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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \example mainwindows/application | 
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| 44 | \title Application Example | 
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| 45 |  | 
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| 46 | The Application example shows how to implement a standard GUI | 
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| 47 | application with menus, toolbars, and a status bar. The example | 
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| 48 | itself is a simple text editor program built around QTextEdit. | 
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| 49 |  | 
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| 50 | \image application.png Screenshot of the Application example | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 | Nearly all of the code for the Application example is in the \c | 
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| 53 | MainWindow class, which inherits QMainWindow. QMainWindow | 
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| 54 | provides the framework for windows that have menus, toolbars, | 
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| 55 | dock windows, and a status bar. The application provides | 
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| 56 | \menu{File}, \menu{Edit}, and \menu{Help} entries in the menu | 
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| 57 | bar, with the following popup menus: | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | \image application-menus.png The Application example's menu system | 
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| 60 |  | 
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| 61 | The status bar at the bottom of the main window shows a | 
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| 62 | description of the menu item or toolbar button under the cursor. | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | To keep the example simple, recently opened files aren't shown in | 
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| 65 | the \menu{File} menu, even though this feature is desired in 90% | 
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| 66 | of applications. The \l{mainwindows/recentfiles}{Recent Files} | 
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| 67 | example shows how to implement this. Furthermore, this example | 
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| 68 | can only load one file at a time. The \l{mainwindows/sdi}{SDI} | 
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| 69 | and \l{mainwindows/mdi}{MDI} examples shows how to lift these | 
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| 70 | restrictions. | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | \section1 MainWindow Class Definition | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | Here's the class definition: | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.h 0 | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | The public API is restricted to the constructor. In the \c | 
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| 79 | protected section, we reimplement QWidget::closeEvent() to detect | 
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| 80 | when the user attempts to close the window, and warn the user | 
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| 81 | about unsaved changes. In the \c{private slots} section, we | 
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| 82 | declare slots that correspond to menu entries, as well as a | 
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| 83 | mysterious \c documentWasModified() slot. Finally, in the \c | 
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| 84 | private section of the class, we have various members that will | 
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| 85 | be explained in due time. | 
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| 86 |  | 
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| 87 | \section1 MainWindow Class Implementation | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 0 | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | We start by including \c <QtGui>, a header file that contains the | 
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| 92 | definition of all classes in the \l QtCore and \l QtGui | 
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| 93 | libraries. This saves us from the trouble of having to include | 
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| 94 | every class individually. We also include \c mainwindow.h. | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | You might wonder why we don't include \c <QtGui> in \c | 
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| 97 | mainwindow.h and be done with it. The reason is that including | 
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| 98 | such a large header from another header file can rapidly degrade | 
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| 99 | performances. Here, it wouldn't do any harm, but it's still | 
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| 100 | generally a good idea to include only the header files that are | 
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| 101 | strictly necessary from another header file. | 
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| 102 |  | 
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| 103 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 1 | 
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| 104 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 2 | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | In the constructor, we start by creating a QTextEdit widget as a | 
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| 107 | child of the main window (the \c this object). Then we call | 
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| 108 | QMainWindow::setCentralWidget() to tell that this is going to be | 
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| 109 | the widget that occupies the central area of the main window, | 
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| 110 | between the toolbars and the status bar. | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | Then we call \c createActions(), \c createMenus(), \c | 
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| 113 | createToolBars(), and \c createStatusBar(), four private | 
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| 114 | functions that set up the user interface. After that, we call \c | 
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| 115 | readSettings() to restore the user's preferences. | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | We establish a signal-slot connection between the QTextEdit's | 
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| 118 | document object and our \c documentWasModified() slot. Whenever | 
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| 119 | the user modifies the text in the QTextEdit, we want to update | 
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| 120 | the title bar to show that the file was modified. | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | At the end, we set the window title using the private | 
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| 123 | \c setCurrentFile() function. We'll come back to this later. | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | \target close event handler | 
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| 126 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 3 | 
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| 127 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 4 | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | When the user attempts to close the window, we call the private | 
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| 130 | function \c maybeSave() to give the user the possibility to save | 
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| 131 | pending changes. The function returns true if the user wants the | 
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| 132 | application to close; otherwise, it returns false. In the first | 
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| 133 | case, we save the user's preferences to disk and accept the close | 
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| 134 | event; in the second case, we ignore the close event, meaning | 
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| 135 | that the application will stay up and running as if nothing | 
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| 136 | happened. | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 5 | 
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| 139 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 6 | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | The \c newFile() slot is invoked when the user selects | 
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| 142 | \menu{File|New} from the menu. We call \c maybeSave() to save any | 
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| 143 | pending changes and if the user accepts to go on, we clear the | 
