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40 | ****************************************************************************/
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41 |
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42 | /*!
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43 | \example layouts/basiclayouts
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44 | \title Basic Layouts Example
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45 |
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46 | The Basic Layouts example shows how to use the standard layout
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47 | managers that are available in Qt: QBoxLayout, QGridLayout and
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48 | QFormLayout.
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49 |
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50 | \image basiclayouts-example.png Screenshot of the Basic Layouts example
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51 |
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52 | The QBoxLayout class lines up widgets horizontally or vertically.
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53 | QHBoxLayout and QVBoxLayout are convenience subclasses of QBoxLayout.
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54 | QGridLayout lays out widgets in cells by dividing the available space
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55 | into rows and columns. QFormLayout, on the other hand, lays out its
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56 | children in a two-column form with labels in the left column and
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57 | input fields in the right column.
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58 |
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59 | \section1 Dialog Class Definition
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60 |
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61 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.h 0
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62 |
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63 | The \c Dialog class inherits QDialog. It is a custom widget that
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64 | displays its child widgets using the geometry managers:
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65 | QHBoxLayout, QVBoxLayout, QGridLayout and QFormLayout.
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66 |
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67 | We declare four private functions to simplify the class
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68 | constructor: The \c createMenu(), \c createHorizontalGroupBox(),
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69 | \c createGridGroupBox() and \c createFormGroupBox() functions create
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70 | several widgets that the example uses to demonstrate how the layout
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71 | affects their appearances.
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72 |
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73 | \section1 Dialog Class Implementation
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74 |
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75 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 0
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76 |
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77 | In the constructor, we first use the \c createMenu() function to
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78 | create and populate a menu bar and the \c createHorizontalGroupBox()
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79 | function to create a group box containing four buttons with a
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80 | horizontal layout. Next we use the \c createGridGroupBox() function
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81 | to create a group box containing several line edits and a small text
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82 | editor which are displayed in a grid layout. Finally, we use the
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83 | \c createFormGroupBox() function to createa a group box with
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84 | three labels and three input fields: a line edit, a combo box and
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85 | a spin box.
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86 |
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87 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 1
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88 |
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89 | We also create a big text editor and a dialog button box. The
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90 | QDialogButtonBox class is a widget that presents buttons in a
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91 | layout that is appropriate to the current widget style. The
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92 | preferred buttons can be specified as arguments to the
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93 | constructor, using the QDialogButtonBox::StandardButtons enum.
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94 |
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95 | Note that we don't have to specify a parent for the widgets when
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96 | we create them. The reason is that all the widgets we create here
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97 | will be added to a layout, and when we add a widget to a layout,
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98 | it is automatically reparented to the widget the layout is
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99 | installed on.
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100 |
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101 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 2
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102 |
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103 | The main layout is a QVBoxLayout object. QVBoxLayout is a
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104 | convenience class for a box layout with vertical orientation.
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105 |
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106 | In general, the QBoxLayout class takes the space it gets (from its
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107 | parent layout or from the parent widget), divides it up into a
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108 | series of boxes, and makes each managed widget fill one box. If
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109 | the QBoxLayout's orientation is Qt::Horizontal the boxes are
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110 | placed in a row. If the orientation is Qt::Vertical, the boxes are
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111 | placed in a column. The corresponding convenience classes are
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112 | QHBoxLayout and QVBoxLayout, respectively.
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113 |
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114 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 3
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115 |
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116 | When we call the QLayout::setMenuBar() function, the layout places
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117 | the provided menu bar at the top of the parent widget, and outside
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118 | the widget's \l {QWidget::contentsRect()}{content margins}. All
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119 | child widgets are placed below the bottom edge of the menu bar.
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120 |
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121 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 4
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122 |
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123 | We use the QBoxLayout::addWidget() function to add the widgets to
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124 | the end of layout. Each widget will get at least its minimum size
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125 | and at most its maximum size. It is possible to specify a stretch
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126 | factor in the \l {QBoxLayout::addWidget()}{addWidget()} function,
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127 | and any excess space is shared according to these stretch
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128 | factors. If not specified, a widget's stretch factor is 0.
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129 |
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130 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 5
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131 |
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132 | We install the main layout on the \c Dialog widget using the
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133 | QWidget::setLayout() function, and all of the layout's widgets are
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134 | automatically reparented to be children of the \c Dialog widget.
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135 |
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136 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 6
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137 |
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138 | In the private \c createMenu() function we create a menu bar, and
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139 | add a pull-down \gui File menu containing an \gui Exit option.
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140 |
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141 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 7
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142 |
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143 | When we create the horizontal group box, we use a QHBoxLayout as
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144 | the internal layout. We create the buttons we want to put in the
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145 | group box, add them to the layout and install the layout on the
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146 | group box.
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147 |
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148 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 8
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149 |
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150 | In the \c createGridGroupBox() function we use a QGridLayout which
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151 | lays out widgets in a grid. It takes the space made available to
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152 | it (by its parent layout or by the parent widget), divides it up
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153 | into rows and columns, and puts each widget it manages into the
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154 | correct cell.
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155 |
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156 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 9
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157 |
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158 | For each row in the grid we create a label and an associated line
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159 | edit, and add them to the layout. The QGridLayout::addWidget()
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160 | function differ from the corresponding function in QBoxLayout: It
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161 | needs the row and column specifying the grid cell to put the
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162 | widget in.
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163 |
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164 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 10
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165 |
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166 | QGridLayout::addWidget() can in addition take arguments
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167 | specifying the number of rows and columns the cell will be
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168 | spanning. In this example, we create a small editor which spans
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169 | three rows and one column.
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170 |
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171 | For both the QBoxLayout::addWidget() and QGridLayout::addWidget()
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172 | functions it is also possible to add a last argument specifying
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173 | the widget's alignment. By default it fills the whole cell. But we
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174 | could, for example, align a widget with the right edge by
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175 | specifying the alignment to be Qt::AlignRight.
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176 |
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177 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 11
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178 |
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179 | Each column in a grid layout has a stretch factor. The stretch
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180 | factor is set using QGridLayout::setColumnStretch() and determines
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181 | how much of the available space the column will get over and above
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182 | its necessary minimum.
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183 |
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184 | In this example, we set the stretch factors for columns 1 and 2.
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185 | The stretch factor is relative to the other columns in this grid;
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186 | columns with a higher stretch factor take more of the available
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187 | space. So column 2 in our grid layout will get more of the
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188 | available space than column 1, and column 0 will not grow at all
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189 | since its stretch factor is 0 (the default).
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190 |
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191 | Columns and rows behave identically; there is an equivalent
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192 | stretch factor for rows, as well as a QGridLayout::setRowStretch()
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193 | function.
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194 |
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195 | \snippet examples/layouts/basiclayouts/dialog.cpp 12
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196 |
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197 | In the \c createFormGroupBox() function, we use a QFormLayout
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198 | to neatly arrange objects into two columns - name and field.
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199 | There are three QLabel objects for names with three
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200 | corresponding input widgets as fields: a QLineEdit, a QComboBox
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201 | and a QSpinBox. Unlike QBoxLayout::addWidget() and
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202 | QGridLayout::addWidget(), we use QFormLayout::addRow() to add widgets
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203 | to the layout.
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204 | */
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