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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page accessible.html | 
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| 44 | \title Accessibility | 
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| 45 | \ingroup accessibility | 
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| 46 |  | 
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| 47 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | \section1 Introduction | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | Accessibility in computer software is making applications usable | 
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| 52 | for people with disabilities. This could be achieved by providing | 
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| 53 | keyboard shortcuts, a high-contrast user interface that uses | 
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| 54 | specially selected colors and fonts, or support for assistive tools | 
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| 55 | such as screen readers and braille displays. | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | An application does not usually communicate directly with | 
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| 58 | assistive tools but through an assistive technology, which is a | 
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| 59 | bridge for exchange of information between the applications and | 
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| 60 | the tools. Information about user interface elements, such | 
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| 61 | as buttons and scroll bars, is exposed to the assistive technologies. | 
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| 62 | Qt supports Microsoft Active Accessibility (MSAA) on Windows and | 
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| 63 | Mac OS X Accessibility on Mac OS X. | 
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| 64 | On Unix/X11, support is preliminary. The individual technologies | 
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| 65 | are abstracted from Qt, and there is only a single interface to | 
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| 66 | consider. We will use MSAA throughout this document when we need | 
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| 67 | to address technology related issues. | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 | In this overview document, we will examine the overall Qt | 
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| 70 | accessibility architecture, and how to implement accessibility for | 
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| 71 | custom widgets and elements. | 
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| 72 |  | 
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| 73 | \section1 Architecture | 
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| 74 |  | 
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| 75 | Providing accessibility is a collaboration between accessibility | 
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| 76 | compliant applications, the assistive technology, and the | 
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| 77 | assistive tools. | 
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| 78 |  | 
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| 79 | \image accessibilityarchitecture.png | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | Accessibility compliant applications are called AT-Servers while | 
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| 82 | assistive tools are called AT-Clients. A Qt application will | 
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| 83 | typically be an AT-Server, but specialized programs might also | 
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| 84 | function like AT-Clients. We will refer to clients and servers | 
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| 85 | when talking about AT-Clients and AT-Servers in the rest of this | 
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| 86 | document. | 
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| 87 |  | 
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| 88 | We will from now on focus on the Qt accessibility interface and | 
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| 89 | how it is implemented to create Qt applications that support | 
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| 90 | accessibility. | 
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| 91 |  | 
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| 92 | \section2 Accessibility in Qt | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | When we communicate with the assistive technologies, we need to | 
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| 95 | describe Qt's user interface in a way that they can understand. Qt | 
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| 96 | applications use QAccessibleInterface to expose information about the | 
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| 97 | individual UI elements. Currently, Qt provides support for its widgets | 
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| 98 | and widget parts, e.g., slider handles, but the interface could | 
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| 99 | also be implemented for any QObject if necessary. QAccessible | 
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| 100 | contains enums that describe the UI. The description is mainly | 
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| 101 | based on MSAA and is independent of Qt. We will examine the enums | 
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| 102 | in the course of this document. | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | The structure of the UI is represented as a tree of | 
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| 105 | QAccessibleInterface subclasses. You can think of this as a | 
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| 106 | representation of a UI like the QObject tree built by Qt. Objects | 
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| 107 | can be widgets or widget parts (such as scroll bar handles). We | 
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| 108 | examine the tree in detail in the next section. | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | Servers notify clients through \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()} | 
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| 111 | about changes in objects by sending events, and the clients | 
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| 112 | register to receive the events. The available events are defined | 
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| 113 | by the QAccessible::Event enum. The clients may then query for | 
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| 114 | the object that generated the event through | 
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| 115 | QAccessible::queryAccessibleInterface(). | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | Three of the enums in QAccessible help clients query and alter | 
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| 118 | accessible objects: | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | \list | 
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| 121 | \o \l{QAccessible::}{Role}: Describes the role the object | 
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| 122 | fills in the user interface, e.g., if it is a main | 
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| 123 | window, a text caret, or a cell in an item view. | 
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| 124 | \o \l{QAccessible::}{Action}: The actions that the | 
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| 125 | clients can perform on the objects, e.g., pushing a | 
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| 126 | button. | 
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| 127 | \o \l{QAccessible::}{Relation}: Describes the relationship | 
