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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc | 196 |
1 files changed, 127 insertions, 69 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc index 1dca28c..f1ebd00 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ example, an \c import statement is required to use: \list \o A component defined in another QML file that is not in the same directory \o A component defined in a QML file located on a remote server -\o A \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML C++ plugin} library (unless the plugin is installed in the same directory) +\o A \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML extension plugin} library (unless the plugin is installed in the same directory) \o A JavaScript file (note this must be imported using \l {#namespaces}{named imports}) \endlist @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ An \c import statement includes the module name, and possibly a version number. This can be seen in the snippet commonly found at the top of QML files: \qml - import QtQuick 1.0 +import QtQuick 1.0 \endqml This imports version 1.0 of the "QtQuick" module into the global namespace. (The QML @@ -61,12 +61,12 @@ are not included in the global namespace by default.) The \c Qt module is an \e installed module; it is found in the \l{The QML import path}{import path}. There are two types of QML modules: -location modules (defined by a URL) and installed modules (defined by a URI). +located modules (defined by a URL) and installed modules (defined by a URI). -\section1 Location Modules +\section1 Located Modules -Location modules can reside on the local filesystem or a network resource, +Located modules can reside on the local filesystem or a network resource, and are referred to by a quoted location URL that specifies the filesystem or network URL. They allow any directory with QML content to be imported as a module, whether the directory is on the local filesystem or a remote @@ -86,8 +86,9 @@ directory using a relative or absolute path, like this: \code MyQMLProject |- MyComponents - |- Slider.qml |- CheckBox.qml + |- Slider.qml + |- Window.qml |- Main |- application.qml \endcode @@ -96,8 +97,10 @@ MyQMLProject \code import "../MyComponents" -Slider { ... } -CheckBox { ... } +Window { + Slider { ... } + CheckBox { ... } +} \endcode \endtable @@ -106,23 +109,51 @@ Similarly, if the directory resided on a network source, it could be imported like this: \code - import "https://qml.nokia.com/qml/qmlcomponents" - import "https://qml.nokia.com/qml/qmlcomponents" 1.0 + import "http://www.my-server.com/MyQMLProject/MyComponents" + import "http://www.my-server.com/MyQMLProject/MyComponents" 1.0 +\endcode + +A located module can also be imported as a network resource if it has a +\l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file} in the directory that specifies the QML files +to be made available by the module. For example, if the \c MyComponents directory +contained a \c qmldir file defined like this: + +\code +Slider 1.0 Slider.qml +CheckBox 1.0 CheckBox.qml +Window 1.0 Window.qml \endcode -Remote location modules must have a \l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file} in the -same directory to specify which QML files should be made available. See the -\l {#qmldirexample}{example} below. The qmldir file is optional for modules on -the local filesystem. +If the \c MyComponents directory was then hosted as a network resource, it could +be imported as a module, like this: + +\code +import "http://the-server-name.com/MyQMLProject/MyComponents" + +Window { + Slider { ... } + CheckBox { ... } +} +\endcode + +with an optional "1.0" version specification. Notice the import would fail if +a later version was used, as the \c qmldir file specifies that these elements +are only available in the 1.0 version. +Note that modules imported as a network resource allow only access to components +defined in QML files; components defined by C++ \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML extension plugins} +are not available. \section1 Installed modules +Installed modules are modules that are made available through the QML import path, +as defined by QDeclarativeEngine::importPathList(), or modules defined within +C++ application code. An installed module is referred to by a URI, which allows +the module to be imported from QML code without specifying a complete filesystem +path or network resource URL. -Installed modules are modules that are installed on the -local filesystem within the QML import path, or modules defined in C++ -application code. When importing an installed module, an un-quoted URI is +When importing an installed module, an un-quoted URI is used, with a mandatory version number: \code @@ -130,15 +161,23 @@ used, with a mandatory version number: import com.nokia.qml.mymodule 1.0 \endcode -Installed modules that are installed into the import path or created -as a \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML C++ plugin} must define a -\l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file}. +When a module is imported, the QML engine searches the QML import path for a matching +module. The root directory of the module must contain a +\l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file} that defines the QML files +and/or C++ QML extension plugins that are made available to the module. +Modules that are installed into the import path translate the URI into +directory names. For example, the qmldir file of the module \c com.nokia.qml.mymodule +must be located in the subpath \c com/nokia/qml/mymodule/qmldir somewhere in the +QML import path. In addition it is possible to store different versions of the +module in subdirectories of its own. For example, a version 2.1 of the +module could be located under \c com/nokia/qml/mymodule.2/qmldir or +\c com/nokia/qml/mymodule.2.1/qmldir. The engine will automatically load +the module which matches best. -\section2 The QML import path - -The QML engine will search the import path for a requested installed module. -The default import path includes: +The import path, as returned by QDeclarativeEngine::importPathList(), defines the default +locations to be searched by the QML engine for a matching module. By default, this list +contains: \list \o The directory of the current file @@ -146,30 +185,80 @@ The default import path includes: \o Paths specified by the \c QML_IMPORT_PATH environment variable \endlist -The import path can be queried using QDeclarativeEngine::importPathList() and modified using QDeclarativeEngine::addImportPath(). +Additional import paths can be added through QDeclarativeEngine::addImportPath() or the +\c QML_IMPORT_PATH environment variable. When running the \l {QML Viewer}, you +can also use the \c -I option to add an import path. + + +\section2 Creating installed modules + +As an example, suppose the \c MyQMLProject directory in the \l{Located Modules}{previous example} +was located on the local filesystem at \c C:\qml\projects\MyQMLProject. The \c MyComponents +subdirectory could be made available as an installed module by adding a +\l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file} to the \c MyComponents directory that looked like this: + +\code +Slider 1.0 Slider.qml +CheckBox 1.0 CheckBox.qml +Window 1.0 Window.qml +\endcode + +Providing the path \c C:\qml is added to the QML import path using any of the methods listed previously, +a QML file located anywhere on the local filesystem can then import the module as shown below, +without referring to the module's absolute filesystem location: + +\qml +import projects.MyQMLProject.MyComponents 1.0 + +Window { + Slider { ... } + CheckBox { ... } +} +\endqml + +Installed modules are also accessible as a network resource. If the \c C:\qml directory was hosted +as \c http://www.some-server.com/qml and this URL was added to the QML import path, the above +QML code would work just the same. -When running the \l {QML Viewer}, use the \c -I option to add paths to the import path. +Note that modules imported as a network resource allow only access to components +defined in QML files; components defined by C++ \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML extension plugins} +are not available. \section2 Creating installed modules in C++ -C++ applications can dynamically define installed modules using -qmlRegisterType(). +C++ applications can define installed modules directly within the application using qmlRegisterType(). +For example, the \l {Tutorial: Writing QML extensions with C++}{Writing QML extensions with C++ tutorial} +defines a C++ class named \c PieChart and makes this type available to QML by calling qmlRegisterType(): + +\qml +qmlRegisterType<PieChart>("Charts", 1, 0, "PieChart"); +\endqml -For \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML C++ plugins}, the -module URI is automatically passed to QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin::registerTypes(). -The QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin documentation shows how to use this URI -to call qmlRegisterType() to enable the plugin library to be built as -an installed module. Once the plugin is built and installed, the module is importable -in QML, like this: +This allows the application's QML files to use the \c PieChart type by importing the declared +\c Charts module: + +\qml +import Charts 1.0 +\endqml + +For \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML plugins}, the +module URI is automatically passed to QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin::registerTypes(). This method +can be reimplemented by the developer to register the necessary types for the module. Below is the +\c registerTypes() implementation from the \l{declarative/cppextensions/plugins}{QML plugins} +example: + +\snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/plugins/plugin.cpp plugin + +Once the plugin is built and installed, and includes a \l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file}, +the module can be imported from QML, like this: \code import com.nokia.TimeExample 1.0 \endcode -A \l{QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin}{QML C++ plugin} also requires a -\l{Writing a qmldir file}{qmldir file} to make it available to the -QML engine. +Unlike QML types defined by QML files, a QML type defined in a C++ extension plugin cannot be loaded by +a module that is imported as a network resource. @@ -224,7 +313,7 @@ Unlike ordinary modules, multiple scripts cannot be imported into the same names A \c qmldir file is a metadata file for a module that maps all type names in the module to versioned QML files. It is required for installed modules, and -location modules that are loaded from a network source. +located modules that are loaded from a network source. It is defined by a plain text file named "qmldir" that contains one or more lines of the form: @@ -274,37 +363,6 @@ containing the plugin file. By default the engine searches for the plugin librar file. The plugin search path can be queried with QDeclarativeEngine::pluginPathList() and modified using QDeclarativeEngine::addPluginPath(). When running the \l {QML Viewer}, use the \c -P option to add paths to the plugin search path. -\target qmldirexample -\section2 Example - -If the components in the \c MyComponents directory from the -\l{Location Modules}{earlier example} were to be made available as a network resource, -the directory would need to contain a \c qmldir file similar to this: - -\code -ComponentA 1.0 ComponentA.qml -ComponentB 1.0 ComponentB.qml -\endcode - -The \c MyComponents directory could then be imported as a module using: - -\code -import "http://the-server-name.com/MyComponents" - -Slider { ... } -CheckBox { ... } -\endcode - -with an optional "1.0" version specification. Notice the import fails if -a later version is used, as the \c qmldir file specifies that these elements -are only available in the 1.0 version. - - -For examples of \c qmldir files for plugins, see the -\l {declarative/cppextensions/plugins}{Plugins} example and -\l {Tutorial: Writing QML extensions with C++}. - - \section1 Debugging The \c QML_IMPORT_TRACE environment variable can be useful for debugging |