| 1 | /**************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 4 | ** Contact: Qt Software Information (qt-info@nokia.com) | 
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| 6 | ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. | 
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| 15 | ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage | 
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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page porting4-overview.html | 
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| 44 | \title Moving from Qt 3 to Qt 4 | 
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| 45 | \ingroup porting | 
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| 46 | \brief Porting advice for authors of new and existing Qt 3 applications. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 | This document describes which parts of Qt should be used when | 
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| 49 | writing an application with Qt 3, so that it can be upgraded to | 
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| 50 | use Qt 4 later with a minimum of effort. However, the advice may | 
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| 51 | also be useful to developers who are porting existing applications | 
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| 52 | from Qt 3 to Qt 4. | 
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| 53 |  | 
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| 54 | For a detailed overview | 
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| 55 | of the porting process for existing Qt 3 applications, see the | 
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| 56 | \l{Porting to Qt 4} document. | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 | Since Qt 4 provides important new functionality at the cost of | 
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| 61 | some compatibility with Qt 3, it is useful for developers of | 
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| 62 | Qt 3-based applications to learn how to take advantage of | 
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| 63 | Qt 3's API now while preparing for future changes that will be | 
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| 64 | needed when upgrading to Qt 4. | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | Certain advanced Qt 3 features were moved to the Qt 3 support | 
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| 67 | library (\l{Qt3Support}) in Qt 4.0, and have been gradually | 
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| 68 | replaced in subsequent releases of Qt 4. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | Making Qt 3 applications as portable to Qt 4 as possible | 
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| 71 | enables a smooth transition between versions of Qt in the | 
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| 72 | long term, and allows for a stable development process | 
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| 73 | throughout. | 
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| 74 |  | 
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| 75 | \section1 Qt 3 Features to Avoid | 
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| 76 |  | 
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| 77 | Although we are proud of the level of stability we have achieved | 
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| 78 | with Qt, it is important to realise that, for Qt 4 to be a | 
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| 79 | substantial improvement over Qt 3, certain features have | 
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| 80 | been revised to make the framework more maintainable for us | 
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| 81 | and more usable for developers. It is therefore useful to | 
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| 82 | know which features of Qt 3 should be avoided to help save | 
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| 83 | time during a later porting effort to Qt 4. Note that it is | 
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| 84 | still possible to use many of the following classes and | 
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| 85 | features through the use of the \l{Qt3Support} module. | 
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| 86 |  | 
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| 87 | \section2 Painting Outside Paint Events | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | In Qt 3, under certain circumstances, it was possible to use | 
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| 90 | QPainter to draw on a given custom widget outside its | 
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| 91 | \l{QWidget::}{paintEvent()} reimplementation. In Qt 4, in most | 
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| 92 | situations, painting must occur within a widget's paint event | 
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| 93 | handler. | 
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| 94 |  | 
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| 95 | On X11, it is possible to set the \l{Qt::WA_PaintOutsidePaintEvent} | 
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| 96 | attribute on widgets to keep existing code, but we recommend | 
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| 97 | restricting the use of painting code to within paint event handlers | 
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| 98 | where possible. | 
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| 99 |  | 
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| 100 | More information about this change can be found in the | 
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| 101 | \l{Porting to Qt 4#Painting and Redrawing Widgets}{Painting and Redrawing Widgets} | 
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| 102 | section of the \l{Porting to Qt 4} document. | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | \section2 Qt Designer | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | The version of Qt Designer supplied with Qt 3 provided | 
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| 107 | extensive code editing and project management features | 
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| 108 | (control over \c{.ui.h} and \c{.pro} files), and encouraged | 
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| 109 | users to design main window applications from within the | 
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| 110 | Qt Designer environment. | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | The version of Qt Designer supplied with Qt 4 is intended | 
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| 113 | to be integrated with other software development tools (such | 
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| 114 | as integrated development environments), and does not | 
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| 115 | support these project-level features. | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | We recommend using one of the | 
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| 118 | \l{Using a Designer .ui File in Your Application}{form subclassing approaches} | 
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| 119 | with forms created using Qt Designer. This avoids the need | 
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| 120 | to use \c{.ui.h} files and special purpose code editors. | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | Existing Qt 3 forms created using Qt Designer can be gradually | 
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| 123 | ported to Qt 4 by following the advice in the | 
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| 124 | \l{Porting .ui Files to Qt 4} guide. However, some extra effort | 
