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authorRalf Engels <ralf.engels@nokia.com>2010-12-21 16:08:21 (GMT)
committerRobert Griebl <robert.griebl@nokia.com>2011-01-24 13:12:41 (GMT)
commit4f9a318d639c4e7e09e56751d31608fb39d472af (patch)
tree07fa66fe0506ea2e60321fdcf62d0227f079a0bf /src/gui
parentfa845566b3733bc06454b71e33b1ff405ba32280 (diff)
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Review and improve scroller documentation
Diffstat (limited to 'src/gui')
-rw-r--r--src/gui/util/qscroller.cpp178
-rw-r--r--src/gui/util/qscrollerproperties.cpp78
2 files changed, 127 insertions, 129 deletions
diff --git a/src/gui/util/qscroller.cpp b/src/gui/util/qscroller.cpp
index a9906f0..ae66cd4 100644
--- a/src/gui/util/qscroller.cpp
+++ b/src/gui/util/qscroller.cpp
@@ -243,7 +243,7 @@ private:
intuitive user experience.
The QScroller object is the object that stores the current position and
- speed of the scrolling and takes care of updates.
+ scrolling speed and takes care of updates.
QScroller can be triggered by a flick gesture
\code
@@ -259,20 +259,20 @@ private:
scroller->scrollTo(QPointF(100, 100));
\endcode
- The scrolled QObjects will be receive a QScrollPrepareEvent whenever the scroller needs to
+ The scrolled QObjects receive a QScrollPrepareEvent whenever the scroller needs to
update its geometry information and a QScrollEvent whenever the content of the object should
actually be scrolled.
- The scroller uses the global QAbstractAnimation timer to generate its QScrollEvents, but this
- can be slowed down with QScrollerProperties::FrameRate on a per-QScroller basis.
+ The scroller uses the global QAbstractAnimation timer to generate its QScrollEvents. This
+ can be changed with QScrollerProperties::FrameRate on a per-QScroller basis.
Several examples in the \c scroller examples directory show how QScroller,
QScrollEvent and the scroller gesture can be used.
- Even though this kinetic scroller has a huge number of settings available via
+ Even though this kinetic scroller has a large number of settings available via
QScrollerProperties, we recommend that you leave them all at their default, platform optimized
- values. In case you really want to change them you can experiment with the \c plot example in
- the \c scroller examples directory first.
+ values. Before changing them you can experiment with the \c plot example in
+ the \c scroller examples directory.
\sa QScrollEvent, QScrollPrepareEvent, QScrollerProperties
*/
@@ -293,9 +293,9 @@ bool QScroller::hasScroller(QObject *target)
/*!
Returns the scroller for the given \a target.
- As long as the object exist this function will always return the same QScroller.
- If a QScroller does not exist yet for the \a target, it will implicitly be created.
- At no point will two QScrollers be active on one object.
+ As long as the object exists this function will always return the same QScroller instance.
+ If no QScroller exists for the \a target, one will implicitly be created.
+ At no point more than one QScroller will be active on an object.
\sa hasScroller(), target()
*/
@@ -324,9 +324,9 @@ const QScroller *QScroller::scroller(const QObject *target)
}
/*!
- Returns an application wide list of currently active, i.e. state() !=
- QScroller::Inactive, QScroller objects.
- This routine is mostly useful when writing your own gesture recognizer.
+ Returns an application wide list of currently active QScroller objects.
+ Active QScroller objects are in a state() that is not QScroller::Inactive.
+ This function is useful when writing your own gesture recognizer.
*/
QList<QScroller *> QScroller::activeScrollers()
{
@@ -346,8 +346,8 @@ QObject *QScroller::target() const
/*!
\fn QScroller::scrollerPropertiesChanged(const QScrollerProperties &newProperties);
- QScroller emits this signal whenever its scroller properties have been
- changed. \a newProperties are the new scroller properties.
