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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page paintsystem.html | 
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| 44 |  | 
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| 45 | \title The Paint System | 
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| 46 |  | 
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| 47 | Qt's paint system enables painting on screen and print devices | 
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| 48 | using the same API, and is primarily based on the QPainter, | 
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| 49 | QPaintDevice, and QPaintEngine classes. | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | QPainter is used to perform drawing operations, QPaintDevice is an | 
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| 52 | abstraction of a two-dimensional space that can be painted on | 
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| 53 | using a QPainter, and QPaintEngine provides the interface that the | 
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| 54 | painter uses to draw onto different types of devices. The | 
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| 55 | QPaintEngine class is used internally by QPainter and | 
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| 56 | QPaintDevice, and is hidden from application programmers unless | 
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| 57 | they create their own device type. | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | \image paintsystem-core.png | 
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| 60 |  | 
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| 61 | The main benefit of this approach is that all painting follows the | 
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| 62 | same painting pipeline making it easy to add support for new | 
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| 63 | features and providing default implementations for unsupported | 
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| 64 | ones. | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | Alternatively, Qt provides the QtOpenGL module, offering classes | 
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| 67 | that makes it easy to use OpenGL in Qt applications. Among others, | 
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| 68 | the module provides an OpenGL widget class that can be used just | 
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| 69 | like any other Qt widget, except that it opens an OpenGL display | 
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| 70 | buffer where the OpenGL API can be used to render the contents. | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | \tableofcontents section1 | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | \section1 Drawing | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | QPainter provides highly optimized functions to do most of the | 
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| 77 | drawing GUI programs require. It can draw everything from simple | 
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| 78 | graphical primitives (represented by the QPoint, QLine, QRect, | 
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| 79 | QRegion and QPolygon classes) to complex shapes like vector | 
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| 80 | paths. In Qt vector paths are represented by the QPainterPath | 
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| 81 | class. QPainterPath provides a container for painting operations, | 
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| 82 | enabling graphical shapes to be constructed and reused. | 
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| 83 |  | 
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| 84 | \table 100% | 
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| 85 | \row | 
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| 86 | \o \image paintsystem-painterpath.png | 
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| 87 | \o \bold QPainterPath | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | A painter path is an object composed of lines and curves. For | 
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| 90 | example, a rectangle is composed by lines and an ellipse is | 
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| 91 | composed by curves. | 
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| 92 |  | 
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| 93 | The main advantage of painter paths over normal drawing operations | 
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| 94 | is that complex shapes only need to be created once; then they can | 
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| 95 | be drawn many times using only calls to the QPainter::drawPath() | 
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| 96 | function. | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | A QPainterPath object can be used for filling, outlining, and | 
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| 99 | clipping. To generate fillable outlines for a given painter path, | 
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| 100 | use the QPainterPathStroker class. | 
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| 101 |  | 
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| 102 | \endtable | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | Lines and outlines are drawn using the QPen class. A pen is | 
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| 105 | defined by its style (i.e. its line-type), width, brush, how the | 
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| 106 | endpoints are drawn (cap-style) and how joins between two | 
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| 107 | connected lines are drawn (join-style). The pen's brush is a | 
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| 108 | QBrush object used to fill strokes generated with the pen, | 
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| 109 | i.e. the QBrush class defines the fill pattern. | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | QPainter can also draw aligned text and pixmaps. | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 | When drawing text, the font is specified using the QFont class. Qt | 
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| 114 | will use the font with the specified attributes, or if no matching | 
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| 115 | font exists, Qt will use the closest matching installed font. The | 
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| 116 | attributes of the font that is actually used can be retrieved | 
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| 117 | using the QFontInfo class. In addition, the QFontMetrics class | 
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| 118 | provides the font measurements, and the QFontDatabase class | 
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| 119 | provides information about the fonts available in the underlying | 
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| 120 | window system. | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | Normally, QPainter draws in a "natural" coordinate system, but it | 
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| 123 | is able to perform view and world transformations using the | 
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| 124 | QMatrix class. For more information, see \l {The Coordinate | 
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| 125 | System} documentation which also describes the rendering process, | 
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| 126 | i.e. the relation between the logical representation and the | 
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| 127 | rendered pixels, and the benefits of anti-aliased painting. | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | \table 100% | 
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| 130 | \row \o | 
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| 131 | \bold {Anti-Aliased Painting} | 
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| 132 |  | 
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| 133 | When drawing, the pixel rendering is controlled by the | 
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| 134 | QPainter::Antialiasing render hint. The QPainter::RenderHint enum | 
