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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \example designer/taskmenuextension | 
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| 44 | \title Task Menu Extension Example | 
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| 45 |  | 
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| 46 | The Task Menu Extension example shows how to create a custom | 
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| 47 | widget plugin for \l {Qt Designer Manual}{\QD}, and how to to use | 
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| 48 | the QDesignerTaskMenuExtension class to provide custom task menu | 
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| 49 | entries associated with the plugin. | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | \image taskmenuextension-example-faded.png | 
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| 52 |  | 
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| 53 | To provide a custom widget that can be used with \QD, we need to | 
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| 54 | supply a self-contained implementation. In this example we use a | 
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| 55 | custom widget designed to show the task menu extension feature: | 
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| 56 | The TicTacToe widget. | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | An extension is an object which modifies the behavior of \QD. The | 
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| 59 | QDesignerTaskMenuExtension can provide custom task menu entries | 
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| 60 | when a widget with this extension is selected. | 
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| 61 |  | 
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| 62 | There are four available types of extensions in \QD: | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | \list | 
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| 65 | \o QDesignerContainerExtension provides an extension that allows | 
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| 66 | you to add (and delete) pages to a multi-page container plugin | 
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| 67 | in \QD. | 
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| 68 | \o QDesignerMemberSheetExtension provides an extension that allows | 
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| 69 | you to manipulate a widget's member functions which is displayed | 
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| 70 | when configuring connections using Qt Designer's mode for editing | 
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| 71 | signals and slots. | 
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| 72 | \o QDesignerPropertySheetExtension provides an extension that | 
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| 73 | allows you to manipulate a widget's properties which is displayed | 
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| 74 | in Qt Designer's property editor. | 
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| 75 | \o QDesignerTaskMenuExtension provides an extension that allows | 
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| 76 | you to add custom menu entries to \QD's task menu. | 
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| 77 | \endlist | 
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| 78 |  | 
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| 79 | You can use all the extensions following the same pattern as in | 
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| 80 | this example, only replacing the respective extension base | 
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| 81 | class. For more information, see the \l {QtDesigner Module}. | 
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| 82 |  | 
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| 83 | The Task Menu Extension example consists of five classes: | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | \list | 
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| 86 | \o \c TicTacToe is a custom widget that lets the user play | 
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| 87 | the Tic-Tac-Toe game. | 
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| 88 | \o \c TicTacToePlugin exposes the \c TicTacToe class to \QD. | 
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| 89 | \o \c TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory creates a \c TicTacToeTaskMenu object. | 
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| 90 | \o \c TicTacToeTaskMenu provides the task menu extension, i.e the | 
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| 91 | plugin's associated task menu entries. | 
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| 92 | \o \c TicTacToeDialog lets the user modify the state of a | 
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| 93 | Tic-Tac-Toe plugin loaded into \QD. | 
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| 94 | \endlist | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | The project file for custom widget plugins needs some additional | 
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| 97 | information to ensure that they will work within \QD. For example, | 
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| 98 | custom widget plugins rely on components supplied with \QD, and | 
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| 99 | this must be specified in the project file that we use. We will | 
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| 100 | first take a look at the plugin's project file. | 
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| 101 |  | 
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| 102 | Then we will continue by reviewing the \c TicTacToePlugin class, | 
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| 103 | and take a look at the \c TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory and \c | 
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| 104 | TicTacToeTaskMenu classes. Finally, we will review the \c | 
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| 105 | TicTacToeDialog class before we take a quick look at the \c | 
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| 106 | TicTacToe widget's class definition. | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | \section1 The Project File: taskmenuextension.pro | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | The project file must contain some additional information to | 
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| 111 | ensure that the plugin will work as expected: | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/taskmenuextension.pro 0 | 
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| 114 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/taskmenuextension.pro 1 | 
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| 115 |  | 
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| 116 | The \c TEMPLATE variable's value makes \c qmake create the custom | 
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| 117 | widget as a library. Later, we will ensure that the widget will be | 
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| 118 | recognized as a plugin by Qt by using the Q_EXPORT_PLUGIN2() macro to | 
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| 119 | export the relevant widget information. | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | The \c CONFIG variable contains two values, \c designer and \c | 
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| 122 | plugin: | 
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| 123 |  | 
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| 124 | \list | 
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| 125 | \o \c designer: Since custom widgets plugins rely on components | 
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| 126 | supplied with \QD, this value ensures that our plugin links against | 
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| 127 | \QD's library (\c libQtDesigner.so). | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | \o \c plugin: We also need to ensure that \c qmake considers the | 
