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Please review the following information to ensure ** the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 requirements ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \page qt4-tulip.html \title The Tulip Container Classes \contentspage {What's New in Qt 4}{Home} \previouspage What's New in Qt 4 \nextpage The Interview Framework Qt 4 introduces a new set of containers that supersede both the old QCollection pointer-based containers and the newer QTL value-based containers. \tableofcontents \section1 General Overview The Tulip containers are similar to Qt 3's QTL containers (QValueList, QValueVector, QMap), but have the following advantages: \list \o The containers provide new iterators with a nicer, less error-prone syntax than STL, inspired by Java's iterators. (The STL-style iterators are still available as a lightweight, STL-compatible alternative.) \o The containers have been optimized for minimal code expansion. \o An empty container performs no memory allocation, and only requires the same space as a pointer. \o Even though they are implicitly shared, they can safely be copied across different threads without formality. There's no need to use \c QDeepCopy. \endlist Tulip provides the following sequential containers: QList, QLinkedList, QVector, QStack, and QQueue. For most applications, QList is the best type to use. Although it is implemented as an array-list, it provides very fast prepends and appends. If you really need a linked-list, use QLinkedList; if you want your items to occupy consecutive memory locations, use QVector. QStack and QQueue are convenience classes that provide LIFO and FIFO semantics. Tulip also provides these associative containers: QMap, QMultiMap, QHash, QMultiHash, and QSet. The "Multi" containers conveniently support multiple values associated with a single key. The "Hash" containers provide faster lookup by using a hash function instead of a binary search on a sorted set. The Tulip containers support the \l foreach keyword, a Qt-specific addition to the C++ language that is implemented using the standard C++ preprocessor. The syntax is: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 0 Example: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 1 The iterator variable can also be defined outside the loop. For example: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 2 Just like standard \c for loops, foreach supports braces, \c break, \c continue, and nested loops. Qt makes a copy of the container when it enters the loop. If you modify the container as you are iterating, that won't affect the loop. For details about the new containers, see the \l{Container Classes} and \l{Generic Algorithms} overview documents. In addition to the new containers, considerable work has also gone into QByteArray and QString. The Qt 3 QCString class has been merged with QByteArray. The new QByteArray automatically provides a '\0' terminator after the last character. For example, the byte array of size 5 containing "abcde" has a null byte at position 5 (one past the end). This solves all the typical problems that occurred in Qt 3 with conversions between QByteArray and QCString. To avoid crashes, QByteArray::data() never returns a null pointer. Furthermore, the distinction between null and empty strings has been watered down so that \c{QByteArray() == QByteArray("")} and \c{QString() == QString("")}. \section1 Examples The first group of examples show how to use the new Java-style iterators. The main difference between the Java-style iterators and the STL-style iterators is that the Java-style ones point between items (or before the first item, or after the last item), whereas the STL ones point at an item (or past the last item). One advantage of the Java-style iterators is that iterating forward and backward are symmetric operations. Traversing a container using a Java-style iterator: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 3 Modifying items using a Java-style iterator: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 4 Removing items using a Java-style iterator: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 5 Iterating over items with a particular value using STL-style vs. Java-style iterators: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 6 Modifying and removing items using STL-style vs. Java-style iterators: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 7 The next group of examples show the API of the container classes themselves. The API is similar to the QTL classes of Qt 3, but is nicer in many respects. Iterating over a QList using an index (which is fast even for large lists, because QList is implemented as an array-list): \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 8 Retrieving a value from a map, using a default value if the key doesn't exist: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 9 Getting all the values for a particular key in a QMultiMap or QMultiHash: \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-tulip.cpp 10 \section1 Comparison with Qt 3 Tulip containers are value based. If you want to store a list where each item is a QWidget *, use QList. The new containers do not support auto-delete. In practice, we discovered that the only case where auto-delete proved worthwhile was when the data really should be stored as a value rather than as a pointer (e.g., QList rather than QList). If you need to delete all the items in a container, use qDeleteAll(). If you use QValueList in Qt 3, you can replace it with either QList or QLinkedList in Qt 4. In most cases, QList is the best choice: It is typically faster, results in less code in your executable, and requires less memory. However, QLinkedList's iterators provide stronger guarantees, and only QLinkedList provides constant-time insertions in the middle, which can make a difference for lists with thousands of items. If you use QValueVector or QMap in Qt 3, the corresponding Qt 4 classes (QVector, QMap) are very similar to use. */