From ec1a593fd480655ec461186160cdcdd890a778ab Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kavindra Devi Palaraja Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 15:40:39 +0100 Subject: Doc - removed mention of an internal function. Also gave the QApplication class and the QSessionManager class a documentation overhaul. Task-number: 249220 Reviewed-by: TrustMe --- src/gui/kernel/qapplication.cpp | 1891 +++++++++++++++++++-------------------- 1 file changed, 918 insertions(+), 973 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/gui/kernel/qapplication.cpp b/src/gui/kernel/qapplication.cpp index 7e59fad..03d74d6 100644 --- a/src/gui/kernel/qapplication.cpp +++ b/src/gui/kernel/qapplication.cpp @@ -169,189 +169,174 @@ QApplicationPrivate::~QApplicationPrivate() } /*! - \class QApplication - \brief The QApplication class manages the GUI application's control - flow and main settings. - - \ingroup application - \mainclass - - It contains the main event loop, where all events from the window - system and other sources are processed and dispatched. It also - handles the application's initialization and finalization, and - provides session management. It also handles most system-wide and - application-wide settings. - - For any GUI application that uses Qt, there is precisely one - QApplication object, no matter whether the application has 0, 1, 2 - or more windows at any time. For non-GUI Qt applications, use - QCoreApplication instead, which doesn't depend on the \l QtGui - library. - - The QApplication object is accessible through the instance() - function which return a pointer equivalent to the global qApp - pointer. - - QApplication's main areas of responsibility are: - \list - - \o It initializes the application with the user's desktop settings - such as palette(), font() and doubleClickInterval(). It keeps track - of these properties in case the user changes the desktop globally, for - example through some kind of control panel. - - \o It performs event handling, meaning that it receives events - from the underlying window system and dispatches them to the relevant - widgets. By using sendEvent() and postEvent() you can send your own - events to widgets. - - \o It parses common command line arguments and sets its internal - state accordingly. See the \link QApplication::QApplication() - constructor documentation\endlink below for more details about this. - - \o It defines the application's look and feel, which is - encapsulated in a QStyle object. This can be changed at runtime - with setStyle(). - - \o It specifies how the application is to allocate colors. - See setColorSpec() for details. - - \o It provides localization of strings that are visible to the user - via translate(). - - \o It provides some magical objects like the desktop() and the - clipboard(). - - \o It knows about the application's windows. You can ask which - widget is at a certain position using widgetAt(), get a list of - topLevelWidgets() and closeAllWindows(), etc. - - \o It manages the application's mouse cursor handling, - see setOverrideCursor() - - \o On the X window system, it provides functions to flush and sync - the communication stream, see flushX() and syncX(). - - \o It provides support for sophisticated \link - session.html session management \endlink. This makes it possible - for applications to terminate gracefully when the user logs out, to - cancel a shutdown process if termination isn't possible and even to - preserve the entire application's state for a future session. See - isSessionRestored(), sessionId() and commitData() and saveState() - for details. - - \endlist - - Since the QApplication object does so much initialization, it - \e{must} be created before any other objects related to the user - interface are created. - - Since it also deals with common command line arguments, it is - usually a good idea to create it \e before any interpretation or - modification of \c argv is done in the application itself. - - \table - \header \o{2,1} Groups of functions - \row - \o System settings - \o - desktopSettingsAware(), - setDesktopSettingsAware(), - cursorFlashTime(), - setCursorFlashTime(), - doubleClickInterval(), - setDoubleClickInterval(), - setKeyboardInputInterval(), - wheelScrollLines(), - setWheelScrollLines(), - palette(), - setPalette(), - font(), - setFont(), - fontMetrics(). - - \row - \o Event handling - \o - exec(), - processEvents(), - exit(), - quit(). - sendEvent(), - postEvent(), - sendPostedEvents(), - removePostedEvents(), - hasPendingEvents(), - notify(), - macEventFilter(), - qwsEventFilter(), - x11EventFilter(), - x11ProcessEvent(), - winEventFilter(). - - \row - \o GUI Styles - \o - style(), - setStyle(). - - \row - \o Color usage - \o - colorSpec(), - setColorSpec(), - qwsSetCustomColors(). - - \row - \o Text handling - \o - installTranslator(), - removeTranslator() - translate(). - - \row - \o Widgets - \o - allWidgets(), - topLevelWidgets(), - desktop(), - activePopupWidget(), - activeModalWidget(), - clipboard(), - focusWidget(), - winFocus(), - activeWindow(), - widgetAt(). - - \row - \o Advanced cursor handling - \o - overrideCursor(), - setOverrideCursor(), - restoreOverrideCursor(). - - \row - \o X Window System synchronization - \o - flushX(), - syncX(). - - \row - \o Session management - \o - isSessionRestored(), - sessionId(), - commitData(), - saveState(). - - \row - \o Miscellaneous - \o - closeAllWindows(), - startingUp(), - closingDown(), - type(). - \endtable + \class QApplication + \brief The QApplication class manages the GUI application's control + flow and main settings. + + \ingroup application + \mainclass + + QApplication contains the main event loop, where all events from the window + system and other sources are processed and dispatched. It also handles the + application's initialization and finalization, and provides session + management. In addition, it handles most system-wide and application-wide + settings. + + For any GUI application using Qt, there is precisely one QApplication + object, no matter whether the application has 0, 1, 2 or more windows at + any given time. For non-GUI Qt applications, use QCoreApplication instead, + as it does not depend on the \l QtGui library. + + The QApplication object is accessible through the instance() function that + returns a pointer equivalent to the global qApp pointer. + + QApplication's main areas of responsibility are: + \list + \o It initializes the application with the user's desktop settings + such as palette(), font() and doubleClickInterval(). It keeps + track of these properties in case the user changes the desktop + globally, for example through some kind of control panel. + + \o It performs event handling, meaning that it receives events + from the underlying window system and dispatches them to the + relevant widgets. By using sendEvent() and postEvent() you can + send your own events to widgets. + + \o It parses common command line arguments and sets its internal + state accordingly. See the \l{QApplication::QApplication()} + {constructor documentation} below for more details. + + \o It defines the application's look and feel, which is + encapsulated in a QStyle object. This can be changed at runtime + with setStyle(). + + \o It specifies how the application is to allocate colors. See + setColorSpec() for details. + + \o It provides localization of strings that are visible to the + user via translate(). + + \o It provides some magical objects like the desktop() and the + clipboard(). + + \o It knows about the application's windows. You can ask which + widget is at a certain position using widgetAt(), get a list of + topLevelWidgets() and closeAllWindows(), etc. + + \o It manages the application's mouse cursor handling, see + setOverrideCursor() + + \o On the X window system, it provides functions to flush and sync + the communication stream, see flushX() and syncX(). + + \o It provides support for sophisticated \l{Session Management} + {session management}. This makes it possible for applications + to terminate gracefully when the user logs out, to cancel a + shutdown process if termination isn't possible and even to + preserve the entire application's state for a future session. + See isSessionRestored(), sessionId() and commitData() and + saveState() for details. + \endlist + + The QApplication object does so much initialization. Hence, it \e{must} be + created before any other objects related to the user interface are created. + Since QApplication also deals with common command line arguments, it is + usually a good idea to create it \e before any interpretation or + modification of \c argv is done in the application itself. + + \table + \header + \o{2,1} Groups of functions + + \row + \o System settings + \o desktopSettingsAware(), + setDesktopSettingsAware(), + cursorFlashTime(), + setCursorFlashTime(), + doubleClickInterval(), + setDoubleClickInterval(), + setKeyboardInputInterval(), + wheelScrollLines(), + setWheelScrollLines(), + palette(), + setPalette(), + font(), + setFont(), + fontMetrics(). + + \row + \o Event handling + \o exec(), + processEvents(), + exit(), + quit(). + sendEvent(), + postEvent(), + sendPostedEvents(), + removePostedEvents(), + hasPendingEvents(), + notify(), + macEventFilter(), + qwsEventFilter(), + x11EventFilter(), + x11ProcessEvent(), + winEventFilter(). + + \row + \o GUI Styles + \o style(), + setStyle(). + + \row + \o Color usage + \o colorSpec(), + setColorSpec(), + qwsSetCustomColors(). + + \row + \o Text handling + \o installTranslator(), + removeTranslator() + translate(). + + \row + \o Widgets + \o allWidgets(), + topLevelWidgets(), + desktop(), + activePopupWidget(), + activeModalWidget(), + clipboard(), + focusWidget(), + activeWindow(), + widgetAt(). + + \row + \o Advanced cursor handling + \o overrideCursor(), + setOverrideCursor(), + restoreOverrideCursor(). + + \row + \o X Window System synchronization + \o flushX(), + syncX(). + + \row + \o Session management + \o isSessionRestored(), + sessionId(), + commitData(), + saveState(). + + \row + \o Miscellaneous + \o closeAllWindows(), + startingUp(), + closingDown(), + type(). + \endtable \sa QCoreApplication, QAbstractEventDispatcher, QEventLoop, QSettings */ @@ -382,6 +367,7 @@ QApplicationPrivate::~QApplicationPrivate() Returns the top-level widget at the given \a point; returns 0 if there is no such widget. */ + /*! \fn QWidget *QApplication::topLevelAt(int x, int y) @@ -393,8 +379,8 @@ QApplicationPrivate::~QApplicationPrivate() /* - The qt_init() and qt_cleanup() functions are implemented in the - qapplication_xyz.cpp file. + The qt_init() and qt_cleanup() functions are implemented in the + qapplication_xyz.cpp file. */ void qt_init(QApplicationPrivate *priv, int type @@ -580,99 +566,100 @@ void QApplicationPrivate::process_cmdline() } /*! - Initializes the window system and constructs an application object - with \a argc command line arguments in \a argv. - - \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid - for the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, - \a argc must be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least - one valid character string. - - The global \c qApp pointer refers to this application object. Only - one application object should be created. - - This application object must be constructed before any \link - QPaintDevice paint devices\endlink (including widgets, pixmaps, bitmaps - etc.). - - Note that \a argc and \a argv might be changed. Qt removes command - line arguments that it recognizes. - - Qt debugging options (not available if Qt was compiled without the - QT_DEBUG flag defined): - \list - \o -nograb, tells Qt that it must never grab the mouse or the keyboard. - \o -dograb (only under X11), running under a debugger can cause - an implicit -nograb, use -dograb to override. - \o -sync (only under X11), switches to synchronous mode for - debugging. - \endlist - - See \link debug.html Debugging Techniques \endlink for a more - detailed explanation. - - All Qt programs automatically support the following command line options: - \list - \o -style= \e style, sets the application GUI style. Possible values - are \c motif, \c windows, and \c platinum. If you compiled Qt - with additional styles or have additional styles as plugins these - will be available to the \c -style command line option. - \o -style \e style, is the same as listed above. - \o -stylesheet= \e stylesheet, sets the application \l styleSheet. The value - must be a path to a file that contains the Style Sheet. Note that relative URLs - in the Style Sheet file are relative to the Style Sheet file's path. - \o -stylesheet \e stylesheet, is the same as listed above. - \o -session= \e session, restores the application from an earlier - \link session.html session \endlink. - \o -session \e session, is the same as listed above. - \o -widgetcount, prints debug message at the end about number of widgets left - undestroyed and maximum number of widgets existed at the same time - \o -reverse, sets the application's layout direction to Qt::RightToLeft - \o -graphicssystem, sets the backend to be used for on-screen - widgets and QPixmaps. Available options are \c{raster} and \c{opengl}. - - \endlist - - The Windows version of Qt also support one additional command line - option, if Direct3D support has been compiled into Qt: - \list - \o -direct3d will make the Direct3D paint engine the default widget - paint engine in Qt. \bold {This functionality is experimental.