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TQDialog Class Reference

The TQDialog class is the base class of dialog windows. More...

#include <qdialog.h>

Inherits TQWidget.

Inherited by TQColorDialog, TQErrorMessage, TQFileDialog, TQFontDialog, TQInputDialog, TQMessageBox, TQMotifDialog, TQProgressDialog, TQTabDialog, and TQWizard.

List of all member functions.

Public Members

Public Slots

Properties

Protected Members

Protected Slots


Detailed Description

The TQDialog class is the base class of dialog windows.

A dialog window is a top-level window mostly used for short-term tasks and brief communications with the user. TQDialogs may be modal or modeless. TQDialogs support extensibility and can provide a return value. They can have default buttons. TQDialogs can also have a TQSizeGrip in their lower-right corner, using setSizeGripEnabled().

Note that TQDialog uses the parent widget slightly differently from other classes in TQt. A dialog is always a top-level widget, but if it has a parent, its default location is centered on top of the parent's top-level widget (if it is not top-level itself). It will also share the parent's taskbar entry.

Modal Dialogs

A modal dialog is a dialog that blocks input to other visible windows in the same application. Users must finish interacting with the dialog and close it before they can access any other window in the application. Dialogs that are used to request a file name from the user or that are used to set application preferences are usually modal.

The most common way to display a modal dialog is to call its exec() function. When the user closes the dialog, exec() will provide a useful return value. Typically we connect a default button, e.g. "OK", to the accept() slot and a "Cancel" button to the reject() slot, to get the dialog to close and return the appropriate value. Alternatively you can connect to the done() slot, passing it Accepted or Rejected.

An alternative is to call setModal(TRUE), then show(). Unlike exec(), show() returns control to the caller immediately. Calling setModal(TRUE) is especially useful for progress dialogs, where the user must have the ability to interact with the dialog, e.g. to cancel a long running operation. If you use show() and setModal(TRUE) together you must call TQApplication::processEvents() periodically during processing to enable the user to interact with the dialog. (See TQProgressDialog.)

Modeless Dialogs

A modeless dialog is a dialog that operates independently of other windows in the same application. Find and replace dialogs in word-processors are often modeless to allow the user to interact with both the application's main window and with the dialog.

Modeless dialogs are displayed using show(), which returns control to the caller immediately.

Default button

A dialog's default button is the button that's pressed when the user presses Enter (Return). This button is used to signify that the user accepts the dialog's settings and wants to close the dialog. Use TQPushButton::setDefault(), TQPushButton::isDefault() and TQPushButton::autoDefault() to set and control the dialog's default button.

Escape Key

If the user presses the Esc key in a dialog, TQDialog::reject() will be called. This will cause the window to close: the closeEvent cannot be ignored.

Extensibility

Extensibility is the ability to show the dialog in two ways: a partial dialog that shows the most commonly used options, and a full dialog that shows all the options. Typically an extensible dialog will initially appear as a partial dialog, but with a "More" toggle button. If the user presses the "More" button down, the full dialog will appear. The extension widget will be resized to its sizeHint(). If orientation is Horizontal the extension widget's height() will be expanded to the height() of the dialog. If the orientation is Vertical the extension widget's width() will be expanded to the width() of the dialog. Extensibility is controlled with setExtension(), setOrientation() and showExtension().

Return value (modal dialogs)

Modal dialogs are often used in situations where a return value is retquired, e.g. to indicate whether the user pressed "OK" or "Cancel". A dialog can be closed by calling the accept() or the reject() slots, and exec() will return Accepted or Rejected as appropriate. The exec() call returns the result of the dialog. The result is also available from result() if the dialog has not been destroyed. If the WDestructiveClose flag is set, the dialog is deleted after exec() returns.

Examples

A modal dialog.

        TQFileDialog *dlg = new TQFileDialog( workingDirectory,
                TQString::null, 0, 0, TRUE );
        dlg->setCaption( TQFileDialog::tr( "Open" ) );
        dlg->setMode( TQFileDialog::ExistingFile );
        TQString result;
        if ( dlg->exec() == TQDialog::Accepted ) {
            result = dlg->selectedFile();
            workingDirectory = dlg->url();
        }
        delete dlg;
        return result;

A modeless dialog. After the show() call, control returns to the main event loop.

    int main( int argc, char **argv )
    {
        TQApplication a( argc, argv );
        int scale = 10;
        LifeDialog *life = new LifeDialog( scale );
        a.setMainWidget( life );
        life->setCaption("TQt Example - Life");
        life->show();
        return a.exec();
    }

See also TQTabDialog, TQWidget, TQProgressDialog, GUI Design Handbook: Dialogs, Standard, Abstract Widget Classes, and Dialog Classes.


Member Type Documentation

TQDialog::DialogCode

The value returned by a modal dialog.


Member Function Documentation

explicit TQDialog::TQDialog ( TQWidget * parent = 0, const char * name = 0, bool modal = FALSE, WFlags f = 0 )

Constructs a dialog called name, with parent parent.