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| 144 | QTextEdit and call the private function \c setCurrentFile() to | 
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| 145 | update the window title and clear the | 
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| 146 | \l{QWidget::windowModified}{windowModified} flag. | 
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| 147 |  | 
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| 148 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 7 | 
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| 149 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 8 | 
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| 150 |  | 
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| 151 | The \c open() slot is invoked when the user clicks | 
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| 152 | \menu{File|Open}. We pop up a QFileDialog asking the user to | 
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| 153 | choose a file. If the user chooses a file (i.e., \c fileName is | 
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| 154 | not an empty string), we call the private function \c loadFile() | 
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| 155 | to actually load the file. | 
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| 156 |  | 
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| 157 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 9 | 
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| 158 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 10 | 
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| 159 |  | 
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| 160 | The \c save() slot is invoked when the user clicks | 
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| 161 | \menu{File|Save}. If the user hasn't provided a name for the file | 
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| 162 | yet, we call \c saveAs(); otherwise, we call the private function | 
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| 163 | \c saveFile() to actually save the file. | 
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| 164 |  | 
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| 165 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 11 | 
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| 166 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 12 | 
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| 167 |  | 
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| 168 | In \c saveAs(), we start by popping up a QFileDialog asking the | 
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| 169 | user to provide a name. If the user clicks \gui{Cancel}, the | 
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| 170 | returned file name is empty, and we do nothing. | 
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| 171 |  | 
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| 172 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 13 | 
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| 173 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 14 | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | The application's About box is done using one statement, using | 
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| 176 | the QMessageBox::about() static function and relying on its | 
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| 177 | support for an HTML subset. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | The \l{QObject::tr()}{tr()} call around the literal string marks | 
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| 180 | the string for translation. It is a good habit to call | 
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| 181 | \l{QObject::tr()}{tr()} on all user-visible strings, in case you | 
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| 182 | later decide to translate your application to other languages. | 
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| 183 | The \l{Internationalization with Qt} overview convers | 
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| 184 | \l{QObject::tr()}{tr()} in more detail. | 
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| 185 |  | 
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| 186 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 15 | 
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| 187 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 16 | 
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| 188 |  | 
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| 189 | The \c documentWasModified() slot is invoked each time the text | 
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| 190 | in the QTextEdit changes because of user edits. We call | 
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| 191 | QWidget::setWindowModified() to make the title bar show that the | 
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| 192 | file was modified. How this is done varies on each platform. | 
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| 193 |  | 
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| 194 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 17 | 
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| 195 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 18 | 
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| 196 | \dots | 
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| 197 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 22 | 
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| 198 |  | 
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| 199 | The \c createActions() private function, which is called from the | 
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| 200 | \c MainWindow constructor, creates \l{QAction}s. The code is very | 
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| 201 | repetitive, so we show only the actions corresponding to | 
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| 202 | \menu{File|New}, \menu{File|Open}, and \menu{Help|About Qt}. | 
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| 203 |  | 
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| 204 | A QAction is an object that represents one user action, such as | 
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| 205 | saving a file or invoking a dialog. An action can be put in a | 
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| 206 | QMenu or a QToolBar, or both, or in any other widget that | 
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| 207 | reimplements QWidget::actionEvent(). | 
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| 208 |  | 
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| 209 | An action has a text that is shown in the menu, an icon, a | 
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| 210 | shortcut key, a tooltip, a status tip (shown in the status bar), | 
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| 211 | a "What's This?" text, and more. It emits a | 
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| 212 | \l{QAction::triggered()}{triggered()} signal whenever the user | 
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| 213 | invokes the action (e.g., by clicking the associated menu item or | 
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| 214 | toolbar button). We connect this signal to a slot that performs | 
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| 215 | the actual action. | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | The code above contains one more idiom that must be explained. | 
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| 218 | For some of the actions, we specify an icon as a QIcon to the | 
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| 219 | QAction constructor. The QIcon constructor takes the file name | 
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| 220 | of an image that it tries to load. Here, the file name starts | 
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| 221 | with \c{:}. Such file names aren't ordinary file names, but | 
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| 222 | rather path in the executable's stored resources. We'll come back | 
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| 223 | to this when we review the \c application.qrc file that's part of | 
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| 224 | the project. | 
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| 225 |  | 
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| 226 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 23 | 
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| 227 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 24 | 
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| 228 |  | 
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| 229 | The \gui{Edit|Cut} and \gui{Edit|Copy} actions must be available | 
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| 230 | only when the QTextEdit contains selected text. We disable them | 
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| 231 | by default and connect the QTextEdit::copyAvailable() signal to | 