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| 135 | is used to specify flags to QPainter that may or may not be | 
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| 136 | respected by any given engine. | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | The QPainter::Antialiasing value indicates that the engine should | 
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| 139 | antialias edges of primitives if possible, i.e. smoothing the | 
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| 140 | edges by using different color intensities. | 
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| 141 |  | 
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| 142 | \o \image paintsystem-antialiasing.png | 
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| 143 |  | 
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| 144 | \endtable | 
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| 145 |  | 
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| 146 | \section1 Filling | 
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| 147 |  | 
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| 148 | Shapes are filled using the QBrush class. A brush is defined | 
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| 149 | by its color and its style (i.e. its fill pattern). | 
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| 150 |  | 
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| 151 | Any color in Qt is represented by the QColor class which supports | 
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| 152 | the RGB, HSV and CMYK color models. QColor also support | 
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| 153 | alpha-blended outlining and filling (specifying the transparency | 
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| 154 | effect), and the class is platform and device independent (the | 
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| 155 | colors are mapped to hardware using the QColormap class). For more | 
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| 156 | information, see the QColor class documentation. | 
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| 157 |  | 
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| 158 | When creating a new widget, it is recommend to use the colors in | 
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| 159 | the widget's palette rather than hard-coding specific colors. All | 
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| 160 | widgets in Qt contain a palette and use their palette to draw | 
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| 161 | themselves. A widget's palette is represented by the QPalette | 
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| 162 | class which contains color groups for each widget state. | 
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| 163 |  | 
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| 164 | The available fill patterns are described by the Qt::BrushStyle | 
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| 165 | enum. These include basic patterns spanning from uniform color to | 
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| 166 | very sparse pattern, various line combinations, gradient fills and | 
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| 167 | textures. Qt provides the QGradient class to define custom | 
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| 168 | gradient fills, while texture patterns are specified using the | 
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| 169 | QPixmap class. | 
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| 170 |  | 
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| 171 | \table 100% | 
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| 172 | \row | 
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| 173 | \o \image paintsystem-fancygradient.png | 
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| 174 | \o \bold QGradient | 
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| 175 |  | 
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| 176 | The QGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify | 
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| 177 | gradient fills. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | \image paintsystem-gradients.png | 
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| 180 |  | 
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| 181 | Qt currently supports three types of gradient fills: Linear | 
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| 182 | gradients interpolate colors between start and end points, radial | 
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| 183 | gradients interpolate colors between a focal point and end points | 
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| 184 | on a circle surrounding it, and conical gradients interpolate | 
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| 185 | colors around a center point. | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | \endtable | 
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| 188 |  | 
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| 189 | \section1 Creating a Paint Device | 
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| 190 |  | 
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| 191 | The QPaintDevice class is the base class of objects that can be | 
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| 192 | painted, i.e. QPainter can draw on any QPaintDevice | 
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| 193 | subclass. QPaintDevice's drawing capabilities are currently | 
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| 194 | implemented by the QWidget, QImage, QPixmap, QGLWidget, | 
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| 195 | QGLPixelBuffer, QPicture and QPrinter subclasses. | 
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| 196 |  | 
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| 197 | \image paintsystem-devices.png | 
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| 198 |  | 
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| 199 | \table 100% | 
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| 200 | \row \o \bold {Custom Backends} | 
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| 201 |  | 
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| 202 | Support for a new backend can be implemented by deriving from the | 
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| 203 | QPaintDevice class and reimplementing the virtual | 
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| 204 | QPaintDevice::paintEngine() function to tell QPainter which paint | 
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| 205 | engine should be used to draw on this particular device. To | 
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| 206 | actually be able to draw on the device, this paint engine must be | 
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| 207 | a custom paint engine created by deriving from the QPaintEngine | 
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| 208 | class. | 
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| 209 |  | 
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| 210 | \endtable | 
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| 211 |  | 
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| 212 | \section2 Widget | 
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| 213 |  | 
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| 214 | The QWidget class is the base class of all user interface | 
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| 215 | objects. The widget is the atom of the user interface: it receives | 
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| 216 | mouse, keyboard and other events from the window system, and | 
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| 217 | paints a representation of itself on the screen. | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | \section2 Image | 
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| 220 |  | 
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| 221 | The QImage class provides a hardware-independent image | 
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| 222 | representation which is designed and optimized for I/O, and for | 
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| 223 | direct pixel access and manipulation. QImage supports several | 
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| 224 | image formats including monochrome, 8-bit, 32-bit and | 
