| 1 | /**************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | ** $Id: qeventloop.cpp 2 2005-11-16 15:49:26Z dmik $ | 
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| 3 | ** | 
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| 4 | ** Implementation of QEventLoop class | 
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| 5 | ** | 
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| 6 | ** Copyright (C) 1992-2002 Trolltech AS.  All rights reserved. | 
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| 7 | ** | 
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| 8 | ** This file is part of the kernel module of the Qt GUI Toolkit. | 
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| 9 | ** | 
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| 10 | ** This file may be distributed under the terms of the Q Public License | 
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| 11 | ** as defined by Trolltech AS of Norway and appearing in the file | 
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| 12 | ** LICENSE.QPL included in the packaging of this file. | 
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| 13 | ** | 
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| 14 | ** This file may be distributed and/or modified under the terms of the | 
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| 15 | ** GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free Software | 
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| 16 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the | 
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| 17 | ** packaging of this file. | 
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| 18 | ** | 
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| 19 | ** Licensees holding valid Qt Enterprise Edition or Qt Professional Edition | 
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| 20 | ** licenses may use this file in accordance with the Qt Commercial License | 
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| 21 | ** Agreement provided with the Software. | 
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| 22 | ** | 
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| 23 | ** This file is provided AS IS with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING THE | 
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| 24 | ** WARRANTY OF DESIGN, MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | 
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| 25 | ** | 
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| 26 | ** See http://www.trolltech.com/pricing.html or email sales@trolltech.com for | 
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| 27 | **   information about Qt Commercial License Agreements. | 
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| 28 | ** See http://www.trolltech.com/qpl/ for QPL licensing information. | 
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| 29 | ** See http://www.trolltech.com/gpl/ for GPL licensing information. | 
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| 30 | ** | 
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| 31 | ** Contact info@trolltech.com if any conditions of this licensing are | 
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| 32 | ** not clear to you. | 
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| 33 | ** | 
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| 34 | **********************************************************************/ | 
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| 35 |  | 
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| 36 | #include "qeventloop_p.h" // includes qplatformdefs.h | 
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| 37 | #include "qeventloop.h" | 
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| 38 | #include "qapplication.h" | 
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| 39 | #include "qdatetime.h" | 
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| 40 |  | 
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| 41 | /*! | 
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| 42 | \class QEventLoop | 
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| 43 | \brief The QEventLoop class manages the event queue. | 
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| 44 |  | 
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| 45 | \ingroup application | 
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| 46 | \ingroup events | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 | It receives events from the window system and other sources.  It | 
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| 49 | then sends them to QApplication for processing and delivery. | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | QEventLoop allows the application programmer to have more control | 
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| 52 | over event delivery.  Programs that perform long operations can | 
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| 53 | call either processOneEvent() or processEvents() with various | 
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| 54 | ProcessEvent values OR'ed together to control which events should | 
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| 55 | be delivered. | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | QEventLoop also allows the integration of an external event loop | 
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| 58 | with the Qt event loop.  The Motif Extension included with Qt | 
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| 59 | includes a reimplementation of QEventLoop for merging Qt and Motif | 
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| 60 | events together. | 
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| 61 |  | 
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| 62 | To use your own instance of QEventLoop or QEventLoop subclass create | 
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| 63 | it before you create the QApplication object. | 
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| 64 | */ | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | /*! \enum QEventLoop::ProcessEvents | 
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| 67 |  | 
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| 68 | This enum controls the types of events processed by the | 
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| 69 | processEvents() functions. | 
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| 70 |  | 
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| 71 | \value AllEvents - All events are processed | 
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| 72 | \value ExcludeUserInput - Do not process user input events. | 
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| 73 | ( ButtonPress, KeyPress, etc. ) | 
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| 74 | \value ExcludeSocketNotifiers - Do not process socket notifier | 
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| 75 | events. | 
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| 76 | \value WaitForMore - Wait for events if no pending events | 
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| 77 | are available. | 
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| 78 |  | 
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| 79 | \sa processEvents() | 
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| 80 | */ | 
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| 81 |  | 
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| 82 | /*! \enum QEventLoop::ProcessEventsFlags | 
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| 83 | A \c typedef to allow various ProcessEvents values to be OR'ed together. | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | \sa ProcessEvents | 
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| 86 | */ | 
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| 87 |  | 
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| 88 | /*! | 
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| 89 | Creates a QEventLoop object, this object becomes the global event loop object. | 
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| 90 | There can only be one event loop object. The QEventLoop is usually constructed | 
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| 91 | by calling QApplication::eventLoop(). To create your own event loop object create | 