A dialog is always a top-level widget, but if it has a parent, its default location is centered on top of the parent. It will also share the parent's taskbar entry.

The widget flags f are passed on to the TQWidget constructor. If, for example, you don't want a What's This button in the titlebar of the dialog, pass WStyle_Customize | WStyle_NormalBorder | WStyle_Title | WStyle_SysMenu in f.

Warning: In TQt 3.2, the modal flag is obsolete. There is now a setModal() function that can be used for obtaining a modal behavior when calling show(). This is rarely needed, because modal dialogs are usually invoked using exec(), which ignores the modal flag.

See also TQWidget::setWFlags() and TQt::WidgetFlags.

TQDialog::~TQDialog ()

Destroys the TQDialog, deleting all its children.

void TQDialog::accept () [virtual protected slot]

Hides the modal dialog and sets the result code to Accepted.

See also reject() and done().

Examples: chart/setdataform.cpp and distributor/distributor.ui.h.

void TQDialog::done ( int r ) [virtual protected slot]

Closes the dialog and sets its result code to r. If this dialog is shown with exec(), done() causes the local event loop to finish, and exec() to return r.

As with TQWidget::close(), done() deletes the dialog if the WDestructiveClose flag is set. If the dialog is the application's main widget, the application terminates. If the dialog is the last window closed, the TQApplication::lastWindowClosed() signal is emitted.

See also accept(), reject(), TQApplication::mainWidget(), and TQApplication::quit().

int TQDialog::exec () [slot]

Shows the dialog as a modal dialog, blocking until the user closes it. The function returns a DialogCode result.

Users cannot interact with any other window in the same application until they close the dialog.

See also show() and result().

Examples: chart/chartform.cpp, dialog/mainwindow.cpp, i18n/main.cpp, network/ftpclient/ftpmainwindow.ui.h, network/networkprotocol/view.cpp, qdir/qdir.cpp, and wizard/main.cpp.

TQWidget * TQDialog::extension () const

Returns the dialog's extension or 0 if no extension has been defined.

See also setExtension().

bool TQDialog::isModal () const

Returns TRUE if show() should pop up the dialog as modal or modeless; otherwise returns FALSE. See the "modal" property for details.

bool TQDialog::isSizeGripEnabled () const

Returns TRUE if the size grip is enabled; otherwise returns FALSE. See the "sizeGripEnabled" property for details.

Orientation TQDialog::orientation () const

Returns the dialog's extension orientation.

See also setOrientation().

void TQDialog::reject () [virtual protected slot]

Hides the modal dialog and sets the result code to Rejected.

See also accept() and done().

int TQDialog::result () const

Returns the modal dialog's result code, Accepted or Rejected.

Do not call this function if the dialog was constructed with the WDestructiveClose flag.

void TQDialog::setExtension ( TQWidget * extension )

Sets the widget, extension, to be the dialog's extension, deleting any previous extension. The dialog takes ownership of the extension. Note that if 0 is passed any existing extension will be deleted.

This function must only be called while the dialog is hidden.

See also showExtension(), setOrientation(), and extension().

void TQDialog::setModal ( bool modal )

Sets whether show() should pop up the dialog as modal or modeless to modal. See the "modal" property for details.

void TQDialog::setOrientation ( Orientation orientation )

If orientation is Horizontal, the extension will be displayed to the right of the dialog's main area. If orientation is Vertical, the extension will be displayed below the dialog's main area.

See also orientation() and setExtension().

void TQDialog::setResult ( int i ) [protected]

Sets the modal dialog's result code to i.

void TQDialog::setSizeGripEnabled ( bool )

Sets whether the size grip is enabled. See the "sizeGripEnabled" property for details.

void TQDialog::show () [virtual]

Shows the dialog as a modeless dialog. Control returns immediately to the calling code.

The dialog will be modal or modeless according to the value of the modal property.

See also exec() and modal.

Examples: movies/main.cpp, regexptester/main.cpp, showimg/showimg.cpp, and sql/overview/form1/main.cpp.

Reimplemented from TQWidget.

void TQDialog::showExtension ( bool showIt ) [protected slot]

If showIt is TRUE, the dialog's extension is shown; otherwise the extension is hidden.

This slot is usually connected to the TQButton::toggled() signal of a TQPushButton.

A dialog with a visible extension is not resizeable.

See also show(), setExtension(), and setOrientation().


Property Documentation

bool modal

This property holds whether show() should pop up the dialog as modal or modeless.

By default, this property is false and show() pops up the dialog as modeless.

exec() ignores the value of this property and always pops up the dialog as modal.

See also show() and exec().

Set this property's value with setModal() and get this property's value with isModal().

bool sizeGripEnabled

This property holds whether the size grip is enabled.

A TQSizeGrip is placed in the bottom right corner of the dialog when this property is enabled. By default, the size grip is disabled.

Set this property's value with setSizeGripEnabled() and get this property's value with isSizeGripEnabled().


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TQt 3.3.8