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| 225 | alpha-blended images. | 
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| 226 |  | 
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| 227 | One advantage of using QImage as a paint device is that it is | 
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| 228 | possible to guarantee the pixel exactness of any drawing operation | 
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| 229 | in a platform-independent way. Another benefit is that the | 
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| 230 | painting can be performed in another thread than the current GUI | 
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| 231 | thread. | 
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| 232 |  | 
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| 233 | \section2 Pixmap | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | The QPixmap class is an off-screen image representation which is | 
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| 236 | designed and optimized for showing images on screen. Unlike | 
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| 237 | QImage, the pixel data in a pixmap is internal and is managed by | 
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| 238 | the underlying window system, i.e. pixels can only be accessed | 
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| 239 | through QPainter functions or by converting the QPixmap to a | 
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| 240 | QImage. | 
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| 241 |  | 
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| 242 | To optimize drawing with QPixmap, Qt provides the QPixmapCache | 
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| 243 | class which can be used to store temporary pixmaps that are | 
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| 244 | expensive to generate without using more storage space than the | 
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| 245 | cache limit. | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | Qt also provides the QBitmap convenience class, inheriting | 
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| 248 | QPixmap. QBitmap guarantees monochrome (1-bit depth) pixmaps, and | 
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| 249 | is mainly used for creating custom QCursor and QBrush objects, | 
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| 250 | constructing QRegion objects, and for setting masks for pixmaps | 
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| 251 | and widgets. | 
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| 252 |  | 
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| 253 | \section2 OpenGL Widget | 
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| 254 |  | 
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| 255 | As mentioned above, Qt provides the QtOpenGL module offering | 
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| 256 | classes that makes it easy to use OpenGL in Qt applications. For | 
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| 257 | example, the QGLWidget enables the OpenGL API for | 
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| 258 | rendering. | 
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| 259 |  | 
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| 260 | But QGLWidget is also a QWidget subclass, and can be used by | 
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| 261 | QPainter as any other paint device. One huge benefit from this is | 
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| 262 | that it enables Qt to utilize the high performance of OpenGL for | 
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| 263 | most drawing operations, such as transformations and pixmap | 
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| 264 | drawing. | 
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| 265 |  | 
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| 266 | \section2 Pixel Buffer | 
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| 267 |  | 
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| 268 | The QtOpenGL module also provides the QGLPixelBuffer class which | 
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| 269 | inherits QPaintDevice directly. | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 | QGLPixelBuffer encapsulates an OpenGL pbuffer. Rendering into a | 
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| 272 | pbuffer is normally done using full hardware acceleration which | 
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| 273 | can be significantly faster than rendering into a QPixmap. | 
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| 274 |  | 
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| 275 | \section2 Framebuffer Object | 
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| 276 |  | 
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| 277 | The QtOpenGL module also provides the QGLFramebufferObject class | 
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| 278 | which inherits QPaintDevice directly. | 
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| 279 |  | 
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| 280 | QGLFramebufferObject encapsulates an OpenGL framebuffer object. | 
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| 281 | Framebuffer objects can also be used for off-screen rendering, and | 
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| 282 | offer several advantages over pixel buffers for this purpose. | 
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| 283 | These are described in the QGLFramebufferObject class documentation. | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | \section2 Picture | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | The QPicture class is a paint device that records and replays | 
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| 288 | QPainter commands. A picture serializes painter commands to an IO | 
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| 289 | device in a platform-independent format. QPicture is also | 
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| 290 | resolution independent, i.e. a QPicture can be displayed on | 
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| 291 | different devices (for example svg, pdf, ps, printer and screen) | 
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| 292 | looking the same. | 
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| 293 |  | 
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| 294 | Qt provides the QPicture::load() and QPicture::save() functions | 
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| 295 | for loading and saving pictures. But in addition the QPictureIO | 
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| 296 | class is provided to enable the programmer to install new picture | 
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| 297 | file formats in addition to those that Qt provides. | 
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| 298 |  | 
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| 299 | \section2 Printer | 
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| 300 |  | 
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| 301 | The QPrinter class is a paint device that paints on a printer. On | 
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| 302 | Windows or Mac OS X, QPrinter uses the built-in printer | 
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| 303 | drivers. On X11, QPrinter generates postscript and sends that to | 
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| 304 | lpr, lp, or another print program. QPrinter can also print to any | 
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| 305 | other QPrintEngine object. | 
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| 306 |  | 
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| 307 | The QPrintEngine class defines an interface for how QPrinter | 
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| 308 | interacts with a given printing subsystem. The common case when | 
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| 309 | creating your own print engine, is to derive from both | 
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| 310 | QPaintEngine and QPrintEngine. | 
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| 311 |  | 
