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-rw-r--r--src/corelib/animation/qabstractanimation.cpp18
-rw-r--r--src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp143
2 files changed, 114 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/src/corelib/animation/qabstractanimation.cpp b/src/corelib/animation/qabstractanimation.cpp
index 71ef45c..40fa8fa 100644
--- a/src/corelib/animation/qabstractanimation.cpp
+++ b/src/corelib/animation/qabstractanimation.cpp
@@ -46,14 +46,13 @@
\since 4.5
\preliminary
- This class is part of \l{The Animation Framework}. It serves as a base class
- for standard animations and groups, with functions for shared
- functionality, and it also makes it easy for you to define custom
- animations that plug into the rest of the animation framework.
-
- If you want to create an animation, you should look at the two subclasses,
- QVariantAnimation and QAnimationGroup, instead.
+ The class defines the functions for the functionality shared
+ between all animations. By inheriting this class, you can create
+ custom animations that plug into the rest of the animation
+ framework.
+
+
QAbstractAnimation provides an interface for the current time and
duration, the loop count, and the state of an animation. These properties
define the base functionality common to all animations in Qt. The virtual
@@ -86,6 +85,11 @@
changes, which is particularily useful for animations that are not driven
by time.
+ \omit
+ If you want to create an animation, you should look at the two subclasses,
+ QVariantAnimation and QAnimationGroup, instead.
+ \endomit
+
\sa QVariantAnimation, QAnimationGroup, {The Animation Framework}
*/
diff --git a/src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp b/src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp
index bb6cf1c..dd32424 100644
--- a/src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp
+++ b/src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp
@@ -59,26 +59,68 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
\since 4.5
\preliminary
- This class is part of {The Animation Framework}. It serves as a base class
- for property and item animations, with functions for shared functionality.
-
- If you want to create an animation, you should look at QPropertyAnimation instead.
-
+ This class is part of \l{The Animation Framework}. It serves as a
+ base class for property and item animations, with functions for
+ shared functionality.
+
+ QVariantAnimation cannot be used directly as it is an abstract
+ class; it does not implement
+ \l{QAbstractAnimation::}{updateCurrentValue()} from
+ QAbstractAnimation. The class performs interpolation over
+ \l{QVariant}s, but leaves using the interpolated values to its
+ subclasses. Currently, Qt provides QPropertyAnimation, which
+ animates Qt \l{Qt's Property System}{properties}. See the
+ QPropertyAnimation class description if you wish to animate such
+ properties.
+
You can then set start and end values for the property by calling
setStartValue() and setEndValue(), and finally call start() to
- start the animation. When control goes back to the event loop, QVariantAnimation
- will interpolate the property of the target object and emit the valueChanged
- signal. To react to a change in the current value you have to reimplement the
- updateCurrentValue virtual method.
-
- There are two ways to affect how QVariantAnimation interpolates the values.
- You can set an easing curve by calling setEasingCurve(), and configure the
- duration by calling setDuration(). You can change how the QVariants are
- interpolated by creating a subclass of QVariantAnimation, and reimplementing the
- virtual interpolated() function.
-
-
- \sa QPropertyAnimation, {The Animation Framework}
+ start the animation. QVariantAnimation will interpolate the
+ property of the target object and emit valueChanged(). To react to
+ a change in the current value you have to reimplement the
+ updateCurrentValue() virtual function.
+
+ It is also possible to set values at specified steps situated
+ between the start and end value. The interpolation will then
+ touch these points at the specified steps. Note that the start and
+ end values are defined as the key values at 0.0 and 1.0.
+
+ There are two ways to affect how QVariantAnimation interpolates
+ the values. You can set an easing curve by calling
+ setEasingCurve(), and configure the duration by calling
+ setDuration(). You can change how the QVariants are interpolated
+ by creating a subclass of QVariantAnimation, and reimplementing
+ the virtual interpolated() function.
+
+ Subclassing QVariantAnimation can be an alternative if you have
+ \l{QVariant}s that you do not wish to declare as Qt properties.
+ Note, however, that you in most cases will be better off declaring
+ your QVariant as a property.
+
+ Not all QVariant types are supported. Below is a list of currently
+ supported QVariant types:
+
+ \list
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{Int}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{Double}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{Float}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QLine}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QLineF}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QPoint}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QSize}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QSizeF}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QRect}
+ \o \l{QMetaType::}{QRectF}
+ \endlist
+
+ If you need to interpolate other variant types, including custom
+ types, you have to implement interpolation for these yourself.