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| 92 | it before you instantiate the QApplication object. | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | The \a parent and \a name arguments are passed on to the QObject constructor. | 
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| 95 | */ | 
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| 96 | QEventLoop::QEventLoop( QObject *parent, const char *name ) | 
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| 97 | : QObject( parent, name ) | 
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| 98 | { | 
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| 99 | #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) | 
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| 100 | if ( QApplication::eventloop ) | 
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| 101 | qFatal( "QEventLoop: there must be only one event loop object. \nConstruct it before QApplication." ); | 
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| 102 | // for now ;) | 
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| 103 | #endif // QT_CHECK_STATE | 
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| 104 |  | 
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| 105 | d = new QEventLoopPrivate; | 
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| 106 |  | 
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| 107 | init(); | 
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| 108 | QApplication::eventloop = this; | 
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| 109 | } | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | /*! | 
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| 112 | Destructs the QEventLoop object. | 
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| 113 | */ | 
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| 114 | QEventLoop::~QEventLoop() | 
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| 115 | { | 
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| 116 | cleanup(); | 
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| 117 | delete d; | 
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| 118 | QApplication::eventloop = 0; | 
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| 119 | } | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | /*! | 
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| 122 | Enters the main event loop and waits until exit() is called, and | 
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| 123 | returns the value that was set to exit(). | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | It is necessary to call this function to start event handling. The | 
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| 126 | main event loop receives events from the window system and | 
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| 127 | dispatches these to the application widgets. | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | Generally speaking, no user interaction can take place before | 
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| 130 | calling exec(). As a special case, modal widgets like QMessageBox | 
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| 131 | can be used before calling exec(), because modal widgets call | 
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| 132 | exec() to start a local event loop. | 
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| 133 |  | 
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| 134 | To make your application perform idle processing, i.e. executing a | 
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| 135 | special function whenever there are no pending events, use a | 
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| 136 | QTimer with 0 timeout. More advanced idle processing schemes can | 
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| 137 | be achieved using processEvents(). | 
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| 138 |  | 
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| 139 | \sa QApplication::quit(), exit(), processEvents() | 
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| 140 | */ | 
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| 141 | int QEventLoop::exec() | 
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| 142 | { | 
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| 143 | d->reset(); | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | enterLoop(); | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | // cleanup | 
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| 148 | d->looplevel = 0; | 
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| 149 | d->quitnow  = FALSE; | 
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| 150 | d->exitloop = FALSE; | 
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| 151 | d->shortcut = FALSE; | 
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| 152 | // don't reset quitcode! | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | return d->quitcode; | 
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| 155 | } | 
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| 156 |  | 
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| 157 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::exit( int retcode = 0 ) | 
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| 158 |  | 
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| 159 | Tells the event loop to exit with a return code. | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | After this function has been called, the event loop returns from | 
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| 162 | the call to exec(). The exec() function returns \a retcode. | 
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| 163 |  | 
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| 164 | By convention, a \a retcode of 0 means success, and any non-zero | 
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| 165 | value indicates an error. | 
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| 166 |  | 
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| 167 | Note that unlike the C library function of the same name, this | 
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| 168 | function \e does return to the caller -- it is event processing that | 
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| 169 | stops. | 
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| 170 |  | 
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| 171 | \sa QApplication::quit(), exec() | 
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| 172 | */ | 
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| 173 | void QEventLoop::exit( int retcode ) | 
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| 174 | { | 
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| 175 | if ( d->quitnow ) // preserve existing quitcode | 
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| 176 | return; | 
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| 177 | d->quitcode = retcode; | 
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| 178 | d->quitnow  = TRUE; | 
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| 179 | d->exitloop = TRUE; | 
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| 180 | d->shortcut = TRUE; | 
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| 181 | } | 
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| 182 |  | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | /*! \fn int QEventLoop::enterLoop() | 
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| 185 |  | 
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| 186 | This function enters the main event loop (recursively). Do not call | 
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| 187 | it unless you really know what you are doing. | 
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| 188 | */ | 
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| 189 | int QEventLoop::enterLoop() | 
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| 190 | { | 
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| 191 | // save the current exitloop state | 
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| 192 | bool old_exitloop = d->exitloop; | 
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| 193 | d->exitloop = FALSE; | 
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| 194 | d->shortcut = FALSE; | 
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| 195 |  | 
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| 196 | d->looplevel++; | 
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| 197 | while ( ! d->exitloop ) | 
