From ae5eae1a859f330922b1480f82498c5a6212ebd0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bea Lam Date: Mon, 27 Sep 2010 10:21:35 +1000 Subject: Document PropertyAnimation::targets property --- src/declarative/util/qdeclarativeanimation.cpp | 9 ++++++++- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/declarative/util/qdeclarativeanimation.cpp b/src/declarative/util/qdeclarativeanimation.cpp index ea3da25..ba6f1e7 100644 --- a/src/declarative/util/qdeclarativeanimation.cpp +++ b/src/declarative/util/qdeclarativeanimation.cpp @@ -2192,6 +2192,13 @@ void QDeclarativePropertyAnimation::setProperties(const QString &prop) The singular forms are slightly optimized, so if you do have only a single target/property to animate you should try to use them. + The \c targets property allows multiple targets to be set. For example, this animates the + \c x property of both \c itemA and \c itemB: + + \qml + NumberAnimation { targets: [itemA, itemB]; properties: "x"; to: 500 } + \endqml + In many cases these properties do not need to be explicitly specified, as they can be inferred from the animation framework: @@ -2255,7 +2262,7 @@ void QDeclarativePropertyAnimation::setProperties(const QString &prop) As seen in the above example, properties is specified as a comma-separated string of property names to animate. - \sa exclude + \sa exclude, {QML Animation} */ QDeclarativeListProperty QDeclarativePropertyAnimation::targets() { -- cgit v0.12