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/****************************************************************************
**
** 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.
**
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
** 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 Lesser General Public License Usage
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser
** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software
** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the
** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements
** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html.
**
** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional
** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception
** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package.
**
** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com.
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
** $QT_END_LICENSE$
**
****************************************************************************/
/*!
\page qdeclarativemodels.html
\target qmlmodels
\title Data Models
Some QML Items use Data Models to provide the data to be displayed.
These items typically require a \e delegate component that
creates an instance for each item in the model. Models may be static, or
have items modified, inserted, removed or moved dynamically.
Data is provided to the delegate via named data roles which the
delegate may bind to. The roles are exposed as properties of the
\e model context property, though this property is set as a default property
of the delegate so, unless there is a naming clash with a
property in the delegate, the roles are usually accessed unqualified. The
example below would have a clash between the \e color role of the model and
the \e color property of the Rectangle. The clash is avoided by referencing
the \e color property of the model by its full name: \e model.color.
\code
ListModel {
id: myModel
ListElement { color: "red" }
ListElement { color: "green" }
}
Component {
id: myDelegate
Rectangle {
width: 20; height: 20
color: model.color
}
}
\endcode
A special \e index role containing the index of the item in the model
is also available.
\e Note: the index role will be set to -1 if the item is removed from
the model. If you bind to the index role, be sure that the logic
accounts for the possibility of index being -1, i.e. that the item
is no longer valid. Usually the item will shortly be destroyed, but
it is possible to delay delegate destruction in some views via a delayRemove
attached property.
Models that do not have named roles will have the data provided via
the \e modelData role. The \e modelData role is also provided for
Models that have only one role. In this case the \e modelData role
contains the same data as the named role.
There are a number of QML elements that operate using data models:
\list
\o ListView
\o GridView
\o PathView
\o \l Repeater
\endlist
QML supports several types of data model, which may be provided by QML
or C++ (via QDeclarativeContext::setContextProperty(), for example).
\section1 QML Data Models
\section2 ListModel
ListModel is a simple hierarchy of elements specified in QML. The
available roles are specified by the \l ListElement properties.
\code
ListModel {
id: fruitModel
ListElement {
name: "Apple"
cost: 2.45
}
ListElement {
name: "Orange"
cost: 3.25
}
ListElement {
name: "Banana"
cost: 1.95
}
}
\endcode
The above model has two roles, \e name and \e cost. These can be bound
to by a ListView delegate, for example:
\code
Component {
id: fruitDelegate
Row {
Text { text: "Fruit: " + name }
Text { text: "Cost: $" + cost }
}
}
ListView {
model: fruitModel
delegate: fruitDelegate
}
\endcode
\section2 XmlListModel
XmlListModel allows construction of a model from an XML data source. The roles
are specified via the \l XmlRole element.
The following model has three roles, \e title, \e link and \e description:
\code
XmlListModel {
id: feedModel
source: "http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/oceania"
query: "/rss/channel/item"
XmlRole { name: "title"; query: "title/string()" }
XmlRole { name: "link"; query: "link/string()" }
XmlRole { name: "description"; query: "description/string()" }
}
\endcode
\section2 VisualItemModel
VisualItemModel allows QML items to be provided as a model. This model contains
both the data and delegate (its child items). This model does not provide any roles.
\code
VisualItemModel {
id: itemModel
Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "red" }
Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "green" }
Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "blue" }
}
ListView {
anchors.fill: parent
model: itemModel
}
\endcode
Note that in the above example there is no delegate required.
The items of the model itself provide the visual elements that
will be positioned by the view.
\section1 C++ Data Models
\section2 QAbstractItemModel
QAbstractItemModel provides the roles set via the QAbstractItemModel::setRoleNames() method.
The default role names set by Qt are:
\table
\header
\o Qt Role
\o QML Role Name
\row
\o Qt::DisplayRole
\o display
\row
\o Qt::DecorationRole
\o decoration
\endtable
QAbstractItemModel presents a heirachy of tables. Views currently provided by QML
can only display list data. In order to display child lists of a heirachical model
use the VisualDataModel element with \e rootIndex set to a parent node.
\section2 QStringList
QStringList provides the contents of the list via the \e modelData role:
\table
\row
\o
\code
// main.cpp
QStringList dataList;
dataList.append("Fred");
dataList.append("Ginger");
dataList.append("Skipper");
QDeclarativeContext *ctxt = view.rootContext();
ctxt->setContextProperty("myModel", QVariant::fromValue(&dataList));
\endcode
\o
\code
// main.qml
ListView {
width: 100
height: 100
anchors.fill: parent
model: myModel
delegate: Component {
Rectangle {
height: 25
Text { text: modelData }
}
}
}
\endcode
\endtable
\note There is no way for the view to know that the contents of a QStringList
have changed. If the QStringList is changed, it will be necessary to reset
the model by calling QDeclarativeContext::setContextProperty() again.
\section2 QList<QObject*>
QList<QObject*> provides the properties of the objects in the list as roles.
\code
class DataObject : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
Q_PROPERTY(QString name READ name WRITE setName)
Q_PROPERTY(QString color READ color WRITE setColor)
...
};
QList<QObject*> dataList;
dataList.append(new DataObject("Item 1", "red"));
dataList.append(new DataObject("Item 2", "green"));
dataList.append(new DataObject("Item 3", "blue"));
dataList.append(new DataObject("Item 4", "yellow"));
QDeclarativeContext *ctxt = view.rootContext();
ctxt->setContextProperty("myModel", QVariant::fromValue(dataList));
\endcode
The properties of the object may then be accessed in the delegate:
\code
ListView {
width: 100
height: 100
anchors.fill: parent
model: myModel
delegate: Component {
Rectangle {
height: 25
width: 100
color: model.color
Text { text: name }
}
}
}
\endcode
Note: There is no way for the view to know that the contents of a QList
have changed. If the QList is changed, it will be necessary to reset
the model by calling QDeclarativeContext::setContextProperty() again.
\section1 Other Data Models
\section2 An Integer
An Integer specifies a model containing the integer number of elements.
There are no data roles.
The following example creates a ListView with five elements:
\code
Item {
width: 200
height: 250
Component {
id: itemDelegate
Text { text: "I am item number: " + index }
}
ListView {
anchors.fill: parent
model: 5
delegate: itemDelegate
}
}
\endcode
\section2 An Object Instance
An Object Instance specifies a model with a single Object element. The
properties of the object are provided as roles.
The example below creates a list with one item, showing the color of the
\e myText text. Note the use of the fully qualified \e model.color property
to avoid clashing with \e color property of the Text element in the delegate.
\code
Rectangle {
Text {
id: myText
text: "Hello"
color: "#dd44ee"
}
Component {
id: myDelegate
Text {
text: model.color
}
}
ListView {
anchors.fill: parent
anchors.topMargin: 30
model: myText
delegate: myDelegate
}
}
\endcode
*/
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