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| 198 | processEvents( AllEvents | WaitForMore ); | 
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| 199 | d->looplevel--; | 
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| 200 |  | 
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| 201 | // restore the exitloop state, but if quitnow is TRUE, we need to keep | 
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| 202 | // exitloop set so that all other event loops drop out. | 
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| 203 | d->exitloop = old_exitloop || d->quitnow; | 
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| 204 | d->shortcut = d->quitnow; | 
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| 205 |  | 
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| 206 | if ( d->looplevel < 1 ) { | 
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| 207 | d->quitnow  = FALSE; | 
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| 208 | d->exitloop = FALSE; | 
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| 209 | d->shortcut = FALSE; | 
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| 210 | emit qApp->aboutToQuit(); | 
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| 211 |  | 
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| 212 | // send deferred deletes | 
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| 213 | QApplication::sendPostedEvents( 0, QEvent::DeferredDelete ); | 
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| 214 | } | 
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| 215 |  | 
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| 216 | return d->looplevel; | 
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| 217 | } | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::exitLoop() | 
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| 220 |  | 
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| 221 | This function exits from a recursive call to the main event loop. | 
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| 222 | Do not call it unless you really know what you are doing. | 
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| 223 | */ | 
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| 224 | void QEventLoop::exitLoop() | 
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| 225 | { | 
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| 226 | d->exitloop = TRUE; | 
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| 227 | d->shortcut = TRUE; | 
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| 228 | } | 
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| 229 |  | 
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| 230 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::loopLevel() const | 
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| 231 |  | 
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| 232 | Returns the current loop level. | 
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| 233 | */ | 
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| 234 | int QEventLoop::loopLevel() const | 
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| 235 | { | 
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| 236 | return d->looplevel; | 
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| 237 | } | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | /*! | 
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| 240 | Process pending events that match \a flags for a maximum of \a | 
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| 241 | maxTime milliseconds, or until there are no more events to | 
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| 242 | process, which ever is shorter. | 
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| 243 |  | 
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| 244 | This function is especially useful if you have a long running | 
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| 245 | operation and want to show its progress without allowing user | 
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| 246 | input, i.e. by using the \c ExcludeUserInput flag. | 
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| 247 |  | 
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| 248 | NOTE: This function will not process events continuously; it | 
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| 249 | returns after all available events are processed. | 
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| 250 |  | 
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| 251 | NOTE: Specifying the \c WaitForMore flag makes no sense and will | 
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| 252 | be ignored. | 
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| 253 | */ | 
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| 254 | void QEventLoop::processEvents( ProcessEventsFlags flags, int maxTime ) | 
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| 255 | { | 
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| 256 | QTime start = QTime::currentTime(); | 
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| 257 | QTime now; | 
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| 258 | while ( ! d->quitnow && processEvents( flags & ~WaitForMore ) ) { | 
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| 259 | now = QTime::currentTime(); | 
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| 260 | if ( start.msecsTo( now ) > maxTime ) | 
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| 261 | break; | 
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| 262 | } | 
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| 263 | } | 
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| 264 |  | 
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| 265 | /*! | 
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| 266 | \fn bool QEventLoop::processEvents( ProcessEventsFlags flags ) | 
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| 267 | \overload | 
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| 268 |  | 
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| 269 | Processes pending events that match \a flags until there are no | 
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| 270 | more events to process. | 
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| 271 |  | 
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| 272 | This function is especially useful if you have a long running | 
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| 273 | operation and want to show its progress without allowing user | 
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| 274 | input, i.e. by using the \c ExcludeUserInput flag. | 
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| 275 |  | 
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| 276 | If the \c WaitForMore flag is set in \a flags, the behavior of | 
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| 277 | this function is as follows: | 
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| 278 |  | 
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| 279 | \list | 
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| 280 |  | 
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| 281 | \i If events are available, this function returns after processing | 
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| 282 | them. | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 | \i If no events are available, this function will wait until more | 
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| 285 | are available and return after processing newly available events. | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | \endlist | 
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| 288 |  | 
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| 289 | If the \c WaitForMore flag is \e not set in \a flags, and no | 
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| 290 | events are available, this function will return immediately. | 
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| 291 |  | 
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| 292 | NOTE: This function will not process events continuously; it | 
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| 293 | returns after all available events are processed. | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | This function returns TRUE if an event was processed; otherwise it | 
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| 296 | returns FALSE. | 
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| 297 |  | 
