/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** All rights reserved. ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) ** ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$ ** Commercial Usage ** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in ** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in a ** written agreement between you and Nokia. ** ** GNU Free Documentation License ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free ** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this ** file. ** ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \page qmlruntime.html \title Qt Declarative UI Runtime QML documents are loaded and executed by the QML runtime. This includes the Declarative UI engine along with the built-in QML elements and plugin modules, and it also provides access to third-party QML elements and modules. Applications that use QML need to invoke the QML runtime in order to execute QML documents. This can be done by creating a QDeclarativeView or a QDeclarativeEngine, as described below. In addition, the Declarative UI package includes the \QQV tool, which loads \c .qml files. This tool is useful for developing and testing QML code without the need to write a C++ application to load the QML runtime. \section1 Deploying QML-based applications To deploy an application that uses QML, the QML runtime must be invoked by the application. This is done by writing a Qt C++ application that loads the QDeclarativeEngine by either: \list \o Loading the QML file through a QDeclarativeView instance, or \o Creating a QDeclarativeEngine instance and loading QML files with QDeclarativeComponent \endlist \section2 Deploying with QDeclarativeView QDeclarativeView is a QWidget-based class that is able to load QML files. For example, if there is a QML file, \c application.qml, like this: \qml import Qt 4.7 Rectangle { width: 100; height: 100; color: "red" } \endqml It can be loaded in a Qt application's \c main.cpp file like this: \code #include #include int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QDeclarativeView view; view.setSource(QUrl::fromLocalFile("application.qml")); view.show(); return app.exec(); } \endcode This creates a QWidget-based view that displays the contents of \c application.qml. The application's \c .pro \l{qmake Project Files}{project file} must specify the \c declarative module for the \c QT variable. For example: \code TEMPLATE += app QT += gui declarative SOURCES += main.cpp \endcode \section2 Creating a QDeclarativeEngine directly If \c application.qml does not have any graphical components, or if it is preferred to avoid QDeclarativeView for other reasons, the QDeclarativeEngine can be constructed directly instead. In this case, \c application.qml is loaded as a QDeclarativeComponent instance rather than placed into a view: \code #include #include #include #include int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QDeclarativeEngine engine; QDeclarativeContext *objectContext = new QDeclarativeContext(engine.rootContext()); QDeclarativeComponent component(&engine, "application.qml"); QObject *object = component.create(objectContext); // ... delete object and objectContext when necessary return app.exec(); } \endcode See \l {Using QML in C++ Applications} for more information about using QDeclarativeEngine, QDeclarativeContext and QDeclarativeComponent, as well as details on including QML files through \l{The Qt Resource System}{Qt's Resource system}. \section1 Developing and prototyping with QML Viewer The Declarative UI package includes a QML runtime tool, the \QQV, which loads and displays QML documents. This is useful during the application development phase for prototyping QML-based applications without writing your own C++ applications to invoke the QML runtime. See the \l{QML Viewer} documentation for more details. */