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40 | ****************************************************************************/
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41 |
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42 | /*!
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43 | \example painting/basicdrawing
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44 | \title Basic Drawing Example
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45 |
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46 | The Basic Drawing example shows how to display basic graphics
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47 | primitives in a variety of styles using the QPainter class.
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48 |
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49 | QPainter performs low-level painting on widgets and other paint
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50 | devices. The class can draw everything from simple lines to
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51 | complex shapes like pies and chords. It can also draw aligned text
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52 | and pixmaps. Normally, it draws in a "natural" coordinate system,
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53 | but it can in addition do view and world transformation.
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54 |
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55 | \image basicdrawing-example.png
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56 |
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57 | The example provides a render area, displaying the currently
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58 | active shape, and lets the user manipulate the rendered shape and
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59 | its appearance using the QPainter parameters: The user can change
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60 | the active shape (\gui Shape), and modify the QPainter's pen (\gui
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61 | {Pen Width}, \gui {Pen Style}, \gui {Pen Cap}, \gui {Pen Join}),
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62 | brush (\gui {Brush Style}) and render hints (\gui
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63 | Antialiasing). In addition the user can rotate a shape (\gui
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64 | Transformations); behind the scenes we use QPainter's ability to
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65 | manipulate the coordinate system to perform the rotation.
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66 |
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67 | The Basic Drawing example consists of two classes:
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68 |
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69 | \list
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70 | \o \c RenderArea is a custom widget that renders multiple
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71 | copies of the currently active shape.
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72 | \o \c Window is the application's main window displaying a
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73 | \c RenderArea widget in addition to several parameter widgets.
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74 | \endlist
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75 |
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76 | First we will review the \c Window class, then we will take a
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77 | look at the \c RenderArea class.
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78 |
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79 | \section1 Window Class Definition
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80 |
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81 | The Window class inherits QWidget, and is the application's main
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82 | window displaying a \c RenderArea widget in addition to several
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83 | parameter widgets.
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84 |
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85 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.h 0
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86 |
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87 | We declare the various widgets, and three private slots updating
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88 | the \c RenderArea widget: The \c shapeChanged() slot updates the
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89 | \c RenderArea widget when the user changes the currently active
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90 | shape. We call the \c penChanged() slot when either of the
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91 | QPainter's pen parameters changes. And the \c brushChanged() slot
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92 | updates the \c RenderArea widget when the user changes the
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93 | painter's brush style.
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94 |
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95 | \section1 Window Class Implementation
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96 |
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97 | In the constructor we create and initialize the various widgets
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98 | appearing in the main application window.
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99 |
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100 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 1
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101 |
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102 | First we create the \c RenderArea widget that will render the
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103 | currently active shape. Then we create the \gui Shape combobox,
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104 | and add the associated items (i.e. the different shapes a QPainter
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105 | can draw).
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106 |
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107 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 2
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108 |
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109 | QPainter's pen is a QPen object; the QPen class defines how a
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110 | painter should draw lines and outlines of shapes. A pen has
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111 | several properties: Width, style, cap and join.
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112 |
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113 | A pen's width can be \e zero or greater, but the most common width
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114 | is zero. Note that this doesn't mean 0 pixels, but implies that
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115 | the shape is drawn as smoothly as possible although perhaps not
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116 | mathematically correct.
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117 |
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118 | We create a QSpinBox for the \gui {Pen Width} parameter.
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119 |
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120 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 3
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121 |
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122 | The pen style defines the line type. The default style is solid
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123 | (Qt::SolidLine). Setting the style to none (Qt::NoPen) tells the
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124 | painter to not draw lines or outlines. The pen cap defines how
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125 | the end points of lines are drawn. And the pen join defines how
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126 | two lines join when multiple connected lines are drawn. The cap
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127 | and join only apply to lines with a width of 1 pixel or greater.
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128 |
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129 | We create \l {QComboBox}es for each of the \gui {Pen Style}, \gui
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130 | {Pen Cap} and \gui {Pen Join} parameters, and adds the associated
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131 | items (i.e the values of the Qt::PenStyle, Qt::PenCapStyle and
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132 | Qt::PenJoinStyle enums respectively).
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133 |
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134 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 4
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135 |
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136 | The QBrush class defines the fill pattern of shapes drawn by a
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137 | QPainter. The default brush style is Qt::NoBrush. This style tells
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138 | the painter to not fill shapes. The standard style for filling is
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139 | Qt::SolidPattern.
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140 |
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141 | We create a QComboBox for the \gui {Brush Style} parameter, and add
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142 | the associated items (i.e. the values of the Qt::BrushStyle enum).