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| 125 | will be required to move application logic from \c{.ui.h} files | 
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| 126 | into the main body of a Qt 4 application. | 
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| 127 |  | 
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| 128 | \section2 Menu Items (QMenuItem) | 
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| 129 |  | 
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| 130 | The old-style construction of menus by creating individual | 
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| 131 | menu items has been superseded in Qt 4 by the use of | 
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| 132 | generic actions which can be used in menus, toolbars, and | 
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| 133 | as keyboard shortcuts. | 
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| 134 |  | 
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| 135 | Qt 3 also supports this action-based approach, so, by using | 
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| 136 | QAction throughout your application, less work will be | 
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| 137 | required to adapt your application to Qt 4. | 
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| 138 |  | 
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| 139 | \section2 Pointer-Based Classes (QPtr*) | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | Qt 3 provides a group of pointer-based classes (\c QPtrList, | 
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| 142 | \c QPtrDict, \c QPtrVector, etc.) that help manage collections | 
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| 143 | of pointers to objects (usually QObject subclasses) in an | 
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| 144 | application. In addition, the value-based collection classes | 
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| 145 | (\c QValueList, \c QValueDict, \c QValueVector, etc.) provide | 
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| 146 | a way to store standard value types which cannot be easily stored | 
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| 147 | in pointer-based collections. | 
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| 148 |  | 
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| 149 | Qt 4 introduces a single set of collection classes which | 
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| 150 | does not require developers to pay as much attention to | 
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| 151 | memory allocation and object ownership issues. As a result, | 
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| 152 | Qt 3's pointer-based classes have no direct equivalent | 
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| 153 | classes in Qt 4. | 
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| 154 |  | 
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| 155 | To ease migration, use Qt 3's value-based classes to store | 
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| 156 | most objects, including pointers; for example, use | 
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| 157 | \c QValueVector<QWidget *> rather than | 
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| 158 | \c QPtrVector<QWidget *>. These can be replaced by | 
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| 159 | Qt 4's QVector, QLinkedList, and QList later. | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | \section2 Other Collection Classes (QStrList, Q*Dict) | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | Some collection classes in Qt 3 have been deprecated in | 
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| 164 | favor of easier to use, higher level alternatives. These | 
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| 165 | include the dictionary classes (\c QAsciiDict, \c QDict, | 
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| 166 | \c QIntDict, \c QPtrDict) and \c QStrList. | 
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| 167 |  | 
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| 168 | \c QStrList can usually replaced by the higher level QStringList | 
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| 169 | class in Qt 3; this is also available in Qt 4. It is | 
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| 170 | recommended that you use the QMap class instead of the \c QDict | 
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| 171 | classes. In Qt 4, QMap is also complemented by the QHash | 
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| 172 | class. | 
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| 173 |  | 
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| 174 | \section2 Memory Arrays (QMemArray) | 
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| 175 |  | 
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| 176 | In Qt 3, the \c QMemArray class is used as a simple array | 
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| 177 | container for simple data types. This class is deprecated in | 
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| 178 | Qt 4 in favor of the QVector and QVarLengthVector classes | 
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| 179 | which provide more powerful and consistent array objects. | 
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| 180 |  | 
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| 181 | Qt 3's closest equivalent class to Qt 4's QVector is the | 
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| 182 | \c QValueVector class. For many purposes, this can be used | 
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| 183 | instead of \c QMemArray. | 
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| 184 |  | 
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| 185 | \section2 URL Operations (QUrlOperator) | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | The URL operator in Qt 3 provides an abstract way to | 
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| 188 | handle files via HTTP, FTP, and on the local file system. | 
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| 189 | However, Qt 4 only provides this functionality through the | 
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| 190 | use of the Q3UrlOperator. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | From Qt 4.4, the Network Access API provides a subset of the features | 
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| 193 | provided by \c QUrlOperator that are mostly intended for use with | 
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| 194 | applications that use the HTTP and FTP protocols. See the | 
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| 195 | QNetworkRequest, QNetworkReply, and QNetworkAccessManager documentation | 
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| 196 | for further details. | 
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| 197 |  | 
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| 198 | It is also possible to perform operations on remote files | 
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| 199 | through the QHttp and QFtp classes, and on local files with | 
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| 200 | the QFile class. | 
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| 201 |  | 
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| 202 | \section2 SQL Cursors (QSqlCursor) | 
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| 203 |  | 
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| 204 | In Qt 3, one of the preferred methods of working with SQL | 
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| 205 | is to use a cursor to manipulate the contents of a database. | 
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| 206 | In Qt 4, the preferred method of working with SQL is to use | 