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| 130 | custom widget a \e plugin library. | 
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| 131 | \endlist | 
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| 132 |  | 
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| 133 | When Qt is configured to build in both debug and release modes, | 
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| 134 | \QD will be built in release mode.  When this occurs, it is | 
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| 135 | necessary to ensure that plugins are also built in release | 
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| 136 | mode. For that reason we add the \c debug_and_release value to | 
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| 137 | the \c CONFIG variable. Otherwise, if a plugin is built in a mode | 
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| 138 | that is incompatible with \QD, it won't be loaded and | 
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| 139 | installed. | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | The header and source files for the widget are declared in the | 
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| 142 | usual way: | 
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| 143 |  | 
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| 144 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/taskmenuextension.pro 2 | 
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| 145 |  | 
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| 146 | We provide an implementation of the plugin interface so that \QD | 
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| 147 | can use the custom widget.  In this particular example we also | 
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| 148 | provide implementations of the task menu extension and the | 
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| 149 | extension factory as well as a dialog implementation. | 
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| 150 |  | 
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| 151 | It is important to ensure that the plugin is installed in a | 
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| 152 | location that is searched by \QD. We do this by specifying a | 
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| 153 | target path for the project and adding it to the list of items to | 
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| 154 | install: | 
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| 155 |  | 
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| 156 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_examples_taskmenuextension.qdoc 0 | 
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| 157 |  | 
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| 158 | The task menu extension is created as a library, and will be | 
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| 159 | installed alongside the other \QD plugins when the project is | 
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| 160 | installed (using \c{make install} or an equivalent installation | 
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| 161 | procedure). | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | Note that if you want the plugins to appear in a Visual Studio | 
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| 164 | integration, the plugins must be built in release mode and their | 
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| 165 | libraries must be copied into the plugin directory in the install | 
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| 166 | path of the integration (for an example, see \c {C:/program | 
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| 167 | files/trolltech as/visual studio integration/plugins}). | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | For more information about plugins, see the \l {How to Create Qt | 
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| 170 | Plugins} documentation. | 
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| 171 |  | 
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| 172 | \section1 TicTacToePlugin Class Definition | 
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| 173 |  | 
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| 174 | The \c TicTacToePlugin class exposes \c the TicTacToe class to | 
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| 175 | \QD. Its definition is equivalent to the \l | 
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| 176 | {designer/customwidgetplugin}{Custom Widget Plugin} example's | 
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| 177 | plugin class which is explained in detail. The only part of the | 
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| 178 | class definition that is specific to this particular custom widget | 
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| 179 | is the class name: | 
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| 180 |  | 
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| 181 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.h 0 | 
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| 182 |  | 
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| 183 | The plugin class provides \QD with basic information about our | 
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| 184 | plugin, such as its class name and its include file. Furthermore | 
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| 185 | it knows how to create instances of the \c TicTacToe widget. | 
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| 186 | TicTacToePlugin also defines the \l | 
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| 187 | {QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface::initialize()}{initialize()} | 
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| 188 | function which is called after the plugin is loaded into \QD. The | 
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| 189 | function's QDesignerFormEditorInterface parameter provides the | 
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| 190 | plugin with a gateway to all of \QD's API's. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | The \c TicTacToePlugin class inherits from both QObject and | 
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| 193 | QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface. It is important to remember, when | 
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| 194 | using multiple inheritance, to ensure that all the interfaces | 
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| 195 | (i.e. the classes that doesn't inherit Q_OBJECT) are made known to | 
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| 196 | the meta object system using the Q_INTERFACES() macro. This | 
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| 197 | enables \QD to use \l qobject_cast() to query for supported | 
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| 198 | interfaces using nothing but a QObject pointer. | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 | \section1 TicTacToePlugin Class Implementation | 
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| 201 |  | 
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| 202 | The TicTacToePlugin class implementation is in most parts | 
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| 203 | equivalent to the \l {designer/customwidgetplugin}{Custom Widget | 
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| 204 | Plugin} example's plugin class: | 
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| 205 |  | 
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| 206 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.cpp 0 | 
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| 207 |  | 
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| 208 | The only function that differs significantly is the initialize() | 
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| 209 | function: | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.cpp 1 | 
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| 212 |  | 