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143 |
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144 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 5
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145 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 6
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146 |
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147 | Antialiasing is a feature that "smoothes" the pixels to create
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148 | more even and less jagged lines, and can be applied using
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149 | QPainter's render hints. QPainter::RenderHints are used to specify
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150 | flags to QPainter that may or may not be respected by any given
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151 | engine.
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152 |
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153 | We simply create a QCheckBox for the \gui Antialiasing option.
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154 |
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155 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 7
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156 |
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157 | The \gui Transformations option implies a manipulation of the
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158 | coordinate system that will appear as if the rendered shape is
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159 | rotated in three dimensions.
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160 |
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161 | We use the QPainter::translate(), QPainter::rotate() and
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162 | QPainter::scale() functions to implement this feature represented
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163 | in the main application window by a simple QCheckBox.
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164 |
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165 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 8
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166 |
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167 | Then we connect the parameter widgets with their associated slots
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168 | using the static QObject::connect() function, ensuring that the \c
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169 | RenderArea widget is updated whenever the user changes the shape,
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170 | or any of the other parameters.
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171 |
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172 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 9
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173 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 10
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174 |
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175 | Finally, we add the various widgets to a layout, and call the \c
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176 | shapeChanged(), \c penChanged(), and \c brushChanged() slots to
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177 | initialize the application. We also turn on antialiasing.
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178 |
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179 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 11
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180 |
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181 | The \c shapeChanged() slot is called whenever the user changes the
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182 | currently active shape.
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183 |
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184 | First we retrieve the shape the user has chosen using the
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185 | QComboBox::itemData() function. This function returns the data for
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186 | the given role in the given index in the combobox. We use
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187 | QComboBox::currentIndex() to retrieve the index of the shape, and
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188 | the role is defined by the Qt::ItemDataRole enum; \c IdRole is an
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189 | alias for Qt::UserRole.
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190 |
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191 | Note that Qt::UserRole is only the first role that can be used for
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192 | application-specific purposes. If you need to store different data
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193 | in the same index, you can use different roles by simply
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194 | incrementing the value of Qt::UserRole, for example: 'Qt::UserRole
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195 | + 1' and 'Qt::UserRole + 2'. However, it is a good programming
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196 | practice to give each role their own name: 'myFirstRole =
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197 | Qt::UserRole + 1' and 'mySecondRole = Qt::UserRole + 2'. Even
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198 | though we only need a single role in this particular example, we
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199 | add the following line of code to the beginning of the \c
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200 | window.cpp file.
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201 |
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202 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 0
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203 |
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204 | The QComboBox::itemData() function returns the data as a QVariant,
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205 | so we need to cast the data to \c RenderArea::Shape. If there is
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206 | no data for the given role, the function returns
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207 | QVariant::Invalid.
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208 |
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209 | In the end we call the \c RenderArea::setShape() slot to update
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210 | the \c RenderArea widget.
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211 |
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212 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 12
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213 |
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214 | We call the \c penChanged() slot whenever the user changes any of
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215 | the pen parameters. Again we use the QComboBox::itemData()
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216 | function to retrieve the parameters, and then we call the \c
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217 | RenderArea::setPen() slot to update the \c RenderArea widget.
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218 |
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219 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 13
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220 |
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221 | The brushChanged() slot is called whenever the user changes the
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222 | brush parameter which we retrieve using the QComboBox::itemData()
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223 | function as before.
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224 |
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225 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 14
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226 |
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227 | If the brush parameter is a gradient fill, special actions are
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228 | required.
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229 |
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230 | The QGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify
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231 | gradient fills. Qt currently supports three types of gradient
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232 | fills: linear, radial and conical. Each of these is represented by
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233 | a subclass of QGradient: QLinearGradient, QRadialGradient and
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234 | QConicalGradient.
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235 |
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236 | So if the brush style is Qt::LinearGradientPattern, we first
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237 | create a QLinearGradient object with interpolation area between
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238 | the coordinates passed as arguments to the constructor. The
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239 | positions are specified using logical coordinates. Then we set the
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240 | gradient's colors using the QGradient::setColorAt() function. The
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241 | colors is defined using stop points which are composed by a
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242 | position (between 0 and 1) and a QColor. The set of stop points
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243 | describes how the gradient area should be filled. A gradient can
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244 | have an arbitrary number of stop points.
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245 |
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246 | In the end we call \c RenderArea::setBrush() slot to update the \c
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247 | RenderArea widget's brush with the QLinearGradient object.
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248 |
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249 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 15
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250 |
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251 | A similar pattern of actions, as the one used for QLinearGradient,
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252 | is used in the cases of Qt::RadialGradientPattern and
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253 | Qt::ConicalGradientPattern.
