Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | |
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* | Remove autotests of depracted element SmoothedFollow | Joona Petrell | 2010-07-09 | 7 | -250/+0 |
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* | Make declarative autotests compile on Symbian abld build system | Joona Petrell | 2010-06-08 | 2 | -3/+6 |
| | | | | | Task-number: Reviewed-by: Martin Jones | ||||
* | Symbian build fix to declarative auto and benchmark tests | Joona Petrell | 2010-05-14 | 1 | -1/+8 |
| | | | | | Task-number: QTBUG-9491 Reviewed-by: Martin Jones | ||||
* | Fix versioning of Qt Declarative's in-built types | Alan Alpert | 2010-04-21 | 5 | -5/+5 |
| | | | | | | Since we aren't releasing for 4.6, all types are new in 4.7. Task-number: QTBUG-10081 | ||||
* | Tweak tests to run in parallel | Aaron Kennedy | 2010-04-13 | 1 | -0/+3 |
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* | Add SmoothedFollow element to qml | Leonardo Sobral Cunha | 2010-04-08 | 7 | -0/+237 |
The SmoothedFollow is the same as the old EaseFollow, so it's not an animation, but its main use case is to be used as a property value source to automatically follow the 'to' property, as in the example below. Rectangle { color: "green" width: 60; height: 60; SmoothedFollow on x { to: rect1.x - 5; velocity: 200 } SmoothedFollow on y { to: rect1.y - 5; velocity: 200 } } This element shares the internal implementation with SmoothedAnimation, both providing the same easing function, but with SmoothedFollow it's easier to set a start value to animate intially and then start to follow, while SmoothedAnimation is still convenient for using inside Behaviors and Transitions. Reviewed-by: Michael Brasser |