+ QScroller emits this signal whenever its scroller properties change.
+ \a newProperties are the new scroller properties.
\sa scrollerProperties
*/
@@ -355,7 +355,7 @@ QObject *QScroller::target() const
/*! \property QScroller::scrollerProperties
\brief The scroller properties of this scroller.
- The properties will be used by the QScroller to determine its scrolling behaviour.
+ The properties are used by the QScroller to determine its scrolling behavior.
*/
QScrollerProperties QScroller::scrollerProperties() const
{
@@ -378,24 +378,25 @@ void QScroller::setScrollerProperties(const QScrollerProperties &sp)
/*!
- Registers a custom scroll gesture recognizer and grabs it for the \a
+ Registers a custom scroll gesture recognizer, grabs it for the \a
target and returns the resulting gesture type. If \a scrollGestureType is
- set to TouchGesture the gesture will trigger on touch events - if set to
+ set to TouchGesture the gesture triggers on touch events. If it is set to
one of LeftMouseButtonGesture, RightMouseButtonGesture or
- MiddleMouseButtonGesture it will trigger on mouse events of the
+ MiddleMouseButtonGesture it triggers on mouse events of the
corresponding button.
Only one scroll gesture can be active on a single object at the same
- time, so if you call this function twice on the same object, it will
+ time. If you call this function twice on the same object, it will
ungrab the existing gesture before grabbing the new one.
- Please note: To avoid nasty side-effects, all mouse events will be
- consumed while the gesture is triggered. Since the mouse press event is
- not consumed, the gesture needs to also send a fake mouse release event
- at the global position \c{(INT_MIN, INT_MIN)} to make sure that it
- doesn't mess with the internal states of the widget that received the
- mouse press in the first place (which could e.g. be a QPushButton
- inside a QScrollArea).
+ \note To avoid unwanted side-effects, mouse events are consumed while
+ the gesture is triggered. Since the initial mouse press event is
+ not consumed, the gesture sends a fake mouse release event
+ at the global position \c{(INT_MIN, INT_MIN)}. This ensures that
+ internal states of the widget that received the original mouse press
+ are consistent.
+
+ \sa ungrabGesture, grabbedGesture
*/
Qt::GestureType QScroller::grabGesture(QObject *target, ScrollerGestureType scrollGestureType)
{
@@ -437,6 +438,8 @@ Qt::GestureType QScroller::grabGesture(QObject *target, ScrollerGestureType scro
/*!
Returns the gesture type currently grabbed for the \a target or 0 if no
gesture is grabbed.
+
+ \sa grabGesture, ungrabGesture
*/
Qt::GestureType QScroller::grabbedGesture(QObject *target)
{
@@ -449,6 +452,9 @@ Qt::GestureType QScroller::grabbedGesture(QObject *target)
/*!
Ungrabs the gesture for the \a target.
+ Does nothing if no gesture is grabbed.
+
+ \sa grabGesture, grabbedGesture
*/
void QScroller::ungrabGesture(QObject *target)
{
@@ -521,7 +527,7 @@ QScroller::State QScroller::state() const
}
/*!
- Stops the scroller and resets the state back to Inactive.
+ Stops the scroller and resets its state back to Inactive.
*/
void QScroller::stop()
{
@@ -543,13 +549,13 @@ void QScroller::stop()
}
/*!
- \brief Returns the pixel per meter metric for the scrolled widget.
+ Returns the pixel per meter metric for the scrolled widget.
The value is reported for both the x and y axis separately by using a QPointF.
- \note Please note that this value should be physically correct, while the actual DPI settings
- that Qt returns for the display may be reported wrongly (on purpose) by the underlying
- windowing system (e.g. Mac OS X or Maemo 5).
+ \note Please note that this value should be physically correct. The actual DPI settings
+ that Qt returns for the display may be reported wrongly on purpose by the underlying
+ windowing system, for example on Mac OS X or Maemo 5.
