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-rw-r--r--doc/src/declarative/globalobject.qdoc244
-rw-r--r--doc/src/declarative/qtdeclarative.qdoc2
2 files changed, 2 insertions, 244 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/globalobject.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/globalobject.qdoc
index bd0a9f5c7b..2885dd588e 100644
--- a/doc/src/declarative/globalobject.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/declarative/globalobject.qdoc
@@ -49,251 +49,9 @@ Contains all the properties of the JavaScript global object, plus:
\section1 Qt Object
-The Qt object provides useful enums and functions from Qt, for use in all QML
+The \l{qt-qml.html}{Qt object} provides useful enums and functions from Qt, for use in all QML
files.
-\section2 Enums
-The Qt object contains all enums in the Qt namespace. For example, you can
-access the AlignLeft member of the Qt::AlignmentFlag enum with \c Qt.AlignLeft.
-
-For a full list of enums, see the \l{Qt Namespace} documentation.
-
-\section2 Types
-The Qt object also contains helper functions for creating objects of specific
-data types. This is primarily useful when setting the properties of an item
-when the property has one of the following types:
-
-\list
-\o Color
-\o Rect
-\o Point
-\o Size
-\o Vector3D
-\endlist
-
-There are also string based constructors for these types, see \l{qdeclarativebasictypes.html}{Qml Types}.
-
-\section3 Qt.rgba(qreal red, qreal green, qreal blue, qreal alpha)
-This function returns a Color with the specified \c red, \c green, \c blue and \c alpha components. All components should be in the range 0-1 inclusive.
-
-\section3 Qt.hsla(qreal hue, qreal saturation, qreal lightness, qreal alpha)
-This function returns a Color with the specified \c hue, \c saturation, \c lightness and \c alpha components. All components should be in the range 0-1 inclusive.
-
-\section3 Qt.rect(int x, int y, int width, int height)
-This function returns a Rect with the top-left corner at \c x, \c y and the specified \c width and \c height.
-\section3 Qt.point(int x, int y)
-This function returns a Point with the specified \c x and \c y coordinates.
-\section3 Qt.size(int width, int height)
-This function returns as Size with the specified \c width and \c height.
-\section3 Qt.vector3d(real x, real y, real z)
-This function returns a Vector3D with the specified \c x, \c y and \c z.
-
-\section2 Formatters
-The Qt object contains several functions for formatting dates and times.
-
-\section3 Qt.formatDate(datetime date, variant format)
-This function returns the string representation of \c date, formatted according to \c format.
-\section3 Qt.formatTime(datetime time, variant format)
-This function returns the string representation of \c time, formatted according to \c format.
-\section3 Qt.formatDateTime(datetime dateTime, variant format)
-This function returns the string representation of \c dateTime, formatted according to \c format.
-
-\c format for the above formatting functions can be specified as follows.
-
- These expressions may be used for the date:
-
- \table
- \header \i Expression \i Output
- \row \i d \i the day as number without a leading zero (1 to 31)
- \row \i dd \i the day as number with a leading zero (01 to 31)
- \row \i ddd
- \i the abbreviated localized day name (e.g. 'Mon' to 'Sun').
- Uses QDate::shortDayName().
- \row \i dddd
- \i the long localized day name (e.g. 'Monday' to 'Qt::Sunday').
- Uses QDate::longDayName().
- \row \i M \i the month as number without a leading zero (1-12)
- \row \i MM \i the month as number with a leading zero (01-12)
- \row \i MMM
- \i the abbreviated localized month name (e.g. 'Jan' to 'Dec').
- Uses QDate::shortMonthName().
- \row \i MMMM
- \i the long localized month name (e.g. 'January' to 'December').
- Uses QDate::longMonthName().
