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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.
**
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$
** 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.
** $QT_END_LICENSE$
**
****************************************************************************/
/*!
\class Q3ValueList
\brief The Q3ValueList class is a value-based template class that
provides lists.
\compat
Q3ValueList is a Qt implementation of an STL-like list container.
It can be used in your application if the standard \c list is not
available for your target platforms.
Q3ValueList\<T\> defines a template instance to create a list of
values that all have the class T. Note that Q3ValueList does not
store pointers to the members of the list; it holds a copy of
every member. This is why these kinds of classes are called "value
based"; Q3PtrList and Q3Dict are "pointer based".
Q3ValueList contains and manages a collection of objects of type T
and provides iterators that allow the contained objects to be
addressed. Q3ValueList owns the contained items. For more relaxed
ownership semantics, see Q3PtrCollection and friends which are
pointer-based containers.
Some classes cannot be used within a Q3ValueList, for example, all
classes derived from QObject and thus all classes that implement
widgets. Only values can be used in a Q3ValueList. To qualify as a
value the class must provide:
\list
\i a copy constructor;
\i an assignment operator;
\i a default constructor, i.e. a constructor that does not take any arguments.
\endlist
Note that C++ defaults to field-by-field assignment operators and
copy constructors if no explicit version is supplied. In many
cases this is sufficient.
In addition, some compilers (e.g. Sun CC) might require that the
class provides an equality operator (operator==()).
Q3ValueList's function naming is consistent with the other Qt
classes (e.g. count(), isEmpty()). Q3ValueList also provides extra
functions for compatibility with STL algorithms, such as size()
and empty(). Programmers already familiar with the STL \c list may
prefer to use the STL-compatible functions.
Example:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_q3valuelist.qdoc 0
Notice that the latest changes to Mary's salary did not affect the
value in the list because the list created a copy of Mary's entry.
There are several ways to find items in the list. The begin() and
end() functions return iterators to the beginning and end of the
list. The advantage of getting an iterator is that you can move
forward or backward from this position by
incrementing/decrementing the iterator. The iterator returned by
end() points to the item which is one \e past the last item in the
container. The past-the-end iterator is still associated with the
list it belongs to, however it is \e not dereferenceable;
operator*() will not return a well-defined value. If the list is
empty(), the iterator returned by begin() will equal the iterator
returned by end().
It is safe to have multiple iterators a the list at the same
time. If some member of the list is removed, only iterators
pointing to the removed member become invalid. Inserting into the
list does not invalidate any iterator. For convenience, the
function last() returns a reference to the last item in the list,
and first() returns a reference to the first item. If the
list is empty(), both last() and first() have undefined behavior
(your application will crash or do unpredictable things). Use
last() and first() with caution, for example:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_q3valuelist.qdoc 1
Because Q3ValueList is value-based there is no need to be careful
about deleting items in the list. The list holds its own copies
and will free them if the corresponding member or the list itself
is deleted. You can force the list to free all of its items with
clear().
Q3ValueList is shared implicitly, which means it can be copied in
constant time, i.e. O(1). If multiple Q3ValueList instances share
the same data and one needs to modify its contents, this modifying
instance makes a copy and modifies its private copy; therefore it
does not affect the other instances; this takes O(n) time. This is
often called "copy on write". If a Q3ValueList is being used in a
multi-threaded program, you must protect all access to the list.
See \l QMutex.
There are several ways to insert items into the list. The
prepend() and append() functions insert items at the beginning and
the end of the list respectively. The insert() function comes in
several flavors and can be used to add one or more items at
specific positions within the list.
Items can also be removed from the list in several ways. There
are several variants of the remove() function, which removes a
specific item from the list. The remove() function will find and
remove items according to a specific item value.
\sa Q3ValueListIterator
*/
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::iterator
The list's iterator type, Q3ValueListIterator. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::const_iterator
The list's const iterator type, Q3ValueListConstIterator. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::value_type
The type of the object stored in the list, T. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::pointer
The pointer to T type. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::const_pointer
The const pointer to T type. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::reference
The reference to T type. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::const_reference
The const reference to T type. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::size_type
An unsigned integral type, used to represent various sizes. */
/*! \typedef Q3ValueList::difference_type
\internal
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList::Q3ValueList()
Constructs an empty list.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList::Q3ValueList( const Q3ValueList<T>& l )
\fn Q3ValueList::Q3ValueList( const QList<T>& l )
\fn Q3ValueList::Q3ValueList( const QLinkedList<T>& l )
Constructs a copy of \a l.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList::Q3ValueList( const std::list<T>& l )
Contructs a copy of \a l.