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| 232 | the QAction::setEnabled() slot, ensuring that the actions are | 
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| 233 | disabled when the text editor has no selection. | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 25 | 
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| 236 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 27 | 
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| 237 |  | 
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| 238 | Creating actions isn't sufficient to make them available to the | 
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| 239 | user; we must also add them to the menu system. This is what \c | 
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| 240 | createMenus() does. We create a \menu{File}, an \menu{Edit}, and | 
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| 241 | a \menu{Help} menu. QMainWindow::menuBar() lets us access the | 
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| 242 | window's menu bar widget. We don't have to worry about creating | 
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| 243 | the menu bar ourselves; the first time we call this function, the | 
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| 244 | QMenuBar is created. | 
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| 245 |  | 
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| 246 | Just before we create the \menu{Help} menu, we call | 
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| 247 | QMenuBar::addSeparator(). This has no effect for most widget | 
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| 248 | styles (e.g., Windows and Mac OS X styles), but for Motif-based | 
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| 249 | styles this makes sure that \menu{Help} is pushed to the right | 
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| 250 | side of the menu bar. Try running the application with various | 
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| 251 | styles and see the results: | 
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| 252 |  | 
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| 253 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_examples_application.qdoc 0 | 
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| 254 |  | 
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| 255 | Let's now review the toolbars: | 
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| 256 |  | 
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| 257 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 30 | 
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| 258 |  | 
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| 259 | Creating toolbars is very similar to creating menus. The same | 
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| 260 | actions that we put in the menus can be reused in the toolbars. | 
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| 261 |  | 
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| 262 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 32 | 
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| 263 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 33 | 
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| 264 |  | 
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| 265 | QMainWindow::statusBar() returns a pointer to the main window's | 
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| 266 | QStatusBar widget. Like with \l{QMainWindow::menuBar()}, the | 
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| 267 | widget is automatically created the first time the function is | 
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| 268 | called. | 
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| 269 |  | 
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| 270 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 34 | 
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| 271 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 36 | 
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| 272 |  | 
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| 273 | The \c readSettings() function is called from the constructor to | 
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| 274 | load the user's preferences and other application settings. The | 
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| 275 | QSettings class provides a high-level interface for storing | 
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| 276 | settings permanently on disk. On Windows, it uses the (in)famous | 
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| 277 | Windows registry; on Mac OS X, it uses the native XML-based | 
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| 278 | CFPreferences API; on Unix/X11, it uses text files. | 
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| 279 |  | 
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| 280 | The QSettings constructor takes arguments that identify your | 
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| 281 | company and the name of the product. This ensures that the | 
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| 282 | settings for different applications are kept separately. | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 | We use QSettings::value() to extract the value of the "pos" and | 
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| 285 | "size" settings. The second argument to QSettings::value() is | 
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| 286 | optional and specifies a default value for the setting if there | 
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| 287 | exists none. This value is used the first time the application is | 
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| 288 | run. | 
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| 289 |  | 
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| 290 | When restoring the position and size of a window, it's important | 
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| 291 | to call QWidget::resize() before QWidget::move(). The reason why | 
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| 292 | is given in the \l{geometry.html}{Window Geometry} overview. | 
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| 293 |  | 
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| 294 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 37 | 
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| 295 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 39 | 
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| 296 |  | 
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| 297 | The \c writeSettings() function is called from \c closeEvent(). | 
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| 298 | Writing settings is similar to reading them, except simpler. The | 
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| 299 | arguments to the QSettings constructor must be the same as in \c | 
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| 300 | readSettings(). | 
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| 301 |  | 
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| 302 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 40 | 
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| 303 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 41 | 
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| 304 |  | 
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| 305 | The \c maybeSave() function is called to save pending changes. If | 
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| 306 | there are pending changes, it pops up a QMessageBox giving the | 
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| 307 | user to save the document. The options are QMessageBox::Yes, | 
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| 308 | QMessageBox::No, and QMessageBox::Cancel. The \gui{Yes} button is | 
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| 309 | made the default button (the button that is invoked when the user | 
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| 310 | presses \key{Return}) using the QMessageBox::Default flag; the | 
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| 311 | \gui{Cancel} button is made the escape button (the button that is | 
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| 312 | invoked when the user presses \key{Esc}) using the | 
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| 313 | QMessageBox::Escape flag. | 
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| 314 |  | 
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| 315 | The \c maybeSave() function returns \c true in all cases, except | 
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| 316 | when the user clicks \gui{Cancel}. The caller must check the | 
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| 317 | return value and stop whatever it was doing if the return value | 
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| 318 | is \c false. | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 42 | 
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| 321 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 43 | 
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| 322 |  | 
