/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2012 Digia Plc and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/legal ** ** This file is part of the QtGui module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** Commercial License Usage ** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in ** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in ** a written agreement between you and Digia. For licensing terms and ** conditions see http://qt.digia.com/licensing. For further information ** use the contact form at http://qt.digia.com/contact-us. ** ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser ** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. ** ** In addition, as a special exception, Digia gives you certain additional ** rights. These rights are described in the Digia Qt LGPL Exception ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. ** ** GNU General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU ** General Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ** ensure the GNU General Public License version 3.0 requirements will be ** met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. ** ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qwindow.h" #include #include #include "qsurfaceformat.h" #ifndef QT_NO_OPENGL #include #include "qopenglcontext.h" #endif #include "qscreen.h" #include "qwindow_p.h" #include "qguiapplication_p.h" #ifndef QT_NO_ACCESSIBILITY # include "qaccessible.h" #endif #include #include #include #include QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE /*! \class QWindow \inmodule QtGui \since 5.0 \brief The QWindow class represents a window in the underlying windowing system. A window that is supplied a parent becomes a native child window of their parent window. An application will typically use QWidget or QQuickView for its UI, and not QWindow directly. Still, it is possible to render directly to a QWindow with QBackingStore or QOpenGLContext, when wanting to keep dependencies to a minimum or when wanting to use OpenGL directly. The \l{gui/rasterwindow}{Raster Window} and \l{gui/openglwindow}{OpenGL Window} examples are useful reference examples for how to render to a QWindow using either approach. \section1 Resource management Windows can potentially use a lot of memory. A usual measurement is width times height times color depth. A window might also include multiple buffers to support double and triple buffering, as well as depth and stencil buffers. To release a window's memory resources, call the destroy() function. \section1 Window and content orientation QWindow has reportContentOrientationChange() and requestWindowOrientation() that can be used to specify the layout of the window contents in relation to the screen. The window orientation determines the actual buffer layout of the window, and the windowing system uses this value to rotate the window before it ends up on the display, and to ensure that input coordinates are in the correct coordinate space relative to the application. On the other hand, the content orientation is simply a hint to the windowing system about which orientation the window contents are in. It's useful when you wish to keep the same buffer layout, but rotate the contents instead, especially when doing rotation animations between different orientations. The windowing system might use this value to determine the layout of system popups or dialogs. \section1 Visibility and Windowing system exposure. By default, the window is not visible, and you must call setVisible(true), or show() or similar to make it visible. To make a window hidden again, call setVisible(false) or hide(). The visible property describes the state the application wants the window to be in. Depending on the underlying system, a visible window might still not be shown on the screen. It could, for instance, be covered by other opaque windows or moved outside the physical area of the screen. On windowing systems that have exposure notifications, the isExposed() accessor describes whether the window should be treated as directly visible on screen. The exposeEvent() function is called whenever the windows exposure in the windowing system changes. On windowing systems that do not make this information visible to the application, isExposed() will simply return the same value as isVisible(). \section1 Rendering There are two Qt APIs that can be used to render content into a window, QBackingStore for rendering with a QPainter and flushing the contents to a window with type QSurface::RasterSurface, and QOpenGLContext for rendering with OpenGL to a window with type QSurface::OpenGLSurface. The application can start rendering as soon as isExposed() returns true, and can keep rendering until it isExposed() returns false. To find out when isExposed() changes, reimplement exposeEvent(). The window will always get a resize event before the first expose event. */ /*! Creates a