} - \endlist - - The X11 version of Qt also supports some traditional X11 - command line options: - \list - \o -display \e display, sets the X display (default is $DISPLAY). - \o -geometry \e geometry, sets the client geometry of the - first window that is shown. - \o -fn or \c -font \e font, defines the application font. The - font should be specified using an X logical font description. - \o -bg or \c -background \e color, sets the default background color - and an application palette (light and dark shades are calculated). - \o -fg or \c -foreground \e color, sets the default foreground color. - \o -btn or \c -button \e color, sets the default button color. - \o -name \e name, sets the application name. - \o -title \e title, sets the application title. - \o -visual \c TrueColor, forces the application to use a TrueColor visual - on an 8-bit display. - \o -ncols \e count, limits the number of colors allocated in the - color cube on an 8-bit display, if the application is using the - QApplication::ManyColor color specification. If \e count is - 216 then a 6x6x6 color cube is used (i.e. 6 levels of red, 6 of green, - and 6 of blue); for other values, a cube - approximately proportional to a 2x3x1 cube is used. - \o -cmap, causes the application to install a private color map - on an 8-bit display. - \o -im, sets the input method server (equivalent to setting the XMODIFIERS - environment variable) - \o -inputstyle, defines how the input is inserted into the given widget. E.g., - \c onTheSpot makes the input appear directly in the widget, while - \c overTheSpot makes the input appear in a box floating over the - widget and is not inserted until the editing is done. - \endlist - - \sa arguments() + Initializes the window system and constructs an application object with + \a argc command line arguments in \a argv. + + \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid for + the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, \a argc must + be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least one valid character + string. + + The global \c qApp pointer refers to this application object. Only one + application object should be created. + + This application object must be constructed before any \l{QPaintDevice} + {paint devices} (including widgets, pixmaps, bitmaps etc.). + + \note \a argc and \a argv might be changed as Qt removes command line + arguments that it recognizes. + + Qt debugging options (not available if Qt was compiled without the QT_DEBUG + flag defined): + \list + \o -nograb, tells Qt that it must never grab the mouse or the + keyboard. + \o -dograb (only under X11), running under a debugger can cause an + implicit -nograb, use -dograb to override. + \o -sync (only under X11), switches to synchronous mode for + debugging. + \endlist + + See \l{Debugging Techniques} for a more detailed explanation. + + All Qt programs automatically support the following command line options: + \list + \o -style= \e style, sets the application GUI style. Possible values + are \c motif, \c windows, and \c platinum. If you compiled Qt with + additional styles or have additional styles as plugins these will + be available to the \c -style command line option. + \o -style \e style, is the same as listed above. + \o -stylesheet= \e stylesheet, sets the application \l styleSheet. The + value must be a path to a file that contains the Style Sheet. + \note Relative URLs in the Style Sheet file are relative to the + Style Sheet file's path. + \o -stylesheet \e stylesheet, is the same as listed above. + \o -session= \e session, restores the application from an earlier + \l{Session Management}{session}. + \o -session \e session, is the same as listed above. + \o -widgetcount, prints debug message at the end about number of + widgets left undestroyed and maximum number of widgets existed at + the same time + \o -reverse, sets the application's layout direction to + Qt::RightToLeft + \o -graphicssystem, sets the backend to be used for on-screen widgets + and QPixmaps. Available options are \c{raster} and \c{opengl}. + \endlist + + The Windows version of Qt supports an additional command line option, if + Direct3D support has been compiled into Qt: + \list + \o -direct3d will make the Direct3D paint engine the default widget + paint engine in Qt. \bold {This functionality is experimental.} + \endlist + + The X11 version of Qt supports some traditional X11 command line options: + \list + \o -display \e display, sets the X display (default is $DISPLAY). + \o -geometry \e geometry, sets the client geometry of the first window + that is shown. + \o -fn or \c -font \e font, defines the application font. The font + should be specified using an X logical font description. + \o -bg or \c -background \e color, sets the default background color + and an application palette (light and dark shades are calculated). + \o -fg or \c -foreground \e color, sets the default foreground color. + \o -btn or \c -button \e color, sets the default button color. + \o -name \e name, sets the application name. + \o -title \e title, sets the application title. + \o -visual \c TrueColor, forces the application to use a TrueColor + visual on an 8-bit display. + \o -ncols \e count, limits the number of colors allocated in the color + cube on an 8-bit display, if the application is using the + QApplication::ManyColor color specification. If \e count is 216 + then a 6x6x6 color cube is used (i.e. 6 levels of red, 6 of green, + and 6 of blue); for other values, a cube approximately proportional + to a 2x3x1 cube is used. + \o -cmap, causes the application to install a private color map on an + 8-bit display. + \o -im, sets the input method server (equivalent to setting the + XMODIFIERS environment variable) + \o -inputstyle, defines how the input is inserted into the given + widget, e.g., \c onTheSpot makes the input appear directly in the + widget, while \c overTheSpot makes the input appear in a box + floating over the widget and is not inserted until the editing is + done. + \endlist + + \sa arguments() */ QApplication::QApplication(int &argc, char **argv) @@ -685,26 +672,26 @@ QApplication::QApplication(int &argc, char **argv, int _internal) /*! - Constructs an application object with \a argc command line arguments - in \a argv. If \a GUIenabled is true, a GUI application is - constructed, otherwise a non-GUI (console) application is created. + Constructs an application object with \a argc command line arguments in + \a argv. If \a GUIenabled is true, a GUI application is constructed, + otherwise a non-GUI (console) application is created. - \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid - for the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, - \a argc must be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least - one valid character string. + \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid for + the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, \a argc must + be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least one valid character + string. - Set \a GUIenabled to false for programs without a graphical user - interface that should be able to run without a window system. + Set \a GUIenabled to false for programs without a graphical user interface + that should be able to run without a window system. - On X11, the window system is initialized if \a GUIenabled is true. - If \a GUIenabled is false, the application does not connect to the - X server. On Windows and Macintosh, currently the window system is - always initialized, regardless of the value of GUIenabled. This may - change in future versions of Qt. + On X11, the window system is initialized if \a GUIenabled is true. If + \a GUIenabled is false, the application does not connect to the X server. + On Windows and Macintosh, currently the window system is always + initialized, regardless of the value of GUIenabled. This may change in + future versions of Qt. - The following example shows how to create an application that - uses a graphical interface when available. + The following example shows how to create an application that uses a + graphical interface when available. \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 0 */ @@ -720,17 +707,17 @@ QApplication::QApplication(int &argc, char **argv, bool GUIenabled , int _intern /*! - Constructs an application object with \a argc command line arguments - in \a argv. + Constructs an application object with \a argc command line arguments in + \a argv. - \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid - for the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, - \a argc must be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least - one valid character string. + \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid for + the entire lifetime of the QApplication object. In addition, \a argc must + be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least one valid character + string. - With Qt for Embedded Linux, passing QApplication::GuiServer for \a type - makes this application the server (equivalent to running with the - \c -qws option). + With Qt for Embedded Linux, passing QApplication::GuiServer for \a type + makes this application the server (equivalent to running with the + \c -qws option). */ QApplication::QApplication(int &argc, char **argv, Type type) : QCoreApplication(*new QApplicationPrivate(argc, argv, type)) @@ -778,16 +765,16 @@ static int aargc = 1; static char *aargv[] = { (char*)"unknown", 0 }; /*! - \fn QApplication::QApplication(Display* display, Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) + \fn QApplication::QApplication(Display* display, Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) - Create an application, given an already open display \a display. If \a - visual and \a colormap are non-zero, the application will use those as - the default Visual and Colormap contexts. + Creates an application, given an already open display \a display. If + \a visual and \a colormap are non-zero, the application will use those + values as the default Visual and Colormap contexts. - \warning Qt only supports TrueColor visuals at depths higher than 8 - bits-per-pixel. + \warning Qt only supports TrueColor visuals at depths higher than 8 + bits-per-pixel. - This is available only on X11. + This function is only available on X11. */ QApplication::QApplication(Display* dpy, Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) : QCoreApplication(*new QApplicationPrivate(aargc, aargv, GuiClient)) @@ -809,19 +796,18 @@ QApplication::QApplication(Display* dpy, Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap, } /*! - \fn QApplication::QApplication(Display *display, int &argc, char **argv, - Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) + \fn QApplication::QApplication(Display *display, int &argc, char **argv, + Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) - Create an application, given an already open \a display and using \a - argc command line arguments in \a argv. If \a visual and \a colormap - are non-zero, the application will use those as the default Visual - and Colormap contexts. + Creates an application, given an already open \a display and using \a argc + command line arguments in \a argv. If \a visual and \a colormap are + non-zero, the application will use those values as the default Visual + and Colormap contexts. - \warning Qt only supports TrueColor visuals at depths higher than 8 - bits-per-pixel. - - This is available only on X11. + \warning Qt only supports TrueColor visuals at depths higher than 8 + bits-per-pixel. + This function is only available on X11. */ QApplication::QApplication(Display *dpy, int &argc, char **argv, Qt::HANDLE visual, Qt::HANDLE colormap) @@ -923,19 +909,18 @@ QApplication::Type QApplication::type() *****************************************************************************/ /*! - Returns the active popup widget. + Returns the active popup widget. - A popup widget is a special top-level widget that sets the \c - Qt::WType_Popup widget flag, e.g. the QMenu widget. When the - application opens a popup widget, all events are sent to the popup. - Normal widgets and modal widgets cannot be accessed before the popup - widget is closed. + A popup widget is a special top-level widget that sets the \c + Qt::WType_Popup widget flag, e.g. the QMenu widget. When the application + opens a popup widget, all events are sent to the popup. Normal widgets and + modal widgets cannot be accessed before the popup widget is closed. - Only other popup widgets may be opened when a popup widget is shown. - The popup widgets are organized in a stack. This function returns - the active popup widget at the top of the stack. + Only other popup widgets may be opened when a popup widget is shown. The + popup widgets are organized in a stack. This function returns the active + popup widget at the top of the stack. - \sa activeModalWidget(), topLevelWidgets() + \sa activeModalWidget(), topLevelWidgets() */ QWidget *QApplication::activePopupWidget() @@ -946,17 +931,17 @@ QWidget *QApplication::activePopupWidget() /*! - Returns the active modal widget. + Returns the active modal widget. - A modal widget is a special top-level widget which is a subclass of - QDialog that specifies the modal parameter of the constructor as - true. A modal widget must be closed before the user can continue - with other parts of the program. + A modal widget is a special top-level widget which is a subclass of QDialog + that specifies the modal parameter of the constructor as true. A modal + widget