[2] | 1 | /****************************************************************************
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| 2 | **
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[846] | 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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[561] | 4 | ** All rights reserved.
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| 5 | ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
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[2] | 6 | **
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| 7 | ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
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| 8 | **
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[846] | 9 | ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$
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[2] | 10 | ** Commercial Usage
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| 11 | ** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in
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| 12 | ** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the
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[846] | 13 | ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in a
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| 14 | ** written agreement between you and Nokia.
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[2] | 15 | **
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[846] | 16 | ** GNU Free Documentation License
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| 19 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this
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[2] | 21 | **
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[561] | 22 | ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
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| 23 | ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com.
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[2] | 24 | ** $QT_END_LICENSE$
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| 25 | **
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| 26 | ****************************************************************************/
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| 27 |
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| 28 | /*!
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| 29 | \example xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel
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| 30 | \title QObject XML Model Example
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| 31 |
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| 32 | This example shows how to use QtXmlPatterns to query QObject trees
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| 33 | by modeling the non-XML data structure of a QObject tree to look
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| 34 | like XML.
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| 35 |
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| 36 | \tableofcontents
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| 37 |
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| 38 | \section1 Introduction
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| 39 |
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| 40 | This example illustrates two important points about using XQuery to
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| 41 | query non-XML data modeled to look like XML. The first point is that
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| 42 | a custom node model class doesn't always have to actually build the
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| 43 | node model. Sometimes the node model can be an already existing data
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| 44 | structure, like the QObject tree used in this example. The second
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| 45 | point is to explain what is required to make non-XML data look like
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| 46 | XML.
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| 47 |
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| 48 | In this example, we want to model a QObject tree to look like
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| 49 | XML. That is easy to do because a QObject tree maps to the XML tree
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| 50 | structure in a staightforward way. Each QObject node is modeled as
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| 51 | an XML element node. However, when we want to add the QMetaObject tree
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| 52 | to the QObject tree node model, we are trying to add a second tree to
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| 53 | the node model. The QMetaObject tree exists \e{behind} the QObject
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| 54 | tree. Adding the QMetaObject tree to the node model changes the two
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| 55 | dimensional tree into a three dimensional tree.
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| 56 |
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| 57 | The query engine can only traverse two dimensional trees, because an
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| 58 | XML document is always a two dimensional tree. If we want to add the
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| 59 | QMetaObject tree to the node model, we have to somehow flatten it
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[561] | 60 | into the same plane as the QObject tree. This requires that the
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[2] | 61 | node model class must build an auxiliary data structure and make it
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| 62 | part of the two dimensional QObject node model. How to do this is
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| 63 | explained in \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}.
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| 64 |
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| 65 | \section2 The User Interface
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| 66 |
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| 67 | The UI for this example was created using Qt Designer:
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| 68 |
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| 69 | \image qobjectxmlmodel-example.png
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| 70 |
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| 71 | \section1 Code Walk-Through
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| 72 |
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| 73 | The strategy for this example is different from the strategy for the
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| 74 | \l{File System Example}{file system example}. In the file system
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| 75 | example, the node model class had to actually build a node model
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| 76 | because the non-XML data to be traversed was the computer's file
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| 77 | system, a structure stored on disk in a form that the query engine
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| 78 | couldn't use. The node model class had to build an analog of the
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| 79 | computer's file system in memory.
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| 80 |
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| 81 | For this example, the data structure to be traversed already exists
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| 82 | in memory in a usable form. It is the QObject tree of the example
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| 83 | application itself. All we need is the pointer to the root of the
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| 84 | QObject tree.
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| 85 |
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| 86 | \note When we add the QMetaObject tree to the node model, the node
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| 87 | model class will have to build an auxiliary data structure to move
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| 88 | the QMetaObject tree into the same plane as the QObject tree. This
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| 89 | is explained later in \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}.
