1 | /****************************************************************************
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2 | **
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3 | ** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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4 | ** All rights reserved.
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7 | ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
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38 | ** $QT_END_LICENSE$
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39 | **
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40 | ****************************************************************************/
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41 |
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42 | /*!
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43 | \page properties.html
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44 | \title Qt's Property System
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45 | \brief An overview of Qt's property system.
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46 |
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47 | Qt provides a sophisticated property system similar to the ones
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48 | supplied by some compiler vendors. However, as a compiler- and
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49 | platform-independent library, Qt does not rely on non-standard
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50 | compiler features like \c __property or \c [property]. The Qt
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51 | solution works with \e any standard C++ compiler on every platform
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52 | Qt supports. It is based on the \l {Meta-Object System} that also
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53 | provides inter-object communication via \l{signals and slots}.
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54 |
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55 | \section1 Requirements for Declaring Properties
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56 |
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57 | To declare a property, use the \l {Q_PROPERTY()} {Q_PROPERTY()}
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58 | macro in a class that inherits QObject.
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59 |
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60 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 0
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61 |
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62 | Here are some typical examples of property declarations taken from
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63 | class QWidget.
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64 |
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65 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 1
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66 |
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67 | A property behaves like a class data member, but it has additional
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68 | features accessible through the \l {Meta-Object System}.
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69 |
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70 | \list
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71 |
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72 | \o A \c READ accessor function is required. It is for reading the
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73 | property value. Ideally, a const function is used for this purpose,
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74 | and it must return either the property's type or a pointer or
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75 | reference to that type. e.g., QWidget::focus is a read-only property
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76 | with \c READ function, QWidget::hasFocus().
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77 |
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78 | \o A \c WRITE accessor function is optional. It is for setting the
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79 | property value. It must return void and must take exactly one
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80 | argument, either of the property's type or a pointer or reference
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81 | to that type. e.g., QWidget::enabled has the \c WRITE function
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82 | QWidget::setEnabled(). Read-only properties do not need \c WRITE
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83 | functions. e.g., QWidget::focus has no \c WRITE function.
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84 |
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85 | \o A \c RESET function is optional. It is for setting the property
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86 | back to its context specific default value. e.g., QWidget::cursor
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87 | has the typical \c READ and \c WRITE functions, QWidget::cursor()
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88 | and QWidget::setCursor(), and it also has a \c RESET function,
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89 | QWidget::unsetCursor(), since no call to QWidget::setCursor() can
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90 | mean \e {reset to the context specific cursor}. The \c RESET
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91 | function must return void and take no parameters.
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92 |
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93 | \o A \c NOTIFY signal is optional. If defined, the signal will be
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94 | emitted whenever the value of the property changes. The signal must
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95 | take one parameter, which must be of the same type as the property; the
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96 | parameter will take the new value of the property.
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97 |
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98 | \o The \c DESIGNABLE attribute indicates whether the property
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99 | should be visible in the property editor of GUI design tool (e.g.,
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100 | \l {Qt Designer}). Most properties are \c DESIGNABLE (default
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101 | true). Instead of true or false, you can specify a boolean
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102 | member function.
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103 |
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104 | \o The \c SCRIPTABLE attribute indicates whether this property
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105 | should be accessible by a scripting engine (default true).
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106 | Instead of true or false, you can specify a boolean member
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107 | function.
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108 |
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109 | \o The \c STORED attribute indicates whether the property should
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110 | be thought of as existing on its own or as depending on other
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111 | values. It also indicates whether the property value must be saved
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112 | when storing the object's state. Most properties are \c STORED
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113 | (default true), but e.g., QWidget::minimumWidth() has \c STORED
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114 | false, because its value is just taken from the width component
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115 | of property QWidget::minimumSize(), which is a QSize.