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| 128 | between objects in the object tree. | 
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| 129 | This is used for navigation. | 
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| 130 | \endlist | 
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| 131 |  | 
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| 132 | The clients also have some possibilities to get the content of | 
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| 133 | objects, e.g., a button's text; the object provides strings | 
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| 134 | defined by the QAccessible::Text enum, that give information | 
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| 135 | about content. | 
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| 136 |  | 
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| 137 | The objects can be in a number of different states as defined by | 
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| 138 | the \l{QAccessible::}{State} enum. Examples of states are whether | 
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| 139 | the object is disabled, if it has focus, or if it provides a pop-up | 
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| 140 | menu. | 
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| 141 |  | 
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| 142 | \section2 The Accessible Object Tree | 
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| 143 |  | 
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| 144 | As mentioned, a tree structure is built from the accessible | 
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| 145 | objects of an application. By navigating through the tree, the | 
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| 146 | clients can access all elements in the UI. Object relations give | 
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| 147 | clients information about the UI. For instance, a slider handle is | 
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| 148 | a child of the slider to which it belongs. QAccessible::Relation | 
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| 149 | describes the various relationships the clients can ask objects | 
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| 150 | for. | 
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| 151 |  | 
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| 152 | Note that there are no direct mapping between the Qt QObject tree | 
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| 153 | and the accessible object tree. For instance, scroll bar handles | 
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| 154 | are accessible objects but are not widgets or objects in Qt. | 
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| 155 |  | 
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| 156 | AT-Clients have access to the accessibility object tree through | 
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| 157 | the root object in the tree, which is the QApplication. They can | 
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| 158 | query other objects through QAccessible::navigate(), which fetches | 
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| 159 | objects based on \l{QAccessible::}{Relation}s. The children of any | 
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| 160 | node is 1-based numbered. The child numbered 0 is the object | 
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| 161 | itself. The children of all interfaces are numbered this way, | 
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| 162 | i.e., it is not a fixed numbering from the root node in the entire | 
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| 163 | tree. | 
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| 164 |  | 
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| 165 | Qt provides accessible interfaces for its widgets. Interfaces for | 
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| 166 | any QObject subclass can be requested through | 
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| 167 | QAccessible::queryInterface(). A default implementation is | 
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| 168 | provided if a more specialized interface is not defined. An | 
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| 169 | AT-Client cannot acquire an interface for accessible objects that | 
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| 170 | do not have an equivalent QObject, e.g., scroll bar handles, but | 
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| 171 | they appear as normal objects through interfaces of parent | 
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| 172 | accessible objects, e.g., you can query their relationships with | 
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| 173 | QAccessible::relationTo(). | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | To illustrate, we present an image of an accessible object tree. | 
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| 176 | Beneath the tree is a table with examples of object relationships. | 
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| 177 |  | 
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| 178 | \image accessibleobjecttree.png | 
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| 179 |  | 
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| 180 | The labels in top-down order are: the QAccessibleInterface class | 
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| 181 | name, the widget for which an interface is provided, and the | 
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| 182 | \l{QAccessible::}{Role} of the object. The Position, PageLeft and | 
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| 183 | PageRight correspond to the slider handle, the slider groove left | 
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| 184 | and the slider groove right, respectively. These accessible objects | 
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| 185 | do not have an equivalent QObject. | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | \table 40% | 
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| 188 | \header | 
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| 189 | \o Source Object | 
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| 190 | \o Target Object | 
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| 191 | \o Relation | 
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| 192 | \row | 
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| 193 | \o Slider | 
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| 194 | \o Indicator | 
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| 195 | \o Controller | 
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| 196 | \row | 
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| 197 | \o Indicator | 
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| 198 | \o Slider | 
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| 199 | \o Controlled | 
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| 200 | \row | 
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| 201 | \o Slider | 
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| 202 | \o Application | 
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| 203 | \o Ancestor | 
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| 204 | \row | 
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| 205 | \o Application | 
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| 206 | \o Slider | 
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| 207 | \o Child | 
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| 208 | \row | 
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| 209 | \o PushButton | 
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| 210 | \o Indicator | 
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| 211 | \o Sibling | 
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| 212 | \endtable | 
