diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src/declarative')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/examples.qdoc | 13 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/extending-tutorial.qdoc | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/focus.qdoc | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/network.qdoc | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativedebugging.qdoc | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativei18n.qdoc | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/qml-intro.qdoc | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/qmlviewer.qdoc | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/declarative/tutorial.qdoc | 4 |
10 files changed, 44 insertions, 27 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/examples.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/examples.qdoc index 587cdf2..8a24228 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/examples.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/examples.qdoc @@ -36,11 +36,18 @@ Qt includes a set of examples and demos that show how to use various aspects of QML. The examples are small demonstrations of particular QML components, while the demos contain more complete and functional applications. -To run the examples and demos, you can use Qt Creator or the included \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qmlviewer} -command-line application. For example, from your build directory, run: +To run the examples and demos, open them in Qt Creator or use the included +\l {QML Viewer} tool. The \l {QML Viewer} can be run from the command line: \code - bin/qmlviewer $QTDIR/demos/declarative/samegame/samegame.qml + qmlviewer $QTDIR/demos/declarative/samegame/samegame.qml +\endcode + +On Mac OS X, you can run the included "QMLViewer" application from the +Finder, or use the command line: + +\code + QMLViewer.app/Contents/MacOS/QMLViewer $QTDIR/demos/declarative/samegame/samegame.qml \endcode diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/extending-tutorial.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/extending-tutorial.qdoc index 0cb3a7d..2cf00b9 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/extending-tutorial.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/extending-tutorial.qdoc @@ -116,9 +116,9 @@ Now we can build and run the application. Try it yourself with the code in Qt's \example declarative/tutorials/extending/chapter1-basics At the moment, the \c app.qml is run from within a C++ application. -This may seem odd if you're used to running QML files with the standard \c qml tool. +This may seem odd if you're used to running QML files with the \l {QML Viewer}. Later on, we'll show how to create a plugin so that you can run \c app.qml using the -\c qml tool instead. +\l {QML Viewer} instead. */ @@ -301,8 +301,8 @@ Try it out with the code in Qt's \c examples/tutorials/extending/chapter4-custom Currently the \c Musician and \c Instrument types are used by \c app.qml, which is displayed using a QDeclarativeView in a C++ application. An alternative way to use our QML extension is to create a plugin library to make it available -to the QML engine. This means we could load \c app.qml using the standard \c qml tool -(or some other QML runtime application) instead of writing a \c main.cpp file and +to the QML engine. This means we could load \c app.qml using the \l {QML Viewer} +(or some other QML \l{Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{runtime} application) instead of writing a \c main.cpp file and loading our own C++ application. To create a plugin library, we need: @@ -337,12 +337,14 @@ of the example project) can be found in the "lib" subdirectory: \quotefile declarative/tutorials/extending/chapter5-plugins/qmldir Now we have a plugin, and instead of having a main.cpp and an executable, we can build -the project and then run the QML file directly using the \c qml tool: +the project and then load the QML file in the \l {QML Viewer}: \code - qml app.qml + qmlviewer app.qml \endcode +(On Mac OS X, you can launch the "QMLViewer" application instead.) + Notice the "import Music 1.0" statement has disappeared from \c app.qml. This is because the \c qmldir file is in the same directory as \c app.qml: this is equivalent to having Musician.qml and Instrument.qml files inside the project directory, which could both diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/focus.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/focus.qdoc index cc546c0..0dd5eb3 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/focus.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/focus.qdoc @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ Text { An \l Item requests focus by setting the \c {Item::focus} property to true. For very simple cases simply setting the \c {Item::focus} property is sometimes -sufficient. If we run the following example with the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool, we see that +sufficient. If we run the following example with the \l {QML Viewer}, we see that the \c {keyHandler} element has \e {active focus} and pressing the 'A', 'B' or 'C' keys modifies the text appropriately. diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc index 02a2f5f..a77c64e 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/modules.qdoc @@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ The second exception is explained in more detail in the section below on Namespa \section2 The Import Path Installed modules are searched for on the import path. -The \c -I option to the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} runtime adds paths to the import path. +The \c -I option to the \l {QML Viewer} adds paths to the import path. From C++, the path is available via \l QDeclarativeEngine::importPathList() and can be prepended to using \l QDeclarativeEngine::addImportPath(). @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ to the module. of the plugin binary, which is platform dependent; e.g. the library MyAppTypes would produce a libMyAppTypes.so on Linux and MyAppTypes.dll on Windows. By default the engine searches for the plugin library in the directory containing the \c qmldir -file. The \c -P option to the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} runtime adds paths to the +file. The \c -P option to the \l {QML Viewer} adds paths to the plugin search path. From C++, the path is available via \l QDeclarativeEngine::pluginPathList() and can be prepended to using \l QDeclarativeEngine::addPluginPath(). diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/network.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/network.qdoc index b0d19e2..60359de 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/network.