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| 90 |
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| 91 | \section2 The Custom Node Model Class: QObjextXmlModel
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| 92 |
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| 93 | The node model class for this example is QObjextXmlModel, which is
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| 94 | derived from QSimpleXmlNodeModel. QObjextXmlModel implements the
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| 95 | callback interface functions that don't have implementations in
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| 96 | QSimpleXmlNodeModel:
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| 97 |
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| 98 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.h 0
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| 99 |
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| 100 | The node model class declares three data members:
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| 101 |
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| 102 | \target Three Data Members
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| 103 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.h 2
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| 104 |
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| 105 | The constructor sets \c m_baseURI to the QUrl constructed from the
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| 106 | \l{QCoreApplication::applicationFilePath()}{file path} of the
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| 107 | application executable. This is the value returned by
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| 108 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::documentUri()}{documentUri()}. The
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| 109 | constructor sets \c{m_root} to point to the QObject tree for the
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| 110 | example application. This is the node model that the query engine
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| 111 | will use. And the constructor calls a local function to build the
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| 112 | auxiliary data structure (\c{m_allMetaObjects}) for including the
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| 113 | QMetaObject tree in the node model. How this auxiliary data
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| 114 | structure is incorporated into the QObject node model is discussed
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| 115 | in \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}.
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| 116 |
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| 117 | \section3 Accessing The Node Model
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| 118 |
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| 119 | Since the query engine knows nothing about QObject trees, it can
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| 120 | only access them by calling functions in the node model callback
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| 121 | interface. The query engine passes a QXmlNodeModelIndex to uniquely
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| 122 | identify a node in the node model. The QXmlNodeModelIndex is
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| 123 | constructed from a pointer to the QObject that represents the node.
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| 124 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::createIndex()}{createIndex()} creates the
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| 125 | QXmlNodeModelIndex, as in the local \c{root()} function, for example:
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| 126 |
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| 127 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 0
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| 128 |
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| 129 | A QObject represents an element node in the node model, but we also
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| 130 | need to represent attribute nodes. For example, the class name of a
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| 131 | QObject is an attribute of the QObject, so it should be an attribute
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| 132 | node in the node model. A QObject's class name is obtained from the
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| 133 | QObject. (Actually, it is in the QMetaObject, which is obtained from
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| 134 | the QObject). This means that a single QObject logically represents
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| 135 | multiple nodes in the node model: the element node and potentially
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| 136 | many attribute nodes.
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| 137 |
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| 138 | To uniquely identify an attribute node, we need the pointer to the
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| 139 | QObject containing the attribute, and an additional value that
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| 140 | identifies the attribute in the QObject. For this \e{additional
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| 141 | data} value, we use \c{enum QObjectNodeType}:
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| 142 |
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| 143 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.h 3
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| 144 |
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| 145 | Ignore the \c{MetaObjectXXX} values for now. They will be explained
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| 146 | in \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}. Here we are interested in the
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| 147 | three node types for QObject nodes: \c{IsQObject}, which represents
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| 148 | the element node type for a QObject, and \c{QObjectProperty} and
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| 149 | \c{QObjectClassName}, which represent the attribute node types for
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| 150 | the attributes of a QObject.
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| 151 |
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| 152 | The \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::createIndex()}{createIndex()}
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| 153 | function called in the \c{root()} snippet above is the overload that
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| 154 | accepts a \c{void*} pointer and a second parameter,
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| 155 | \c{additionalData}, with default value 0 (\c{IsQObject}). Wherever
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| 156 | you see a call to \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::createIndex()}
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| 157 | {createIndex()} that only passes the QObject pointer, it is creating
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| 158 | the node index for a QObject element node. To create the node index
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| 159 | for the class name attribute, for example, the \l{QObject
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| 160 | attributes} {attributes()} function uses
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| 161 | \c{createIndex(object,QObjectClassName)}.
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| 162 |
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| 163 | \target QObject attributes
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| 164 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 6
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| 165 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 8
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| 166 |
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| 167 | \l{QObject attributes} {attributes()} is one of the callback
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| 168 | functions you have to implement in your custom node model class. It
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| 169 | returns a QVector of \l{QXmlNodeModelIndex} {node indexes} for all
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| 170 | the attribute nodes for QObject \c{n}. It calls
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| 171 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::createIndex()} {createIndex()} in two places.
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| 172 | Both calls use the QObject pointer from the current node \c{n} (the
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| 173 | element node), and just add a different value for the \e{additional data}
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| 174 | parameter. This makes sense because, in XML, the attributes of an
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| 175 | element are part of that element.
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| 176 |
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| 177 | \section3 Traversing The Node Model
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| 178 |
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| 179 | The query engine traverses the QObject tree by calling back to the
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| 180 | node model class's implementation of \l{QObject nextFromSimpleAxis}
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| 181 | {nextFromSimpleAxis()}. This function is the heart of the callback
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| 182 | interface, and it will probably be the most complex to implement in
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| 183 | your custom node model class. Below is a partial listing of the
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| 184 | implementation for this example. The full listing will be shown in
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| 185 | \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}, where we discuss traversing the
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| 186 | QMetaObject tree.