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| 213 |  | 
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| 214 | \section2 The Static QAccessible Functions | 
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| 215 |  | 
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| 216 | The accessibility is managed by QAccessible's static functions, | 
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| 217 | which we will examine shortly. They produce QAccessible | 
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| 218 | interfaces, build the object tree, and initiate the connection | 
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| 219 | with MSAA or the other platform specific technologies. If you are | 
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| 220 | only interested in learning how to make your application | 
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| 221 | accessible, you can safely skip over this section to | 
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| 222 | \l{Implementing Accessibility}. | 
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| 223 |  | 
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| 224 | The communication between clients and the server is initiated when | 
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| 225 | \l{QAccessible::}{setRootObject()} is called. This is done when | 
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| 226 | the QApplication instance is instantiated and you should not have | 
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| 227 | to do this yourself. | 
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| 228 |  | 
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| 229 | When a QObject calls \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}, | 
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| 230 | clients that are listening to events are notified of the | 
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| 231 | change. The function is used to post events to the assistive | 
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| 232 | technology, and accessible \l{QAccessible::Event}{events} are | 
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| 233 | posted by \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}. | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | \l{QAccessible::}{queryAccessibleInterface()} returns accessible | 
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| 236 | interfaces for \l{QObject}s. All widgets in Qt provide interfaces; | 
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| 237 | if you need interfaces to control the behavior of other \l{QObject} | 
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| 238 | subclasses, you must implement the interfaces yourself, although | 
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| 239 | the QAccessibleObject convenience class implements parts of the | 
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| 240 | functionality for you. | 
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| 241 |  | 
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| 242 | The factory that produces accessibility interfaces for QObjects is | 
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| 243 | a function of type QAccessible::InterfaceFactory. It is possible | 
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| 244 | to have several factories installed. The last factory installed | 
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| 245 | will be the first to be asked for interfaces. | 
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| 246 | \l{QAccessible::}{queryAccessibleInterface()} uses the factories | 
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| 247 | to create interfaces for \l{QObject}s. Normally, you need not be | 
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| 248 | concerned about factories because you can implement plugins that | 
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| 249 | produce interfaces. We will give examples of both approaches | 
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| 250 | later. | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | \section1 Implementing Accessibility | 
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| 253 |  | 
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| 254 | To provide accessibility support for a widget or other user | 
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| 255 | interface element, you need to implement the QAccessibleInterface | 
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| 256 | and distribute it in a QAccessiblePlugin. It is also possible to | 
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| 257 | compile the interface into the application and provide a | 
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| 258 | QAccessible::InterfaceFactory for it. The factory can be used if | 
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| 259 | you link statically or do not want the added complexity of | 
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| 260 | plugins.  This can be an advantage if you, for instance, are | 
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| 261 | delivering a 3-rd party library. | 
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| 262 |  | 
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| 263 | All widgets and other user interface elements should have | 
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| 264 | interfaces and plugins. If you want your application to support | 
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| 265 | accessibility, you will need to consider the following: | 
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| 266 |  | 
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| 267 | \list | 
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| 268 | \o Qt already implements accessibility for its own widgets. | 
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| 269 | We therefore recommend that you use Qt widgets where possible. | 
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| 270 | \o A QAccessibleInterface needs to be implemented for each element | 
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| 271 | that you want to make available to accessibility clients. | 
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| 272 | \o You need to send accessibility events from the custom | 
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| 273 | user interface elements that you implement. | 
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| 274 | \endlist | 
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| 275 |  | 
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| 276 | In general, it is recommended that you are somewhat familiar with | 
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| 277 | MSAA, which Qt originally was built for. You should also study | 
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| 278 | the enum values of QAccessible, which describe the roles, actions, | 
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| 279 | relationships, and events that you need to consider. | 
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| 280 |  | 
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| 281 | Note that you can examine how Qt's widgets implement their | 
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| 282 | accessibility. One major problem with the MSAA standard is that | 
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| 283 | interfaces are often implemented in an inconsistent way. This | 
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| 284 | makes life difficult for clients and often leads to guesswork on | 
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| 285 | object functionality. | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | It is possible to implement interfaces by inheriting | 
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| 288 | QAccessibleInterface and implementing its pure virtual functions. | 