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| 207 | the model/view architecture (QSqlQueryModel and QSqlTableModel) | 
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| 208 | and, as a result, the cursor interface is only supplied in the | 
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| 209 | Q3SqlCursor class. | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | The easiest way to ensure continuity between Qt 3 and Qt 4 | 
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| 212 | is to use QSqlQuery rather than \c QSqlCursor, | 
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| 213 | and migrate to QSqlQueryModel later. | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | \section2 Domain Name Service (QDns) | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | The QDns class in Qt 4 provides a much simpler interface | 
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| 218 | than the QDns class in Qt 3, and is mainly used for host | 
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| 219 | name resolution. | 
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| 220 | As a result, many of the more complex features of Qt 3's | 
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| 221 | QDns class are only available through Qt 4's Q3Dns | 
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| 222 | compatibility class. | 
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| 223 |  | 
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| 224 | To resolve host names with Qt 3, it is recommended that you | 
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| 225 | use the higher level interface of QSocket rather than QDns. | 
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| 226 | The equivalent functionality is available in Qt 4 in the | 
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| 227 | QAbstractSocket and QHostInfo classes. | 
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| 228 |  | 
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| 229 | \section2 Wizard Dialogs (QWizard) | 
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| 230 |  | 
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| 231 | Qt 3 provides support for "wizard" dialogs in the form of | 
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| 232 | the \c QWizard class. Prior to Qt 4.3, this class was made | 
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| 233 | available as Q3Wizard, and provides the same interface for | 
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| 234 | creating relatively complex wizards. | 
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| 235 |  | 
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| 236 | In Qt 4.3 and later, a revised QWizard class can be used to | 
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| 237 | create this kind of dialog, but existing Qt 3 wizard | 
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| 238 | implementations may need to be redesigned to work with the | 
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| 239 | new QWizard API. | 
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| 240 |  | 
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| 241 | \section2 Abstract Grid Views (QGridView) | 
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| 242 |  | 
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| 243 | Before the introduction of the Qt 3 \c QTable class, | 
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| 244 | \c QGridView was the recommended way to create tables of | 
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| 245 | custom items. | 
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| 246 | With the introduction of \c QTable, the \c QGridView class was | 
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| 247 | effectively obsoleted, and the \c QTable class should now be | 
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| 248 | used to display tabular information in your Qt 3 application. | 
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| 249 | This approach allows you to use QTableWidget as a replacement | 
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| 250 | when later porting your application to Qt 4. | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | \section2 Specialized Scrolling Views | 
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| 253 |  | 
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| 254 | In Qt 3, the \c QScrollView class provides a viewport that can | 
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| 255 | be used to display part of a larger widget, and will | 
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| 256 | optionally provide scroll bars for navigation purposes. | 
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| 257 | In Qt 4, this functionality is superseded by classes such as | 
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| 258 | QScrollArea, which provides a more intuitive interface for | 
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| 259 | developers to use. | 
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| 260 | \c QScrollView is available in Qt 4 as the Q3ScrollView class. | 
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| 261 |  | 
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| 262 | In Qt 3, it is recommended that \c QScrollView should be | 
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| 263 | used with child widgets rather than subclassed. However, it | 
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| 264 | should be noted that this approach may not be appropriate if | 
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| 265 | you need to use extremely large scrolling areas in your | 
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| 266 | application, since Qt 3 widgets cannot be wider or taller | 
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| 267 | than 32767 pixels. | 
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| 268 |  | 
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| 269 | \section1 Significantly Changed Features | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 | Some Qt 3 features have changed significantly for Qt 4. | 
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| 272 | and the recommended way of using them has therefore changed | 
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| 273 | significantly, too. This is most notably true for the drag | 
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| 274 | and drop API. | 
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| 275 |  | 
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| 276 | Additionally, some of the more specialized features in Qt 3 are | 
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| 277 | often used to help customize widgets and add extra polish to an | 
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| 278 | application. | 
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| 279 | Although these improvements make applications more presentable to | 
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| 280 | users, many of them are unnecessary with Qt 4, and may create | 
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| 281 | additional porting work. | 
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| 282 |  | 
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| 283 | \section2 Drag and Drop | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | Qt 4 introduces a simpler and more intuitive implementation | 
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| 286 | of drag and drop between widgets, and with other applications. | 
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| 287 | As a result, there is no simple approach that can be used to | 
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| 288 | make drag and drop in a Qt 3 application easier to port to | 