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| 312 | The output format is by default determined by the platform the | 
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| 313 | printer is running on, but by explicitly setting the output format | 
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| 314 | to QPrinter::PdfFormat, QPrinter will generate its output as a PDF | 
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| 315 | file. | 
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| 316 |  | 
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| 317 | \section1 Reading and Writing Image Files | 
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| 318 |  | 
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| 319 | The most common way to read images is through QImage and QPixmap's | 
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| 320 | constructors, or by calling the QImage::load() and QPixmap::load() | 
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| 321 | functions. In addition, Qt provides the QImageReader class which | 
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| 322 | gives more control over the process. Depending on the underlying | 
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| 323 | support in the image format, the functions provided by the class | 
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| 324 | can save memory and speed up loading of images. | 
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| 325 |  | 
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| 326 | Likewise, Qt provides the QImageWriter class which supports | 
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| 327 | setting format specific options, such as the gamma level, | 
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| 328 | compression level and quality, prior to storing the image. If you | 
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| 329 | do not need such options, you can use QImage::save() or | 
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| 330 | QPixmap::save() instead. | 
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| 331 |  | 
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| 332 | \table 100% | 
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| 333 | \row | 
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| 334 | \o \bold QMovie | 
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| 335 |  | 
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| 336 | QMovie is a convenience class for displaying animations, using the | 
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| 337 | QImageReader class internally.  Once created, the QMovie class | 
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| 338 | provides various functions for both running and controlling the | 
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| 339 | given animation. | 
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| 340 |  | 
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| 341 | \o \image paintsystem-movie.png | 
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| 342 | \endtable | 
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| 343 |  | 
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| 344 | The QImageReader and QImageWriter classes rely on the | 
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| 345 | QImageIOHandler class which is the common image I/O interface for | 
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| 346 | all image formats in Qt. QImageIOHandler objects are used | 
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| 347 | internally by QImageReader and QImageWriter to add support for | 
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| 348 | different image formats to Qt. | 
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| 349 |  | 
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| 350 | A list of the supported file formats are available through the | 
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| 351 | QImageReader::supportedImageFormats() and | 
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| 352 | QImageWriter::supportedImageFormats() functions. Qt supports | 
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| 353 | several file formats by default, and in addition new formats can | 
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| 354 | be added as plugins. The currently supported formats are listed in | 
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| 355 | the QImageReader and QImageWriter class documentation. | 
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| 356 |  | 
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| 357 | Qt's plugin mechanism can also be used to write a custom image | 
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| 358 | format handler. This is done by deriving from the QImageIOHandler | 
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| 359 | class, and creating a QImageIOPlugin object which is a factory for | 
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| 360 | creating QImageIOHandler objects. When the plugin is installed, | 
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| 361 | QImageReader and QImageWriter will automatically load the plugin | 
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| 362 | and start using it. | 
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| 363 |  | 
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| 364 | \table 100% | 
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| 365 | \row | 
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| 366 | \o \image paintsystem-svg.png | 
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| 367 | \o \bold {SVG Rendering} | 
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| 368 |  | 
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| 369 | Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is an language for describing both | 
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| 370 | static and animated two-dimensional vector graphics. Qt includes | 
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| 371 | support for the static features of SVG 1.2 Tiny. | 
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| 372 |  | 
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| 373 | SVG drawings can be rendered onto any QPaintDevice subclass.  This | 
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| 374 | approach gives developers the flexibility to experiment, in order | 
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| 375 | to find the best solution for each application. | 
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| 376 |  | 
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| 377 | The easiest way to render SVG files is to construct a QSvgWidget | 
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| 378 | and load an SVG file using one of the QSvgWidget::load() | 
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| 379 | functions. The rendering is performed by the QSvgRenderer class | 
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| 380 | which also can be used directly to provide SVG support for custom | 
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| 381 | widgets. | 
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| 382 |  | 
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| 383 | For more information, see the QtSvg module documentation. | 
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| 384 |  | 
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| 385 | \endtable | 
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| 386 |  | 
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| 387 | \section1 Styling | 
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| 388 |  | 
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| 389 | Qt's built-in widgets use the QStyle class to perform nearly all | 
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| 390 | of their drawing.  QStyle is an abstract base class that | 
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| 391 | encapsulates the look and feel of a GUI, and can be used to make | 
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| 392 | the widgets look exactly like the equivalent native widgets or to | 
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| 393 | give the widgets a custom look. | 
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| 394 |  | 
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| 395 | Qt provides a set of QStyle subclasses that emulate the native | 