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| 289 | In practice, however, it is usually preferable to inherit | 
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| 290 | QAccessibleObject or QAccessibleWidget, which implement part of | 
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| 291 | the functionality for you. In the next section, we will see an | 
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| 292 | example of implementing accessibility for a widget by inheriting | 
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| 293 | the QAccessibleWidget class. | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | \section2 The QAccessibleObject and QAccessibleWidget Convenience Classes | 
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| 296 |  | 
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| 297 | When implementing an accessibility interface for widgets, one would | 
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| 298 | as a rule inherit QAccessibleWidget, which is a convenience class | 
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| 299 | for widgets. Another available convenience class, which is | 
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| 300 | inherited by QAccessibleWidget, is the QAccessibleObject, which | 
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| 301 | implements part of the interface for QObjects. | 
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| 302 |  | 
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| 303 | The QAccessibleWidget provides the following functionality: | 
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| 304 |  | 
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| 305 | \list | 
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| 306 | \o It handles the navigation of the tree and | 
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| 307 | hit testing of the objects. | 
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| 308 | \o It handles events, roles, and actions that are common for all | 
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| 309 | \l{QWidget}s. | 
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| 310 | \o It handles action and methods that can be performed on | 
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| 311 | all widgets. | 
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| 312 | \o It calculates bounding rectangles with | 
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| 313 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{rect()}. | 
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| 314 | \o It gives \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{text()} strings that are | 
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| 315 | appropriate for a generic widget. | 
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| 316 | \o It sets the \l{QAccessible::State}{states} that | 
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| 317 | are common for all widgets. | 
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| 318 | \endlist | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 | \section2 QAccessibleWidget Example | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | Instead of creating a custom widget and implementing an interface | 
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| 323 | for it, we will show how accessibility can be implemented for one of | 
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| 324 | Qt's standard widgets: QSlider. Making this widget accessible | 
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| 325 | demonstrates many of the issues that need to be faced when making | 
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| 326 | a custom widget accessible. | 
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| 327 |  | 
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| 328 | The slider is a complex control that functions as a | 
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| 329 | \l{QAccessible::}{Controller} for its accessible children. | 
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| 330 | This relationship must be known by the interface (for | 
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| 331 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{relationTo()} and | 
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| 332 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{navigate()}). This can be done | 
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| 333 | using a controlling signal, which is a mechanism provided by | 
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| 334 | QAccessibleWidget. We do this in the constructor: | 
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| 335 |  | 
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| 336 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 0 | 
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| 337 |  | 
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| 338 | The choice of signal shown is not important; the same principles | 
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| 339 | apply to all signals that are declared in this way. Note that we | 
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| 340 | use QLatin1String to ensure that the signal name is correctly | 
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| 341 | specified. | 
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| 342 |  | 
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| 343 | When an accessible object is changed in a way that users need | 
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| 344 | to know about, it notifies clients of the change by sending them | 
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| 345 | an event via the accessible interface. This is how QSlider calls | 
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| 346 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{updateAccessibility()} to indicate that | 
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| 347 | its value has changed: | 
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| 348 |  | 
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| 349 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 0 | 
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| 350 | \dots | 
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| 351 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 1 | 
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| 352 | \dots | 
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| 353 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 2 | 
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| 354 |  | 
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| 355 | Note that the call is made after the value of the slider has | 
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| 356 | changed because clients may query the new value immediately after | 
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| 357 | receiving the event. | 
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| 358 |  | 
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| 359 | The interface must be able to calculate bounding rectangles of | 
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| 360 | itself and any children that do not provide an interface of their | 
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| 361 | own. The \c QAccessibleSlider has three such children identified by | 
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| 362 | the private enum, \c SliderElements, which has the following values: | 
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| 363 | \c PageLeft (the rectangle on the left hand side of the slider | 
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| 364 | handle), \c PageRight (the rectangle on the right hand side of the | 
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| 365 | handle), and \c Position (the slider handle). Here is the | 
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| 366 | implementation of \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{rect()}: | 