*/
QPointF QScroller::pixelPerMeter() const
{
@@ -574,10 +580,8 @@ QPointF QScroller::pixelPerMeter() const
}
/*!
- \brief Returns the current velocity of the scroller.
-
- Returns the current scrolling velocity in meter per second when in the state Scrolling.
- Returns a null velocity otherwise.
+ Returns the current scrolling velocity in meter per second when the state is Scrolling or Dragging.
+ Returns a zero velocity otherwise.
The velocity is reported for both the x and y axis separately by using a QPointF.
@@ -617,11 +621,9 @@ QPointF QScroller::velocity() const
}
/*!
- \brief Returns the target position for the scroll movement.
-
- Returns the planned final position for the current scroll movement or the current
- position if the scroller is not in the scrolling state.
- The result is undefined when the scroller is in the inactive state.
+ Returns the estimated final position for the current scroll movement.
+ Returns the current position if the scroller state is not Scrolling.
+ The result is undefined when the scroller state is Inactive.
The target position is in pixel.
@@ -642,7 +644,7 @@ QPointF QScroller::finalPosition() const
In this case the scroller might or might not overshoot.
The scrolling speed will be calculated so that the given position will
- be reached after a platform-defined time span (e.g. 1 second for Maemo 5).
+ be reached after a platform-defined time span.
\a pos is given in viewport coordinates.
@@ -656,7 +658,7 @@ void QScroller::scrollTo(const QPointF &pos)
/*! \overload
- This version will reach its destination position in \a scrollTime milli seconds.
+ This version will reach its destination position in \a scrollTime milliseconds.
*/
void QScroller::scrollTo(const QPointF &pos, int scrollTime)
{
@@ -704,10 +706,12 @@ void QScroller::scrollTo(const QPointF &pos, int scrollTime)
In cases where it is not possible to fit the rect plus margins inside the viewport the contents
are scrolled so that as much as possible is visible from \a rect.
- The scrolling speed will be calculated so that the given position will
- be reached after a platform-defined time span (e.g. 1 second for Maemo 5).
+ The scrolling speed is calculated so that the given position is reached after a platform-defined
+ time span.
This function performs the actual scrolling by calling scrollTo().
+
+ \sa scrollTo
*/
void QScroller::ensureVisible(const QRectF &rect, qreal xmargin, qreal ymargin)
{
@@ -717,7 +721,7 @@ void QScroller::ensureVisible(const QRectF &rect, qreal xmargin, qreal ymargin)
/*! \overload
- This version will reach its destination position in \a scrollTime milli seconds.
+ This version will reach its destination position in \a scrollTime milliseconds.
*/
void QScroller::ensureVisible(const QRectF &rect, qreal xmargin, qreal ymargin, int scrollTime)
{
@@ -787,11 +791,11 @@ void QScroller::ensureVisible(const QRectF &rect, qreal xmargin, qreal ymargin,
}
/*! This function resends the QScrollPrepareEvent.
- * Calling resendPrepareEvent triggers a QScrollPrepareEvent from the scroller.
- * This will allow the receiver to re-set content position and content size while
- * scrolling.
- * Calling this function while in the Inactive state is useless as the prepare event
- * is send again right before scrolling starts.
+ Calling resendPrepareEvent triggers a QScrollPrepareEvent from the scroller.
+ This allows the receiver to re-set content position and content size while
+ scrolling.
+ Calling this function while in the Inactive state is useless as the prepare event
+ is sent again before scrolling starts.
*/
void QScroller::resendPrepareEvent()
{
@@ -799,11 +803,10 @@ void QScroller::resendPrepareEvent()
d->prepareScrolling(d->pressPosition);
}
-/*! Set the snap positions for the horizontal axis.
- * Set the snap positions to a list of \a positions.
- * This will overwrite all previously set snap positions and also a previously
- * set snapping interval.
- * Snapping can be deactivated by setting an empty list of positions.