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254 |
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255 | The only difference is the arguments passed to the constructor:
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256 | Regarding the QRadialGradient constructor the first argument is
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257 | the center, and the second the radial gradient's radius. The third
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258 | argument is optional, but can be used to define the focal point of
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259 | the gradient inside the circle (the default focal point is the
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260 | circle center). Regarding the QConicalGradient constructor, the
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261 | first argument specifies the center of the conical, and the second
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262 | specifies the start angle of the interpolation.
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263 |
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264 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 16
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265 |
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266 | If the brush style is Qt::TexturePattern we create a QBrush from a
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267 | QPixmap. Then we call \c RenderArea::setBrush() slot to update the
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268 | \c RenderArea widget with the newly created brush.
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269 |
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270 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/window.cpp 17
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271 |
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272 | Otherwise we simply create a brush with the given style and a
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273 | green color, and then call \c RenderArea::setBrush() slot to
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274 | update the \c RenderArea widget with the newly created brush.
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275 |
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276 | \section1 RenderArea Class Definition
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277 |
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278 | The \c RenderArea class inherits QWidget, and renders multiple
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279 | copies of the currently active shape using a QPainter.
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280 |
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281 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.h 0
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282 |
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283 | First we define a public \c Shape enum to hold the different
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284 | shapes that can be rendered by the widget (i.e the shapes that can
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285 | be rendered by a QPainter). Then we reimplement the constructor as
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286 | well as two of QWidget's public functions: \l
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287 | {QWidget::minimumSizeHint()}{minimumSizeHint()} and \l
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288 | {QWidget::sizeHint()}{sizeHint()}.
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289 |
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290 | We also reimplement the QWidget::paintEvent() function to be able
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291 | to draw the currently active shape according to the specified
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292 | parameters.
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293 |
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294 | We declare several private slots: The \c setShape() slot changes
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295 | the \c RenderArea's shape, the \c setPen() and \c setBrush() slots
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296 | modify the widget's pen and brush, and the \c setAntialiased() and
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297 | \c setTransformed() slots modify the widget's respective
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298 | properties.
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299 |
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300 | \section1 RenderArea Class Implementation
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301 |
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302 | In the constructor we initialize some of the widget's variables.
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303 |
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304 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 0
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305 |
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306 | We set its shape to be a \gui Polygon, its antialiased property to
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307 | be false and we load an image into the widget's pixmap
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308 | variable. In the end we set the widget's background role, defining
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309 | the brush from the widget's \l {QWidget::palette}{palette} that
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310 | will be used to render the background. QPalette::Base is typically
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311 | white.
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312 |
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313 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 2
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314 |
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315 | The \c RenderArea inherits QWidget's \l
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316 | {QWidget::sizeHint()}{sizeHint} property holding the recommended
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317 | size for the widget. If the value of this property is an invalid
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318 | size, no size is recommended.
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319 |
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320 | The default implementation of the QWidget::sizeHint() function
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321 | returns an invalid size if there is no layout for the widget, and
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322 | returns the layout's preferred size otherwise.
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323 |
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324 | Our reimplementation of the function returns a QSize with a 400
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325 | pixels width and a 200 pixels height.
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326 |
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327 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 1
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328 |
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329 | \c RenderArea also inherits QWidget's
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330 | \l{QWidget::minimumSizeHint()}{minimumSizeHint} property holding
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331 | the recommended minimum size for the widget. Again, if the value
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332 | of this property is an invalid size, no size is recommended.
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333 |
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334 | The default implementation of QWidget::minimumSizeHint() returns
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335 | an invalid size if there is no layout for the widget, and returns
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336 | the layout's minimum size otherwise.
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337 |
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338 | Our reimplementation of the function returns a QSize with a 100
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339 | pixels width and a 100 pixels height.
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340 |
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341 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 3
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342 | \codeline
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343 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 4
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344 | \codeline
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345 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 5
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346 |
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347 | The public \c setShape(), \c setPen() and \c setBrush() slots are
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348 | called whenever we want to modify a \c RenderArea widget's shape,
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349 | pen or brush. We set the shape, pen or brush according to the
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350 | slot parameter, and call QWidget::update() to make the changes
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351 | visible in the \c RenderArea widget.
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352 |
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353 | The QWidget::update() slot does not cause an immediate
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354 | repaint; instead it schedules a paint event for processing when Qt
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355 | returns to the main event loop.
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356 |
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357 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 6
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358 | \codeline
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359 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 7
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360 |
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361 | With the \c setAntialiased() and \c setTransformed() slots we
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362 | change the state of the properties according to the slot
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363 | parameter, and call the QWidget::update() slot to make the changes
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364 | visible in the \c RenderArea widget.