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| 213 | The \c initialize() function takes a QDesignerFormEditorInterface | 
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| 214 | object as argument.  The QDesignerFormEditorInterface class | 
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| 215 | provides access to Qt Designer's components. | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | In \QD you can create two kinds of plugins: custom widget plugins | 
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| 218 | and tool plugins. QDesignerFormEditorInterface provides access to | 
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| 219 | all the \QD components that you normally need to create a tool | 
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| 220 | plugin: the extension manager, the object inspector, the property | 
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| 221 | editor and the widget box. Custom widget plugins have access to | 
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| 222 | the same components. | 
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| 223 |  | 
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| 224 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.cpp 2 | 
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| 225 |  | 
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| 226 | When creating extensions associated with custom widget plugins, we | 
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| 227 | need to access \QD's current extension manager which we retrieve | 
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| 228 | from the QDesignerFormEditorInterface parameter. | 
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| 229 |  | 
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| 230 | \QD's QDesignerFormEditorInterface holds information about all Qt | 
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| 231 | Designer's components: The action editor, the object inspector, | 
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| 232 | the property editor, the widget box, and the extension and form | 
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| 233 | window managers. | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | The QExtensionManager class provides extension management | 
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| 236 | facilities for \QD. Using \QD's current extension manager you can | 
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| 237 | retrieve the extension for a given object. You can also register | 
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| 238 | and unregister an extension for a given object. Remember that an | 
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| 239 | extension is an object which modifies the behavior of \QD. | 
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| 240 |  | 
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| 241 | When registrering an extension, it is actually the associated | 
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| 242 | extension factory that is registered. In \QD, extension factories | 
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| 243 | are used to look up and create named extensions as they are | 
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| 244 | required. So, in this example, the task menu extension itself is | 
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| 245 | not created until a task menu is requested by the user. | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.cpp 3 | 
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| 248 |  | 
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| 249 | We create a \c TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory object that we register | 
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| 250 | using \QD's current \l {QExtensionManager}{extension manager} | 
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| 251 | retrieved from the QDesignerFormEditorInterface parameter. The | 
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| 252 | first argument is the newly created factory and the second | 
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| 253 | argument is an extension identifier which is a string. The \c | 
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| 254 | Q_TYPEID() macro simply converts the string into a QLatin1String. | 
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| 255 |  | 
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| 256 | The \c TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory class is a subclass of | 
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| 257 | QExtensionFactory. When the user request a task menu by clicking | 
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| 258 | the right mouse button over a widget with the specified task menu | 
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| 259 | extension, \QD's extension manager will run through all its | 
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| 260 | registered factories invoking the first one that is able to create | 
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| 261 | a task menu extension for the selected widget. This factory will | 
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| 262 | in turn create a \c TicTacToeTaskMenu object (the extension). | 
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| 263 |  | 
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| 264 | We omit to reimplement the | 
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| 265 | QDesignerCustomWidgetInterface::domXml() function (which include | 
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| 266 | default settings for the widget in the standard XML format used by | 
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| 267 | Qt Designer), since no default values are necessary. | 
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| 268 |  | 
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| 269 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoeplugin.cpp 4 | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 | Finally, we use the Q_EXPORT_PLUGIN2() macro to export the | 
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| 272 | TicTacToePlugin class for use with Qt's plugin handling classes: | 
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| 273 | This macro ensures that \QD can access and construct the custom | 
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| 274 | widget. Without this macro, there is no way for \QD to use the | 
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| 275 | widget. | 
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| 276 |  | 
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| 277 | \section1 TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory Class Definition | 
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| 278 |  | 
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| 279 | The \c TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory class inherits QExtensionFactory | 
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| 280 | which provides a standard extension factory for \QD. | 
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| 281 |  | 
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| 282 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.h 1 | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 | The subclass's purpose is to reimplement the | 
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| 285 | QExtensionFactory::createExtension() function, making it able to | 
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| 286 | create a \c TicTacToe task menu extension. | 
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| 287 |  | 
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| 288 | \section1 TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory Class Implementation | 
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| 289 |  | 
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| 290 | The class constructor simply calls the QExtensionFactory base | 
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| 291 | class constructor: | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 4 | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | As described above, the factory is invoked when the user request a | 