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| 367 |  | 
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| 368 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 1 | 
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| 369 | \dots | 
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| 370 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 2 | 
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| 371 | \dots | 
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| 372 |  | 
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| 373 | The first part of the function, which we have omitted, uses the | 
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| 374 | current \l{QStyle}{style} to calculate the slider handle's | 
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| 375 | bounding rectangle; it is stored in \c srect. Notice that child 0, | 
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| 376 | covered in the default case in the above code, is the slider itself, | 
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| 377 | so we can simply return the QSlider bounding rectangle obtained | 
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| 378 | from the superclass, which is effectively the value obtained from | 
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| 379 | QAccessibleWidget::rect(). | 
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| 380 |  | 
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| 381 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 3 | 
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| 382 |  | 
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| 383 | Before the rectangle is returned it must be mapped to screen | 
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| 384 | coordinates. | 
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| 385 |  | 
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| 386 | The QAccessibleSlider must reimplement | 
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| 387 | QAccessibleInterface::childCount() since it manages children | 
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| 388 | without interfaces. | 
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| 389 |  | 
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| 390 | The \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{text()} function returns the | 
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| 391 | QAccessible::Text strings for the slider: | 
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| 392 |  | 
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| 393 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 4 | 
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| 394 |  | 
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| 395 | The \c slider() function returns a pointer to the interface's | 
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| 396 | QSlider. Some values are left for the superclass's implementation. | 
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| 397 | Not all values are appropriate for all accessible objects, as you | 
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| 398 | can see for QAccessible::Value case. You should just return an | 
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| 399 | empty string for those values where no relevant text can be | 
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| 400 | provided. | 
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| 401 |  | 
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| 402 | The implementation of the \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{role()} | 
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| 403 | function is straightforward: | 
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| 404 |  | 
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| 405 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 5 | 
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| 406 |  | 
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| 407 | The role function should be reimplemented by all objects and | 
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| 408 | describes the role of themselves and the children that do not | 
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| 409 | provide accessible interfaces of their own. | 
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| 410 |  | 
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| 411 | Next, the accessible interface needs to return the | 
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| 412 | \l{QAccessible::State}{states} that the slider can be in. We look | 
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| 413 | at parts of the \c state() implementation to show how just a few | 
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| 414 | of the states are handled: | 
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| 415 |  | 
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| 416 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 6 | 
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| 417 | \dots | 
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| 418 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 7 | 
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| 419 |  | 
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| 420 | The superclass implementation of | 
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| 421 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{state()}, uses the | 
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| 422 | QAccessibleInterface::state() implementation. We simply need to | 
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| 423 | disable the buttons if the slider is at its minimum or maximum. | 
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| 424 |  | 
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| 425 | We have now exposed the information we have about the slider to | 
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| 426 | the clients. For the clients to be able to alter the slider - for | 
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| 427 | example, to change its value - we must provide information about | 
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| 428 | the actions that can be performed and perform them upon request. | 
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| 429 | We discuss this in the next section. | 
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| 430 |  | 
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| 431 | \section2 Handling Action Requests from Clients | 
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| 432 |  | 
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| 433 | QAccessible provides a number of \l{QAccessible::}{Action}s | 
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| 434 | that can be performed on request from clients. If an | 
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| 435 | accessible object supports actions, it should reimplement the | 
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| 436 | following functions from QAccessibleInterface: | 
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| 437 |  | 
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| 438 | \list | 
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| 439 | \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{actionText()} returns | 
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| 440 | strings that describe each action. The descriptions | 
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| 441 | to be made available are one for each | 
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| 442 | \l{QAccessible::}{Text} enum value. | 
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| 443 | \o  \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{doAction()} executes requests | 
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| 444 | from clients to perform actions. | 
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| 445 | \endlist | 
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| 446 |  | 
