/************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (c) 2012 Digia Plc and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/legal ** ** This file is part of Qt Creator ** ** ** GNU Free Documentation License ** ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free ** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this ** file. ** ** **************************************************************************/ /*! \page creating-plugins.html \title Creating Plugins At its very core, \QC consists of a plugin loader that loads and runs a set of plugins, which then actually provide the functionality that you know from \QC the IDE. So, even the main application window and menus are all provided by plugins. Plugins can use different means to provide other plugins access to their functionality and to allow them to extend certain aspects of the application. For example the "Core" plugin, which is the very basic plugin that must be present for \QC to run at all, provides the main window itself, and API for adding menu items, modes, editor types, navigation panels and many other things. The "TextEditor" plugin provides a framework and base implementation for different text editors with highlighting, completion and folding, that is then used by other plugins to add more specialized text editor types to \QC, like for editing C/C++ or .pro files. After reading this guide you will know what a basic plugin consists of, how to write a plugin specification file, what the lifecycle of a plugin is, what the general principles for extending existing plugins' functionality and providing interfaces for other plugins are, and will be able to write your first plugin. \section1 Basics \list \o \l{Getting and Building Qt Creator} \o \l{Creating Your First Plugin} \o \l{Plugin Specifications} \o \l{Plugin Life Cycle} \endlist \section1 Design Principles \list \o \l{The Plugin Manager, the Object Pool, and Registered Objects} \o \l{Aggregations} \o \l{Extending and Providing Interfaces} \endlist \section1 Creating 3rd-Party Plugins \list \o \l{A Note on Binary Compatibility} \o \l{Creating User-Installable Plugins} \endlist */