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author | Bea Lam <bea.lam@nokia.com> | 2010-11-04 05:18:08 (GMT) |
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committer | Bea Lam <bea.lam@nokia.com> | 2010-11-04 05:19:51 (GMT) |
commit | b628a6dc1373fcfbc71a7668d39111c699396674 (patch) | |
tree | e9ba297e092751de340516311d4223eb86b0cb44 /doc/src | |
parent | 80544a90d165736088b8286b738fd4e3033b1ade (diff) | |
download | Qt-b628a6dc1373fcfbc71a7668d39111c699396674.zip Qt-b628a6dc1373fcfbc71a7668d39111c699396674.tar.gz Qt-b628a6dc1373fcfbc71a7668d39111c699396674.tar.bz2 |
Document list type operations
Task-number: QTBUG-14645
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/basictypes.qdoc | 85 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/extending.qdoc | 9 |
2 files changed, 87 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/basictypes.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/basictypes.qdoc index 6abe96f..8ab06ab 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/basictypes.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/basictypes.qdoc @@ -355,9 +355,11 @@ \brief A list of objects. - A list of objects. While not technically a basic type, QML also - supports lists of object types. When used from QML, the engine - automatically appends each value to the list. + A list type contains a list of objects. While not technically + a basic type, QML supports lists of object types. When used + from QML, the engine automatically appends each value to the list. + Items in the list can be accessed by index using the usual + \c listName[index] syntax. For example, the \l Item class contains a list property named children that can be used like this: @@ -366,14 +368,87 @@ Item { children: [ Item { id: child1 }, - Rectangle { id: child2 }, + Rectangle { id: child2; width: 200 }, Text { id: child3 } ] + + Component.onCompleted: { + console.log("Width of child rectangle:", children[1].width) + } } \endqml - \c child1, \c child2 and \c child3 will all be added to the children list + \c child1, \c child2 and \c child3 will be added to the children list in the order in which they appear. + List \l {Adding new properties}{properties} can be created as a + \c variant type, or as a \c list<Type> type, where \c Type is the + type of the object in the list: + + \qml + Item { + property variant values: [ 10, 20, 'abc', 'xyz' ] + + property list<Rectangle> rects: [ + Rectangle { width: 100; height: 100}, + Rectangle { width: 200; height: 200} + ] + } + \endqml + + A \c variant list can contain values of any of the \l {QML Basic Types}{basic QML types} + such as numbers, strings, etc. while a \c list<Type> list can only contain values + that match (or are derived from) the specified \c Type. + + A list property can be cleared by setting it to an empty list: + + \qml + Item { + children: [] + } + \endqml + + A list property cannot be modified in any other way. Items cannot be dynamically added to + or removed from the list through JavaScript operations; any \c push() operations on the + list only modify a \e copy of the list and not the actual list. (These current limitations + are due to restrictions on \l {Property Binding} where lists are involved.) + + To create a modifiable list, create an array object from within a \c .js JavaScript file, + or implement a custom list element in C++. Here is a QML element that modifies the list in a + JavaScript file: + + \table + \row + \o + \qml + // QML + import "script.js" as Script + + Item { + Component.onCompleted: { + Script.addItem('abc') + console.log("Added:", Script.getList()[0]) + } + } + \endqml + + \o + \code + // script.js + var myArray = new Array() + + function getList() { + return myArray + } + + function addItem(item) { + myArray.push(item) + } + \endcode + \endtable + + However, note that a JavaScript list should not be used as a QML \c property value, + as the property is not updated when the list changes. + \sa {QML Basic Types} */ diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/extending.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/extending.qdoc index 18887c7..5c1b977 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/extending.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/extending.qdoc @@ -647,7 +647,8 @@ language. \section1 Adding new properties -New properties can be added to an existing type. These new properties are +New properties can be added to an existing type using the \c property keyword. +These new properties are available for use within QML, and also appear as regular Qt properties on the C++ object, accessible through the regular property access mechanisms. @@ -679,8 +680,12 @@ like this: property list<Item> listOfItemsProperty \endcode +Custom types must be registered with qmlRegisterType() to be usable as a property +type. Also note that list properties cannot be modified like ordinary JavaScript +arrays; see the \l {list}{list type documentation} for details. + QML supports two methods for adding a new property to a type: a new property -definition, and a property alias. +definition, and a property alias. These are shown below. \section2 Property definitions |