diff options
author | Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com> | 2009-03-23 09:18:55 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@nokia.com> | 2009-03-23 09:18:55 (GMT) |
commit | e5fcad302d86d316390c6b0f62759a067313e8a9 (patch) | |
tree | c2afbf6f1066b6ce261f14341cf6d310e5595bc1 /doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc | |
download | Qt-e5fcad302d86d316390c6b0f62759a067313e8a9.zip Qt-e5fcad302d86d316390c6b0f62759a067313e8a9.tar.gz Qt-e5fcad302d86d316390c6b0f62759a067313e8a9.tar.bz2 |
Long live Qt 4.5!
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc | 303 |
1 files changed, 303 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc b/doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5778581 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/src/examples/customsortfiltermodel.qdoc @@ -0,0 +1,303 @@ +/**************************************************************************** +** +** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). +** Contact: Qt Software Information (qt-info@nokia.com) +** +** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. +** +** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ +** No Commercial Usage +** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. +** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions +** contained in the either Technology Preview License Agreement or the +** Beta Release License Agreement. +** +** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage +** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser +** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software +** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the +** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to +** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements +** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. +** +** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain +** additional rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL +** Exception version 1.0, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this +** package. +** +** GNU General Public License Usage +** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU +** General Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software +** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the +** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to +** ensure the GNU General Public License version 3.0 requirements will be +** met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. +** +** If you are unsure which license is appropriate for your use, please +** contact the sales department at qt-sales@nokia.com. +** $QT_END_LICENSE$ +** +****************************************************************************/ + +/*! + \example itemviews/customsortfiltermodel + \title Custom Sort/Filter Model Example + + The Custom Sort/Filter Model example illustrates how to subclass + QSortFilterProxyModel to perform advanced sorting and filtering. + + \image customsortfiltermodel-example.png Screenshot of the Custom Sort/Filter Model Example + + The QSortFilterProxyModel class provides support for sorting and + filtering data passed between another model and a view. + + The model transforms the structure of a source model by mapping + the model indexes it supplies to new indexes, corresponding to + different locations, for views to use. This approach allows a + given source model to be restructured as far as views are + concerned, without requiring any transformations on the underlying + data and without duplicating the data in memory. + + The Custom Sort/Filter Model example consists of two classes: + + \list + + \o The \c MySortFilterProxyModel class provides a custom proxy + model. + + \o The \c Window class provides the main application window, + using the custom proxy model to sort and filter a standard + item model. + + \endlist + + We will first take a look at the \c MySortFilterProxyModel class + to see how the custom proxy model is implemented, then we will + take a look at the \c Window class to see how the model is + used. Finally we will take a quick look at the \c main() function. + + \section1 MySortFilterProxyModel Class Definition + + The \c MySortFilterProxyModel class inherits the + QSortFilterProxyModel class. + + Since QAbstractProxyModel and its subclasses are derived from + QAbstractItemModel, much of the same advice about subclassing + normal models also applies to proxy models. + + On the other hand, it is worth noting that many of + QSortFilterProxyModel's default implementations of functions are + written so that they call the equivalent functions in the relevant + source model. This simple proxying mechanism may need to be + overridden for source models with more complex behavior; in this + example we derive from the QSortFilterProxyModel class to ensure + that our filter can recognize a valid range of dates, and to + control the sorting behavior. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.h 0 + + We want to be able to filter our data by specifying a given period + of time. For that reason, we implement the custom \c + setFilterMinimumDate() and \c setFilterMaximumDate() functions as + well as the corresponding \c filterMinimumDate() and \c + filterMaximumDate() functions. We reimplement + QSortFilterProxyModel's \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::filterAcceptsRow()}{filterAcceptsRow()} + function to only accept rows with valid dates, and + QSortFilterProxyModel::lessThan() to be able to sort the senders + by their email adresses. Finally, we implement a \c dateInRange() + convenience function that we will use to determine if a date is + valid. + + \section1 MySortFilterProxyModel Class Implementation + + The \c MySortFilterProxyModel constructor is trivial, passing the + parent parameter on to the base class constructor: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 0 + + The most interesting parts of the \c MySortFilterProxyModel + implementation are the reimplementations of + QSortFilterProxyModel's \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::filterAcceptsRow()}{filterAcceptsRow()} + and \l {QSortFilterProxyModel::lessThan()}{lessThan()} + functions. Let's first take a look at our customized \c lessThan() + function. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 4 + + We want to sort the senders by their email adresses. The \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::}{lessThan()} function is used as the < + operator when sorting. The default implementation handles a + collection of types including QDateTime and String, but in order + to be able to sort the senders by their email adresses we must + first identify the adress within the given string: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 6 + + We use QRegExp to define a pattern for the adresses we are looking + for. The QRegExp::indexIn() function attempts to find a match in + the given string and returns the position of the first match, or + -1 if there was no match. If the given string contains the + pattern, we use QRegExp's \l {QRegExp::cap()}{cap()} function to + retrieve the actual adress. The \l {QRegExp::cap()}{cap()} + function returns the text captured by the \e nth + subexpression. The entire match has index 0 and the parenthesized + subexpressions have indexes starting from 1 (excluding + non-capturing parentheses). + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 3 + + The \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::filterAcceptsRow()}{filterAcceptsRow()} + function, on the other hand, is expected to return true if the + given row should be included in the model. In our example, a row + is accepted if either the subject or the sender contains the given + regular expression, and the date is valid. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 7 + + We use our custom \c dateInRange() function to determine if a date + is valid. + + To be able to filter our data by specifying a given period of + time, we also implement functions for getting and setting the + minimum and maximum dates: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 1 + \codeline + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/mysortfilterproxymodel.cpp 2 + + The get functions, \c filterMinimumDate() and \c + filterMaximumDate(), are trivial and implemented as inline + function in the header file. + + This completes our custom proxy model. Let's see how we can use it + in an application. + + \section1 Window Class Definition + + The \c CustomFilter class inherits QWidget, and provides this + example's main application window: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.h 0 + + We implement two private slots, \c textFilterChanged() and \c + dateFilterChanged(), to respond to the user changing the filter + pattern, case sensitivity or any of the dates. In addition, we + implement a public \c setSourceModel() convenience function to set + up the model/ view relation. + + \section1 Window Class Implementation + + In this example, we have chosen to create and set the source model + in the \c main () function (which we will come back to later). So + when constructing the main application window, we assume that a + source model already exists and start by creating an instance of + our custom proxy model: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 0 + + We set the \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::dynamicSortFilter}{dynamicSortFilter} + property that holds whether the proxy model is dynamically sorted + and filtered. By setting this property to true, we ensure that the + model is sorted and filtered whenever the contents of the source + model change. + + The main application window shows views of both the source model + and the proxy model. The source view is quite simple: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 1 + + The QTreeView class provides a default model/view implementation + of a tree view; our view implements a tree representation of items + in the application's source model. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 2 + + The QTreeView class provides a default model/view implementation + of a tree view; our view implements a tree representation of items + in the application's source model. We add our view widget to a + layout that we install on a corresponding group box. + + The proxy model view, on the other hand, contains several widgets + controlling the various aspects of transforming the source model's + data structure: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 3 + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 4 + + Note that whenever the user changes one of the filtering options, + we must explicitly reapply the filter. This is done by connecting + the various editors to functions that update the proxy model. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 5 + + The sorting will be handled by the view. All we have to do is to + enable sorting for our proxy view by setting the + QTreeView::sortingEnabled property (which is false by + default). Then we add all the filtering widgets and the proxy view + to a layout that we install on a corresponding group box. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 6 + + Finally, after putting our two group boxes into another layout + that we install on our main application widget, we customize the + application window. + + As mentioned above, we create the source model in the \c main () + function, calling the \c Window::setSourceModel() function to make + the application use it: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 7 + + The QSortFilterProxyModel::setSourceModel() function makes the + proxy model process the data in the given model, in this case out + mail model. The \l {QAbstractItemView::}{setModel()} that the + view widget inherits from the QAbstractItemModel class, sets the + model for the view to present. Note that the latter function will + also create and set a new selection model. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 8 + + The \c textFilterChanged() function is called whenever the user + changes the filter pattern or the case sensitivity. + + We first retrieve the preferred syntax (the QRegExp::PatternSyntax + enum is used to interpret the meaning of the given pattern), then + we determine the preferred case sensitivity. Based on these + preferences and the current filter pattern, we set the proxy + model's \l {QSortFilterProxyModel::}{filterRegExp} property. The + \l {QSortFilterProxyModel::}{filterRegExp} property holds the + regular expression used to filter the contents of the source + model. Note that calling QSortFilterProxyModel's \l + {QSortFilterProxyModel::}{setFilterRegExp()} function also updates + the model. + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/window.cpp 9 + + The \c dateFilterChanged() function is called whenever the user + modifies the range of valid dates. We retrieve the new dates from + the user interface, and call the corresponding functions (provided + by our custom proxy model) to set the proxy model's minimum and + maximum dates. As we explained above, calling these functions also + updates the model. + + \section1 The Main() Function + + In this example, we have separated the application from the source + model by creating the model in the \c main () function. First we + create the application, then we create the source model: + + \snippet examples/itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/main.cpp 0 + + The \c createMailModel() function is a convenience function + provided to simplify the constructor. All it does is to create and + return a model describing a collection of emails. The model is an + instance of the QStandardItemModel class, i.e., a generic model + for storing custom data typically used as a repository for + standard Qt data types. Each mail description is added to the + model using \c addMail(), another convenience function. See \l + {itemviews/customsortfiltermodel/main.cpp}{main.cpp} for details. +*/ |