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/network.qdoc @@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ Network transparency is supported throughout QML, for example: \o WebViews - the \c url property of WebView (obviously!) \endlist -Even QML types themselves can be on the network - if the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool is used to load +Even QML types themselves can be on the network - if the \l {QML Viewer} is used to load \tt http://example.com/mystuff/Hello.qml and that content refers to a type "World", the engine will load \tt http://example.com/mystuff/qmldir and resolve the type just as it would for a local file. For example if the qmldir file contains the line "World World.qml", it will load @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ All network access from QML is managed by a QNetworkAccessManager set on the QDe By default, this is an unmodified Qt QNetworkAccessManager. You may set a different manager by providing a QDeclarativeNetworkAccessManagerFactory and setting it via QDeclarativeEngine::setNetworkAccessManagerFactory(). -For example, the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool sets a QDeclarativeNetworkAccessManagerFactory which +For example, the \l {QML Viewer} sets a QDeclarativeNetworkAccessManagerFactory which creates QNetworkAccessManager that trusts HTTP Expiry headers to avoid network cache checks, allows HTTP Pipelining, adds a persistent HTTP CookieJar, a simple disk cache, and supports proxy settings. diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativedebugging.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativedebugging.qdoc index da6e407..ea21852 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativedebugging.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativedebugging.qdoc @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ Rectangle { When a transition doesn't look quite right, it can be helpful to view it in slow motion to see what is happening more clearly. This functionality is supported -in the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qmlviewer} tool: to enable this, +in the \l {QML Viewer} tool: to enable this, click on the "Debugging" menu, then "Slow Down Animations". @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ import Qt 4.7 Rectangle { width: 100; height: 100 } \endqml -If you set \c {QML_IMPORT_TRACE=1} before running the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qmlviewer} +If you set \c {QML_IMPORT_TRACE=1} before running the \l {QML Viewer} (or your QML C++ application), you will see output similar to this: \code @@ -85,11 +85,11 @@ show QML debugging information and options for your application, including object inspection, property monitoring and application frame-rate analysis. Creator can be used to debug both local and remote QML applications. To -enable remote debugging, start the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool +enable remote debugging, start the \l {QML Viewer} on the remote device with a debugging port defined, like this: \code - QML_DEBUG_SERVER_PORT=3768 qml myqmlfile.qml + QML_DEBUG_SERVER_PORT=3768 qmlviewer myqmlfile.qml \endcode In Creator, open the project settings pane and set the server and port diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativei18n.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativei18n.qdoc index 40f7919..b6e6c6e 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativei18n.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/qdeclarativei18n.qdoc @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ capabilities are described more fully in: \o \l {Qt Linguist Manual} \endlist -You can test a translation with the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool using the -translation option. +You can test a translation with the \l {QML Viewer} using the -translation option. \section1 Example @@ -61,8 +61,8 @@ hello.qml: import Qt 4.7 Rectangle { - width: 200; height: 200 - Text { text: qsTr("Hello"); anchors.centerIn: parent } + width: 200; height: 200 + Text { text: qsTr("Hello"); anchors.centerIn: parent } } \endqml @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ a translation and create the release file \c hello.qm. Finally, we can test the translation: \code -qml -translation hello.qm hello.qml +qmlviewer -translation hello.qm hello.qml \endcode diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/qml-intro.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/qml-intro.qdoc index ac79496..21ce2dd 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/qml-intro.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/qml-intro.qdoc @@ -105,9 +105,17 @@ This is a valid QML script. To run it, copy it and save it to a file, say myexample.qml, and on the command line run the command \code - qml myexample.qml + qmlviewer myexample.qml \endcode +On Mac OS X, open the "QMLViewer" application instead and open the +\c myexample.qml file, or run it from the command line: + + \code + QMLViewer.app/Contents/MacOS/QMLViewer myexample.qml + \endcode + + It will create a very boring rectangle in its own window. diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/qmlviewer.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/qmlviewer.qdoc index efff9cc..5efc0ce 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/qmlviewer.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/qmlviewer.qdoc @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ deployment of QML applications. In those cases, the QML runtime should be invoke from a Qt application instead; see \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime} for more information. -The viewer is located at QTDIR/bin/qmlviewer. To load a \c .qml file +The viewer is located at \c QTDIR/bin/qmlviewer. To load a \c .qml file with the viewer, run the viewer and select the file to be opened, or provide the file path on the command line: @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ file path on the command line: qmlviewer myqmlfile.qml \endcode -On Mac OS X, the QML Viewer application is named \c QMLViewer.app instead. You +On Mac OS X, the QML Viewer application is named "QMLViewer" instead. You can launch the viewer by opening the QMLViewer application from the Finder, or from the command line: diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/tutorial.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/tutorial.qdoc index c884486..7a97eb1 100644 --- a/doc/src/declarative/tutorial.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/declarative/tutorial.qdoc @@ -101,11 +101,11 @@ The \c font.pointSize and \c font.bold properties are related to fonts and use t \section2 Viewing the example -To view what you have created, run the \l{Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} tool (located in the \c bin directory) with your filename as the first argument. +To view what you have created, run the \l{QML Viewer} tool (located in the \c bin directory) with your filename as the first argument. For example, to run the provided completed Tutorial 1 example from the install location, you would type: \code -bin/qml $QTDIR/examples/declarative/tutorials/helloworld/tutorial1.qml +bin/qmlviewer $QTDIR/examples/declarative/tutorials/helloworld/tutorial1.qml \endcode */ |