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| 296 | task menu by clicking the right mouse button over a widget with | 
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| 297 | the specified task menu extension in \QD. | 
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| 298 |  | 
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| 299 | \QD's behavior is the same whether the requested extension is | 
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| 300 | associated with a container, a member sheet, a property sheet or a | 
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| 301 | task menu: Its extension manager runs through all its registered | 
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| 302 | extension factories calling \c createExtension() for each until | 
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| 303 | one responds by creating the requested extension. | 
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| 304 |  | 
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| 305 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 5 | 
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| 306 |  | 
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| 307 | So the first thing we do in \c | 
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| 308 | TicTacToeTaskMenuFactory::createExtension() is to check if the | 
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| 309 | requested extension is a task menu extension. If it is, and the | 
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| 310 | widget requesting it is a \c TicTacToe widget, we create and | 
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| 311 | return a \c TicTacToeTaskMenu object. Otherwise, we simply return | 
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| 312 | a null pointer, allowing \QD's extension manager to continue its | 
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| 313 | search through the registered factories. | 
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| 314 |  | 
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| 315 |  | 
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| 316 | \section1 TicTacToeTaskMenu Class Definition | 
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| 317 |  | 
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| 318 | \image taskmenuextension-menu.png | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 | The \c TicTacToeTaskMenu class inherits QDesignerTaskMenuExtension | 
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| 321 | which allows you to add custom entries (in the form of QActions) | 
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| 322 | to the task menu in \QD. | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.h 0 | 
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| 325 |  | 
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| 326 | We reimplement the \c preferredEditAction() and \c taskActions() | 
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| 327 | functions. Note that we implement a constructor that takes \e two | 
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| 328 | arguments: the parent widget, and the \c TicTacToe widget for | 
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| 329 | which the task menu is requested. | 
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| 330 |  | 
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| 331 | In addition we declare the private \c editState() slot, our custom | 
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| 332 | \c editStateAction and a private pointer to the \c TicTacToe | 
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| 333 | widget which state we want to modify. | 
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| 334 |  | 
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| 335 | \section1 TicTacToeTaskMenu Class Implementation | 
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| 336 |  | 
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| 337 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 0 | 
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| 338 |  | 
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| 339 | In the constructor we first save the reference to the \c TicTacToe | 
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| 340 | widget sent as parameter, i.e the widget which state we want to | 
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| 341 | modify. We will need this later when our custom action is | 
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| 342 | invoked. We also create our custom \c editStateAction and connect | 
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| 343 | it to the \c editState() slot. | 
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| 344 |  | 
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| 345 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 1 | 
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| 346 |  | 
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| 347 | The \c editState() slot is called whenever the user chooses the | 
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| 348 | \gui {Edit State...} option in a \c TicTacToe widget's task menu. The | 
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| 349 | slot creates a \c TicTacToeDialog presenting the current state of | 
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| 350 | the widget, and allowing the user to edit its state by playing the | 
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| 351 | game. | 
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| 352 |  | 
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| 353 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 2 | 
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| 354 |  | 
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| 355 | We reimplement the \c preferredEditAction() function to return our | 
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| 356 | custom \c editStateAction as the action that should be invoked | 
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| 357 | when selecting a \c TicTacToe widget and pressing \key F2 . | 
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| 358 |  | 
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| 359 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoetaskmenu.cpp 3 | 
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| 360 |  | 
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| 361 | We reimplement the \c taskActions() function to return a list of | 
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| 362 | our custom actions making these appear on top of the default menu | 
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| 363 | entries in a \c TicTacToe widget's task menu. | 
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| 364 |  | 
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| 365 | \section1 TicTacToeDialog Class Definition | 
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| 366 |  | 
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| 367 | \image taskmenuextension-dialog.png | 
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| 368 |  | 
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| 369 | The \c TicTacToeDialog class inherits QDialog. The dialog lets the | 
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| 370 | user modify the state of the currently selected Tic-Tac-Toe | 
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| 371 | plugin. | 
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| 372 |  | 
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| 373 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.h 0 | 
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| 374 |  | 
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| 375 | We reimplement the \c sizeHint() function. We also declare two | 
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| 376 | private slots: \c resetState() and \c saveState(). In addition to | 
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| 377 | the dialog's buttons and layouts we declare two \c TicTacToe | 