+/*! Set the snap positions for the horizontal axis to a list of \a positions.
+ This overwrites all previously set snap positions and also a previously
+ set snapping interval.
+ Snapping can be deactivated by setting an empty list of positions.
*/
void QScroller::setSnapPositionsX(const QList<qreal> &positions)
{
@@ -814,13 +817,12 @@ void QScroller::setSnapPositionsX(const QList<qreal> &positions)
d->recalcScrollingSegments();
}
-/*! Set the snap positions for the horizontal axis.
- * Set the snap positions to regular spaced intervals.
- * The first snap position will be at \a first from the beginning of the list. The next at \a first + \a interval and so on.
- * This can be used to implement a list header.
- * This will overwrite all previously set snap positions and also a previously
- * set snapping interval.
- * Snapping can be deactivated by setting an interval of 0.0
+/*! Set the snap positions for the horizontal axis to regular spaced intervals.
+ The first snap position is at \a first. The next at \a first + \a interval.
+ This can be used to implement a list header.
+ This overwrites all previously set snap positions and also a previously
+ set snapping interval.
+ Snapping can be deactivated by setting an interval of 0.0
*/
void QScroller::setSnapPositionsX(qreal first, qreal interval)
{
@@ -832,11 +834,10 @@ void QScroller::setSnapPositionsX(qreal first, qreal interval)
d->recalcScrollingSegments();
}
-/*! Set the snap positions for the vertical axis.
- * Set the snap positions to a list of \a positions.
- * This will overwrite all previously set snap positions and also a previously
- * set snapping interval.
- * Snapping can be deactivated by setting an empty list of positions.
+/*! Set the snap positions for the vertical axis to a list of \a positions.
+ This overwrites all previously set snap positions and also a previously
+ set snapping interval.
+ Snapping can be deactivated by setting an empty list of positions.
*/
void QScroller::setSnapPositionsY(const QList<qreal> &positions)
{
@@ -847,12 +848,11 @@ void QScroller::setSnapPositionsY(const QList<qreal> &positions)
d->recalcScrollingSegments();
}
-/*! Set the snap positions for the vertical axis.
- * Set the snap positions to regular spaced intervals.
- * The first snap position will be at \a first. The next at \a first + \a interval and so on.
- * This will overwrite all previously set snap positions and also a previously
- * set snapping interval.
- * Snapping can be deactivated by setting an interval of 0.0
+/*! Set the snap positions for the vertical axis to regular spaced intervals.
+ The first snap position is at \a first. The next at \a first + \a interval.
+ This overwrites all previously set snap positions and also a previously
+ set snapping interval.
+ Snapping can be deactivated by setting an interval of 0.0
*/
void QScroller::setSnapPositionsY(qreal first, qreal interval)
{
@@ -951,14 +951,15 @@ void QScrollerPrivate::timerTick()
/*!
This function is used by gesture recognizers to inform the scroller about a new input event.
- The scroller will change its internal state() according to the input event and its attached
- scroller properties. Since the scroller doesn't care about the actual kind of input device the
- event came from, you need to decompose the event into the \a input type, a \a position and a
+ The scroller changes its internal state() according to the input event and its attached
+ scroller properties. The scroller doesn't distinguish between the kind of input device the
+ event came from. Therefore the event needs to be split into the \a input type, a \a position and a
milli-second \a timestamp. The \a position needs to be in the target's coordinate system.
+
The return value is \c true if the event should be consumed by the calling filter or \c false
if the event should be forwarded to the control.
- \note Using grabGesture() should be sufficient for most use cases though.
+ \note Using grabGesture() should be sufficient for most use cases.
*/
bool QScroller::handleInput(Input input, const QPointF &position, qint64 timestamp)
{
@@ -1380,7 +1381,8 @@ void QScrollerPrivate::createScrollingSegments(qreal v, qreal startPos, qreal pp
}
-/*! Prepares scrolling by sending a QScrollPrepareEvent to the receiver widget.