must be closed before the user can continue with other parts of the + program. - Modal widgets are organized in a stack. This function returns - the active modal widget at the top of the stack. + Modal widgets are organized in a stack. This function returns the active + modal widget at the top of the stack. - \sa activePopupWidget(), topLevelWidgets() + \sa activePopupWidget(), topLevelWidgets() */ QWidget *QApplication::activeModalWidget() @@ -965,8 +950,8 @@ QWidget *QApplication::activeModalWidget() } /*! - Cleans up any window system resources that were allocated by this - application. Sets the global variable \c qApp to 0. + Cleans up any window system resources that were allocated by this + application. Sets the global variable \c qApp to 0. */ QApplication::~QApplication() @@ -1092,8 +1077,8 @@ QApplication::~QApplication() /*! \fn QWidget *QApplication::widgetAt(const QPoint &point) - Returns the widget at global screen position \a point, or 0 if there - is no Qt widget there. + Returns the widget at global screen position \a point, or 0 if there is no + Qt widget there. This function can be slow. @@ -1141,8 +1126,8 @@ QWidget *QApplication::widgetAt(const QPoint &p) \overload - Returns the widget at global screen position (\a x, \a y), or 0 - if there is no Qt widget there. + Returns the widget at global screen position (\a x, \a y), or 0 if there is + no Qt widget there. */ /*! @@ -1211,16 +1196,17 @@ bool QApplication::compressEvent(QEvent *event, QObject *receiver, QPostEventLis \since 4.4 \brief defines a threshold for auto maximizing widgets - The auto maximize threshold is only available - as part of Qt for Windows CE. + The auto maximize threshold is only available as part of Qt for Windows CE. This property defines a threshold for the size of a window as a percentage - of the screen size. If the minimum size hint of a window exceeds the threshold, - calling show() will then cause the window to be maximized automatically. + of the screen size. If the minimum size hint of a window exceeds the + threshold, calling show() will then cause the window to be maximized + automatically. - Setting the threshold to be 100 or greater means that it will cause it to always - be maximized. Setting it to be 50 means that the widget is maximized if the vertical - minimum size hint is at least 50% of the vertical screen size. + Setting the threshold to be 100 or greater means that it will cause it to + always be maximized. Setting it to be 50 means that the widget is maximized + if the vertical minimum size hint is at least 50% of the vertical screen + size. If -1 is specified then this will disable the feature. @@ -1233,12 +1219,11 @@ bool QApplication::compressEvent(QEvent *event, QObject *receiver, QPostEventLis \since 4.5 \brief toggles automatic SIP (software input panel) visibility - The auto SIP property is only available - as part of Qt for Windows CE. + The auto SIP property is only available as part of Qt for Windows CE. Set this property to true to automatically display the SIP when entering - widgets that accept keyboard input. This only affects widgets that have the - attribute WA_InputMethodEnabled set. + widgets that accept keyboard input. This property only affects widgets with + the WA_InputMethodEnabled attribute set. */ #ifdef Q_OS_WINCE @@ -1290,9 +1275,9 @@ void QApplication::setStyleSheet(const QString& styleSheet) #endif // QT_NO_STYLE_STYLESHEET /*! - Returns the application's style object. + Returns the application's style object. - \sa setStyle(), QStyle + \sa setStyle(), QStyle */ QStyle *QApplication::style() { @@ -1375,22 +1360,21 @@ QStyle *QApplication::style() } /*! - Sets the application's GUI style to \a style. Ownership of the style - object is transferred to QApplication, so QApplication will delete - the style object on application exit or when a new style is set and - the old style is still the parent of the application object. + Sets the application's GUI style to \a style. Ownership of the style object + is transferred to QApplication, so QApplication will delete the style + object on application exit or when a new style is set and the old style is + still the parent of the application object. Example usage: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 1 - When switching application styles, the color palette is set back to - the initial colors or the system defaults. This is necessary since - certain styles have to adapt the color palette to be fully - style-guide compliant. + When switching application styles, the color palette is set back to the + initial colors or the system defaults. This is necessary since certain + styles have to adapt the color palette to be fully style-guide compliant. - Note that setting the style before a palette has been set - (i.e. before creating QApplication) will cause the application to - use QStyle::standardPalette() for the palette. + Setting the style before a palette has been se, i.e., before creating + QApplication, will cause the application to use QStyle::standardPalette() + for the palette. \warning Qt style sheets are currently not supported for custom QStyle subclasses. We plan to address this in some future release. @@ -1493,20 +1477,20 @@ void QApplication::setStyle(QStyle *style) } /*! - \overload + \overload - Requests a QStyle object for \a style from the QStyleFactory. + Requests a QStyle object for \a style from the QStyleFactory. - The string must be one of the QStyleFactory::keys(), typically one - of "windows", "motif", "cde", "plastique", "windowsxp", or - "macintosh". Style names are case insensitive. + The string must be one of the QStyleFactory::keys(), typically one of + "windows", "motif", "cde", "plastique", "windowsxp", or "macintosh". Style + names are case insensitive. - Returns 0 if an unknown \a style is passed, otherwise the QStyle object - returned is set as the application's GUI style. + Returns 0 if an unknown \a style is passed, otherwise the QStyle object + returned is set as the application's GUI style. - \warning To ensure that the application's style is set correctly, it is - best to call this function before the QApplication constructor, if - possible. + \warning To ensure that the application's style is set correctly, it is + best to call this function before the QApplication constructor, if + possible. */ QStyle* QApplication::setStyle(const QString& style) { @@ -1519,20 +1503,19 @@ QStyle* QApplication::setStyle(const QString& style) } /*! - \since 4.5 + \since 4.5 - Sets the default graphics backend to \a system, which will be used - for on-screen widgets and QPixmaps. The available systems are - \c{"native"}, \c{"raster"} and \c{"opengl"}. + Sets the default graphics backend to \a system, which will be used for + on-screen widgets and QPixmaps. The available systems are \c{"native"}, + \c{"raster"} and \c{"opengl"}. - Note that this function call overrides both the application - commandline \c{-graphicssystem} switch and the configure - \c{-graphicssystem} switch. + This function call overrides both the application commandline + \c{-graphicssystem} switch and the configure \c{-graphicssystem} switch. - \warning This function must be called before the QApplication - constructor is called. + \warning This function must be called before the QApplication constructor + is called. - The \c{"opengl"} option is currently considered experimental. + \note The \c{"opengl"} option is currently experimental. */ void QApplication::setGraphicsSystem(const QString &system) @@ -1541,9 +1524,10 @@ void QApplication::setGraphicsSystem(const QString &system) } /*! - Returns the color specification. - \sa QApplication::setColorSpec() - */ + Returns the color specification. + + \sa QApplication::setColorSpec() +*/ int QApplication::colorSpec() { @@ -1551,54 +1535,54 @@ int QApplication::colorSpec() } /*! - Sets the color specification for the application to \a spec. - - The color specification controls how the application allocates colors - when run on a display with a limited amount of colors, e.g. 8 bit / 256 - color displays. - - The color specification must be set before you create the QApplication - object. - - The options are: - \list - \o QApplication::NormalColor. - This is the default color allocation strategy. Use this option if - your application uses buttons, menus, texts and pixmaps with few - colors. With this option, the application uses system global - colors. This works fine for most applications under X11, but on - Windows machines it may cause dithering of non-standard colors. - \o QApplication::CustomColor. - Use this option if your application needs a small number of custom - colors. On X11, this option is the same as NormalColor. On Windows, Qt - creates a Windows palette, and allocates colors to it on demand. - \o QApplication::ManyColor. - Use this option if your application is very color hungry - (e.g. it requires thousands of colors). - Under X11 the effect is: + Sets the color specification for the application to \a spec. + + The color specification controls how the application allocates colors when + run on a display with a limited amount of colors, e.g. 8 bit / 256 color + displays. + + The color specification must be set before you create the QApplication + object. + + The options are: \list - \o For 256-color displays which have at best a 256 color true - color visual, the default visual is used, and colors are - allocated from a color cube. The color cube is the 6x6x6 (216 - color) "Web palette" (the red, green, and blue components - always have one of the following values: 0x00, 0x33, 0x66, - 0x99, 0xCC, or 0xFF), but the number of colors can be changed - by the \e -ncols option. The user can force the application to - use the true color visual with the \link - QApplication::QApplication() -visual \endlink option. - \o For 256-color displays which have a true color visual with more - than 256 colors, use that visual. Silicon Graphics X servers - have this feature, for example. They provide an 8 bit visual - by default but can deliver true color when asked. + \o QApplication::NormalColor. This is the default color allocation + strategy. Use this option if your application uses buttons, menus, + texts and pixmaps with few colors. With this option, the + application uses system global colors. This works fine for most + applications under X11, but on Windows machines it may cause + dithering of non-standard colors. + \o QApplication::CustomColor. Use this option if your application + needs a small number of custom colors. On X11, this option is the + same as NormalColor. On Windows, Qt creates a Windows palette, and + allocates colors to it on demand. + \o QApplication::ManyColor. Use this option if your application is + very color hungry, e.g., it requires thousands of colors. \br + Under X11 the effect is: + \list + \o For 256-color displays which have at best a 256 color true + color visual, the default visual is used, and colors are + allocated from a color cube. The color cube is the 6x6x6 + (216 color) "Web palette" (the red, green, and blue + components always have one of the following values: 0x00, + 0x33, 0x66, 0x99, 0xCC, or 0xFF), but the number of colors + can be changed by the \e -ncols option. The user can force + the application to use the true color visual with the + \l{QApplication::QApplication()}{-visual} option. + \o For 256-color displays which have a true color visual with + more than 256 colors, use that visual. Silicon Graphics X + servers this feature, for example. They provide an 8 bit + visual by default but can deliver true color when asked. + \endlist + On Windows, Qt creates a Windows palette, and fills it with a color + cube. \endlist - On Windows, Qt creates a Windows palette, and fills it with a color cube. - \endlist - Be aware that the CustomColor and ManyColor choices may lead to colormap - flashing: The foreground application gets (most) of the available - colors, while the background windows will look less attractive. + Be aware that the CustomColor and ManyColor choices may lead to colormap + flashing: The foreground application gets (most) of the available colors, + while the background windows will look less attractive. - Example: + Example: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 2 @@ -1618,10 +1602,9 @@ void QApplication::setColorSpec(int spec) \brief the minimum size that any GUI element that the user can interact with should have - For example, no button should be resized to be smaller than the - global strut size. The strut size should be considered when - reimplementing GUI controls that may be used on touch-screens or - similar I/O devices. + For example, no button should be resized to be smaller than the global + strut size. The strut size should be considered when reimplementing GUI + controls that may be used on touch-screens or similar I/O devices. Example: @@ -1655,12 +1638,11 @@ QPalette QApplication::palette() \fn QPalette QApplication::palette(const QWidget* widget) \overload - If a \a widget is passed, the default palette for the - widget's class is returned. This may or may not be the application - palette. In most cases there isn't a special palette for certain - types of widgets, but one notable exception is the popup menu - under Windows, if the user has defined a special background color - for menus in the display settings. + If a \a widget is passed, the default palette for the widget's class is + returned. This may or may not be the application palette. In most cases + there is no special palette for certain types of