This constructor is provided for compatibility with STL
containers.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList::~Q3ValueList()
Destroys the list. References to the values in the list and all
iterators of this list become invalidated. Note that it is
impossible for an iterator to check whether or not it is valid:
Q3ValueList is highly tuned for performance, not for error
checking.
*/
/*!
\fn bool Q3ValueList::operator== ( const Q3ValueList<T>& l ) const
Compares both lists.
Returns TRUE if this list and \a l are equal; otherwise returns
FALSE.
*/
/*!
\fn bool Q3ValueList::operator== ( const std::list<T>& l ) const
\overload
Returns TRUE if this list and \a l are equal; otherwise returns
FALSE.
This operator is provided for compatibility with STL containers.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator= ( const Q3ValueList<T>& l )
Assigns \a l to this list and returns a reference to this list.
All iterators of the current list become invalidated by this
operation. The cost of such an assignment is O(1) since Q3ValueList
is implicitly shared.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator= ( const QList<T>& l )
Assigns \a l to this list and returns a reference to this list.
All iterators of the current list become invalidated by this
operation.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator= ( const std::list<T>& l )
\overload
Assigns the contents of \a l to the list.
All iterators of the current list become invalidated by this
operation.
*/
/*!
\fn bool Q3ValueList::operator!= ( const Q3ValueList<T>& l ) const
Compares both lists.
Returns TRUE if this list and \a l are unequal; otherwise returns
FALSE.
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::insert( typename Q3ValueList<T>::Iterator it, const T& x )
Inserts the value \a x in front of the item pointed to by the
iterator, \a it.
Returns an iterator pointing at the inserted item.
\sa append(), prepend()
*/
/*!
\fn uint Q3ValueList::remove( const T& x )
\overload
Removes all items that have value \a x and returns the number of
removed items.
*/
/*!
\fn QDataStream& operator>>( QDataStream& s, Q3ValueList<T>& l )
\relates Q3ValueList
Reads a list, \a l, from the stream \a s. The type T stored in the
list must implement the streaming operator.
*/
/*!
\fn QDataStream& operator<<( QDataStream& s, const Q3ValueList<T>& l )
\overload
\relates Q3ValueList
Writes a list, \a l, to the stream \a s. The type T stored in the
list must implement the streaming operator.
*/
/*!
\fn void Q3ValueList::insert( typename Q3ValueList<T>::Iterator pos,
typename Q3ValueList<T>::size_type n, const T& x )
\overload
Inserts \a n copies of \a x before position \a pos.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator<< ( const T& x )
Adds the value \a x to the end of the list.
Returns a reference to the list.
*/
/*!
\fn const T& Q3ValueList::operator[] ( typename Q3ValueList<T>::size_type i ) const
Returns a const reference to the item with index \a i in the list.
It is up to you to check whether this item really exists. You can
do that easily with the count() function. However this operator
does not check whether \a i is in range and will deliver undefined
results if it does not exist.
\warning This function uses a linear search and can be extremely
slow for large lists. Q3ValueList is not optimized for random item
access. If you need random access use a different container, such
as Q3ValueVector.
*/
/*!
\fn T& Q3ValueList::operator[] ( typename Q3ValueList<T>::size_type i )
\overload
Returns a non-const reference to the item with index \a i.
*/
/*!
\fn const_iterator Q3ValueList::at( typename Q3ValueList<T>::size_type i ) const
Returns an iterator pointing to the item at position \a i in the
list, or an undefined value if the index is out of range.
\warning This function uses a linear search and can be extremely
slow for large lists. Q3ValueList is not optimized for random item
access. If you need random access use a different container, such
as Q3ValueVector.
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::at( typename Q3ValueList<T>::size_type i )
\overload
Returns an iterator pointing to the item at position \a i in the
list, or an undefined value if the index is out of range.
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::fromLast()
\overload
Returns an iterator to the last item in the list, or end() if
there is no last item.
Use the end() function instead. For example:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_q3valuelist.qdoc 2
*/
/*!
\fn const_iterator Q3ValueList::fromLast() const
Returns an iterator to the last item in the list, or end() if
there is no last item.
Use the end() function instead. For example:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_q3valuelist.qdoc 3
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T> Q3ValueList::operator+( const Q3ValueList<T>& l ) const
Creates a new list and fills it with the items of this list. Then
the items of \a l are appended. Returns the new list.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator+= ( const Q3ValueList<T>& l )
Appends the items of \a l to this list. Returns a reference to
this list.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList<T>& Q3ValueList::operator+= ( const T& x )
\overload
Appends the value \a x to the list. Returns a reference to the
list.
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::append( const T& x )
Inserts \a x at the end of the list.