- \row \i yy \i the year as two digit number (00-99)
- \row \i yyyy \i the year as four digit number
- \endtable
-
- These expressions may be used for the time:
-
- \table
- \header \i Expression \i Output
- \row \i h
- \i the hour without a leading zero (0 to 23 or 1 to 12 if AM/PM display)
- \row \i hh
- \i the hour with a leading zero (00 to 23 or 01 to 12 if AM/PM display)
- \row \i m \i the minute without a leading zero (0 to 59)
- \row \i mm \i the minute with a leading zero (00 to 59)
- \row \i s \i the second without a leading zero (0 to 59)
- \row \i ss \i the second with a leading zero (00 to 59)
- \row \i z \i the milliseconds without leading zeroes (0 to 999)
- \row \i zzz \i the milliseconds with leading zeroes (000 to 999)
- \row \i AP
- \i use AM/PM display. \e AP will be replaced by either "AM" or "PM".
- \row \i ap
- \i use am/pm display. \e ap will be replaced by either "am" or "pm".
- \endtable
-
- All other input characters will be ignored. Any sequence of characters that
- are enclosed in singlequotes will be treated as text and not be used as an
- expression. Two consecutive singlequotes ("''") are replaced by a singlequote
- in the output.
-
- Example format strings (assumed that the date and time is 21 May 2001
- 14:13:09):
-
- \table
- \header \i Format \i Result
- \row \i dd.MM.yyyy \i 21.05.2001
- \row \i ddd MMMM d yy \i Tue May 21 01
- \row \i hh:mm:ss.zzz \i 14:13:09.042
- \row \i h:m:s ap \i 2:13:9 pm
- \endtable
-
-If no format is specified the locale's short format is used. Alternatively, you can specify
-\c Qt.DefaultLocaleLongDate to get the locale's long format.
-
-\section2 Functions
-The Qt object also contains the following miscellaneous functions which expose Qt functionality for use in QML.
-
-\section3 Qt.lighter(color baseColor, real factor)
-This function returns a color lighter than \c baseColor by the \c factor provided.
-
-If the factor is greater than 1.0, this functions returns a lighter color.
-Setting factor to 1.5 returns a color that is 50% brighter. If the factor is less than 1.0,
-the return color is darker, but we recommend using the Qt.darker() function for this purpose.
-If the factor is 0 or negative, the return value is unspecified.
-
-The function converts the current RGB color to HSV, multiplies the value (V) component
-by factor and converts the color back to RGB.
-
-If \c factor is not supplied, returns a color 50% lighter than \c baseColor (factor 1.5).
-
-\section3 Qt.darker(color baseColor, real factor)
-This function returns a color darker than \c baseColor by the \c factor provided.
-
-If the factor is greater than 1.0, this function returns a darker color.
-Setting factor to 3.0 returns a color that has one-third the brightness.
-If the factor is less than 1.0, the return color is lighter, but we recommend using
-the Qt.lighter() function for this purpose. If the factor is 0 or negative, the return
-value is unspecified.
-
-The function converts the current RGB color to HSV, divides the value (V) component
-by factor and converts the color back to RGB.
-
-If \c factor is not supplied, returns a color 50% darker than \c baseColor (factor 2.0).
-
-\section3 Qt.tint(color baseColor, color tintColor)
- This function allows tinting one color with another.
-
- The tint color should usually be mostly transparent, or you will not be able to see the underlying color. The below example provides a slight red tint by having the tint color be pure red which is only 1/16th opaque.
-
- \qml
- Rectangle { x: 0; width: 80; height: 80; color: "lightsteelblue" }
- Rectangle { x: 100; width: 80; height: 80; color: Qt.tint("lightsteelblue", "#10FF0000") }
- \endqml
- \image declarative-rect_tint.png
-
- Tint is most useful when a subtle change is intended to be conveyed due to some event; you can then use tinting to more effectively tune the visible color.
-
-\section3 Qt.openUrlExternally(url target)
-This function attempts to open the specified \c target url in an external application, based on the user's desktop preferences. It will return true if it succeeds, and false otherwise.
-
-\section3 Qt.md5(data)
-This function returns a hex string of the md5 hash of \c data.