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| 447 | Note that a client can request any action from an object. If | 
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| 448 | the object does not support the action, it returns false from | 
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| 449 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{doAction()}. | 
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| 450 |  | 
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| 451 | None of the standard actions take any parameters. It is possible | 
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| 452 | to provide user-defined actions that can take parameters. | 
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| 453 | The interface must then also reimplement | 
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| 454 | \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{userActionCount()}. Since this is not | 
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| 455 | defined in the MSAA specification, it is probably only useful to | 
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| 456 | use this if you know which specific AT-Clients will use the | 
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| 457 | application. | 
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| 458 |  | 
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| 459 | QAccessibleInterface gives another technique for clients to handle | 
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| 460 | accessible objects. It works basically the same way, but uses the | 
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| 461 | concept of methods in place of actions. The available methods are | 
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| 462 | defined by the QAccessible::Method enum. The following functions | 
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| 463 | need to be reimplemented from QAccessibleInterface if the | 
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| 464 | accessible object is to support methods: | 
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| 465 |  | 
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| 466 | \list | 
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| 467 | \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{supportedMethods()} returns | 
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| 468 | a QSet of \l{QAccessible::}{Method} values that are | 
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| 469 | supported by the object. | 
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| 470 | \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{invokeMethod()} executes | 
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| 471 | methods requested by clients. | 
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| 472 | \endlist | 
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| 473 |  | 
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| 474 | The action mechanism will probably be substituted by providing | 
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| 475 | methods in place of the standard actions. | 
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| 476 |  | 
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| 477 | To see examples on how to implement actions and methods, you | 
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| 478 | could examine the QAccessibleObject and QAccessibleWidget | 
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| 479 | implementations. You might also want to take a look at the | 
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| 480 | MSAA documentation. | 
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| 481 |  | 
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| 482 | \section2 Implementing Accessible Plugins | 
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| 483 |  | 
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| 484 | In this section we will explain the procedure of implementing | 
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| 485 | accessible plugins for your interfaces. A plugin is a class stored | 
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| 486 | in a shared library that can be loaded at run-time. It is | 
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| 487 | convenient to distribute interfaces as plugins since they will only | 
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| 488 | be loaded when required. | 
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| 489 |  | 
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| 490 | Creating an accessible plugin is achieved by inheriting | 
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| 491 | QAccessiblePlugin, reimplementing \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{keys()} | 
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| 492 | and \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{create()} from that class, and adding | 
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| 493 | one or two macros. The \c .pro file must be altered to use the | 
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| 494 | plugin template, and the library containing the plugin must be | 
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| 495 | placed on a path where Qt searches for accessible plugins. | 
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| 496 |  | 
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| 497 | We will go through the implementation of \c SliderPlugin, which is an | 
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| 498 | accessible plugin that produces interfaces for the | 
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| 499 | QAccessibleSlider we implemented in the \l{QAccessibleWidget Example}. | 
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| 500 | We start with the \c key() function: | 
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| 501 |  | 
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| 502 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 0 | 
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| 503 |  | 
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| 504 | We simply need to return the class name of the single interface | 
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| 505 | our plugin can create an accessible interface for. A plugin | 
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| 506 | can support any number of classes; just add more class names | 
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| 507 | to the string list. We move on to the \c create() function: | 
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| 508 |  | 
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| 509 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 1 | 
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| 510 |  | 
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| 511 | We check whether the interface requested is for the QSlider; if it | 
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| 512 | is, we create and return an interface for it. Note that \c object | 
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| 513 | will always be an instance of \c classname. You must return 0 if | 
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| 514 | you do not support the class. | 
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| 515 | \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()} checks with the | 
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| 516 | available accessibility plugins until it finds one that does not | 
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| 517 | return 0. | 
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| 518 |  | 
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| 519 | Finally, you need to include macros in the cpp file: | 
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| 520 |  | 
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| 521 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 2 | 
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| 522 |  | 