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| 187 |
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| 188 | \target QObject nextFromSimpleAxis
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| 189 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 2
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| 190 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 4
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| 191 |
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| 192 | The main switch uses \c toNodeType(), which obtains the node
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| 193 | type from \l{QXmlNodeModelIndex::additionalData()}:
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| 194 |
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| 195 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 1
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| 196 |
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| 197 | \c{case IsObject} case is the most interesting. It switches again on
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| 198 | the value of the \c{axis} parameter, which specifies the direction
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| 199 | the query engine wants to take from the current node. It is one of
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| 200 | the four enum values of \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::SimpleAxis}. The
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| 201 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::Parent} {Parent} and
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| 202 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::FirstChild} {FirstChild} cases reduce to
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| 203 | calls to QObject::parent() and QObject::children()
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| 204 | respectively. Note that a default constructed QXmlNodeModelIndex is
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| 205 | returned in the \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::Parent} {Parent} case if
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| 206 | the current node is the root, and in the
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| 207 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::FirstChild} {FirstChild} case if the
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| 208 | current node has no children.
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| 209 |
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| 210 | For the \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::NextSibling} {NextSibling} and
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| 211 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::PreviousSibling} {PreviousSibling} axes,
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| 212 | the helper function \c{qObjectSibling()} is called, with +1 to
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| 213 | traverse to the \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::NextSibling} {NextSibling}
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| 214 | and -1 to traverse to the
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| 215 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::PreviousSibling} {PreviousSibling}.
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| 216 |
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| 217 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 5
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| 218 |
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| 219 | \c{qObjectSibling()} determines whether or not the node has any
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| 220 | siblings. It is called with \c{n}, the index of the current node.
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| 221 | If the current node is a child, then it has a parent with children
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| 222 | (the current node one of these).
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| 223 | So, we get the \l{QObject::parent()}{parent}, obtain the parent's
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| 224 | \l{QObject::children()} {child list}, find the current node in the
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| 225 | list, and construct the node index for the next or previous child
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| 226 | (sibling) and return it.
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| 227 |
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| 228 | \note In \l{QObject nextFromSimpleAxis} {nextFromSimpleAxis()}, the
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| 229 | special case of asking for the
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| 230 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::PreviousSibling} {PreviousSibling} of the
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| 231 | root node is discussed in \l{Including The QMetaObject Tree}.
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| 232 |
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| 233 | Traversing away from a \c{QObjectClassName} attribute node or a
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| 234 | \c{QObjectProperty} attribute node might seem a bit confusing at
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| 235 | first glance. The only move allowed from an attribute node is to the
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| 236 | \l{QAbstractXmlNodeModel::Parent} {Parent}, because attribute nodes
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| 237 | don't have children. But these two cases simply return the
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| 238 | \l{QXmlNodeModelIndex} {node index} of the current node.
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| 239 |
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| 240 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 7
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| 241 |
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| 242 | Since \c n is the QXmlNodeModelIndex of the current node, all this
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| 243 | does is create another QXmlNodeModelIndex for the current node and
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| 244 | return it. This was explained above in \l{Accessing The Node Model},
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| 245 | where we saw that each QObject in the node model actually represents
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| 246 | an element node and potentially many attribute nodes. Traversing to
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| 247 | the parent node of an attribute simply creates a node index for the
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| 248 | same QObject, but with an \e{additional data} value of 0
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| 249 | (\c{IsQObject}).
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| 250 |
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| 251 | If we only wanted to traverse the QObject tree with XQuery, we could
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| 252 | just implement the rest of the virtual callback functions listed
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| 253 | earlier and we would be done. The implementations for the remaining
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| 254 | functions are straightforward. But if we also want to use XQuery to
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| 255 | traverse the QMetaObject tree, we must include the QMetaObject tree
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| 256 | in the custom node model.