widgets, but one notable + exception is the popup menu under Windows, if the user has defined a + special background color for menus in the display settings. \sa setPalette(), QWidget::palette() */ @@ -1754,26 +1736,26 @@ void QApplicationPrivate::setPalette_helper(const QPalette &palette, const char* } /*! - Changes the default application palette to \a palette. + Changes the default application palette to \a palette. - If \a className is passed, the change applies only to widgets that - inherit \a className (as reported by QObject::inherits()). If - \a className is left 0, the change affects all widgets, thus overriding - any previously set class specific palettes. + If \a className is passed, the change applies only to widgets that inherit + \a className (as reported by QObject::inherits()). If \a className is left + 0, the change affects all widgets, thus overriding any previously set class + specific palettes. - The palette may be changed according to the current GUI style in - QStyle::polish(). + The palette may be changed according to the current GUI style in + QStyle::polish(). - \warning Do not use this function in conjunction with \l{Qt Style Sheets}. - When using style sheets, the palette of a widget can be customized using the "color", - "background-color", "selection-color", "selection-background-color" and - "alternate-background-color". + \warning Do not use this function in conjunction with \l{Qt Style Sheets}. + When using style sheets, the palette of a widget can be customized using + the "color", "background-color", "selection-color", + "selection-background-color" and "alternate-background-color". - Note that some styles do not use the palette for all drawing, - for instance, if they make use of native theme engines. This is - the case for the Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Mac OS X styles. + \note Some styles do not use the palette for all drawing, for instance, if + they make use of native theme engines. This is the case for the Windows XP, + Windows Vista, and Mac OS X styles. - \sa QWidget::setPalette(), palette(), QStyle::polish() + \sa QWidget::setPalette(), palette(), QStyle::polish() */ void QApplication::setPalette(const QPalette &palette, const char* className) @@ -1878,15 +1860,15 @@ QFont QApplication::font(const char *className) /*! - Changes the default application font to \a font. If \a className - is passed, the change applies only to classes that inherit \a - className (as reported by QObject::inherits()). + Changes the default application font to \a font. If \a className is passed, + the change applies only to classes that inherit \a className (as reported + by QObject::inherits()). - On application start-up, the default font depends on the window - system. It can vary depending on both the window system version and - the locale. This function lets you override the default font; but - overriding may be a bad idea because, for example, some locales need - extra large fonts to support their special characters. + On application start-up, the default font depends on the window system. It + can vary depending on both the window system version and the locale. This + function lets you override the default font; but overriding may be a bad + idea because, for example, some locales need extra large fonts to support + their special characters. \warning Do not use this function in conjunction with \l{Qt Style Sheets}. The font of an application can be customized using the "font" style sheet @@ -1988,11 +1970,10 @@ void QApplication::setWindowIcon(const QIcon &icon) } /*! - Returns a list of the top-level widgets (windows) in the - application. + Returns a list of the top-level widgets (windows) in the application. - Note that some of the top-level widgets may be hidden, for - example a tooltip if no tooltip is currently shown. + \note Some of the top-level widgets may be hidden, for example a tooltip if + no tooltip is currently shown. Example: @@ -2018,7 +1999,7 @@ QWidgetList QApplication::topLevelWidgets() The list is empty (QList::isEmpty()) if there are no widgets. - Note that some of the widgets may be hidden. + \note Some of the widgets may be hidden. Example: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 5 @@ -2037,10 +2018,10 @@ QWidgetList QApplication::allWidgets() } /*! - Returns the application widget that has the keyboard input focus, or - 0 if no widget in this application has the focus. + Returns the application widget that has the keyboard input focus, or 0 if + no widget in this application has the focus. - \sa QWidget::setFocus(), QWidget::hasFocus(), activeWindow(), focusChanged() + \sa QWidget::setFocus(), QWidget::hasFocus(), activeWindow(), focusChanged() */ QWidget *QApplication::focusWidget() @@ -2121,12 +2102,12 @@ void QApplicationPrivate::setFocusWidget(QWidget *focus, Qt::FocusReason reason) /*! - Returns the application top-level window that has the keyboard input - focus, or 0 if no application window has the focus. Note that - there might be an activeWindow() even if there is no focusWidget(), - for example if no widget in that window accepts key events. + Returns the application top-level window that has the keyboard input focus, + or 0 if no application window has the focus. There might be an + activeWindow() even if there is no focusWidget(), for example if no widget + in that window accepts key events. - \sa QWidget::setFocus(), QWidget::hasFocus(), focusWidget() + \sa QWidget::setFocus(), QWidget::hasFocus(), focusWidget() */ QWidget *QApplication::activeWindow() @@ -2135,9 +2116,9 @@ QWidget *QApplication::activeWindow() } /*! - Returns display (screen) font metrics for the application font. + Returns display (screen) font metrics for the application font. - \sa font(), setFont(), QWidget::fontMetrics(), QPainter::fontMetrics() + \sa font(), setFont(), QWidget::fontMetrics(), QPainter::fontMetrics() */ QFontMetrics QApplication::fontMetrics() @@ -2149,19 +2130,20 @@ QFontMetrics QApplication::fontMetrics() /*! Closes all top-level windows. - This function is particularly useful for applications with many - top-level windows. It could, for example, be connected to a - \gui{Exit} entry in the \gui{File} menu: + This function is particularly useful for applications with many top-level + windows. It could, for example, be connected to a \gui{Exit} entry in the + \gui{File} menu: \snippet examples/mainwindows/mdi/mainwindow.cpp 0 - The windows are closed in random order, until one window does not - accept the close event. The application quits when the last window - was successfully closed; this can be turned off by setting \l - quitOnLastWindowClosed to false. + The windows are closed in random order, until one window does not accept + the close event. The application quits when the last window was + successfully closed; this can be turned off by setting + \l quitOnLastWindowClosed to false. - \sa quitOnLastWindowClosed, lastWindowClosed() QWidget::close(), QWidget::closeEvent(), lastWindowClosed(), - quit(), topLevelWidgets(), QWidget::isWindow() + \sa quitOnLastWindowClosed, lastWindowClosed(), QWidget::close(), + QWidget::closeEvent(), lastWindowClosed(), quit(), topLevelWidgets(), + QWidget::isWindow() */ void QApplication::closeAllWindows() { @@ -2184,11 +2166,11 @@ void QApplication::closeAllWindows() } /*! - Displays a simple message box about Qt. The message includes the - version number of Qt being used by the application. + Displays a simple message box about Qt. The message includes the version + number of Qt being used by the application. - This is useful for inclusion in the \gui Help menu of an application, - as shown in the \l{mainwindows/menus}{Menus} example. + This is useful for inclusion in the \gui Help menu of an application, as + shown in the \l{mainwindows/menus}{Menus} example. This function is a convenience slot for QMessageBox::aboutQt(). */ @@ -2209,22 +2191,20 @@ void QApplication::aboutQt() /*! \fn void QApplication::lastWindowClosed() - This signal is emitted from QApplication::exec() when the last - visible primary window (i.e. window with no parent) with the - Qt::WA_QuitOnClose attribute set is closed. + This signal is emitted from QApplication::exec() when the last visible + primary window (i.e. window with no parent) with the Qt::WA_QuitOnClose + attribute set is closed. By default, \list + \o this attribute is set for all widgets except transient windows such + as splash screens, tool windows, and popup menus - \i this attribute is set for all widgets except transient windows - such as splash screens, tool windows, and popup menus - - \i QApplication implicitly quits when this signal is emitted. - + \o QApplication implicitly quits when this signal is emitted. \endlist - This feature be turned off by setting \l quitOnLastWindowClosed to + This feature can be turned off by setting \l quitOnLastWindowClosed to false. \sa QWidget::close() @@ -2234,15 +2214,15 @@ void QApplication::aboutQt() \since 4.1 \fn void QApplication::focusChanged(QWidget *old, QWidget *now) - This signal is emitted when the widget that has keyboard focus - changed from \a old to \a now, i.e. because the user pressed the - tab-key, clicked into a widget or changed the active window. Note - that both \a old and \a now can be the null-pointer. + This signal is emitted when the widget that has keyboard focus changed from + \a old to \a now, i.e., because the user pressed the tab-key, clicked into + a widget or changed the active window. Both \a old and \a now can be the + null-pointer. - The signal is emitted after both widget have been notified about - the change through QFocusEvent. + The signal is emitted after both widget have been notified about the change + through QFocusEvent. - \sa QWidget::setFocus() QWidget::clearFocus() Qt::FocusReason + \sa QWidget::setFocus(), QWidget::clearFocus(), Qt::FocusReason */ /*! @@ -2251,10 +2231,10 @@ void QApplication::aboutQt() This signal is emitted when application fonts are loaded or removed. - \sa QFontDatabase::addApplicationFont() - \sa QFontDatabase::addApplicationFontFromData() - \sa QFontDatabase::removeAllApplicationFonts() - \sa QFontDatabase::removeApplicationFont() + \sa QFontDatabase::addApplicationFont(), + QFontDatabase::addApplicationFontFromData(), + QFontDatabase::removeAllApplicationFonts(), + QFontDatabase::removeApplicationFont() */ #ifndef QT_NO_TRANSLATION @@ -2351,18 +2331,17 @@ void QApplication::syncX() {} // do nothing \fn void QApplication::setActiveWindow(QWidget* active) Sets the active window to the \a active widget in response to a system - event. The function is called from the platform specific event - handlers. + event. The function is called from the platform specific event handlers. - \warning This function does \e not set the keyboard focus to the - active widget. Call QWidget::activateWindow() instead. + \warning This function does \e not set the keyboard focus to the active + widget. Call QWidget::activateWindow() instead. - It sets the activeWindow() and focusWidget() attributes and sends - proper \l{QEvent::WindowActivate}{WindowActivate}/\l{QEvent::WindowDeactivate}{WindowDeactivate} - and \l{QEvent::FocusIn}{FocusIn}/\l{QEvent::FocusOut}{FocusOut} events - to all appropriate widgets. The window will then be painted in - active state (e.g. cursors in line edits will blink), and it will - have tool tips enabled. + It sets the activeWindow() and focusWidget() attributes and sends proper + \l{QEvent::WindowActivate}{WindowActivate}/\l{QEvent::WindowDeactivate} + {WindowDeactivate} and \l{QEvent::FocusIn}{FocusIn}/\l{QEvent::FocusOut} + {FocusOut} events to all appropriate widgets. The window will then be + painted in active state (e.g. cursors in line edits will blink), and it + will have tool tips enabled. \sa activeWindow(), QWidget::activateWindow() */ @@ -2508,11 +2487,11 @@ QWidget *QApplicationPrivate::focusNextPrevChild_helper(QWidget *toplevel, bool } /*! - \fn void QApplicationPrivate::dispatchEnterLeave(QWidget* enter, QWidget* leave) - \internal + \fn void QApplicationPrivate::dispatchEnterLeave(QWidget* enter, QWidget* leave) + \internal - Creates the proper Enter/Leave event when widget \a enter is entered - and widget \a leave is left. + Creates the proper Enter/Leave event when widget \a enter is entered and + widget \a leave is left. */ #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) extern void qt_win_set_cursor(QWidget *, bool); @@ -3029,11 +3008,11 @@ void QApplicationPrivate::sendSyntheticEnterLeave(QWidget *widget) /*! Returns the desktop widget (also called the root window). - Note that the desktop may be composed of multiple screens, so it would be - incorrect, for example, to attempt to \e center some widget in the - desktop's geometry. QDesktopWidget has various functions for obtaining - useful geometries upon the desktop, such as QDesktopWidget::screenGeometry() - and QDesktopWidget::availableGeometry(). + The desktop may be composed of multiple screens, so it would be incorrect, + for example, to attempt to \e center some widget in the desktop's geometry. + QDesktopWidget has various functions for obtaining useful geometries upon + the desktop, such as QDesktopWidget::screenGeometry() and + QDesktopWidget::availableGeometry(). On X11, it is also possible to draw on the desktop. */ @@ -3048,10 +3027,10 @@ QDesktopWidget *QApplication::desktop() #ifndef QT_NO_CLIPBOARD /*! - Returns a pointer to the application global clipboard. + Returns a pointer to the application global clipboard. - \note The QApplication object should