+/*! \internal
+ Prepares scrolling by sending a QScrollPrepareEvent to the receiver widget.
Returns true if the scrolling was accepted and a target was returned.
*/
bool QScrollerPrivate::prepareScrolling(const QPointF &position)
@@ -1838,12 +1840,12 @@ void QScrollerPrivate::setContentPositionHelperScrolling()
}
/*! \internal
- * Returns the next snap point in direction.
- * If \a direction >0 it will return the next snap point that is larger than the current position.
- * If \a direction <0 it will return the next snap point that is smaller than the current position.
- * If \a direction ==0 it will return the nearest snap point (or the current position if we are already
- * on a snap point.
- * Returns the nearest snap position or NaN if no such point could be found.
+ Returns the next snap point in direction.
+ If \a direction >0 it will return the next snap point that is larger than the current position.
+ If \a direction <0 it will return the next snap point that is smaller than the current position.
+ If \a direction ==0 it will return the nearest snap point (or the current position if we are already
+ on a snap point.
+ Returns the nearest snap position or NaN if no such point could be found.
*/
qreal QScrollerPrivate::nextSnapPos(qreal p, int dir, Qt::Orientation orientation)
{
@@ -1965,7 +1967,7 @@ qreal QScrollerPrivate::nextSnapPos(qreal p, int dir, Qt::Orientation orientatio
This enum contains the different QScroller states.
\value Inactive The scroller is not scrolling and nothing is pressed.
- \value Pressed A touch event was received or the mouse button pressed but the scroll area is currently not dragged.
+ \value Pressed A touch event was received or the mouse button was pressed but the scroll area is currently not dragged.
\value Dragging The scroll area is currently following the touch point or mouse.
\value Scrolling The scroll area is moving on it's own.
*/
@@ -1976,8 +1978,8 @@ qreal QScrollerPrivate::nextSnapPos(qreal p, int dir, Qt::Orientation orientatio
This enum contains the different gesture types that are supported by the QScroller gesture recognizer.
\value TouchGesture The gesture recognizer will only trigger on touch
- events. Specifically it will react on single touch points when using a
- touch screen and dual touch points when using a touchpad.
+ events. Specifically it will react on single touch points when using a
+ touch screen and dual touch points when using a touchpad.
\value LeftMouseButtonGesture The gesture recognizer will only trigger on left mouse button events.
\value MiddleMouseButtonGesture The gesture recognizer will only trigger on middle mouse button events.
\value RightMouseButtonGesture The gesture recognizer will only trigger on right mouse button events.
diff --git a/src/gui/util/qscrollerproperties.cpp b/src/gui/util/qscrollerproperties.cpp
index 2e52959..b159e05 100644
--- a/src/gui/util/qscrollerproperties.cpp
+++ b/src/gui/util/qscrollerproperties.cpp
@@ -95,11 +95,11 @@ QScrollerPropertiesPrivate *QScrollerPropertiesPrivate::defaults()
The QScrollerProperties class stores the parameters used by QScroller.
- The default settings are platform dependant and Qt will emulate the
+ The default settings are platform dependent so that Qt emulates the
platform behaviour for kinetic scrolling.
As a convention the QScrollerProperties are in physical units (meter,
- seconds) and will be converted by QScroller using the current DPI.
+ seconds) and are converted by QScroller using the current DPI.
\sa QScroller
*/
@@ -179,10 +179,10 @@ bool QScrollerPropertiesPrivate::operator==(const QScrollerPropertiesPrivate &p)
}
/*!
- Sets the scroller properties returned by the default constructor to \a sp.
+ Sets the scroller properties for all new QScrollerProperties objects to \a sp.
