/*! \page qml.html \title 'Qt Declarative' Documentation \target qtdeclarativemainpage The Qt Declarative module provides a declarative framework for building highly dynamic and fluid applications. It is targetted at the sorts of user interface (and the sorts of hardware) in embedded devices such as phones, media players, and set-top boxes. It is also appropriate for highly custom desktop user-interfaces, or special elements in more traditional desktop user-interfaces. Building fluid applications is done declaratively, rather than procedurally. That is, you specify \e what the UI should look like and how it should behave in an declarative format called QML, rather than specifying step-by-step \e how to build it in a language like C++ or JavaScript. Specifying a UI declaratively does not just include the layout of the interface items, but also the way each individual item looks and behaves and the overall flow of the application. Getting Started: \list \o \l {qmlexamples}{Examples} \o \l {tutorial}{Tutorial: 'Hello World'} \o \l {tutorials-declarative-contacts.html}{Tutorial: 'Introduction to QML'} \o \l {qmlforcpp}{Qt Declarative Markup Language For C++ Programmers} \endlist Core Features: \list \o \l {binding}{Data Binding} \o \l {anchor-layout}{Layout Anchors} \o \l {qmlanimation}{Animation} \o \l {qmleffects}{Visual Effects} \o \l {components}{Components} \o \l {qmlmodules}{Modules} \o \l {qmlfocus}{Keyboard Focus} \endlist QML Reference: \list \o \l {elements}{Qml Elements} \endlist C++ Reference: \list \o \l {qtprogrammers}{QML for Qt programmers} \o \l {qtbinding}{C++ Data Binding} \o \l {cppitem}{C++ Components} \endlist */