already be constructed before - accessing the clipboard. + \note The QApplication object should already be constructed before + accessing the clipboard. */ QClipboard *QApplication::clipboard() { @@ -3067,11 +3046,11 @@ QClipboard *QApplication::clipboard() #endif // QT_NO_CLIPBOARD /*! - Sets whether Qt should use the system's standard colors, fonts, - etc., to \a on. By default, this is true. + Sets whether Qt should use the system's standard colors, fonts, etc., to + \a on. By default, this is true. - This function must be called before creating the QApplication - object, like this: + This function must be called before creating the QApplication object, like + this: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 6 @@ -3083,8 +3062,8 @@ void QApplication::setDesktopSettingsAware(bool on) } /*! - Returns true if Qt is set to use the system's standard colors, - fonts, etc.; otherwise returns false. The default is true. + Returns true if Qt is set to use the system's standard colors, fonts, etc.; + otherwise returns false. The default is true. \sa setDesktopSettingsAware() */ @@ -3094,17 +3073,17 @@ bool QApplication::desktopSettingsAware() } /*! - Returns the current state of the modifier keys on the keyboard. The - current state is updated sychronously as the event queue is emptied - of events that will spontaneously change the keyboard state - (QEvent::KeyPress and QEvent::KeyRelease events). + Returns the current state of the modifier keys on the keyboard. The current + state is updated sychronously as the event queue is emptied of events that + will spontaneously change the keyboard state (QEvent::KeyPress and + QEvent::KeyRelease events). - It should be noted this may not reflect the actual keys held on the - input device at the time of calling but rather the modifiers as - last reported in one of the above events. If no keys are being held - Qt::NoModifier is returned. + It should be noted this may not reflect the actual keys held on the input + device at the time of calling but rather the modifiers as last reported in + one of the above events. If no keys are being held Qt::NoModifier is + returned. - \sa mouseButtons() + \sa mouseButtons() */ Qt::KeyboardModifiers QApplication::keyboardModifiers() @@ -3113,17 +3092,17 @@ Qt::KeyboardModifiers QApplication::keyboardModifiers() } /*! - Returns the current state of the buttons on the mouse. The current - state is updated syncronously as the event queue is emptied of - events that will spontaneously change the mouse state - (QEvent::MouseButtonPress and QEvent::MouseButtonRelease events). + Returns the current state of the buttons on the mouse. The current state is + updated syncronously as the event queue is emptied of events that will + spontaneously change the mouse state (QEvent::MouseButtonPress and + QEvent::MouseButtonRelease events). - It should be noted this may not reflect the actual buttons held on - theinput device at the time of calling but rather the mouse buttons - as last reported in one of the above events. If no mouse buttons are - being held Qt::NoButton is returned. + It should be noted this may not reflect the actual buttons held on the + input device at the time of calling but rather the mouse buttons as last + reported in one of the above events. If no mouse buttons are being held + Qt::NoButton is returned. - \sa keyboardModifiers() + \sa keyboardModifiers() */ Qt::MouseButtons QApplication::mouseButtons() @@ -3132,43 +3111,40 @@ Qt::MouseButtons QApplication::mouseButtons() } /*! - \fn bool QApplication::isSessionRestored() const + \fn bool QApplication::isSessionRestored() const - Returns true if the application has been restored from an earlier - \link session.html session\endlink; otherwise returns false. + Returns true if the application has been restored from an earlier + \l{Session Management}{session}; otherwise returns false. - \sa sessionId(), commitData(), saveState() + \sa sessionId(), commitData(), saveState() */ /*! - \fn QString QApplication::sessionId() const + \fn QString QApplication::sessionId() const - Returns the current \link session.html session's\endlink identifier. + Returns the current \l{Session Management}{session's} identifier. - If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this - identifier is the same as it was in that previous session. + If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this + identifier is the same as it was in that previous session. The session + identifier is guaranteed to be unique both for different applications + and for different instances of the same application. - The session identifier is guaranteed to be unique both for different - applications and for different instances of the same application. - - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionKey(), commitData(), saveState() - */ + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionKey(), commitData(), saveState() +*/ /*! - \fn QString QApplication::sessionKey() const + \fn QString QApplication::sessionKey() const - Returns the session key in the current \link session.html - session\endlink. + Returns the session key in the current \l{Session Management}{session}. - If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this - key is the same as it was when the previous session ended. + If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this key is + the same as it was when the previous session ended. - The session key changes with every call of commitData() or - saveState(). + The session key changes with every call of commitData() or saveState(). - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), saveState() - */ + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), saveState() +*/ #ifndef QT_NO_SESSIONMANAGER bool QApplication::isSessionRestored() const { @@ -3191,59 +3167,57 @@ QString QApplication::sessionKey() const - - /*! - \since 4.2 - \fn void QApplication::commitDataRequest(QSessionManager &manager) + \since 4.2 + \fn void QApplication::commitDataRequest(QSessionManager &manager) - This signal deals with \link session.html session - management\endlink. It is emitted when the QSessionManager wants the - application to commit all its data. + This signal deals with \l{Session Management}{session management}. It is + emitted when the QSessionManager wants the application to commit all its + data. - Usually this means saving all open files, after getting - permission from the user. Furthermore you may want to provide a means - by which the user can cancel the shutdown. + Usually this means saving all open files, after getting permission from + the user. Furthermore you may want to provide a means by which the user + can cancel the shutdown. - Note that you should not exit the application when called. - Instead, the session manager may or may not do this afterwards, - depending on the context. + You should not exit the application within this signal. Instead, + the session manager may or may not do this afterwards, depending on the + context. - \warning Within this signal, no user interaction is possible, \e - unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See - QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and - QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details and example - usage. + \warning Within this signal, no user interaction is possible, \e + unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See + QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and + QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details and example + usage. - Note: You should use Qt::DirectConnection when connecting to this signal. + \note You should use Qt::DirectConnection when connecting to this signal. - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), saveState(), {Session Management} + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), saveState(), {Session Management} */ /*! - This function deals with \link session.html session - management\endlink. It is invoked when the QSessionManager wants the - application to commit all its data. + This function deals with \l{Session Management}{session management}. It is + invoked when the QSessionManager wants the application to commit all its + data. - Usually this means saving all open files, after getting - permission from the user. Furthermore you may want to provide a means - by which the user can cancel the shutdown. + Usually this means saving all open files, after getting permission from the + user. Furthermore you may want to provide a means by which the user can + cancel the shutdown. - Note that you should not exit the application within this function. - Instead, the session manager may or may not do this afterwards, - depending on the context. + You should not exit the application within this function. Instead, the + session manager may or may not do this afterwards, depending on the + context. - \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e - unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See - QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and - QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details and example - usage. + \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e + unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See + QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and + QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details and example + usage. - The default implementation requests interaction and sends a close - event to all visible top-level widgets. If any event was - rejected, the shutdown is canceled. + The default implementation requests interaction and sends a close event to + all visible top-level widgets. If any event was rejected, the shutdown is + canceled. - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), saveState(), {Session Management} + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), saveState(), {Session Management} */ #ifndef QT_NO_SESSIONMANAGER void QApplication::commitData(QSessionManager& manager ) @@ -3269,58 +3243,54 @@ void QApplication::commitData(QSessionManager& manager ) } /*! - \since 4.2 - \fn void QApplication::saveStateRequest(QSessionManager &manager) + \since 4.2 + \fn void QApplication::saveStateRequest(QSessionManager &manager) - This signal deals with \link session.html session - management\endlink. It is invoked when the - \link QSessionManager session manager \endlink wants the application - to preserve its state for a future session. + This signal deals with \l{Session Management}{session management}. It is + invoked when the \l{QSessionManager}{session manager} wants the application + to preserve its state for a future session. - For example, a text editor would create a temporary file that - includes the current contents of its edit buffers, the location of - the cursor and other aspects of the current editing session. + For example, a text editor would create a temporary file that includes the + current contents of its edit buffers, the location of the cursor and other + aspects of the current editing session. - Note that you should never exit the application within this - signal. Instead, the session manager may or may not do this - afterwards, depending on the context. Futhermore, most session - managers will very likely request a saved state immediately after - the application has been started. This permits the session manager - to learn about the application's restart policy. + You should never exit the application within this signal. Instead, the + session manager may or may not do this afterwards, depending on the + context. Futhermore, most session managers will very likely request a saved + state immediately after the application has been started. This permits the + session manager to learn about the application's restart policy. - \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e - unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See - QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and - QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details. + \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e + unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See + QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and + QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details. - Note:: You should use Qt::DirectConnection when connecting to this signal. + \note You should use Qt::DirectConnection when connecting to this signal. - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), {Session Management} + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), {Session Management} */ /*! - This function deals with \link session.html session - management\endlink. It is invoked when the - \link QSessionManager session manager \endlink wants the application - to preserve its state for a future session. + This function deals with \l{Session Management}{session management}. It is + invoked when the \l{QSessionManager}{session manager} wants the application + to preserve its state for a future session. - For example, a text editor would create a temporary file that - includes the current contents of its edit buffers, the location of - the cursor and other aspects of the current editing session. + For example, a text editor would create a temporary file that includes the + current contents of its edit buffers, the location of the cursor and other + aspects of the current editing session. - Note that you should never exit the application within this - function. Instead, the session manager may or may not do this - afterwards, depending on