-
-\section3 Qt.btoa(data)
-Binary to ASCII - this function returns a base64 encoding of \c data.
-
-\section3 Qt.atob(data)
-ASCII to binary - this function returns a base64 decoding of \c data.
-
-\section3 Qt.quit()
-This function causes the QDeclarativeEngine::quit() signal to be emitted.
-Within the \l {Qt Declarative UI Runtime}{qml} application this causes the
-launcher application to exit.
-
-\section3 Qt.resolvedUrl(url)
-This function returns \c url resolved relative to the URL of the
-caller.
-
-\section3 Qt.fontFamilies()
-This function returns a list of the font families available to the application.
-
-\section3 Qt.isQtObject(object)
-Returns true if \c object is a valid reference to a Qt or QML object, otherwise false.
-
-\section1 Dynamic Object Creation
-The following functions on the global object allow you to dynamically create QML
-items from files or strings. See \l{Dynamic Object Management} for an overview
-of their use.
-
-
-\section2 Qt.createComponent(url file)
-
-This function takes the URL of a QML file as its only argument. It returns
-a component object which can be used to create and load that QML file.
-
-Here is an example. Remember that QML files that might be loaded
-over the network cannot be expected to be ready immediately.
-
-\snippet doc/src/snippets/declarative/componentCreation.js 0
-\codeline
-\snippet doc/src/snippets/declarative/componentCreation.js 1
-
-If you are certain the files will be local, you could simplify to:
-
-\snippet doc/src/snippets/declarative/componentCreation.js 2
-
-The methods and properties of the Component element are defined in its own
-page, but when using it dynamically only two methods are usually used.
-\c Component.createObject() returns the created object or \c null if there is an error.
-If there is an error, \l {Component::errorString()}{Component.errorString()} describes
-the error that occurred. Note that createObject() takes exactly one argument, which is set
-to the parent of the created object. Graphical objects without a parent will not appear
-on the scene, but if you do not wish to parent the item at this point you can safely pass
-in null.
-
-If you want to just create an arbitrary string of QML, instead of
-loading a QML file, consider the \l{Qt.createQmlObject(string qml, object parent, string filepath)}{Qt.createQmlObject()} function.
-
-
-\section2 Qt.createQmlObject(string qml, object parent, string filepath)
-
-Creates a new object from the specified string of QML. It requires a
-second argument, which is the id of an existing QML object to use as
-the new object's parent. If a third argument is provided, this is used
-for error reporting as the filepath that the QML came from.
-
-Example (where \c targetItem is the id of an existing QML item):
-
-\snippet doc/src/snippets/declarative/createQmlObject.qml 0
-
-This function is intended for use inside QML only. It is intended to behave
-similarly to eval, but for creating QML elements.
-
-Returns the created object, \c or null if there is an error. In the case of an
-error, a QtScript Error object is thrown. This object has the additional property,
-qmlErrors, which is an array of all the errors encountered when trying to execute the
-QML. Each object in the array has the members \c lineNumber, \c columnNumber, \c fileName and \c message.
-
-Note that this function returns immediately, and therefore may not work if
-the QML loads new components. If you are trying to load a new component,
-for example from a QML file, consider the \l{Qt.createComponent(url file)}{Qt.createComponent()} function
-instead. 'New components' refers to external QML files that have not yet
-been loaded, and so it is safe to use \c Qt.createQmlObject() to load built-in
-components.
-
\section1 XMLHttpRequest
\target XMLHttpRequest
diff --git a/doc/src/declarative/qtdeclarative.qdoc b/doc/src/declarative/qtdeclarative.qdoc
index 670a218425..c47ab23462 100644
--- a/doc/src/declarative/qtdeclarative.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/declarative/qtdeclarative.qdoc
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@
\endcode
For more information on the Qt Declarative module, see the
- \l{declarativeui.html}{Declarative UI} documentation.
+ \l{declarativeui.html}{Qt Quick} documentation.
*/