption.
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\printline fileopen
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\printuntil TQ_SLOT(choose())
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Now we create the first tool button for the \e fileTools toolbar
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with the appropriate icon and the tool-tip text "Open File".
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The \c fileopen.xpm we included at the beginning
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contains the definition of a pixmap called \e fileopen.
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We use this icon to illustrate our first tool button.
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\printuntil TQ_SLOT(print())
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In a similar way we create two more tool buttons in this toolbar, each with
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appropriate icons and tool-tip text. All three buttons are connected
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to appropriate slots in this object; for example, the "Print File" button
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to \link #printer ApplicationWindow::print()\endlink.
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\printline whatsThisButton
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The fourth button in the toolbar is somewhat peculiar: it's the one that
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provides "What's This?" help. This must be set up using a special
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function, as its mouse interface is unusual.
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\printuntil fileOpenText )
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With the above line we add the "What's This?" help-text to the
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\e fileOpen button...
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\printline openIcon
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... and tell the rich-text engine that when a help-text (like the one
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saved in \e fileOpenText) requests an image named "fileopen", the \e
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openIcon pixmap is used.
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\printuntil fileSaveText )
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\printuntil filePrintText )
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The "What's This?" help of the remaining two buttons doesn't make use
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of pixmaps, therefore all we need to do is to add the help-text to the
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button. Be careful though: To invoke the rich-text elements in \c
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fileSaveText(), the entire string must be surrounded by \<p\> and
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\</p\>. In \c filePrintText(), we don't have rich-text elements, so
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this is not necessary.
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\printuntil &File
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Next we create a \l TQPopupMenu for the \e File menu and
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add it to the menu bar. With the ampersand in front of the letter F,
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we allow the user to use the shortcut \e Alt+F to pop up this menu.
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\printline &New
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Its first entry is connected to the (yet to be implemented) slot \c
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newDoc(). When the user chooses this \e New entry (e.g. by typing the
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letter N as marked by the ampersand) or uses the
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\e Ctrl+N accelerator, a new editor-window will pop up.
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\printuntil &Open
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\printuntil &Save
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\printuntil Save &As
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\printuntil fileSaveText
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We populate the \e File menu with three more commands (\e Open, \e Save and
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\e{Save As}), and set "What's This?" help for them. Note in particular
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that "What's This?" help and pixmaps are used in both the toolbar (above)
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and the menu bar (here). (See TQAction and the \c examples/action
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example for a shorter and easier approach.)
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\printline insertSeparator(
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Then we insert a separator, ...
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\printline &Print
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\printuntil &Close
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\printline &Quit
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... the \e Print command with "What's This?" help, another separator and
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two more commands (\e Close and \e Quit) without "What's This?" and pixmaps.
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In case of the \e Close command, the signal is connected
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to the \e close() slot of the respective \e ApplicationWindow object whilst
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the \e Quit command affects the entire application.
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Because \e ApplicationWindow is a TQWidget, the \e close() function
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triggers a call to \link #closeEvent closeEvent()\endlink which we
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will implement later.
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\target common_constructor
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\printline insertSeparator
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Now that we have done the File menu we shift our focus back to the
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menu bar and insert a separator. From now on further menu bar entries
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will be aligned to the right if the windows system style requires it.
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\printline help
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\printuntil whatsThis
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We create a \e Help menu, add it to the menu bar, and insert a few
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commands. Depending on the style it will appear on the right hand
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side of the menu bar or not.
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\printline TQTextEdit
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\printline setFocus
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\printline setCentralWidget
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Now we create a simple text-editor, set the initial focus to it,
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and make it the window's central widget.
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\l TQMainWindow::centralWidget() is the heart of the entire application:
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It's what menu bar, statusbar and toolbars are all arranged around. Since
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the central widget is a text editing widget, we can now reveal that
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our simple application is a text editor. :)
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\printline "Ready"
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We make the statusbar say "Ready" for two seconds at startup, just to
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tell the user that the window has finished initialization and can be
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used.
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\printline resize
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Finally it's time to resize the new window to a a nice default size.
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\printline }
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We have now finished with the constructor. Now we'll deal with the
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destructor.