\sa insert(), prepend()
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::prepend( const T& x )
Inserts \a x at the beginning of the list.
\sa insert(), append()
*/
/*!
\fn iterator Q3ValueList::remove( typename Q3ValueList<T>::Iterator it )
Removes the item pointed to by \a it from the list. No iterators
other than \a it or other iterators pointing at the same item as
\a it are invalidated. Returns an iterator to the next item after
\a it, or end() if there is no such item.
\sa clear()
*/
/*!
\fn uint Q3ValueList::contains( const T& x ) const
Returns the number of occurrences of the value \a x in the list.
*/
/*!
\class Q3ValueListIterator
\brief The Q3ValueListIterator class provides an iterator for Q3ValueList.
\compat
An iterator is a class for accessing the items of a container
class: a generalization of the index in an array. A pointer
into a "const char *" and an index into an "int[]" are both
iterators, and the general idea is to provide that functionality
for any data structure.
The Q3ValueListIterator class is an iterator for Q3ValueList
instantiations. You can create the appropriate iterator type by
using the \c iterator typedef provided by Q3ValueList.
The only way to access the items in a Q3ValueList is to use an
iterator.
Example (see Q3ValueList for the complete code):
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_q3valuelist.qdoc 4
Q3ValueList is highly optimized for performance and memory usage.
This means that you must be careful: Q3ValueList does not know
about all its iterators and the iterators don't know to which list
they belong. This makes things very fast, but if you're not
careful, you can get spectacular bugs. Always make sure iterators
are valid before dereferencing them or using them as parameters to
generic algorithms in the STL.
Using an invalid iterator is undefined (your application will
probably crash). Many Qt functions return const value lists; to
iterate over these you should make a copy and iterate over the
copy.
For every Iterator there is a ConstIterator. When accessing a
Q3ValueList in a const environment or if the reference or pointer
to the list is itself const, then you must use the ConstIterator.
Its semantics are the same as the Iterator, but it only returns
const references.
\sa Q3ValueList, Q3ValueListConstIterator
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueListIterator::Q3ValueListIterator()
Constructs an unitialized iterator.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueListIterator::Q3ValueListIterator(const Q3ValueListIterator &o)
\fn Q3ValueListIterator::Q3ValueListIterator(const typename QLinkedList<T>::iterator &o)
Constucts a copy of iterator \a o.
*/
/*!
\class Q3ValueListConstIterator
\brief The Q3ValueListConstIterator class provides a const iterator
for Q3ValueList.
\compat
In contrast to Q3ValueListIterator, this class is used to iterate
over a const list. It does not allow modification of the values of
the list since that would break const semantics.
You can create the appropriate const iterator type by using the \c
const_iterator typedef provided by Q3ValueList.
For more information on Q3ValueList iterators, see
Q3ValueListIterator.
\sa Q3ValueListIterator, Q3ValueList
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueListConstIterator::Q3ValueListConstIterator()
Constructs an unitialized iterator.
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueListConstIterator::Q3ValueListConstIterator(const Q3ValueListConstIterator &o)
\fn Q3ValueListConstIterator::Q3ValueListConstIterator(const typename QLinkedList<T>::const_iterator &o)
\fn Q3ValueListConstIterator::Q3ValueListConstIterator(const typename QLinkedList<T>::iterator &o)
Constructs a copy of iterator \a o.
*/
/*!
\typedef Q3ValueList::Iterator
This iterator is an instantiation of Q3ValueListIterator for the
same type as this Q3ValueList. In other words, if you instantiate
Q3ValueList<int>, Iterator is a Q3ValueListIterator<int>. Several
member function use it, such as Q3ValueList::begin(), which returns
an iterator pointing to the first item in the list.
Functionally, this is almost the same as ConstIterator. The only
difference is that you cannot use ConstIterator for non-const
operations, and that the compiler can often generate better code
if you use ConstIterator.
\sa Q3ValueListIterator ConstIterator
*/
/*!
\typedef Q3ValueList::ConstIterator
This iterator is an instantiation of Q3ValueListConstIterator for
the same type as this Q3ValueList. In other words, if you
instantiate Q3ValueList<int>, ConstIterator is a
Q3ValueListConstIterator<int>. Several member function use it, such
as Q3ValueList::begin(), which returns an iterator pointing to the
first item in the list.
Functionally, this is almost the same as Iterator. The only
difference is you cannot use ConstIterator for non-const
operations, and that the compiler can often generate better code
if you use ConstIterator.
\sa Q3ValueListIterator Iterator
*/
/*!
\fn Q3ValueList::operator QList<T>() const
Automatically converts a Q3ValueList<T> into a QList<T>.
*/
|