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| 257 |
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| 258 | \section3 Including The QMetaObject Tree
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| 259 |
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| 260 | The \l{Meta-Object System} {metaobject system} not only enables Qt's
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| 261 | \l{Signals and Slots} {signals and slots}, it also provides type
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| 262 | information that is useful at run-time; e.g., getting and setting
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| 263 | properties without knowing the property names at compile time. Each
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| 264 | QObject has an associated QMetaObject tree which contains all this
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| 265 | useful type information. Given a QObject, its QMetaObject is
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| 266 | obtained with QObject::metaObject(). Then QMetaObject::superClass()
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| 267 | can be called repeatedly to get the QMetaObject for each class in the
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| 268 | class hierarchy for the original QObject.
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| 269 |
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| 270 | However, the QMetaObject hierarchy is a second tree in a plan that
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| 271 | exists logically behind the plane of the QObject tree. The QtXmlPatterns
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| 272 | query engine can only traverse a two dimensional node model that
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| 273 | represents an XML tree. If we want to include the QMetaObject in the
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| 274 | same node model that represents the QObject tree, we must find a way
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| 275 | to flatten the QMetaObject tree into the same plane as the QObject
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| 276 | tree.
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| 277 |
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| 278 | The node model class declares \l{All MetaObjects}{m_allMetaObjects}
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| 279 | as a vector of pointers to QMetaObject:
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| 280 |
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| 281 | \target All MetaObjects
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| 282 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.h 1
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| 283 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.h 4
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| 284 |
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| 285 | This vector gets populated by the QObjectXmlModel constructor by
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| 286 | calling the private allMetaObjects() function:
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| 287 |
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| 288 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 9
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| 289 |
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| 290 | The first half of the function is an example of the standard code
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| 291 | pattern for using QtXmlPatterns to run an XQuery. First it creates an
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| 292 | instance of QXmlQuery. Then it \l{QXmlQuery::bindVariable()}{binds}
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| 293 | the XQuery variable \c{$root} to the root node of the of the node
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| 294 | model; i.e., the root of the QObject tree. Then it
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| 295 | \l{QXmlQuery::setQuery()} {sets the query} to be an XQuery that
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| 296 | returns all the QObjects in the node model. Finally, the query is
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| 297 | evaluated into a \l{QXmlResultItems} {result item list}.
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| 298 |
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| 299 | \note \l{QXmlQuery::bindVariable()} must be called before
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| 300 | \l{QXmlQuery::setQuery()}, because setting the query causes
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| 301 | QtXmlPatterns to \e compile the XQuery, which requires knowledge of
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| 302 | the variable bindings.
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| 303 |
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| 304 | The second half of the function traverses the \l{QXmlResultItems}
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| 305 | {result item list}, getting the QMetaObject hierarchy for each
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| 306 | QObject and appending it to \l{All MetaObjects} {m_allMetaObjects},
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| 307 | if it isn't already there. But how do we include this vector of
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| 308 | pointers to QMetaObjects in the node model? The key insight is
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| 309 | shown in the full listing of \l{Full Listing of nextFromSimpleAxis}
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| 310 | {nextFromSimpleAxis()}, where we are interested now in the
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| 311 | \c{MetaObjectXXX} cases:
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| 312 |
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| 313 | \target Full Listing of nextFromSimpleAxis
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| 314 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 2
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| 315 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 3
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| 316 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 4
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| 317 |
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| 318 | But first, revisit the \c{PreviousSibling} case for the
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| 319 | \c{IsQObject} case:
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| 320 |
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| 321 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 10
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| 322 |
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| 323 | When asking for the previous sibling of the root of the QObject
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| 324 | tree, it creates a node model index with a null QObject pointer and
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| 325 | an \c{additionalData} value of \c{MetaObjects}. This effectively
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| 326 | allows the query engine to jump from the QObject tree to the
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| 327 | QMetaObject tree.
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| 328 |
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| 329 | The query engine can jump from the QMetaObject tree back to the
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| 330 | QObject tree in the \c{NextSibling} case of case \c{MetaObjects},
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| 331 | where the \c{root()} function is called:
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| 332 |
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| 333 | \snippet examples/xmlpatterns/qobjectxmlmodel/qobjectxmlmodel.cpp 11
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| 334 |
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| 335 | Having jumped from the QObject tree to the QMetaObject tree, the
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| 336 | query engine will use the \c{MetaObject}, \c{MetaObjectClassName},
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| 337 | and \c{MetaObjectSuperClass} cases, which are similar to the cases
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| 338 | for \c{IsQObject}, \c{QObjectProperty}, and \c{QObjectClassName}.
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| 339 | */
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