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41
42/*!
43 \page how-to-learn-qt.html
44 \title How to Learn Qt
45 \brief Links to guides and resources for learning Qt.
46 \nextpage Tutorials
47
48 \section1 Getting Started
49
50 We assume that you already know C++ and will be using it for Qt
51 development. See the \l{Qt website} for more information about
52 using other programming languages with Qt.
53
54 If you want to program purely in C++, designing your interfaces
55 in code without the aid of any design tools, take a look at the
56 \l{Tutorials}. These are designed to get you into Qt programming,
57 with an emphasis on working code rather than being a tour of features.
58
59 If you want to design your user interfaces using a design tool, then
60 read at least the first few chapters of the \l{Qt Designer manual}.
61
62 By now you'll have produced some small working applications and have a
63 broad feel for Qt programming. You could start work on your own
64 projects straight away, but we recommend reading a couple of key
65 overviews to deepen your understanding of Qt: \l{Qt Object Model}
66 and \l{Signals and Slots}.
67
68 \beginfloatleft
69 \inlineimage qtdemo-small.png
70 \endfloat
71
72 \section1 Getting an Overview
73
74 At this point, we recommend looking at the
75 \l{All Overviews and HOWTOs}{overviews} and reading those that are
76 relevant to your projects. You may also find it useful to browse the
77 source code of the \l{Qt Examples}{examples} that have things in
78 common with your projects. You can also read Qt's source code since
79 this is supplied.
80
81 If you run the \l{Examples and Demos Launcher}, you'll see many of Qt's
82 widgets in action.
83
84 The \l{Qt Widget Gallery} also provides overviews of selected Qt
85 widgets in each of the styles used on various supported platforms.
86 \clearfloat
87
88 \section1 Books and Learning Materials
89
90 Qt comes with extensive documentation, with hypertext
91 cross-references throughout, so you can easily click your way to
92 whatever interests you. The part of the documentation that you'll
93 probably use the most is the \link index.html API
94 Reference\endlink. Each link provides a different way of
95 navigating the API Reference; try them all to see which work best
96 for you. You might also like to try \l{Qt Assistant}:
97 this tool is supplied with Qt and provides access to the entire
98 Qt API, and it provides a full text search facility.
99
100 There are also a growing number of books about Qt programming.
101 We recommend the official Qt book,
102 \l{http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0132354160/ref=ase_trolltech/}{C++
103 GUI Programming with Qt 4, Second Edition} (ISBN 0-13-235416-0). This book
104 provides comprehensive coverage of Qt programming all the way
105 from "Hello Qt" to advanced features such as multithreading, 2D and
106 3D graphics, networking, item view classes, and XML. (The first edition,
107 which is based on Qt 4.1, is available
108 \l{http://www.qtrac.eu/C++-GUI-Programming-with-Qt-4-1st-ed.zip}{online}.)
109
110 See \l{Books about Qt Programming} for a complete list of Qt books,
111 including translations to various languages.
112
113 Another valuable source of example code and explanations of Qt
114 features is the archive of articles from \l{Qt Quarterly}, a quarterly newsletter for users of Qt.
115
116 For documentation on specific Qt modules and other guides, refer to
117 \l{All Overviews and HOWTOs}.
118
119 \section1 Further Reading
120
121 Qt has an active and helpful user community who communicate using
122 the \l{Qt Mailing Lists}{qt-interest} mailing list, the \l{Qt Centre}
123 Web site, and a number of other community Web sites and Weblogs.
124 In addition, many Qt developers are active members of the
125 \l{KDE}{KDE community}.
126
127 Good luck, and have fun!
128*/
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