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\printline ::~
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\printuntil }
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The only thing an \e ApplicationWindow widget needs to do in its
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destructor is to delete the printer it created. All other objects are
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child widgets, which TQt will delete when appropriate.
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Now our task is to implement all the slots mentioned in the header file
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and used in the constructor.
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\target newDoc()
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\printline ::newDoc
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\printuntil }
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This slot, connected to the \e{File|New} menu item, simply creates a
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new \e ApplicationWindow and shows it.
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\target choose()
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\printline ::choose
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\printuntil getOpenFileName
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\printuntil }
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The \e choose() slot is connected to the \e Open menu item and
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tool button. With a little help from \l TQFileDialog::getOpenFileName(), it
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asks the user for a file name and then either loads that file or gives an
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error message in the statusbar.
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\printline ::load
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\printuntil statusBar
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\printline }
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This function loads a file into the editor. When it's done, it sets the
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window system caption to the file name and displays a success message in
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the statusbar for two seconds. With files that exist but are not
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readable, nothing happens.
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\target save()
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\printline ::save
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\printuntil close
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As its name suggests, this function saves the current file. If no
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filename has been specified so far, the \link #saveAs()
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saveAs()\endlink function is called. Unwritable files cause the \e
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ApplicationWindow object to provide an error-message in the statusbar.
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Note that there is more than one way to do this:
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compare the above \c{statusBar()->message()} line with the equivalent
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code in the \c load() function.
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\printline setModified
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Tell the editor that the contents haven't been edited since the last
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save. When the user does some further editing and wishes to close the
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window without explicit saving, \link #closeEvent
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ApplicationWindow::closeEvent()\endlink will ask about it.
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\printline setCaption
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It may be that the document was saved under a different name than the
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old caption suggests, so we set the window caption just to be sure.
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\printuntil }
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With a message in the statusbar, we inform the user that the file
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was saved successfully.
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\target saveAs()
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\printline ::saveAs
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\printuntil message
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\printline }
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\printline }
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This function asks for a new name, saves the document under that name,
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and implicitly changes the window system caption to the new name.
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\target printer
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\skipto ::print
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\printuntil aborted
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\printuntil aborted
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\printline }
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\printline }
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\e print() is called by the \e{File|Print} menu item and the \e filePrint
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tool button.
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We present the user with the print setup dialog, and abandon printing
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if they cancel.
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We create a TQSimpleRichText object and give it the text. This object
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is able to format the text nicely as one long page. We achieve
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pagination by printing one paper page's worth of text from the
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TQSimpleRichText page at a time.
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|
Now let's see what happens when a user wishes to \e close()
|
|
|
|
an \e ApplicationWindow.
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\target closeEvent
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\printline ::closeEvent
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\printline {
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This event gets to process window system close events. A close event is
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|
subtly different from a hide event: hide often means "iconify" whereas
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close means that the window is going away for good.
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\printline isModified
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\printline accept
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\printline return
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\printline }
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If the text hasn't been edited, we just accept the event. The window
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will be closed, and because we used the \e WDestructiveClose widget
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flag in the \link #ApplicationWindow <i>ApplicationWindow()</i> constructor\endlink,
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the widget will be deleted.
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\printline TQMessageBox
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\printuntil {
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Otherwise we ask the user: What do you want to do?
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\printuntil break
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If they want to save and then exit, we do that.
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\printuntil break
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If the user doesn't want to exit, we ignore the close event (there is
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a chance that we can't block it but we try).
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\printuntil break
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The last case -- the user wants to abandon the edits and exit -- is very
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simple.
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\printline }
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\printline }
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Last but not least we implement the slots used by the help menu entries.
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\printline ::about
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\printuntil aboutTQt
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\printuntil }
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These two slots use ready-made "about" functions to provide some
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information about this program and the GUI toolkit it uses. (Although you
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don't need to provide an About TQt in your programs, if you use TQt for free
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we would appreciate it if you tell people what you're using.)
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That was all we needed to write a complete, almost useful application with
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nice help-functions, almost as good as the "editors" some computer vendors
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ship with their desktops, and in less than 300 lines of code!
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*/
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