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Collection Classes

A collection class is a container which holds a number of items in a data structure and provides various operations to manipulate the contents of the collection, such as insert item, remove item, find item, etc.

TQt has several value-based and several pointer-based collection classes. The pointer-based collection classes work with pointers to items, while the value-based classes store copies of their items. The value-based collections are very similar to STL container classes, and can be used with STL algorithms and containers. See the TQt Template Library documentation for details.

The value-based collections are:

The pointer-based collections are:

TQMemArray is exceptional; it is neither pointer nor value based, but memory based. For maximum efficiency with the simple data types usually used in arrays, it uses bitwise operations to copy and compare array elements.

Some of these classes have corresponding iterators. An iterator is a class for traversing the items in a collection:

The value-based collections plus algorithms operating on them are grouped together in the TQt Template Library; see also the TQt Template Library Classes.

The rest of this page dicusses the pointer-based containers.

Architecture of the pointer-based containers

There are four internal base classes for the pointer-based containers (TQGCache, TQGDict, TQGList and TQGVector) that operate on void pointers. A thin template layer implements the actual collections by casting item pointers to and from void pointers.

This strategy allows TQt's templates to be very economical on space (instantiating one of these templates adds only inlinable calls to the base classes), without hurting performance.

A TQPtrList Example

This example shows how to store Employee items in a list and prints them out in reverse order:

    #include <tqptrlist.h>
    #include <ntqstring.h>
    #include <stdio.h>

    class Employee
    {
    public:
        Employee( const char *name, int salary ) { n=name; s=salary; }
        const char *name()   const               { return n; }
        int         salary() const               { return s; }
    private:
        TQString     n;
        int         s;
    };

    int main()
    {
        TQPtrList<Employee> list;        // list of pointers to Employee
        list.setAutoDelete( TRUE );     // delete items when they are removed

        list.append( new Employee("Bill", 50000) );
        list.append( new Employee("Steve",80000) );
        list.append( new Employee("Ron",  60000) );

        TQPtrListIterator<Employee> it(list); // iterator for employee list
        for ( it.toLast(); it.current(); --it) ) {
            Employee *emp = it.current();
            printf( "%s earns %d\n", emp->name(), emp->salary() );
        }

        return 0;
    }

Program output:

    Ron earns 60000
    Steve earns 80000
    Bill earns 50000

Managing Collection Items

All pointer-based collections inherit the TQPtrCollection base class. This class only knows about the number of items in the collection and the deletion strategy.

By default, items in a collection are not deleted when they are removed from the collection. The TQPtrCollection::setAutoDelete() function specifies the deletion strategy. In the list example, we enable auto-deletion to make the list delete the items when they are removed from the list.

When inserting an item into a collection, only the pointer is copied, not the item itself. This is called a shallow copy. It is possible to make the collection copy all of the item's data (known as a deep copy) when an item is inserted. All collection functions that insert an item call the virtual function TQPtrCollection::newItem() for the item to be inserted. Inherit a collection and reimplement it if you want to have deep copies in your collection.

When removing an item from a list, the virtual function TQPtrCollection::deleteItem() is called. The default implementation in all collection classes deletes the item if auto-deletion is enabled.

Usage

A pointer-based collection class, such as TQPtrList<type>, defines a collection of pointers to type objects. The pointer (*) is implicit.

We discuss TQPtrList here, but the same techniques apply to all pointer-based collection classes and all collection class iterators.

Template instantiation:

    TQPtrList<Employee> list;            // wherever the list is used

The item's class or type, Employee in our example, must be defined prior to the list definition.

    // Does not work: Employee is not defined
    class Employee;
    TQPtrList<Employee> list;

    // This works: Employee is defined before it is used
    class Employee {
        ...
    };
    TQPtrList<Employee> list;

Iterators

Although TQPtrList has member functions to traverse the list, it can often be better to make use of an iterator. TQPtrListIterator is very safe and can traverse lists that are being modified at the same time. Multiple iterators can work independently on the same collection.

A TQPtrList has an internal list of all the iterators that are currently operating on it. When a list entry is removed, the list updates all iterators accordingly.

The TQDict and TQCache collections have no traversal functions. To traverse these collections, you must use TQDictIterator or TQCacheIterator.

Predefined Collections

TQt has the following predefined collection classes:

In almost all cases you would choose TQStringList, a value list of implicitly shared TQString Unicode strings. TQPtrStrList and TQPtrStrIList store only char pointers, not the strings themselves.

List of Pointer-based Collection Classes and Related Iterator Classes

TQAsciiCacheTemplate class that provides a cache based on char* keys
TQAsciiCacheIteratorIterator for TQAsciiCache collections
TQAsciiDictTemplate class that provides a dictionary based on char* keys
TQAsciiDictIteratorIterator for TQAsciiDict collections
TQBitArrayArray of bits
TQBitValInternal class, used with TQBitArray
TQBufferI/O device that operates on a TQByteArray
TQByteArrayArray of bytes
TQCacheTemplate class that provides a cache based on TQString keys
TQCacheIteratorIterator for TQCache collections
TQCStringAbstraction of the classic C zero-terminated char array (char *)
TQDictTemplate class that provides a dictionary based on TQString keys
TQDictIteratorIterator for TQDict collections
TQIntCacheTemplate class that provides a cache based on long keys
TQIntCacheIteratorIterator for TQIntCache collections
TQIntDictTemplate class that provides a dictionary based on long keys
TQIntDictIteratorIterator for TQIntDict collections
TQObjectListTQPtrList of TQObjects
TQObjectListIteratorIterator for TQObjectLists
TQPtrCollectionThe base class of most pointer-based TQt collections
TQPtrDictTemplate class that provides a dictionary based on void* keys
TQPtrDictIteratorIterator for TQPtrDict collections
TQPtrListTemplate class that provides a list
TQPtrListIteratorIterator for TQPtrList collections
TQPtrQueueTemplate class that provides a queue
TQStrIListDoubly-linked list of char* with case-insensitive comparison
TQStrListDoubly-linked list of char*


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TQt 3.3.8