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116 |
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117 | \o The \c USER attribute indicates whether the property is
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118 | designated as the user-facing or user-editable property for the
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119 | class. Normally, there is only one \c USER property per class
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120 | (default false). e.g., QAbstractButton::checked is the user
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121 | editable property for (checkable) buttons. Note that QItemDelegate
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122 | gets and sets a widget's \c USER property.
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123 |
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124 | \o The presence of the \c CONSTANT attibute indicates that the property
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125 | value is constant. For a given object instance, the READ method of a
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126 | constant property must return the same value every time it is called. This
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127 | constant value may be different for different instances of the object. A
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128 | constant property cannot have a WRITE method or a NOTIFY signal.
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129 |
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130 | \o The presence of the \c FINAL attribute indicates that the property
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131 | will not be overridden by a derived class. This can be used for performance
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132 | optimizations in some cases, but is not enforced by moc. Care must be taken
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133 | never to override a \c FINAL property.
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134 |
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135 | \endlist
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136 |
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137 | The \c READ, \c WRITE, and \c RESET functions can be inherited.
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138 | They can also be virtual. When they are inherited in classes where
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139 | multiple inheritance is used, they must come from the first
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140 | inherited class.
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141 |
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142 | The property type can be any type supported by QVariant, or it can
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143 | be a user-defined type. In this example, class QDate is considered
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144 | to be a user-defined type.
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145 |
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146 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 2
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147 |
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148 | Because QDate is user-defined, you must include the \c{<QDate>}
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149 | header file with the property declaration.
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150 |
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151 | For QMap, QList, and QValueList properties, the property value is
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152 | a QVariant whose value is the entire list or map. Note that the
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153 | Q_PROPERTY string cannot contain commas, because commas separate
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154 | macro arguments. Therefore, you must use \c QMap as the property
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155 | type instead of \c QMap<QString,QVariant>. For consistency, also
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156 | use \c QList and \c QValueList instead of \c QList<QVariant> and
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157 | \c QValueList<QVariant>.
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158 |
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159 | \section1 Reading and Writing Properties with the Meta-Object System
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160 |
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161 | A property can be read and written using the generic functions
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162 | QObject::property() and QObject::setProperty(), without knowing
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163 | anything about the owning class except the property's name. In
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164 | the code snippet below, the call to QAbstractButton::setDown() and
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165 | the call to QObject::setProperty() both set property "down".
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166 |
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167 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 3
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168 |
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169 | Accessing a property through its \c WRITE accessor is the better
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170 | of the two, because it is faster and gives better diagnostics at
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171 | compile time, but setting the property this way requires that you
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172 | know about the class at compile time. Accessing properties by name
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173 | lets you access classes you don't know about at compile time. You
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174 | can \e discover a class's properties at run time by querying its
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175 | QObject, QMetaObject, and \l {QMetaProperty} {QMetaProperties}.
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176 |
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177 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 4
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178 |
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179 | In the above snippet, QMetaObject::property() is used to get \l
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180 | {QMetaProperty} {metadata} about each property defined in some
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181 | unknown class. The property name is fetched from the metadata and
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182 | passed to QObject::property() to get the \l {QVariant} {value} of
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183 | the property in the current \l {QObject}{object}.
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184 |
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185 | \section1 A Simple Example
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186 |
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187 | Suppose we have a class MyClass, which is derived from QObject and
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188 | which uses the Q_OBJECT macro in its private section. We want to
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189 | declare a property in MyClass to keep track of a priorty
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190 | value. The name of the property will be \e priority, and its type
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191 | will be an enumeration type named \e Priority, which is defined in
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192 | MyClass.
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193 |
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194 | We declare the property with the Q_PROPERTY() macro in the private
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195 | section of the class. The required \c READ function is named \c
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196 | priority, and we include a \c WRITE function named \c setPriority.