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| 323 | In \c loadFile(), we use QFile and QTextStream to read in the | 
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| 324 | data. The QFile object provides access to the bytes stored in a | 
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| 325 | file. | 
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| 326 |  | 
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| 327 | We start by opening the file in read-only mode. The QFile::Text | 
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| 328 | flag indicates that the file is a text file, not a binary file. | 
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| 329 | On Unix and Mac OS X, this makes no difference, but on Windows, | 
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| 330 | it ensures that the "\\r\\n" end-of-line sequence is converted to | 
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| 331 | "\\n" when reading. | 
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| 332 |  | 
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| 333 | If we successfully opened the file, we use a QTextStream object | 
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| 334 | to read in the data. QTextStream automatically converts the 8-bit | 
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| 335 | data into a Unicode QString and supports various encodings. If no | 
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| 336 | encoding is specified, QTextStream assumes the file is written | 
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| 337 | using the system's default 8-bit encoding (for example, Latin-1; | 
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| 338 | see QTextCodec::codecForLocale() for details). | 
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| 339 |  | 
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| 340 | Since the call to QTextStream::readAll() might take some time, we | 
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| 341 | set the cursor to be Qt::WaitCursor for the entire application | 
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| 342 | while it goes on. | 
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| 343 |  | 
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| 344 | At the end, we call the private \c setCurrentFile() function, | 
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| 345 | which we'll cover in a moment, and we display the string "File | 
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| 346 | loaded" in the status bar for 2 seconds (2000 milliseconds). | 
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| 347 |  | 
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| 348 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 44 | 
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| 349 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 45 | 
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| 350 |  | 
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| 351 | Saving a file is very similar to loading one. Here, the | 
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| 352 | QFile::Text flag ensures that on Windows, "\\n" is converted into | 
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| 353 | "\\r\\n" to conform to the Windows convension. | 
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| 354 |  | 
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| 355 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 46 | 
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| 356 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 47 | 
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| 357 |  | 
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| 358 | The \c setCurrentFile() function is called to reset the state of | 
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| 359 | a few variables when a file is loaded or saved, or when the user | 
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| 360 | starts editing a new file (in which case \c fileName is empty). | 
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| 361 | We update the \c curFile variable, clear the | 
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| 362 | QTextDocument::modified flag and the associated \c | 
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| 363 | QWidget:windowModified flag, and update the window title to | 
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| 364 | contain the new file name (or \c untitled.txt). | 
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| 365 |  | 
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| 366 | The \c strippedName() function call around \c curFile in the | 
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| 367 | QWidget::setWindowTitle() call shortens the file name to exclude | 
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| 368 | the path. Here's the function: | 
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| 369 |  | 
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| 370 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 48 | 
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| 371 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/mainwindow.cpp 49 | 
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| 372 |  | 
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| 373 | \section1 The main() Function | 
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| 374 |  | 
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| 375 | The \c main() function for this application is typical of | 
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| 376 | applications that contain one main window: | 
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| 377 |  | 
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| 378 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/main.cpp 0 | 
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| 379 |  | 
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| 380 | \section1 The Resource File | 
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| 381 |  | 
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| 382 | As you will probably recall, for some of the actions, we | 
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| 383 | specified icons with file names starting with \c{:} and mentioned | 
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| 384 | that such file names aren't ordinary file names, but path in the | 
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| 385 | executable's stored resources. These resources are compiled | 
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| 386 |  | 
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| 387 | The resources associated with an application are specified in a | 
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| 388 | \c .qrc file, an XML-based file format that lists files on the | 
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| 389 | disk. Here's the \c application.qrc file that's used by the | 
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| 390 | Application example: | 
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| 391 |  | 
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| 392 | \quotefile mainwindows/application/application.qrc | 
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| 393 |  | 
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| 394 | The \c .png files listed in the \c application.qrc file are files | 
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| 395 | that are part of the Application example's source tree. Paths are | 
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| 396 | relative to the directory where the \c application.qrc file is | 
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| 397 | located (the \c mainwindows/application directory). | 
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| 398 |  | 
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| 399 | The resource file must be mentioned in the \c application.pro | 
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| 400 | file  so that \c qmake knows about it: | 
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| 401 |  | 
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| 402 | \snippet examples/mainwindows/application/application.pro 0 | 
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| 403 |  | 
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| 404 | \c qmake will produce make rules to generate a file called \c | 
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| 405 | qrc_application.cpp that is linked into the application. This | 
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| 406 | file contains all the data for the images and other resources as | 
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| 407 | static C++ arrays of compressed binary data. See | 
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| 408 | \l{resources.html}{The Qt Resource System} for more information | 
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| 409 | about resources. | 
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| 410 | */ | 
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