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| 396 | look of the different platforms supported by Qt (QWindowsStyle, | 
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| 397 | QMacStyle, QMotifStyle, etc.). These styles are built into the | 
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| 398 | QtGui library, other styles can be made available using Qt's | 
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| 399 | plugin mechansim. | 
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| 400 |  | 
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| 401 | Most functions for drawing style elements take four arguments: | 
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| 402 |  | 
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| 403 | \list | 
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| 404 | \o an enum value specifying which graphical element to draw | 
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| 405 | \o a QStyleOption object specifying how and where to render that element | 
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| 406 | \o a QPainter object that should be used to draw the element | 
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| 407 | \o a QWidget object on which the drawing is performed (optional) | 
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| 408 | \endlist | 
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| 409 |  | 
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| 410 | The style gets all the information it needs to render the | 
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| 411 | graphical element from the QStyleOption class. The widget is | 
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| 412 | passed as the last argument in case the style needs it to perform | 
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| 413 | special effects (such as animated default buttons on Mac OS X), | 
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| 414 | but it isn't mandatory. In fact, QStyle can be used to draw on any | 
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| 415 | paint device (not just widgets), in which case the widget argument | 
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| 416 | is a zero pointer. | 
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| 417 |  | 
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| 418 | \image paintsystem-stylepainter.png | 
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| 419 |  | 
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| 420 | The paint system also provides the QStylePainter class inheriting | 
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| 421 | from QPainter.  QStylePainter is a convenience class for drawing | 
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| 422 | QStyle elements inside a widget, and extends QPainter with a set | 
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| 423 | of high-level drawing functions implemented on top of QStyle's | 
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| 424 | API. The advantage of using QStylePainter is that the parameter | 
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| 425 | lists get considerably shorter. | 
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| 426 |  | 
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| 427 | \table 100% | 
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| 428 | \row | 
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| 429 | \o \inlineimage paintsystem-icon.png | 
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| 430 | \o \bold QIcon | 
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| 431 |  | 
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| 432 | The QIcon class provides scalable icons in different modes and states. | 
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| 433 |  | 
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| 434 | QIcon can generate pixmaps reflecting an icon's state, mode and | 
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| 435 | size. These pixmaps are generated from the set of pixmaps | 
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| 436 | made available to the icon, and are used by Qt widgets to show an | 
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| 437 | icon representing a particular action. | 
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| 438 |  | 
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| 439 | The rendering of a QIcon object is handled by the QIconEngine | 
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| 440 | class. Each icon has a corresponding icon engine that is | 
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| 441 | responsible for drawing the icon with a requested size, mode and | 
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| 442 | state. | 
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| 443 |  | 
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| 444 | \endtable | 
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| 445 |  | 
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| 446 | \section1 Selecting the Painting Backend | 
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| 447 |  | 
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| 448 | Since Qt 4.5, it is possible to replace the paint engines and paint | 
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| 449 | devices used for widgets, pixmaps and the offscreen double buffer. By | 
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| 450 | default the backends are: | 
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| 451 |  | 
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| 452 | \table | 
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| 453 | \row | 
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| 454 | \o Windows | 
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| 455 | \o Software Rasterizer | 
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| 456 | \row | 
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| 457 | \o X11 | 
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| 458 | \o X11 | 
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| 459 | \row | 
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| 460 | \o Mac OS X | 
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| 461 | \o CoreGraphics | 
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| 462 | \row | 
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| 463 | \o Embedded | 
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| 464 | \o Software Rasterizer | 
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| 465 | \endtable | 
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| 466 |  | 
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| 467 | Passing a command line parameter to the application, such as, | 
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| 468 | \c{-graphicssystem raster}, specifies that Qt should use the software | 
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| 469 | rasterizer for this application. The Software rasterizer is fully | 
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| 470 | supported on all platforms. | 
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| 471 |  | 
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| 472 | \code | 
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| 473 | > analogclock -graphicssystem raster | 
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| 474 | \endcode | 
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| 475 |  | 
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| 476 | There is also a \c{-graphicssystem opengl} mode that uses OpenGL for | 
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| 477 | all drawing. Currently, this engine is experimental as it does not draw | 
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| 478 | everything correctly. | 
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| 479 |  | 
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| 480 | Qt also supports being configured using \c {-graphicssystem | 
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| 481 | raster|opengl} in which case all applications will use the | 
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| 482 | specified graphics system for its graphics. | 
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| 483 |  | 
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| 484 | */ | 
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| 485 |  | 
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