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| 289 | Qt 4. | 
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| 290 |  | 
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| 291 | \section2 Extensive Customization of Item Views | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | Each of the classes that are used to display list, tree, | 
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| 294 | and table items in Qt 3 can be subclassed for the purposes | 
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| 295 | of customizing their appearance. The item view framework | 
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| 296 | in Qt 4 is implemented according to a different paradigm | 
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| 297 | (model/view) which does not allow items to be customized | 
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| 298 | using this method. | 
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| 299 |  | 
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| 300 | Although Qt 4 provides compatibility classes (Q3ListBoxItem, | 
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| 301 | Q3ListViewItem, and Q3TableItem) that can be used in the same | 
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| 302 | way as their Qt 3 counterparts, these cannot be used within | 
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| 303 | the standard model/view framework. It is recommended that, | 
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| 304 | to minimize porting effort, extensive customization of item | 
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| 305 | classes should be avoided in Qt 3, if at all possible. | 
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| 306 |  | 
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| 307 | \section2 Double Buffering | 
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| 308 |  | 
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| 309 | Qt 3 applications often use double buffering for reducing | 
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| 310 | flicker when painting custom widgets. This approach is | 
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| 311 | unnecessary with Qt 4 because double buffering is | 
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| 312 | automatically performed by the paint engine. | 
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| 313 |  | 
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| 314 | It still makes sense to use double buffering in | 
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| 315 | Qt 4 in certain contexts. For example, in | 
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| 316 | Chapter 5 of \l{GUI Programming with Qt 3}, double buffering | 
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| 317 | was presented as a speed optimization and not just as a means | 
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| 318 | of reducing flicker. | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 | \section2 Data-Aware Forms | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | The \c QDataTable, \c QDataBrowser, and \c QDataView classes | 
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| 323 | in Qt 3 allow integration between widgets and SQL-based | 
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| 324 | databases. | 
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| 325 |  | 
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| 326 | In Qt 4.1 and earlier, the preferred way to create a data-aware | 
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| 327 | widget is to connect an generic item view (such as a table view) | 
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| 328 | to a SQL model. In Qt 4.2 and later, the QDataWidgetMapper class | 
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| 329 | can be used to map data to widgets in a form-based user interface. | 
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| 330 |  | 
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| 331 | New applications written with Qt 3 should use QSqlQuery in | 
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| 332 | preference to an approach based on the old-style data-aware | 
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| 333 | widgets. | 
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| 334 | This offers a choice of porting strategies when later migrating | 
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| 335 | the application to Qt 4: You can either continue to use | 
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| 336 | QSqlQuery or take the opportunity to use the model/view | 
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| 337 | classes to handle database integration. | 
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| 338 |  | 
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| 339 | \section2 Dock Windows and Areas | 
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| 340 |  | 
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| 341 | In Qt 4, the way that dock windows are constructed and used | 
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| 342 | in main window applications differs significantly to the | 
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| 343 | pattern of use provided by Qt 3. As a result, the introduction | 
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| 344 | of a simpler and cleaner API means that Qt 3 applications that | 
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| 345 | make extensive use of dock window areas will require careful | 
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| 346 | examination when they are ported to Qt 4. | 
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| 347 |  | 
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| 348 | We recommend that the QMainWindow class be used in preference | 
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| 349 | to the Q3MainWindow compatibility class when an existing Qt 3 | 
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| 350 | main window application is ported to Qt 4. Therefore, we | 
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| 351 | recommend that specialized use of dock window areas should | 
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| 352 | be avoided when writing a Qt 3 application with Qt 4 in mind. | 
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| 353 |  | 
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| 354 | \section2 Custom Styles | 
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| 355 |  | 
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| 356 | The style system used to provide consistent themes for Qt's | 
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| 357 | standard widgets has been revised for Qt 4. As a result, | 
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| 358 | custom styles for Qt 3 require some porting work to be done | 
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| 359 | before they can be used with Qt 4. To ease the porting process, | 
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| 360 | we recommend that you avoid implementing custom widget styles | 
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| 361 | for Qt 3 applications unless it is absolutely necessary for | 
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| 362 | your users. | 
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| 363 |  | 
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| 364 | In Qt 4.2 and later, \l{Qt Style Sheets} can be used to | 
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| 365 | implement many common modifications to existing styles, and | 
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| 366 | this may be sufficient for Qt 3 applications. | 
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| 367 | */ | 
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