the context. Futhermore, most session - managers will very likely request a saved state immediately after - the application has been started. This permits the session manager - to learn about the application's restart policy. + You should never exit the application within this function. Instead, the + session manager may or may not do this afterwards, depending on the + context. Futhermore, most session managers will very likely request a saved + state immediately after the application has been started. This permits the + session manager to learn about the application's restart policy. - \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e - unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See - QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and - QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details. + \warning Within this function, no user interaction is possible, \e + unless you ask the \a manager for explicit permission. See + QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() and + QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() for details. - \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), {Session Management} + \sa isSessionRestored(), sessionId(), commitData(), {Session Management} */ void QApplication::saveState(QSessionManager &manager) @@ -3344,13 +3314,12 @@ void QApplication::setStartDragTime(int ms) \brief the time in milliseconds that a mouse button must be held down before a drag and drop operation will begin - If you support drag and drop in your application, and want to start a - drag and drop operation after the user has held down a mouse button for - a certain amount of time, you should use this property's value as the - delay. + If you support drag and drop in your application, and want to start a drag + and drop operation after the user has held down a mouse button for a + certain amount of time, you should use this property's value as the delay. - Qt also uses this delay internally, e.g. in QTextEdit and QLineEdit, - for starting a drag. + Qt also uses this delay internally, e.g. in QTextEdit and QLineEdit, for + starting a drag. The default value is 500 ms. @@ -3363,9 +3332,9 @@ int QApplication::startDragTime() } /* - Sets the distance after which a drag should start to \a l pixels. + Sets the distance after which a drag should start to \a l pixels. - \sa startDragDistance() + \sa startDragDistance() */ void QApplication::setStartDragDistance(int l) @@ -3376,15 +3345,14 @@ void QApplication::setStartDragDistance(int l) /*! \property QApplication::startDragDistance - If you support drag and drop in your application, and want to start a - drag and drop operation after the user has moved the cursor a certain - distance with a button held down, you should use this property's value - as the minimum distance required. + If you support drag and drop in your application, and want to start a drag + and drop operation after the user has moved the cursor a certain distance + with a button held down, you should use this property's value as the + minimum distance required. - For example, if the mouse position of the click is stored in \c - startPos and the current position (e.g. in the mouse move event) is - \c currentPos, you can find out if a drag should be started with code - like this: + For example, if the mouse position of the click is stored in \c startPos + and the current position (e.g. in the mouse move event) is \c currentPos, + you can find out if a drag should be started with code like this: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 7 @@ -3430,14 +3398,14 @@ int QApplication::startDragDistance() \sa layoutDirection(), isRightToLeft() */ -/*! \property QApplication::layoutDirection - - \brief the default layout direction for this application +/*! + \property QApplication::layoutDirection + \brief the default layout direction for this application - On system start-up, the default layout direction depends on the - application's language. + On system start-up, the default layout direction depends on the + application's language. - \sa QWidget::layoutDirection, isLeftToRight(), isRightToLeft() + \sa QWidget::layoutDirection, isLeftToRight(), isRightToLeft() */ void QApplication::setLayoutDirection(Qt::LayoutDirection direction) @@ -3461,11 +3429,12 @@ Qt::LayoutDirection QApplication::layoutDirection() } -/*! \obsolete +/*! + \obsolete - Strips out vertical alignment flags and transforms an - alignment \a align of Qt::AlignLeft into Qt::AlignLeft or - Qt::AlignRight according to the language used. + Strips out vertical alignment flags and transforms an alignment \a align + of Qt::AlignLeft into Qt::AlignLeft or Qt::AlignRight according to the + language used. */ #ifdef QT3_SUPPORT @@ -3481,8 +3450,8 @@ Qt::Alignment QApplication::horizontalAlignment(Qt::Alignment align) Returns the active application override cursor. - This function returns 0 if no application cursor has been defined - (i.e. the internal cursor stack is empty). + This function returns 0 if no application cursor has been defined (i.e. the + internal cursor stack is empty). \sa setOverrideCursor(), restoreOverrideCursor() */ @@ -3495,9 +3464,10 @@ QCursor *QApplication::overrideCursor() /*! Changes the currently active application override cursor to \a cursor. - This function has no effect if setOverrideCursor() wasn't called. + This function has no effect if setOverrideCursor() was not called. - \sa setOverrideCursor() overrideCursor() restoreOverrideCursor() QWidget::setCursor() + \sa setOverrideCursor(), overrideCursor(), restoreOverrideCursor(), + QWidget::setCursor() */ void QApplication::changeOverrideCursor(const QCursor &cursor) { @@ -3511,8 +3481,8 @@ void QApplication::changeOverrideCursor(const QCursor &cursor) /*! \fn void QApplication::setOverrideCursor(const QCursor &cursor, bool replace) - Use changeOverrideCursor(\a cursor) (if \a replace is true) - or setOverrideCursor(\a cursor) (if \a replace is false). + Use changeOverrideCursor(\a cursor) (if \a replace is true) or + setOverrideCursor(\a cursor) (if \a replace is false). */ /*! @@ -3520,29 +3490,26 @@ void QApplication::changeOverrideCursor(const QCursor &cursor) the value that was set to exit() (which is 0 if exit() is called via quit()). - It is necessary to call this function to start event handling. The - main event loop receives events from the window system and - dispatches these to the application widgets. + It is necessary to call this function to start event handling. The main + event loop receives events from the window system and dispatches these to + the application widgets. + + Generally, no user interaction can take place before calling exec(). As a + special case, modal widgets like QMessageBox can be used before calling + exec(), because modal widgets call exec() to start a local event loop. - Generally speaking, no user interaction can take place before - calling exec(). As a special case, modal widgets like QMessageBox - can be used before calling exec(), because modal widgets call - exec() to start a local event loop. - - To make your application perform idle processing, i.e. executing a - special function whenever there are no pending events, use a - QTimer with 0 timeout. More advanced idle processing schemes can - be achieved using processEvents(). + To make your application perform idle processing, i.e., executing a special + function whenever there are no pending events, use a QTimer with 0 timeout. + More advanced idle processing schemes can be achieved using processEvents(). We recommend that you connect clean-up code to the - \l{QCoreApplication::}{aboutToQuit()} signal, instead of putting it in - your application's \c{main()} function because on some platforms the - QApplication::exec() call may not return. For example, on Windows - when the user logs off, the system terminates the process after Qt - closes all top-level windows. Hence, there is no guarantee that the - application will have time to exit its event loop and execute code at - the end of the \c{main()} function after the QApplication::exec() - call. + \l{QCoreApplication::}{aboutToQuit()} signal, instead of putting it in your + application's \c{main()} function because on some platforms the + QApplication::exec() call may not return. For example, on Windows when the + user logs off, the system terminates the process after Qt closes all + top-level windows. Hence, there is no guarantee that the application will + have time to exit its event loop and execute code at the end of the + \c{main()} function after the QApplication::exec() call. \sa quitOnLastWindowClosed, quit(), exit(), processEvents(), QCoreApplication::exec() @@ -4090,101 +4057,98 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) /*! - \class QSessionManager - \brief The QSessionManager class provides access to the session manager. - - \ingroup application - \ingroup environment - - A session manager in a desktop environment (in which Qt GUI - applications live) keeps track of a session, which is a group of - running applications, each of which has a particular state. The - state of an application contains (most notably) the documents the - application has open and the position and size of its windows. - - The session manager is used to save the session, e.g. when the - machine is shut down, and to restore a session, e.g. when the - machine is started up. We recommend that you use QSettings to save - an individual application's settings, e.g. window positions, - recently used files, etc. When the application is restarted by the - session manager, you can restore the settings. - - QSessionManager provides an interface between the application - and the session manager so that the program can work well with the - session manager. In Qt, session management requests for action are - handled by the two virtual functions QApplication::commitData() - and QApplication::saveState(). Both provide a reference to a - session manager object as argument, to allow the application to - communicate with the session manager. The session manager can only - be accessed through these functions. - - No user interaction is possible \e unless the application gets - explicit permission from the session manager. You ask for permission - by calling allowsInteraction() or, if it's really urgent, - allowsErrorInteraction(). Qt does not enforce this, but the session - manager may. - - You can try to abort the shutdown process by calling cancel(). The - default commitData() function does this if some top-level window - rejected its closeEvent(). - - For sophisticated session managers provided on Unix/X11, QSessionManager - offers further possibilities to fine-tune an application's session - management behavior: setRestartCommand(), setDiscardCommand(), - setRestartHint(), setProperty(), requestPhase2(). See the respective - function descriptions for further details. - - \sa QApplication, {Session Management} + \class QSessionManager + \brief The QSessionManager class provides access to the session manager. + + \ingroup application + \ingroup environment + + A session manager in a desktop environment (in which Qt GUI applications + live) keeps track of a session, which is a group of running applications, + each of which has a particular state. The state of an application contains + (most notably) the documents the application has open and the position and + size of its windows. + + The session manager is used to save the session, e.g., when the machine is + shut down, and to restore a session, e.g., when the machine is started up. + We recommend that you use QSettings to save an application's settings, + for example, window positions, recently used files, etc. When the + application is restarted by the session manager, you can restore the + settings. + + QSessionManager provides an interface between the application and the + session manager so that the program can work well with the session manager. + In Qt, session management requests for action are handled by the two + virtual functions QApplication::commitData() and QApplication::saveState(). + Both provide a reference to a session manager object as argument, to allow + the application to communicate with the session manager. The session + manager can only be accessed through these functions. + + No user interaction is possible \e unless the application gets explicit + permission from the session manager. You ask for permission by calling + allowsInteraction() or, if it is really urgent, allowsErrorInteraction(). + Qt does not enforce this, but the session manager may. + + You can try to abort the shutdown process by calling cancel(). The default + commitData() function does this if some top-level window rejected its + closeEvent(). + + For sophisticated session managers provided on Unix/X11, QSessionManager + offers further possibilities to fine-tune an application's session + management behavior: setRestartCommand(), setDiscardCommand(), + setRestartHint(), setProperty(), requestPhase2(). See the respective + function descriptions for further details. + + \sa QApplication, {Session Management} */ /*! \enum QSessionManager::RestartHint - This enum type defines the circumstances under which this - application wants to be restarted by the session manager. The - current values are + This enum type defines the circumstances under which this application wants + to be restarted by the session manager. The current values are: - \value RestartIfRunning if the application is still running when - the session is shut down, it wants to be restarted