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197 | The enumeration type must be registered with the \l {Meta-Object
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198 | System} using the Q_ENUMS() macro. Registering an enumeration type
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199 | makes the enumerator names available for use in calls to
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200 | QObject::setProperty(). We must also provide our own declarations
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201 | for the \c READ and \c WRITE functions. The declaration of MyClass
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202 | then might look like this:
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203 |
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204 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 5
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205 |
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206 | The \c READ function is const and returns the property type. The
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207 | \c WRITE function returns void and has exactly one parameter of
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208 | the property type. The meta-object compiler enforces these
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209 | requirements.
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210 |
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211 | Given a pointer to an instance of MyClass or a pointer to a
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212 | QObject that is an instance of MyClass, we have two ways to set
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213 | its priority property:
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214 |
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215 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 6
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216 |
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217 | In the example, the enumeration type that is the property type is
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218 | declared in MyClass and registered with the \l{Meta-Object System}
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219 | using the Q_ENUMS() macro. This makes the enumeration values
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220 | available as strings for use as in the call to setProperty(). Had
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221 | the enumeration type been declared in another class, its fully
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222 | qualified name (i.e., OtherClass::Priority) would be required, and
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223 | that other class would also have to inherit QObject and register
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224 | the enumeration type there using the Q_ENUMS() macro.
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225 |
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226 | A similar macro, Q_FLAGS(), is also available. Like Q_ENUMS(), it
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227 | registers an enumeration type, but it marks the type as being a
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228 | set of \e flags, i.e. values that can be OR'd together. An I/O
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229 | class might have enumeration values \c Read and \c Write and then
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230 | QObject::setProperty() could accept \c{Read | Write}. Q_FLAGS()
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231 | should be used to register this enumeration type.
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232 |
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233 | \section1 Dynamic Properties
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234 |
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235 | QObject::setProperty() can also be used to add \e new properties
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236 | to an instance of a class at runtime. When it is called with a
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237 | name and a value, if a property with the given name exists in the
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238 | QObject, and if the given value is compatible with the property's
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239 | type, the value is stored in the property, and true is returned.
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240 | If the value is \e not compatible with the property's type, the
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241 | property is \e not changed, and false is returned. But if the
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242 | property with the given name doesn't exist in the QObject (i.e.,
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243 | if it wasn't declared with Q_PROPERTY(), a new property with the
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244 | given name and value is automatically added to the QObject, but
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245 | false is still returned. This means that a return of false can't
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246 | be used to determine whether a particular property was actually
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247 | set, unless you know in advance that the property already exists
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248 | in the QObject.
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249 |
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250 | Note that \e dynamic properties are added on a per instance basis,
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251 | i.e., they are added to QObject, not QMetaObject. A property can
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252 | be removed from an instance by passing the property name and an
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253 | invalid QVariant value to QObject::setProperty(). The default
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254 | constructor for QVariant constructs an invalid QVariant.
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255 |
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256 | Dynamic properties can be queried with QObject::property(), just
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257 | like properties declared at compile time with Q_PROPERTY().
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258 |
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259 | \sa {Meta-Object System}, {Signals and Slots}
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260 |
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261 | \section1 Properties and Custom Types
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262 |
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263 | Custom types used by properties need to be registered using the
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264 | Q_DECLARE_METATYPE() macro so that their values can be stored in
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265 | QVariant objects. This makes them suitable for use with both
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266 | static properties declared using the Q_PROPERTY() macro in class
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267 | definitions and dynamic properties created at run-time.
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268 |
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269 | \sa Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(), QMetaType, QVariant
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270 |
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271 | \section1 Adding Additional Information to a Class
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272 |
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273 | Connected to the property system is an additional macro,
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274 | Q_CLASSINFO(), that can be used to attach additional
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275 | \e{name}--\e{value} pairs to a class's meta-object, for example:
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276 |
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277 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_properties.qdoc 7
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278 |
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279 | Like other meta-data, class information is accessible at run-time
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280 | through the meta-object; see QMetaObject::classInfo() for details.
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281 | */
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