Use this function to override the platform default properties returned by the default
- constructor. If you only want to change the scroller properties of a single scroller, then use
+ constructor. If you only want to change the scroller properties of a single scroller, use
QScroller::setScrollerProperties()
\note Calling this function will not change the content of already existing
@@ -291,50 +291,48 @@ void QScrollerProperties::setScrollMetric(ScrollMetric metric, const QVariant &v
This enum describes the various modes of overshooting.
- \value OvershootWhenScrollable Overshooting is when the content is scrollable. This is the
+ \value OvershootWhenScrollable Overshooting is possible when the content is scrollable. This is the
default.
- \value OvershootAlwaysOff Overshooting is never enabled (even when the content is scrollable).
+ \value OvershootAlwaysOff Overshooting is never enabled, even when the content is scrollable.
- \value OvershootAlwaysOn Overshooting is always enabled (even when the content is not
- scrollable).
+ \value OvershootAlwaysOn Overshooting is always enabled, even when the content is not
+ scrollable.
*/
/*!
\enum QScrollerProperties::ScrollMetric
This enum contains the different scroll metric types. When not indicated otherwise the
- setScrollMetric function expects a QVariant of a real value.
+ setScrollMetric function expects a QVariant of type qreal.
- See the QScroller documentation for a further explanation of the concepts behind the different
+ See the QScroller documentation for further details of the concepts behind the different
values.
- \value MousePressEventDelay This is the time a mouse press event will be delayed when starting
+ \value MousePressEventDelay This is the time a mouse press event is delayed when starting
a flick gesture in \c{[s]}. If the gesture is triggered within that time, no mouse press or
- release will be sent to the scrolled object. If it triggers after that delay the (delayed)
- mouse press plus a faked release event (at global postion \c{QPoint(-QWIDGETSIZE_MAX,
- -QWIDGETSIZE_MAX)} will be sent. If the gesture is canceled, then both the (delayed) mouse
- press plus the real release event will be delivered.
+ release is sent to the scrolled object. If it triggers after that delay the delayed
+ mouse press plus a faked release event at global postion \c{QPoint(-QWIDGETSIZE_MAX,
+ -QWIDGETSIZE_MAX)} is sent. If the gesture is canceled, then both the delayed mouse
+ press plus the real release event are delivered.
\value DragStartDistance This is the minimum distance the touch or mouse point needs to be
moved before the flick gesture is triggered in \c m.
- \value DragVelocitySmoothingFactor A value that describes how much new drag velocities are
+ \value DragVelocitySmoothingFactor A value that describes to which extent new drag velocities are
included in the final scrolling velocity. This value should be in the range between \c 0 and
- \c 1. The lower the value, the more smoothing will be applied to the dragging velocity. The
- default value is \c 0.8.
+ \c 1. The lower the value, the more smoothing is applied to the dragging velocity.
- \value AxisLockThreshold If greater than zero a scroll movement will be restricted to one axis
- only if the movement is inside an angle about the axis. The threshold must be in the range \c 0
- to \c 1.
+ \value AxisLockThreshold Restricts the movement to one axis if the movement is inside an angle
+ around the axis. The threshold must be in the range \c 0 to \c 1.
\value ScrollingCurve The QEasingCurve used when decelerating the scrolling velocity after an
user initiated flick. Please note that this is the easing curve for the positions, \bold{not}
- the velocity: the default is QEasingCurve::OutQuad, which results is a linear decrease in
+ the velocity: the default is QEasingCurve::OutQuad, which results in a linear decrease in
velocity (1st derivative) and a constant deceleration (2nd derivative).
\value DecelerationFactor This factor influences how long it takes the scroller to decelerate
- to 0 velocity. The actual value heavily depends on the chosen ScrollingCurve, but for most
+ to 0 velocity. The actual value depends on the chosen ScrollingCurve. For most
types the value should be in the range from \c 0.1 to \c 2.0
\value MinimumVelocity The minimum velocity that is needed after ending the touch or releasing
@@ -344,39 +342,38 @@ void QScrollerProperties::setScrollMetric(ScrollMetric metric, const QVariant &v
\value MaximumClickThroughVelocity This is the maximum allowed scroll speed for a click-through
in \c{m/s}. This means that a click on a currently (slowly) scrolling object will not only stop
- the scrolling but the click event will also be delivered to the UI control - this is very
+ the scrolling but the click event will also be delivered to the UI control. This is
useful when using exponential-type scrolling curves.