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365 |
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366 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 8
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367 |
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368 | Then we reimplement the QWidget::paintEvent() function. The first
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369 | thing we do is to create the graphical objects we will need to
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370 | draw the various shapes.
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371 |
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372 | We create a vector of four \l {QPoint}s. We use this vector to
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373 | render the \gui Points, \gui Polyline and \gui Polygon
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374 | shapes. Then we create a QRect, defining a rectangle in the plane,
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375 | which we use as the bounding rectangle for all the shapes excluding
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376 | the \gui Path and the \gui Pixmap.
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377 |
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378 | We also create a QPainterPath. The QPainterPath class provides a
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379 | container for painting operations, enabling graphical shapes to be
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380 | constructed and reused. A painter path is an object composed of a
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381 | number of graphical building blocks, such as rectangles, ellipses,
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382 | lines, and curves. For more information about the QPainterPath
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383 | class, see the \l {painting/painterpaths}{Painter Paths}
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384 | example. In this example, we create a painter path composed of one
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385 | straight line and a Bezier curve.
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386 |
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387 | In addition we define a start angle and an arc length that we will
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388 | use when drawing the \gui Arc, \gui Chord and \gui Pie shapes.
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389 |
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390 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 9
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391 |
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392 | We create a QPainter for the \c RenderArea widget, and set the
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393 | painters pen and brush according to the \c RenderArea's pen and
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394 | brush. If the \gui Antialiasing parameter option is checked, we
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395 | also set the painter's render hints. QPainter::Antialiasing
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396 | indicates that the engine should antialias edges of primitives if
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397 | possible.
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398 |
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399 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 10
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400 |
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401 | Finally, we render the multiple copies of the \c RenderArea's
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402 | shape. The number of copies is depending on the size of the \c
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403 | RenderArea widget, and we calculate their positions using two \c
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404 | for loops and the widgets height and width.
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405 |
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406 | For each copy we first save the current painter state (pushes the
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407 | state onto a stack). Then we translate the coordinate system,
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408 | using the QPainter::translate() function, to the position
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409 | determined by the variables of the \c for loops. If we omit this
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410 | translation of the coordinate system all the copies of the shape
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411 | will be rendered on top of each other in the top left cormer of
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412 | the \c RenderArea widget.
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413 |
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414 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 11
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415 |
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416 | If the \gui Transformations parameter option is checked, we do an
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417 | additional translation of the coordinate system before we rotate
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418 | the coordinate system 60 degrees clockwise using the
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419 | QPainter::rotate() function and scale it down in size using the
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420 | QPainter::scale() function. In the end we translate the coordinate
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421 | system back to where it was before we rotated and scaled it.
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422 |
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423 | Now, when rendering the shape, it will appear as if it was rotated
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424 | in three dimensions.
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425 |
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426 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 12
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427 |
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428 | Next, we identify the \c RenderArea's shape, and render it using
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429 | the associated QPainter drawing function:
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430 |
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431 | \list
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432 | \o QPainter::drawLine(),
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433 | \o QPainter::drawPoints(),
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434 | \o QPainter::drawPolyline(),
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435 | \o QPainter::drawPolygon(),
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436 | \o QPainter::drawRect(),
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437 | \o QPainter::drawRoundedRect(),
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438 | \o QPainter::drawEllipse(),
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439 | \o QPainter::drawArc(),
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440 | \o QPainter::drawChord(),
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441 | \o QPainter::drawPie(),
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442 | \o QPainter::drawPath(),
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443 | \o QPainter::drawText() or
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444 | \o QPainter::drawPixmap()
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445 | \endlist
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446 |
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447 | Before we started rendering, we saved the current painter state
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448 | (pushes the state onto a stack). The rationale for this is that we
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449 | calculate each shape copy's position relative to the same point in
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450 | the coordinate system. When translating the coordinate system, we
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451 | lose the knowledge of this point unless we save the current
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452 | painter state \e before we start the translating process.
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453 |
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454 | \snippet examples/painting/basicdrawing/renderarea.cpp 13
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455 |
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456 | Then, when we are finished rendering a copy of the shape we can
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457 | restore the original painter state, with its associated coordinate
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458 | system, using the QPainter::restore() function. In this way we
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459 | ensure that the next shape copy will be rendered in the correct
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460 | position.
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461 |
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462 | We could translate the coordinate system back using
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463 | QPainter::translate() instead of saving the painter state. But
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464 | since we in addition to translating the coordinate system (when
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465 | the \gui Transformation parameter option is checked) both rotate
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466 | and scale the coordinate system, the easiest solution is to save
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467 | the current painter state.
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468 | */
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