at the start of - the next session. + \value RestartIfRunning If the application is still running when the + session is shut down, it wants to be restarted + at the start of the next session. - \value RestartAnyway the application wants to be started at the - start of the next session, no matter what. (This is useful for - utilities that run just after startup and then quit.) + \value RestartAnyway The application wants to be started at the + start of the next session, no matter what. + (This is useful for utilities that run just + after startup and then quit.) - \value RestartImmediately the application wants to be started - immediately whenever it is not running. + \value RestartImmediately The application wants to be started immediately + whenever it is not running. - \value RestartNever the application does not want to be restarted - automatically. + \value RestartNever The application does not want to be restarted + automatically. - The default hint is \c RestartIfRunning. + The default hint is \c RestartIfRunning. */ /*! - \fn QString QSessionManager::sessionId() const + \fn QString QSessionManager::sessionId() const - Returns the identifier of the current session. + Returns the identifier of the current session. - If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this - identifier is the same as it was in that earlier session. + If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this + identifier is the same as it was in the earlier session. - \sa sessionKey(), QApplication::sessionId() - */ + \sa sessionKey(), QApplication::sessionId() +*/ /*! - \fn QString QSessionManager::sessionKey() const + \fn QString QSessionManager::sessionKey() const - Returns the session key in the current session. + Returns the session key in the current session. - If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this - key is the same as it was when the previous session ended. + If the application has been restored from an earlier session, this key is + the same as it was when the previous session ended. - The session key changes with every call of commitData() or - saveState(). + The session key changes with every call of commitData() or saveState(). - \sa sessionId(), QApplication::sessionKey() - */ + \sa sessionId(), QApplication::sessionKey() +*/ /*! \fn void* QSessionManager::handle() const @@ -4193,120 +4157,116 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) */ /*! - \fn bool QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() + \fn bool QSessionManager::allowsInteraction() - Asks the session manager for permission to interact with the - user. Returns true if interaction is permitted; otherwise - returns false. + Asks the session manager for permission to interact with the user. Returns + true if interaction is permitted; otherwise returns false. - The rationale behind this mechanism is to make it possible to - synchronize user interaction during a shutdown. Advanced session - managers may ask all applications simultaneously to commit their - data, resulting in a much faster shutdown. + The rationale behind this mechanism is to make it possible to synchronize + user interaction during a shutdown. Advanced session managers may ask all + applications simultaneously to commit their data, resulting in a much + faster shutdown. - When the interaction is completed we strongly recommend releasing the - user interaction semaphore with a call to release(). This way, other - applications may get the chance to interact with the user while your - application is still busy saving data. (The semaphore is implicitly - released when the application exits.) + When the interaction is completed we strongly recommend releasing the user + interaction semaphore with a call to release(). This way, other + applications may get the chance to interact with the user while your + application is still busy saving data. (The semaphore is implicitly + released when the application exits.) - If the user decides to cancel the shutdown process during the - interaction phase, you must tell the session manager that this has - happened by calling cancel(). + If the user decides to cancel the shutdown process during the interaction + phase, you must tell the session manager that this has happened by calling + cancel(). - Here's an example of how an application's QApplication::commitData() - might be implemented: + Here's an example of how an application's QApplication::commitData() might + be implemented: - \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 8 + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 8 - If an error occurred within the application while saving its data, - you may want to try allowsErrorInteraction() instead. + If an error occurred within the application while saving its data, you may + want to try allowsErrorInteraction() instead. - \sa QApplication::commitData(), release(), cancel() + \sa QApplication::commitData(), release(), cancel() */ /*! - \fn bool QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() + \fn bool QSessionManager::allowsErrorInteraction() - Returns true if error interaction is permitted; otherwise returns false. + Returns true if error interaction is permitted; otherwise returns false. - This is similar to allowsInteraction(), but also enables the application - to tell the user about any errors that occur. Session managers - may give error interaction requests higher priority, which means that it - is more likely that an error interaction is permitted. However, you are - still not guaranteed that the session manager will allow interaction. + This is similar to allowsInteraction(), but also enables the application to + tell the user about any errors that occur. Session managers may give error + interaction requests higher priority, which means that it is more likely + that an error interaction is permitted. However, you are still not + guaranteed that the session manager will allow interaction. - \sa allowsInteraction(), release(), cancel() + \sa allowsInteraction(), release(), cancel() */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::release() + \fn void QSessionManager::release() - Releases the session manager's interaction semaphore after an - interaction phase. + Releases the session manager's interaction semaphore after an interaction + phase. - \sa allowsInteraction(), allowsErrorInteraction() + \sa allowsInteraction(), allowsErrorInteraction() */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::cancel() - - Tells the session manager to cancel the shutdown process. Applications - should not call this function without first asking the user. + \fn void QSessionManager::cancel() - \sa allowsInteraction(), allowsErrorInteraction() + Tells the session manager to cancel the shutdown process. Applications + should not call this function without asking the user first. + \sa allowsInteraction(), allowsErrorInteraction() */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::setRestartHint(RestartHint hint) + \fn void QSessionManager::setRestartHint(RestartHint hint) - Sets the application's restart hint to \a hint. On application - startup the hint is set to \c RestartIfRunning. + Sets the application's restart hint to \a hint. On application startup, the + hint is set to \c RestartIfRunning. - Note that these flags are only hints, a session manager may or may - not respect them. + \note These flags are only hints, a session manager may or may not respect + them. - We recommend setting the restart hint in QApplication::saveState() - because most session managers perform a checkpoint shortly after an - application's startup. + We recommend setting the restart hint in QApplication::saveState() because + most session managers perform a checkpoint shortly after an application's + startup. - \sa restartHint() + \sa restartHint() */ /*! - \fn QSessionManager::RestartHint QSessionManager::restartHint() const + \fn QSessionManager::RestartHint QSessionManager::restartHint() const - Returns the application's current restart hint. The default is - \c RestartIfRunning. + Returns the application's current restart hint. The default is + \c RestartIfRunning. - \sa setRestartHint() + \sa setRestartHint() */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::setRestartCommand(const QStringList& command) + \fn void QSessionManager::setRestartCommand(const QStringList& command) - If the session manager is capable of restoring sessions it will - execute \a command in order to restore the application. The command - defaults to + If the session manager is capable of restoring sessions it will execute + \a command in order to restore the application. The command defaults to \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 9 - The \c -session option is mandatory; otherwise QApplication cannot - tell whether it has been restored or what the current session - identifier is. See QApplication::isSessionRestored() and - QApplication::sessionId() for details. + The \c -session option is mandatory; otherwise QApplication cannot tell + whether it has been restored or what the current session identifier is. + See QApplication::isSessionRestored() and QApplication::sessionId() for + details. - If your application is very simple, it may be possible to store the - entire application state in additional command line options. This - is usually a very bad idea because command lines are often limited - to a few hundred bytes. Instead, use QSettings, or temporary files - or a database for this purpose. By marking the data with the unique - sessionId(), you will be able to restore the application in a future - session. + If your application is very simple, it may be possible to store the entire + application state in additional command line options. This is usually a + very bad idea because command lines are often limited to a few hundred + bytes. Instead, use QSettings, temporary files, or a database for this + purpose. By marking the data with the unique sessionId(), you will be able + to restore the application in a future session. - \sa restartCommand(), setDiscardCommand(), setRestartHint() + \sa restartCommand(), setDiscardCommand(), setRestartHint() */ /*! @@ -4314,8 +4274,7 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) Returns the currently set restart command. - To iterate over the list, you can use the \l foreach - pseudo-keyword: + To iterate over the list, you can use the \l foreach pseudo-keyword: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 10 @@ -4323,11 +4282,11 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::setDiscardCommand(const QStringList& list) + \fn void QSessionManager::setDiscardCommand(const QStringList& list) - Sets the discard command to the given \a list. + Sets the discard command to the given \a list. - \sa discardCommand(), setRestartCommand() + \sa discardCommand(), setRestartCommand() */ @@ -4336,8 +4295,7 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) Returns the currently set discard command. - To iterate over the list, you can use the \l foreach - pseudo-keyword: + To iterate over the list, you can use the \l foreach pseudo-keyword: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 11 @@ -4345,53 +4303,51 @@ bool QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * e) */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::setManagerProperty(const QString &name, const QString &value) - \overload + \fn void QSessionManager::setManagerProperty(const QString &name, const QString &value) + \overload - Low-level write access to the application's identification and state - records are kept in the session manager. + Low-level write access to the application's identification and state + records are kept in the session manager. - The property called \a name has its value set to the string \a value. + The property called \a name has its value set to the string \a value. */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::setManagerProperty(const QString& name, - const QStringList& value) + \fn void QSessionManager::setManagerProperty(const QString& name, + const QStringList& value) - Low-level write access to the application's identification and state - record are kept in the session manager. + Low-level write access to the application's identification and state record + are kept in the session manager. - The property called \a name has its value set to the string list \a value. + The property called \a name has its value set to the string list \a value. */ /*! - \fn bool QSessionManager::isPhase2() const + \fn bool QSessionManager::isPhase2() const - Returns true if the session manager is currently performing a second - session management phase; otherwise returns false. + Returns true if the session manager is currently performing a second + session management phase; otherwise returns false. - \sa requestPhase2() + \sa requestPhase2() */ /*! - \fn void QSessionManager::requestPhase2() + \fn void QSessionManager::requestPhase2() - Requests a second session management phase for the application. The - application may then return immediately from the - QApplication::commitData() or QApplication::saveState() function, - and they will be called again once most or all other applications have - finished their session management. + Requests a second session management phase for the application. The + application may then return immediately from the QApplication::commitData() + or QApplication::saveState() function, and they will be called again once + most or all other applications have finished their session management. - The two phases are