/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2011 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. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$ ** No Commercial Usage ** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. ** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions ** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying ** this package. ** ** 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. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/adding \title Extending QML - Adding Types Example The Adding Types Example shows how to add a new element type, \c Person, to QML. The \c Person type can be used from QML like this: \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/adding/example.qml 0 \section1 Declare the Person class All QML elements map to C++ types. Here we declare a basic C++ Person class with the two properties we want accessible on the QML type - name and shoeSize. Although in this example we use the same name for the C++ class as the QML element, the C++ class can be named differently, or appear in a namespace. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/adding/person.h 0 \section1 Define the Person class \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/adding/person.cpp 0 The Person class implementation is quite basic. The property accessors simply return members of the object instance. The \c main.cpp file also calls the \c qmlRegisterType() function to register the \c Person type with QML as a type in the People library version 1.0, and defines the mapping between the C++ and QML class names. \section1 Running the example The main.cpp file in the example includes a simple shell application that loads and runs the QML snippet shown at the beginning of this page. */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties \title Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist The Object and List Property Types example shows how to add object and list properties in QML. This example adds a BirthdayParty element that specifies a birthday party, consisting of a celebrant and a list of guests. People are specified using the People QML type built in the previous example. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/example.qml 0 \section1 Declare the BirthdayParty The BirthdayParty class is declared like this: \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/birthdayparty.h 0 \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/birthdayparty.h 1 \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/birthdayparty.h 2 \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/birthdayparty.h 3 The class contains a member to store the celebrant object, and also a QList member. In QML, the type of a list properties - and the guests property is a list of people - are all of type QDeclarativeListProperty. QDeclarativeListProperty is simple value type that contains a set of function pointers. QML calls these function pointers whenever it needs to read from, write to or otherwise interact with the list. In addition to concrete lists like the people list used in this example, the use of QDeclarativeListProperty allows for "virtual lists" and other advanced scenarios. \section2 Define the BirthdayParty The implementation of BirthdayParty property accessors is straight forward. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/properties/birthdayparty.cpp 0 \section1 Running the example The main.cpp file in the example includes a simple shell application that loads and runs the QML snippet shown at the beginning of this page. */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion \title Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist The Inheritance and Coercion Example shows how to use base classes to assign elements of more than one type to a property. It specializes the Person element developed in the previous examples into two elements - a \c Boy and a \c Girl. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion/example.qml 0 \section1 Declare Boy and Girl \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion/person.h 0 The Person class remains unaltered in this example and the Boy and Girl C++ classes are trivial extensions of it. As an example, the inheritance used here is a little contrived, but in real applications it is likely that the two extensions would add additional properties or modify the Person classes behavior. \section2 Define People as a base class The implementation of the People class itself has not changed since the the previous example. However, as we have repurposed the People class as a common base for Boy and Girl, we want to prevent it from being instantiated from QML directly - an explicit Boy or Girl should be instantiated instead. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion/main.cpp 0 While we want to disallow instantiating Person from within QML, it still needs to be registered with the QML engine, so that it can be used as a property type and other types can be coerced to it. \section2 Define Boy and Girl The implementation of Boy and Girl are trivial. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion/person.cpp 1 All that is necessary is to implement the constructor, and to register the types and their QML name with the QML engine. \section1 Running the example The BirthdayParty element has not changed since the previous example. The celebrant and guests property still use the People type. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/coercion/birthdayparty.h 0 However, as all three types, Person, Boy and Girl, have been registered with the QML system, on assignment QML automatically (and type-safely) converts the Boy and Girl objects into a Person. The main.cpp file in the example includes a simple shell application that loads and runs the QML snippet shown at the beginning of this page. */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/default \title Extending QML - Default Property Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist The Default Property Example is a minor modification of the \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} that simplifies the specification of a BirthdayParty through the use of a default property. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/default/example.qml 0 \section1 Declaring the BirthdayParty class The only difference between this example and the last, is the addition of the \c DefaultProperty class info annotation. \snippet examples/declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/default/birthdayparty.h 0 The default property specifies the property to assign to whenever an explicit property is not specified, in the case of the BirthdayParty element the guest property. It is purely a syntactic simplification, the behavior is identical to specifying the property by name, but it can add a more natural feel in many situations. The default property must be either an object or list property. \section1 Running the example The main.cpp file in the example includes a simple shell application that loads and runs the QML snippet shown at the beginning of this page. */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/grouped \title Extending QML - Grouped Properties Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/attached \title Extending QML - Attached Properties Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Grouped Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/signal \title Extending QML - Signal Support Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Attached Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Grouped Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/methods \title Extending QML - Methods Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/valuesource \title Extending QML - Property Value Source Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Signal Support Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Attached Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Grouped Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */ /*! \example declarative/cppextensions/referenceexamples/binding \title Extending QML - Binding Example This example builds on: \list \o \l {Extending QML - Property Value Source Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Signal Support Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Attached Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Grouped Properties Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Default Property Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Inheritance and Coercion Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Object and List Property Types Example} \o \l {Extending QML - Adding Types Example} \endlist */