\value AcceleratingFlickMaximumTime This is the maximum time in \c seconds that a flick gesture
- can take to be recognized as an accelerating flick. If set to zero no such gesture will be
+ can take to be recognized as an accelerating flick. If set to zero no such gesture is
detected. An "accelerating flick" is a flick gesture executed on an already scrolling object.
In such cases the scrolling speed is multiplied by AcceleratingFlickSpeedupFactor in order to
accelerate it.
- \value AcceleratingFlickSpeedupFactor The current speed will be multiplied by this number if an
- accelerating flick is detected. Should be \c{> 1}.
+ \value AcceleratingFlickSpeedupFactor The current speed is multiplied by this number if an
+ accelerating flick is detected. Should be \c{>= 1}.
\value SnapPositionRatio This is the distance that the user must drag the area beween two snap
- points in order to snap it to the next position. e.g. \c{0.33} means that the scroll must only
+ points in order to snap it to the next position. \c{0.33} means that the scroll must only
reach one third of the distance between two snap points to snap to the next one. The ratio must
- be in the range \c 0 to \c 1.
+ be between \c 0 and \c 1.
\value SnapTime This is the time factor for the scrolling curve. A lower value means that the
scrolling will take longer. The scrolling distance is independet of this value.
\value OvershootDragResistanceFactor This value is the factor between the mouse dragging and
- the actual scroll area movement (during overshoot). The factor must be in the range \c 0 to \c
- 1.
+ the actual scroll area movement (during overshoot). The factor must be between \c 0 and \c 1.
\value OvershootDragDistanceFactor This is the maximum distance for overshoot movements while
- dragging. The actual overshoot distance will be calculated by multiplying this value with the
- viewport size of the scrolled object. The factor must be in the range \c 0 to \c 1.
+ dragging. The actual overshoot distance is calculated by multiplying this value with the
+ viewport size of the scrolled object. The factor must be between \c 0 and \c 1.
\value OvershootScrollDistanceFactor This is the maximum distance for overshoot movements while
- scrolling. The actual overshoot distance will be calculated by multiplying this value with the
- viewport size of the scrolled object. The factor must be in the range \c 0 to \c 1.
+ scrolling. The actual overshoot distance is calculated by multiplying this value with the
+ viewport size of the scrolled object. The factor must be between \c 0 and \c 1.
- \value OvershootScrollTime This is the time in \c seconds that will be used to play the
+ \value OvershootScrollTime This is the time in \c seconds that is used to play the
complete overshoot animation.
\value HorizontalOvershootPolicy This is the horizontal overshooting policy (see OvershootPolicy).
@@ -385,13 +382,12 @@ void QScrollerProperties::setScrollMetric(ScrollMetric metric, const QVariant &v
\value FrameRate This is the frame rate which should be used while dragging or scrolling.
QScroller uses a QAbstractAnimation timer internally to sync all scrolling operations to other
- animations that might be active at the same time. If the Standard value of 60 frames per
- second is too fast for your use case, you can lower the frames per second with this setting
- (while still being in-sync with QAbstractAnimation). Please note that only the values of the
+ animations that might be active at the same time. If the standard value of 60 frames per
+ second is too fast, it can be lowered with this setting,
+ while still being in-sync with QAbstractAnimation. Please note that only the values of the
FrameRates enum are allowed here.
- \value ScrollMetricCount This is just used when enumerating the metrics. It is always the last
- entry.
+ \value ScrollMetricCount This is always the last entry.
*/
QT_END_NAMESPACE