/**************************************************************************** ** ** Implementation of QDataView class ** ** Created : 2000-11-03 ** ** Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Trolltech ASA. All rights reserved. ** ** This file is part of the sql module of the Qt GUI Toolkit. ** ** This file may be distributed under the terms of the Q Public License ** as defined by Trolltech ASA of Norway and appearing in the file ** LICENSE.QPL included in the packaging of this file. ** ** This file may be distributed and/or modified under the terms of the ** GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the ** packaging of this file. ** ** Licensees holding valid Qt Enterprise Edition licenses may use this ** file in accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided ** with the Software. ** ** This file is provided AS IS with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING THE ** WARRANTY OF DESIGN, MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. ** ** See http://www.trolltech.com/pricing.html or email sales@trolltech.com for ** information about Qt Commercial License Agreements. ** See http://www.trolltech.com/qpl/ for QPL licensing information. ** See http://www.trolltech.com/gpl/ for GPL licensing information. ** ** Contact info@trolltech.com if any conditions of this licensing are ** not clear to you. ** **********************************************************************/ #include "qdataview.h" #ifndef QT_NO_SQL_VIEW_WIDGETS #include "qsqlmanager_p.h" class QDataViewPrivate { public: QDataViewPrivate() {} QSqlFormManager frm; }; /*! \class QDataView qdataview.h \brief The QDataView class provides read-only SQL forms. \ingroup database \mainclass \module sql This class provides a form which displays SQL field data from a record buffer. Because QDataView does not support editing it uses less resources than a QDataBrowser. This class is well suited for displaying read-only data from a SQL database. If you want a to present your data in an editable form use QDataBrowser; if you want a table-based presentation of your data use QDataTable. The form is associated with the data view with setForm() and the record is associated with setRecord(). You can also pass a QSqlRecord to the refresh() function which will set the record to the given record and read the record's fields into the form. */ /*! Constructs a data view which is a child of \a parent, called \a name, and with widget flags \a fl. */ QDataView::QDataView( QWidget *parent, const char *name, WFlags fl ) : QWidget( parent, name, fl ) { d = new QDataViewPrivate(); } /*! Destroys the object and frees any allocated resources. */ QDataView::~QDataView() { delete d; } /*! Clears the default form's values. If there is no default form, nothing happens. All the values are set to their 'zero state', e.g. 0 for numeric fields, "" for string fields. */ void QDataView::clearValues() { d->frm.clearValues(); } /*! Sets the form used by the data view to \a form. If a record has already been assigned to the data view, the form will display that record's data. \sa form() */ void QDataView::setForm( QSqlForm* form ) { d->frm.setForm( form ); } /*! Returns the default form used by the data view, or 0 if there is none. \sa setForm() */ QSqlForm* QDataView::form() { return d->frm.form(); } /*! Sets the record used by the data view to \a record. If a form has already been assigned to the data view, the form will display the data from \a record in that form. \sa record() */ void QDataView::setRecord( QSqlRecord* record ) { d->frm.setRecord( record ); } /*! Returns the default record used by the data view, or 0 if there is none. \sa setRecord() */ QSqlRecord* QDataView::record() { return d->frm.record(); } /*! Causes the default form to read its fields from the record buffer. If there is no default form, or no record, nothing happens. \sa setForm() */ void QDataView::readFields() { d->frm.readFields(); } /*! Causes the default form to write its fields to the record buffer. If there is no default form, or no record, nothing happens. \sa setForm() */ void QDataView::writeFields() { d->frm.writeFields(); } /*! Causes the default form to display the contents of \a buf. If there is no default form, nothing happens.The \a buf also becomes the default record for all subsequent calls to readFields() and writefields(). This slot is equivalant to calling: \code myView.setRecord( record ); myView.readFields(); \endcode \sa setRecord() readFields() */ void QDataView::refresh( QSqlRecord* buf ) { if ( buf && buf != record() ) setRecord( buf ); readFields(); } #endif