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2 | **
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3 | ** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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15 | **
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16 | ** GNU Free Documentation License
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26 | ****************************************************************************/
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27 |
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28 | /*!
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29 | \example widgets/sliders
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30 | \title Sliders Example
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31 |
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32 | Qt provides three types of slider-like widgets: QSlider,
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33 | QScrollBar and QDial. They all inherit most of their
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34 | functionality from QAbstractSlider, and can in theory replace
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35 | each other in an application since the differences only concern
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36 | their look and feel. This example shows what they look like, how
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37 | they work and how their behavior and appearance can be
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38 | manipulated through their properties.
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39 |
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40 | The example also demonstrates how signals and slots can be used to
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41 | synchronize the behavior of two or more widgets.
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42 |
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43 | \image sliders-example.png Screenshot of the Sliders example
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44 |
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45 | The Sliders example consists of two classes:
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46 |
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47 | \list
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48 |
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49 | \o \c SlidersGroup is a custom widget. It combines a QSlider, a
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50 | QScrollBar and a QDial.
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51 |
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52 | \o \c Window is the main widget combining a QGroupBox and a
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53 | QStackedWidget. In this example, the QStackedWidget provides a
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54 | stack of two \c SlidersGroup widgets. The QGroupBox contain
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55 | several widgets that control the behavior of the slider-like
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56 | widgets.
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57 |
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58 | \endlist
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59 |
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60 | First we will review the \c Window class, then we
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61 | will take a look at the \c SlidersGroup class.
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62 |
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63 | \section1 Window Class Definition
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64 |
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65 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.h 0
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66 |
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67 | The \c Window class inherits from QWidget. It displays the slider
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68 | widgets and allows the user to set their minimum, maximum and
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69 | current values and to customize their appearance, key bindings
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70 | and orientation. We use a private \c createControls() function to
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71 | create the widgets that provide these controlling mechanisms and
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72 | to connect them to the slider widgets.
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73 |
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74 | \section1 Window Class Implementation
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75 |
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76 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 0
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77 |
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78 | In the constructor we first create the two \c SlidersGroup
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79 | widgets that display the slider widgets horizontally and
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80 | vertically, and add them to the QStackedWidget. QStackedWidget
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81 | provides a stack of widgets where only the top widget is visible.
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82 | With \c createControls() we create a connection from a
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83 | controlling widget to the QStackedWidget, making the user able to
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84 | choose between horizontal and vertical orientation of the slider
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85 | widgets. The rest of the controlling mechanisms is implemented by
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86 | the same function call.
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87 |
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88 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 1
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89 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 2
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90 |
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91 | Then we connect the \c horizontalSliders, \c verticalSliders and
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92 | \c valueSpinBox to each other, so that the slider widgets and the
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93 | control widget will behave synchronized when the current value of
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94 | one of them changes. The \c valueChanged() signal is emitted with
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95 | the new value as argument. The \c setValue() slot sets the
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96 | current value of the widget to the new value, and emits \c
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97 | valueChanged() if the new value is different from the old one.
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98 |
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99 | We put the group of control widgets and the stacked widget in a
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100 | horizontal layout before we initialize the minimum, maximum and
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101 | current values. The initialization of the current value will
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102 | propagate to the slider widgets through the connection we made
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103 | between \c valueSpinBox and the \c SlidersGroup widgets. The
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104 | minimum and maximum values propagate through the connections we
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105 | created with \c createControls().
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106 |
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107 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 3
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108 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 4
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109 |
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110 | In the private \c createControls() function, we let a QGroupBox
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111 | (\c controlsGroup) display the control widgets. A group box can
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112 | provide a frame, a title and a keyboard shortcut, and displays
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113 | various other widgets inside itself. The group of control widgets
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114 | is composed by two checkboxes, three spin boxes (with labels) and
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115 | one combobox.
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116 |
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117 | After creating the labels, we create the two checkboxes.
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118 | Checkboxes are typically used to represent features in an
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119 | application that can be enabled or disabled. When \c
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120 | invertedAppearance is enabled, the slider values are inverted.
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121 | The table below shows the appearance for the different
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122 | slider-like widgets:
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123 |
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124 | \table
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125 | \header \o \o{2,1} QSlider \o{2,1} QScrollBar \o{2,1} QDial
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126 | \header \o \o Normal \o Inverted \o Normal \o Inverted \o Normal \o Inverted
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127 | \row \o Qt::Horizontal \o Left to right \o Right to left \o Left to right \o Right to left \o Clockwise \o Counterclockwise
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128 | \row \o Qt::Vertical \o Bottom to top \o Top to bottom \o Top to bottom \o Bottom to top \o Clockwise \o Counterclockwise
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129 | \endtable
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130 |
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131 | It is common to invert the appearance of a vertical QSlider. A
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132 | vertical slider that controls volume, for example, will typically
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133 | go from bottom to top (the non-inverted appearance), whereas a
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134 | vertical slider that controls the position of an object on screen
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135 | might go from top to bottom, because screen coordinates go from
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136 | top to bottom.
