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TQWidgetFactory Class Reference

The TQWidgetFactory class provides for the dynamic creation of widgets from TQt Designer .ui files. More...

#include <ntqwidgetfactory.h>

List of all member functions.

Public Members

Static Public Members


Detailed Description

The TQWidgetFactory class provides for the dynamic creation of widgets from TQt Designer .ui files.

This class basically offers two things:

This class is not included in the TQt library itself. To use it you must link against libtqui.so (Unix) or tqui.lib (Windows), which is built into INSTALL/lib if you built TQt Designer (INSTALL is the directory where TQt is installed ).

If you create a TQMainWindow using a TQWidgetFactory, be aware that it already has a central widget. Therefore, you need to delete this one before setting another one.

See the "Creating Dynamic Dialogs from .ui Files" section of the TQt Designer manual for an example. See also the TQWidgetPlugin class and the Plugins documentation.


Member Function Documentation

TQWidgetFactory::TQWidgetFactory ()

Constructs a TQWidgetFactory.

TQWidgetFactory::~TQWidgetFactory () [virtual]

Destructor.

void TQWidgetFactory::addWidgetFactory ( TQWidgetFactory * factory ) [static]

Installs a widget factory factory, which normally contains additional widgets that can then be created using a TQWidgetFactory. See createWidget() for further details.

TQWidget * TQWidgetFactory::create ( const TQString & uiFile, TQObject * connector = 0, TQWidget * parent = 0, const char * name = 0 ) [static]

Loads the TQt Designer user interface description file uiFile and returns the top-level widget in that description. parent and name are passed to the constructor of the top-level widget.

This function also performs signal and slot connections, tab ordering, etc., as described in the .ui file. In TQt Designer it is possible to add custom slots to a form and connect to them. If you want these connections to be made, you must create a class derived from TQObject, which implements all these slots. Then pass an instance of the object as connector to this function. If you do this, the connections to the custom slots will be done using the connector as slot.

If something fails, 0 is returned.

The ownership of the returned widget is passed to the caller.

TQWidget * TQWidgetFactory::create ( TQIODevice * dev, TQObject * connector = 0, TQWidget * parent = 0, const char * name = 0 ) [static]

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.

Loads the user interface description from device dev.

TQWidget * TQWidgetFactory::createWidget ( const TQString & className, TQWidget * parent, const char * name ) const [virtual]

Creates a widget of the type className passing parent and name to its constructor.

If className is a widget in the TQt library, it is directly created by this function. If the widget isn't in the TQt library, each of the installed widget plugins is asked, in turn, to create the widget. As soon as a plugin says it can create the widget it is asked to do so. It may occur that none of the plugins can create the widget, in which case each installed widget factory is asked to create the widget (see addWidgetFactory()). If the widget cannot be created by any of these means, 0 is returned.

If you have a custom widget, and want it to be created using the widget factory, there are two approaches you can use:

  1. Write a widget plugin. This allows you to use the widget in TQt Designer and in this TQWidgetFactory. See the widget plugin documentation for further details. (See the "Creating Custom Widgets with Plugins" section of the TQt Designer manual for an example.

  2. Subclass TQWidgetFactory. Then reimplement this function to create and return an instance of your custom widget if className equals the name of your widget, otherwise return 0. Then at the beginning of your program where you want to use the widget factory to create widgets do a:
        TQWidgetFactory::addWidgetFactory( new MyWidgetFactory );
        
    where MyWidgetFactory is your TQWidgetFactory subclass.

void TQWidgetFactory::loadImages ( const TQString & dir ) [static]

If you use a pixmap collection (which is the default for new projects) rather than saving the pixmaps within the .ui XML file, you must load the pixmap collection. TQWidgetFactory looks in the default TQMimeSourceFactory for the pixmaps. Either add it there manually, or call this function and specify the directory where the images can be found, as dir. This is normally the directory called images in the project's directory.

bool TQWidgetFactory::supportsWidget ( const TQString & widget ) [static]

Returns TRUE if the widget factory can create the specified widget; otherwise returns FALSE.

TQStringList TQWidgetFactory::widgets () [static]

Returns the names of the widgets this factory can create.

This file is part of the TQt toolkit. Copyright © 1995-2007 Trolltech. All Rights Reserved.


Copyright © 2007 TrolltechTrademarks
TQt 3.3.8