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| 523 | The Q_EXPORT_PLUGIN2 macro exports the plugin in the \c | 
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| 524 | SliderPlugin class into the \c acc_sliderplugin library. The first | 
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| 525 | argument is the name of the plugin library file, excluding the | 
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| 526 | file suffix, and the second is the class name. For more information | 
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| 527 | on plugins, consult the plugins \l{How to Create Qt | 
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| 528 | Plugins}{overview document}. | 
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| 529 |  | 
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| 530 | You can omit the the first macro unless you want the plugin | 
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| 531 | to be statically linked with the application. | 
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| 532 |  | 
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| 533 | \section2 Implementing Interface Factories | 
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| 534 |  | 
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| 535 | If you do not want to provide plugins for your accessibility | 
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| 536 | interfaces, you can use an interface factory | 
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| 537 | (QAccessible::InterfaceFactory), which is the recommended way to | 
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| 538 | provide accessible interfaces in a statically-linked application. | 
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| 539 |  | 
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| 540 | A factory is a function pointer for a function that takes the same | 
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| 541 | parameters as \l{QAccessiblePlugin}'s | 
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| 542 | \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{create()} - a QString and a QObject. It | 
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| 543 | also works the same way. You install the factory with the | 
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| 544 | \l{QAccessible::}{installFactory()} function. We give an example | 
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| 545 | of how to create a factory for the \c SliderPlugin class: | 
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| 546 |  | 
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| 547 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityfactorysnippet.cpp 0 | 
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| 548 | \dots | 
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| 549 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityfactorysnippet.cpp 1 | 
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| 550 |  | 
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| 551 | \omit | 
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| 552 |  | 
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| 553 | \section1 Implementing Bridges for Other Assistive Technologies | 
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| 554 |  | 
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| 555 | An accessibility bridge provides the means for an assistive | 
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| 556 | technology to talk to Qt. On Windows and Mac, the built-in bridges | 
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| 557 | will be used. On UNIX, however, there are no built-in standard | 
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| 558 | assistive technology, and it might therefore be necessary to | 
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| 559 | implement an accessible bridge. | 
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| 560 |  | 
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| 561 | A bridge is implemented by inheriting QAccessibleBridge for the | 
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| 562 | technology to support. The class defines the interface that Qt | 
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| 563 | needs an assistive technology to support: | 
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| 564 |  | 
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| 565 | \list | 
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| 566 | \o A root object. This is the root in the accessible | 
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| 567 | object tree and is of type QAccessibleInterface. | 
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| 568 | \o Receive events from from accessible objects. | 
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| 569 | \endlist | 
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| 570 |  | 
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| 571 | The root object is set with the | 
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| 572 | \l{QAccessibleBridge::}{setRootObject()}. In the case of Qt, this | 
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| 573 | will always be an interface for the QApplication instance of the | 
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| 574 | application. | 
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| 575 |  | 
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| 576 | Event notification is sent through | 
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| 577 | \l{QAccessibleBridge::}{notifyAccessibilityUpdate()}. This | 
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| 578 | function is called by \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}. Even | 
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| 579 | though the bridge needs only to implement these two functions, it | 
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| 580 | must be able to communicate the entire QAccessibleInterface to the | 
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| 581 | underlying technology. How this is achieved is, naturally, up to | 
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| 582 | the individual bridge and none of Qt's concern. | 
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| 583 |  | 
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| 584 | As with accessible interfaces, you distribute accessible bridges | 
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| 585 | in plugins. Accessible bridge plugins are subclasses of the | 
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| 586 | QAccessibleBridgePlugin class; the class defines the functions | 
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| 587 | \l{QAccessibleBridgePlugin::}{create()} and | 
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| 588 | \l{QAccessibleBridgePlugin::}{keys()}, which must me | 
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| 589 | reimplemented. If Qt finds a built-in bridge to use, it will | 
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| 590 | ignore any available plugins. | 
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| 591 |  | 
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| 592 | \endomit | 
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| 593 |  | 
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| 594 | \section1 Further Reading | 
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| 595 |  | 
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| 596 | The \l{Cross-Platform Accessibility Support in Qt 4} document contains a more | 
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| 597 | general overview of Qt's accessibility features and discusses how it is | 
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| 598 | used on each platform. | 
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| 599 | issues | 
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| 600 | */ | 
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