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137 |
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138 | When the \c invertedKeyBindings option is enabled (corresponding
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139 | to the QAbstractSlider::invertedControls property), the slider's
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140 | wheel and key events are inverted. The normal key bindings mean
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141 | that scrolling the mouse wheel "up" or using keys like page up
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142 | will increase the slider's current value towards its maximum.
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143 | Inverted, the same wheel and key events will move the value
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144 | toward the slider's minimum. This can be useful if the \e
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145 | appearance of a slider is inverted: Some users might expect the
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146 | keys to still work the same way on the value, whereas others
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147 | might expect \key PageUp to mean "up" on the screen.
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148 |
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149 | Note that for horizontal and vertical scroll bars, the key
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150 | bindings are inverted by default: \key PageDown increases the
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151 | current value, and \key PageUp decreases it.
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152 |
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153 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 5
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154 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 6
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155 |
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156 | Then we create the spin boxes. QSpinBox allows the user to choose
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157 | a value by clicking the up and down buttons or pressing the \key
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158 | Up and \key Down keys on the keyboard to modify the value
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159 | currently displayed. The user can also type in the value
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160 | manually. The spin boxes control the minimum, maximum and current
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161 | values for the QSlider, QScrollBar, and QDial widgets.
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162 |
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163 | We create a QComboBox that allows the user to choose the
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164 | orientation of the slider widgets. The QComboBox widget is a
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165 | combined button and popup list. It provides a means of presenting
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166 | a list of options to the user in a way that takes up the minimum
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167 | amount of screen space.
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168 |
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169 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 7
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170 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/window.cpp 8
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171 |
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172 | We synchronize the behavior of the control widgets and the slider
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173 | widgets through their signals and slots. We connect each control
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174 | widget to both the horizontal and vertical group of slider
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175 | widgets. We also connect \c orientationCombo to the
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176 | QStackedWidget, so that the correct "page" is shown. Finally, we
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177 | lay out the control widgets in a QGridLayout within the \c
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178 | controlsGroup group box.
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179 |
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180 | \section1 SlidersGroup Class Definition
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181 |
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182 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.h 0
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183 |
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184 | The \c SlidersGroup class inherits from QGroupBox. It provides a
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185 | frame and a title, and contains a QSlider, a QScrollBar and a
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186 | QDial.
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187 |
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188 | We provide a \c valueChanged() signal and a public \c setValue()
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189 | slot with equivalent functionality to the ones in QAbstractSlider
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190 | and QSpinBox. In addition, we implement several other public
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191 | slots to set the minimum and maximum value, and invert the slider
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192 | widgets' appearance as well as key bindings.
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193 |
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194 | \section1 SlidersGroup Class Implementation
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195 |
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196 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 0
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197 |
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198 | First we create the slider-like widgets with the appropiate
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199 | properties. In particular we set the focus policy for each
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200 | widget. Qt::FocusPolicy is an enum type that defines the various
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201 | policies a widget can have with respect to acquiring keyboard
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202 | focus. The Qt::StrongFocus policy means that the widget accepts
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203 | focus by both tabbing and clicking.
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204 |
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205 | Then we connect the widgets with each other, so that they will
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206 | stay synchronized when the current value of one of them changes.
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207 |
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208 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 1
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209 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 2
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210 |
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211 | We connect \c {dial}'s \c valueChanged() signal to the
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212 | \c{SlidersGroup}'s \c valueChanged() signal, to notify the other
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213 | widgets in the application (i.e., the control widgets) of the
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214 | changed value.
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215 |
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216 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 3
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217 | \codeline
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218 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 4
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219 |
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220 | Finally, depending on the \l {Qt::Orientation}{orientation} given
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221 | at the time of construction, we choose and create the layout for
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222 | the slider widgets within the group box.
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223 |
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224 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 5
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225 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 6
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226 |
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227 | The \c setValue() slot sets the value of the QSlider. We don't
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228 | need to explicitly call
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229 | \l{QAbstractSlider::setValue()}{setValue()} on the QScrollBar and
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230 | QDial widgets, since QSlider will emit the
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231 | \l{QAbstractSlider::valueChanged()}{valueChanged()} signal when
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232 | its value changes, triggering a domino effect.
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233 |
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234 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 7
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235 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 8
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236 | \codeline
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237 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 9
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238 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 10
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239 |
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240 | The \c setMinimum() and \c setMaximum() slots are used by the \c
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241 | Window class to set the range of the QSlider, QScrollBar, and
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242 | QDial widgets.
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243 |
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244 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 11
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245 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 12
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246 | \codeline
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247 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 13
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248 | \snippet examples/widgets/sliders/slidersgroup.cpp 14
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249 |
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250 | The \c invertAppearance() and \c invertKeyBindings() slots
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251 | control the child widgets'
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252 | \l{QAbstractSlider::invertedAppearance}{invertedAppearance} and
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253 | \l{QAbstractSlider::invertedControls}{invertedControls}
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254 | properties.
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255 | */
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