+ You do this by reimplementing interpolated(), which returns
+ interpolation values for the value being interpolated.
+
+ \omit We need some snippets around here. \endomit
+
+ \sa QPropertyAnimation, QAbstractAnimation, {The Animation Framework}
*/
/*!
@@ -261,16 +303,23 @@ QVariantAnimation::~QVariantAnimation()
\property QVariantAnimation::easingCurve
\brief the easing curve of the animation
- This property defines the easing curve of the animation. By default, a
- linear easing curve is used, resulting in linear interpolation of the
- end property. For many animations, it's useful to try different easing
- curves, including QEasingCurve::InCirc, which provides a circular entry curve,
- and QEasingCurve::InOutElastic, which provides an elastic effect on the values
- of the interpolated property.
+ This property defines the easing curve of the animation. By
+ default, a linear easing curve is used, resulting in linear
+ interpolation. Other curves are provided, for instance,
+ QEasingCurve::InCirc, which provides a circular entry curve.
+ Another example is QEasingCurve::InOutElastic, which provides an
+ elastic effect on the values of the interpolated variant.
+ The easing curve is used with the interpolator, the interpolated()
+ virtual function, the animation's duration, and iterationCount, to
+ control how the current value changes as the animation progresses.
+
+<<<<<<< Updated upstream:src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp
The easing curve is used with the interpolator, the interpolated() virtual
function, the animation's duration, and loopCount, to control how the
current value changes as the animation progresses.
+=======
+>>>>>>> Stashed changes:src/corelib/animation/qvariantanimation.cpp
*/
QEasingCurve QVariantAnimation::easingCurve() const
{
@@ -372,8 +421,8 @@ QVariantAnimation::Interpolator QVariantAnimationPrivate::getInterpolator(int in
\property QVariantAnimation::duration
\brief the duration of the animation
- This property describes the duration of the animation. The default
- duration is 250 milliseconds.
+ This property describes the duration in milliseconds of the
+ animation. The default duration is 250 milliseconds.
\sa QAbstractAnimation::duration()
*/
@@ -509,17 +558,22 @@ void QVariantAnimation::setKeyValues(const KeyValues &keyValues)
/*!
\property QVariantAnimation::currentValue
- \brief the current value of the animation
+ \brief the current value of the animation.
- This property describes the current value; an interpolation between the
- start value and the end value, using the current time for progress.
+ This property describes the current value; an interpolated value
+ between the \l{startValue}{start value} and the \l{endValue}{end
+ value}, using the current time for progress. The value itself is
+ obtained from interpolated(), which is called repeatedly as the
+ animation is running.
- QVariantAnimation calls the virtual updateCurrentValue() function when the
- current value changes. This is particularily useful for subclasses that
- need to track updates.
+ QVariantAnimation calls the virtual updateCurrentValue() function
+ when the current value changes. This is particularly useful for
+ subclasses that need to track updates. For example,
+ QPropertyAnimation uses this function to animate Qt \l{Qt's
+ Property System}{properties}.
\sa startValue, endValue
- */
+*/
QVariant QVariantAnimation::currentValue() const
{
Q_D(const QVariantAnimation);
@@ -549,13 +603,22 @@ void QVariantAnimation::updateState(QAbstractAnimation::State oldState,
}
/*!
- This virtual function returns the linear interpolation between variants \a
- from and \a to, at \a progress, usually a value between 0 and 1. You can reimplement
- this function in a subclass of QVariantAnimation to provide your own interpolation
- algorithm. Note that in order for the interpolation to work with a QEasingCurve
- that return a value smaller than 0 or larger than 1 (such as QEasingCurve::InBack)
- you should make sure that it can extrapolate. If the semantic of the datatype
- does not allow extrapolation this function should handle that gracefully.
+
+ This virtual function returns the linear interpolation between
+ variants \a from and \a to, at \a progress, usually a value
+ between 0 and 1. You can reimplement this function in a subclass
+ of QVariantAnimation to provide your own interpolation algorithm.
+
+ Note that in order for the interpolation to work with a
+ QEasingCurve that return a value smaller than 0 or larger than 1
+ (such as QEasingCurve::InBack) you should make sure that it can
+ extrapolate. If the semantic of the datatype does not allow
+ extrapolation this function should handle that gracefully.
+
+ You should call the QVariantAnimation implementation of this
+ function if you want your class to handle the types already
+ supported by Qt (see class QVariantAnimation description for a
+ list of supported types).
\sa QEasingCurve
*/