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| 378 | pointers, one to the widget the user can interact with and the | 
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| 379 | other to the original custom widget plugin which state the user | 
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| 380 | wants to edit. | 
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| 381 |  | 
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| 382 | \section1 TicTacToeDialog Class Implementation | 
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| 383 |  | 
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| 384 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 0 | 
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| 385 |  | 
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| 386 | In the constructor we first save the reference to the TicTacToe | 
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| 387 | widget sent as parameter, i.e the widget which state the user want | 
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| 388 | to modify. Then we create a new \c TicTacToe widget, and set its | 
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| 389 | state to be equivalent to the parameter widget's state. | 
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| 390 |  | 
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| 391 | Finally, we create the dialog's buttons and layout. | 
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| 392 |  | 
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| 393 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 1 | 
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| 394 |  | 
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| 395 | We reimplement the \c sizeHint() function to ensure that the | 
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| 396 | dialog is given a reasonable size. | 
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| 397 |  | 
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| 398 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 2 | 
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| 399 |  | 
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| 400 | The \c resetState() slot is called whenever the user press the | 
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| 401 | \gui Reset button. The only thing we do is to call the \c | 
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| 402 | clearBoard() function for the editor widget, i.e. the \c TicTacToe | 
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| 403 | widget we created in the dialog's constructor. | 
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| 404 |  | 
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| 405 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 3 | 
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| 406 |  | 
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| 407 | The \c saveState() slot is called whenever the user press the \gui | 
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| 408 | OK button, and transfers the state of the editor widget to the | 
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| 409 | widget which state we want to modify. In order to make the change | 
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| 410 | of state visible to \QD we need to set the latter widget's state | 
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| 411 | property using the QDesignerFormWindowInterface class. | 
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| 412 |  | 
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| 413 | QDesignerFormWindowInterface provides you with information about | 
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| 414 | the associated form window as well as allowing you to alter its | 
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| 415 | properties. The interface is not intended to be instantiated | 
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| 416 | directly, but to provide access to Qt Designer's current form | 
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| 417 | windows controlled by Qt Designer's form window manager. | 
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| 418 |  | 
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| 419 | If you are looking for the form window containing a specific | 
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| 420 | widget, you can use the static | 
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| 421 | QDesignerFormWindowInterface::findFormWindow() function: | 
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| 422 |  | 
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| 423 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 4 | 
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| 424 |  | 
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| 425 | After retrieving the form window of the widget (which state we | 
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| 426 | want to modify), we use the QDesignerFormWindowInterface::cursor() | 
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| 427 | function to retrieve the form window's cursor. | 
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| 428 |  | 
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| 429 | The QDesignerFormWindowCursorInterface class provides an interface | 
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| 430 | to the form window's text cursor. Once we have cursor, we can | 
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| 431 | finally set the state property using the | 
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| 432 | QDesignerFormWindowCursorInterface::setProperty() function. | 
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| 433 |  | 
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| 434 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoedialog.cpp 5 | 
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| 435 |  | 
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| 436 | In the end we call the QEvent::accept() function which sets the | 
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| 437 | accept flag of the event object. Setting the \c accept parameter | 
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| 438 | indicates that the event receiver wants the event. Unwanted events | 
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| 439 | might be propagated to the parent widget. | 
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| 440 |  | 
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| 441 | \section1 TicTacToe Class Definition | 
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| 442 |  | 
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| 443 | The \c TicTacToe class is a custom widget that lets the user play | 
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| 444 | the Tic-Tac-Toe game. | 
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| 445 |  | 
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| 446 | \snippet examples/designer/taskmenuextension/tictactoe.h 0 | 
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| 447 |  | 
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| 448 | The main details to observe in the \c TicTacToe class defintion is | 
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| 449 | the declaration of the \c state property and its \c state() and \c | 
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| 450 | setState() functions. | 
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| 451 |  | 
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| 452 | We need to declare the \c TicTacToe widget's state as a property | 
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| 453 | to make it visible to \QD; allowing \QD to manage it in the same | 
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| 454 | way it manages the properties the \c TicTacToe widget inherits | 
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| 455 | from QWidget and QObject, for example featuring the property | 
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| 456 | editor. | 
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| 457 | */ | 
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