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diff --git a/examples/widgets/doc/src/calendar.qdoc b/examples/widgets/doc/src/calendar.qdoc deleted file mode 100644 index 218ea5ea0c..0000000000 --- a/examples/widgets/doc/src/calendar.qdoc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,202 +0,0 @@ -// Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd. -// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GFDL-1.3-no-invariants-only - -/*! - \example richtext/calendar - \title Calendar Example - \ingroup examples-richtext - \brief The Calendar example shows how to create rich text content - and display it using a rich text editor. - - \brief The Calendar example shows how to create rich text content and display it using - a rich text editor. - - \image calendar-example.png - - Specifically, the example demonstrates the following: - - \list - \li Use of a text editor with a text document - \li Insertion of tables and frames into a document - \li Navigation within a table - \li Insert text in different styles - \endlist - - The rich text editor used to display the document is used within a main window - application. - - \section1 MainWindow Class Definition - - The \c MainWindow class provides a text editor widget and some controls to - allow the user to change the month and year shown. The font size used for the - text can also be adjusted. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.h 0 - - The private \c insertCalendar() function performs most of the work, relying on - the \c fontSize and \c selectedDate variables to write useful information to - the \c editor. - - \section1 MainWindow Class Implementation - - The \c MainWindow constructor sets up the user interface and initializes - variables used to generate a calendar for each month. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 0 - - We begin by setting default values for the selected date that will be highlighted - in the calendar and the font size to be used. Since we are using a QMainWindow - for the user interface, we construct a widget for use as the central widget. - - The user interface will include a line of controls above the generated calendar; - we construct a label and a combobox to allow the month to be selected, and a - spin box for the year. These widgets are configured to provide a reasonable range - of values for the user to try: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 1 - - We use the \c selectedDate object to obtain the current month and year, and we - set these in the combobox and spin box: - - The font size is displayed in a spin box which we restrict to a sensible range - of values: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 2 - - We construct an editor and use the \c insertCalendar() function to create - a calendar for it. Each calendar is displayed in the same text editor; in - this example we use a QTextBrowser since we do not allow the calendar to be - edited. - - The controls used to set the month, year, and font size will not have any - effect on the appearance of the calendar unless we make some signal-slot - connections: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 3 - - The signals are connected to some simple slots in the \c MainWindow class - which we will describe later. - - We create layouts to manage the widgets we constructed: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 4 - - Finally, the central widget is set for the window. - - Each calendar is created for the editor by the \c insertCalendar() function - which uses the date and font size, defined by the private \a selectedDate - and \c fontSize variables, to produce a suitable plan for the specified - month and year. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 5 - - We begin by clearing the editor's rich text document, and obtain a text - cursor from the editor that we will use to add content. We also create a - QDate object based on the currently selected date. - - The calendar is made up of a table with a gray background color that contains - seven columns: one for each day of the week. It is placed in the center of the - page with equal space to the left and right of it. All of these properties are - set in a QTextTableFormat object: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 6 - - Each cell in the table will be padded and spaced to make the text easier to - read. - - We want the columns to have equal widths, so we provide a list containing - percentage widths for each of them and set the constraints in the - QTextTableFormat: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 7 - - The constraints used for the column widths are only useful if the table has - an appropriate number of columns. With the format for the table defined, we - construct a new table with one row and seven columns at the current cursor - position: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 8 - - We only need one row to start with; more can be added as we need them. Using - this approach means that we do not need to perform any date calculations - until we add cells to the table. - - When inserting objects into a document with the cursor's insertion functions, - the cursor is automatically moved inside the newly inserted object. This means - that we can immediately start modifying the table from within: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 9 - - Since the table has an outer frame, we obtain the frame and its format so that - we can customize it. After making the changes we want, we set the frame's format - using the modified format object. We have given the table an outer border one - pixel wide. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 10 - - In a similar way, we obtain the cursor's current character format and - create customized formats based on it. - - We do not set the format on the cursor because this would change the default - character format; instead, we use the customized formats explicitly when we - insert text. The following loop inserts the days of the week into the table - as bold text: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 11 - - For each day of the week, we obtain an existing table cell in the first row - (row 0) using the table's \l{QTextTable::cellAt()}{cellAt()} function. Since - we start counting the days of the week at day 1 (Monday), we subtract 1 from - \c weekDay to ensure that we obtain the cell for the correct column of the - table. - - Before text can be inserted into a cell, we must obtain a cursor with the - correct position in the document. The cell provides a function for this - purpose, and we use this cursor to insert text using the \c boldFormat - character format that we created earlier: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 12 - - Inserting text into document objects usually follows the same pattern. - Each object can provide a new cursor that corresponds to the first valid - position within itself, and this can be used to insert new content. We - continue to use this pattern as we insert the days of the month into the - table. - - Since every month has more than seven days, we insert a single row to begin - and add days until we reach the end of the month. If the current date is - encountered, it is inserted with a special format (created earlier) that - makes it stand out: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 13 - - We add a new row to the table at the end of each week only if the next week - falls within the currently selected month. - - For each calendar that we create, we change the window title to reflect the - currently selected month and year: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 14 - - The \c insertCalendar() function relies on up-to-date values for the month, - year, and font size. These are set in the following slots: - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 15 - - The \c setFontSize() function simply changes the private \c fontSize variable - before updating the calendar. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 16 - - The \c setMonth slot is called when the QComboBox used to select the month is - updated. The value supplied is the currently selected row in the combobox. - We add 1 to this value to obtain a valid month number, and create a new QDate - based on the existing one. The calendar is then updated to use this new date. - - \snippet richtext/calendar/mainwindow.cpp 17 - - The \c setYear() slot is called when the QDateTimeEdit used to select the - year is updated. The value supplied is a QDate object; this makes - the construction of a new value for \c selectedDate simple. We update the - calendar afterwards to use this new date. -*/ |