useful for applications such as the X11 window manager - that need to store information about another application's windows - and therefore have to wait until these applications have completed their - respective session management tasks. + The two phases are useful for applications such as the X11 window manager + that need to store information about another application's windows and + therefore have to wait until these applications have completed their + respective session management tasks. - Note that if another application has requested a second phase it - may get called before, simultaneously with, or after your - application's second phase. + \note If another application has requested a second phase it may get called + before, simultaneously with, or after your application's second phase. - \sa isPhase2() + \sa isPhase2() */ /***************************************************************************** @@ -4584,15 +4540,14 @@ void QSessionManager::requestPhase2() /*! \fn bool QApplication::hasGlobalMouseTracking() - This feature does not exist anymore. This function - always returns true in Qt 4. + This feature does not exist anymore. This function always returns true + in Qt 4. */ /*! \fn void QApplication::setGlobalMouseTracking(bool dummy) - This function does nothing in Qt 4. The \a dummy parameter - is ignored. + This function does nothing in Qt 4. The \a dummy parameter is ignored. */ /*! @@ -4630,15 +4585,14 @@ void QSessionManager::requestPhase2() /*! \fn const QColor &QApplication::winStyleHighlightColor() - Use qApp->palette().color(QPalette::Active, QPalette::Highlight) - instead. + Use qApp->palette().color(QPalette::Active, QPalette::Highlight) instead. */ /*! \fn QWidget *QApplication::widgetAt(int x, int y, bool child) - Use the two-argument widgetAt() overload to get the child widget. - To get the top-level widget do this: + Use the two-argument widgetAt() overload to get the child widget. To get + the top-level widget do this: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 12 */ @@ -4646,8 +4600,8 @@ void QSessionManager::requestPhase2() /*! \fn QWidget *QApplication::widgetAt(const QPoint &point, bool child) - Use the single-argument widgetAt() overload to get the child widget. - To get the top-level widget do this: + Use the single-argument widgetAt() overload to get the child widget. To get + the top-level widget do this: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication.cpp 13 */ @@ -4719,10 +4673,9 @@ void QApplicationPrivate::emitLastWindowClosed() Sets whether Qt should use focus navigation suitable for use with a minimal keypad. - If \a enable is true, Qt::Key_Up and Qt::Key_Down are used to - change focus. + If \a enable is true, Qt::Key_Up and Qt::Key_Down are used to change focus. - This feature is only available in Qt for Embedded Linux. + This feature is available in Qt for Embedded Linux only. \sa keypadNavigationEnabled() */ @@ -4735,7 +4688,8 @@ void QApplication::setKeypadNavigationEnabled(bool enable) Returns true if Qt is set to use keypad navigation; otherwise returns false. The default is false. - This feature is only available in Qt for Embedded Linux. + This feature is available in Qt for Embedded Linux only. + \sa setKeypadNavigationEnabled() */ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() @@ -4758,12 +4712,12 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() On Mac OS X, this works more at the application level and will cause the application icon to bounce in the dock. - On Windows this causes the window's taskbar entry to flash for a time. If \a - msec is zero, the flashing will stop and the taskbar entry will turn a + On Windows this causes the window's taskbar entry to flash for a time. If + \a msec is zero, the flashing will stop and the taskbar entry will turn a different color (currently orange). - On X11, this will cause the window to be marked as "demands attention", - the window must not be hidden (i.e. not have hide() called on it, but be + On X11, this will cause the window to be marked as "demands attention", the + window must not be hidden (i.e. not have hide() called on it, but be visible in some sort of way) in order for this to work. */ @@ -4771,18 +4725,16 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() \property QApplication::cursorFlashTime \brief the text cursor's flash (blink) time in milliseconds - The flash time is the time required to display, invert and - restore the caret display. Usually the text cursor is displayed - for half the cursor flash time, then hidden for the same amount - of time, but this may vary. + The flash time is the time required to display, invert and restore the + caret display. Usually the text cursor is displayed for half the cursor + flash time, then hidden for the same amount of time, but this may vary. - The default value on X11 is 1000 milliseconds. On Windows, the - control panel value is used. Widgets should not cache this value - since it may be changed at any time by the user changing the - global desktop settings. + The default value on X11 is 1000 milliseconds. On Windows, the control + panel value is used. Widgets should not cache this value since it may be + changed at any time by the user changing the global desktop settings. - Note that on Microsoft Windows, setting this property sets the - cursor flash time for all applications. + \note On Microsoft Windows, setting this property sets the cursor flash + time for all applications. */ /*! @@ -4790,11 +4742,11 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() \brief the time limit in milliseconds that distinguishes a double click from two consecutive mouse clicks - The default value on X11 is 400 milliseconds. On Windows and Mac - OS X, the operating system's value is used. + The default value on X11 is 400 milliseconds. On Windows and Mac OS X, the + operating system's value is used. - On Microsoft Windows, calling this function sets the - double click interval for all applications. + On Microsoft Windows, calling this function sets the double click interval + for all applications. */ /*! @@ -4812,15 +4764,13 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() \brief the number of lines to scroll a widget, when the mouse wheel is rotated. - If the value exceeds the widget's number of visible lines, the - widget should interpret the scroll operation as a single \e{page - up} or \e{page down}. If the widget is an \l{QAbstractItemView} - {item view class}, then the result of scrolling one \e line - depends on the setting of the widget's - \l{QAbstractItemView::verticalScrollMode()} {scroll mode}. Scroll - one \e line can mean \l{QAbstractItemView::ScrollPerItem} {scroll - one item} or \l{QAbstractItemView::ScrollPerPixel} {scroll one - pixel}. + If the value exceeds the widget's number of visible lines, the widget + should interpret the scroll operation as a single \e{page up} or + \e{page down}. If the widget is an \l{QAbstractItemView}{item view class}, + then the result of scrolling one \e line depends on the setting of the + widget's \l{QAbstractItemView::verticalScrollMode()}{scroll mode}. Scroll + one \e line can mean \l{QAbstractItemView::ScrollPerItem}{scroll one item} + or \l{QAbstractItemView::ScrollPerPixel}{scroll one pixel}. By default, this property has a value of 3. */ @@ -4828,11 +4778,11 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() /*! \fn void QApplication::setEffectEnabled(Qt::UIEffect effect, bool enable) - Enables the UI effect \a effect if \a enable is true, otherwise - the effect will not be used. + Enables the UI effect \a effect if \a enable is true, otherwise the effect + will not be used. - Note: All effects are disabled on screens running at less than - 16-bit color depth. + \note All effects are disabled on screens running at less than 16-bit color + depth. \sa isEffectEnabled(), Qt::UIEffect, setDesktopSettingsAware() */ @@ -4842,11 +4792,11 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() Returns true if \a effect is enabled; otherwise returns false. - By default, Qt will try to use the desktop settings. Call - setDesktopSettingsAware(false) to prevent this. + By default, Qt will try to use the desktop settings. To prevent this, call + setDesktopSettingsAware(false). - Note: All effects are disabled on screens running at less than - 16-bit color depth. + \note All effects are disabled on screens running at less than 16-bit color + depth. \sa setEffectEnabled(), Qt::UIEffect */ @@ -4854,8 +4804,7 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() /*! \fn QWidget *QApplication::mainWidget() - Returns the main application widget, or 0 if there is no main - widget. + Returns the main application widget, or 0 if there is no main widget. */ /*! @@ -4863,19 +4812,17 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() Sets the application's main widget to \a mainWidget. - In most respects the main widget is like any other widget, except - that if it is closed, the application exits. Note that - QApplication does \e not take ownership of the \a mainWidget, so - if you create your main widget on the heap you must delete it - yourself. + In most respects the main widget is like any other widget, except that if + it is closed, the application exits. QApplication does \e not take + ownership of the \a mainWidget, so if you create your main widget on the + heap you must delete it yourself. - You need not have a main widget; connecting lastWindowClosed() to - quit() is an alternative. + You need not have a main widget; connecting lastWindowClosed() to quit() + is an alternative. - For X11, this function also resizes and moves the main widget - according to the \e -geometry command-line option, so you should - set the default geometry (using \l QWidget::setGeometry()) before - calling setMainWidget(). + For X11, this function also resizes and moves the main widget according + to the \e -geometry command-line option, so you should set the default + geometry (using \l QWidget::setGeometry()) before calling setMainWidget(). \sa mainWidget(), exec(), quit() */ @@ -4883,8 +4830,8 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() /*! \fn void QApplication::beep() - Sounds the bell, using the default volume and sound. The function - is \e not available in Qt for Embedded Linux. + Sounds the bell, using the default volume and sound. The function is \e not + available in Qt for Embedded Linux. */ /*! @@ -4892,26 +4839,25 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() Sets the application override cursor to \a cursor. - Application override cursors are intended for showing the user - that the application is in a special state, for example during an - operation that might take some time. + Application override cursors are intended for showing the user that the + application is in a special state, for example during an operation that + might take some time. - This cursor will be displayed in all the application's widgets - until restoreOverrideCursor() or another setOverrideCursor() is - called. + This cursor will be displayed in all the application's widgets until + restoreOverrideCursor() or another setOverrideCursor() is called. - Application cursors are stored on an internal stack. - setOverrideCursor() pushes the cursor onto the stack, and - restoreOverrideCursor() pops the active cursor off the - stack. changeOverrideCursor() changes the curently active - application override cursor. Every setOverrideCursor() must + Application cursors are stored on an internal stack. setOverrideCursor() + pushes the cursor onto the stack, and restoreOverrideCursor() pops the + active cursor off the stack. changeOverrideCursor() changes the curently + active application override cursor. Every setOverrideCursor() must eventually be followed by a corresponding restoreOverrideCursor(), otherwise the stack will never be emptied. Example: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_kernel_qapplication_x11.cpp 0 - \sa overrideCursor() restoreOverrideCursor() changeOverrideCursor() QWidget::setCursor() + \sa overrideCursor(), restoreOverrideCursor(), changeOverrideCursor(), + QWidget::setCursor() */ /*! @@ -4920,9 +4866,8 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() Undoes the last setOverrideCursor(). If setOverrideCursor() has been called twice, calling - restoreOverrideCursor() will activate the first cursor set. - Calling this function a second time restores the original widgets' - cursors. + restoreOverrideCursor() will activate the first cursor set. Calling this + function a second time restores the original widgets' cursors. \sa setOverrideCursor(), overrideCursor() */ @@ -4932,9 +4877,9 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() \relates QApplication A global pointer referring to the unique application object. It is - equivalent to the pointer returned by the - QCoreApplication::instance() function except that, in GUI applications, - it is a pointer to a QApplication instance. + equivalent to the pointer returned by the QCoreApplication::instance() + function except that, in GUI applications, it is a pointer to a + QApplication instance. Only one application object can be created. @@ -4946,8 +4891,8 @@ bool QApplication::keypadNavigationEnabled() // ************************************************************************ /*! - This function replaces the QInputContext instance used by the - application with \a inputContext. + This function replaces the QInputContext instance used by the application + with \a inputContext. \sa inputContext() */ -- cgit v0.12