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| 298 | \sa ProcessEvents hasPendingEvents() | 
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| 299 | */ | 
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| 300 |  | 
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| 301 | /*! \fn bool QEventLoop::hasPendingEvents() const | 
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| 302 |  | 
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| 303 | Returns TRUE if there is an event waiting, otherwise it returns FALSE. | 
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| 304 | */ | 
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| 305 |  | 
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| 306 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::registerSocketNotifier( QSocketNotifier *notifier ) | 
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| 307 |  | 
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| 308 | Registers \a notifier with the event loop.  Subclasses need to | 
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| 309 | reimplement this method to tie a socket notifier into another | 
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| 310 | event loop.  Reimplementations \e MUST call the base | 
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| 311 | implementation. | 
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| 312 | */ | 
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| 313 |  | 
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| 314 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::unregisterSocketNotifier( QSocketNotifier *notifier ) | 
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| 315 |  | 
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| 316 | Unregisters \a notifier from the event loop.  Subclasses need to | 
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| 317 | reimplement this method to tie a socket notifier into another | 
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| 318 | event loop.  Reimplementations \e MUST call the base | 
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| 319 | implementation. | 
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| 320 | */ | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::setSocketNotifierPending( QSocketNotifier *notifier ) | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | Marks \a notifier as pending.  The socket notifier will be | 
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| 325 | activated the next time activateSocketNotifiers() is called. | 
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| 326 | */ | 
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| 327 |  | 
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| 328 | /*! \fn int QEventLoop::activateSocketNotifiers() | 
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| 329 |  | 
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| 330 | Activates all pending socket notifiers and returns the number of | 
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| 331 | socket notifiers that were activated. | 
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| 332 | */ | 
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| 333 |  | 
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| 334 | /*! \fn int QEventLoop::activateTimers() | 
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| 335 |  | 
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| 336 | Activates all Qt timers and returns the number of timers that were | 
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| 337 | activated. | 
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| 338 |  | 
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| 339 | QEventLoop subclasses that do their own timer handling need to | 
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| 340 | call this after the time returned by timeToWait() has elapsed. | 
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| 341 |  | 
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| 342 | Note: This function is only useful on systems where \c select() is | 
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| 343 | used to block the eventloop.  On Windows, this function always | 
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| 344 | returns 0.  On MacOS X, this function always returns 0 when the | 
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| 345 | GUI is enabled.  On MacOS X, this function returns the documented | 
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| 346 | value when the GUI is disabled. | 
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| 347 | */ | 
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| 348 |  | 
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| 349 | /*! \fn int QEventLoop::timeToWait() const | 
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| 350 |  | 
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| 351 | Returns the number of milliseconds that Qt needs to handle its | 
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| 352 | timers or -1 if there are no timers running. | 
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| 353 |  | 
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| 354 | QEventLoop subclasses that do their own timer handling need to use | 
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| 355 | this to make sure that Qt's timers continue to work. | 
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| 356 |  | 
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| 357 | Note: This function is only useful on systems where \c select() is | 
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| 358 | used to block the eventloop.  On Windows, this function always | 
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| 359 | returns -1.  On MacOS X, this function always returns -1 when the | 
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| 360 | GUI is enabled.  On MacOS X, this function returns the documented | 
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| 361 | value when the GUI is disabled. | 
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| 362 | */ | 
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| 363 |  | 
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| 364 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::wakeUp() | 
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| 365 | \threadsafe | 
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| 366 |  | 
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| 367 | Wakes up the event loop. | 
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| 368 |  | 
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| 369 | \sa awake() | 
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| 370 | */ | 
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| 371 |  | 
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| 372 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::awake() | 
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| 373 |  | 
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| 374 | This signal is emitted after the event loop returns from a | 
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| 375 | function that could block. | 
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| 376 |  | 
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| 377 | \sa wakeUp() aboutToBlock() | 
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| 378 | */ | 
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| 379 |  | 
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| 380 | /*! \fn void QEventLoop::aboutToBlock() | 
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| 381 |  | 
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| 382 | This signal is emitted before the event loop calls a function that | 
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| 383 | could block. | 
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| 384 |  | 
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| 385 | \sa awake() | 
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| 386 | */ | 
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| 387 |  | 
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| 388 | #if !defined(Q_WS_X11) | 
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| 389 | void QEventLoop::appStartingUp(){} | 
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| 390 | void QEventLoop::appClosingDown(){} | 
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| 391 | #endif // Q_WS_X11 | 
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