window as a top level on the \a targetScreen. The window is not shown until setVisible(true), show(), or similar is called. \sa setScreen() */ QWindow::QWindow(QScreen *targetScreen) : QObject(*new QWindowPrivate(), 0) , QSurface(QSurface::Window) { Q_D(QWindow); d->screen = targetScreen; if (!d->screen) d->screen = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen(); //if your applications aborts here, then chances are your creating a QWindow before the //screen list is populated. Q_ASSERT(d->screen); connect(d->screen, SIGNAL(destroyed(QObject*)), this, SLOT(screenDestroyed(QObject*))); QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.prepend(this); } /*! Creates a window as a child of the given \a parent window. The window will be embedded inside the parent window, its coordinates relative to the parent. The screen is inherited from the parent. \sa setParent() */ QWindow::QWindow(QWindow *parent) : QObject(*new QWindowPrivate(), parent) , QSurface(QSurface::Window) { Q_D(QWindow); d->parentWindow = parent; if (parent) d->screen = parent->screen(); if (!d->screen) d->screen = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen(); connect(d->screen, SIGNAL(destroyed(QObject*)), this, SLOT(screenDestroyed(QObject*))); QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.prepend(this); } /*! Creates a window as a child of the given \a parent window with the \a dd private implementation. The window will be embedded inside the parent window, its coordinates relative to the parent. The screen is inherited from the parent. \internal \sa setParent() */ QWindow::QWindow(QWindowPrivate &dd, QWindow *parent) : QObject(dd, parent) , QSurface(QSurface::Window) { Q_D(QWindow); d->parentWindow = parent; if (parent) d->screen = parent->screen(); if (!d->screen) d->screen = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen(); connect(d->screen, SIGNAL(destroyed(QObject*)), this, SLOT(screenDestroyed(QObject*))); QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.prepend(this); } /*! Destroys the window. */ QWindow::~QWindow() { if (QGuiApplicationPrivate::focus_window == this) QGuiApplicationPrivate::focus_window = 0; if (QGuiApplicationPrivate::currentMouseWindow == this) QGuiApplicationPrivate::currentMouseWindow = 0; QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.removeAll(this); destroy(); } /*! Set the \a surfaceType of the window. Specifies whether the window is meant for raster rendering with QBackingStore, or OpenGL rendering with QOpenGLContext. The surfaceType will be used when the native surface is created in the create() function. Calling this function after the native surface has been created requires calling destroy() and create() to release the old native surface and create a new one. \sa QBackingStore, QOpenGLContext, create(), destroy() */ void QWindow::setSurfaceType(SurfaceType surfaceType) { Q_D(QWindow); d->surfaceType = surfaceType; } /*! Returns the surface type of the window. \sa setSurfaceType() */ QWindow::SurfaceType QWindow::surfaceType() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->surfaceType; } /*! \property QWindow::visible \brief whether the window is visible or not This property controls the visibility of the window in the windowing system. By default, the window is not visible, you must call setVisible(true), or show() or similar to make it visible. \sa show() */ void QWindow::setVisible(bool visible) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->visible == visible) return; d->visible = visible; emit visibleChanged(visible); if (!d->platformWindow) create(); if (visible) { // remove posted quit events when showing a new window QCoreApplication::removePostedEvents(qApp, QEvent::Quit); QShowEvent showEvent; QGuiApplication::sendEvent(this, &showEvent); } if (isModal()) { if (visible) QGuiApplicationPrivate::showModalWindow(this); else QGuiApplicationPrivate::hideModalWindow(this); } #ifndef QT_NO_CURSOR if (visible) d->applyCursor(); #endif d->platformWindow->setVisible(visible); if (!visible) { QHideEvent hideEvent; QGuiApplication::sendEvent(this, &hideEvent); } } bool QWindow::isVisible() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->visible; } /*! Allocates the platform resources associated with the window. It is at this point that the surface format set using setFormat() gets resolved into an actual native surface. However, the window remains hidden until setVisible() is called. Note that it is not usually necessary to call this function directly, as it will be implicitly called by show(), setVisible(), and other functions that require access to the platform resources. Call destroy() to free the platform resources if necessary. \sa destroy() */ void QWindow::create() { Q_D(QWindow); if (!d->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow = QGuiApplicationPrivate::platformIntegration()->createPlatformWindow(this); QObjectList childObjects = children(); for (int i = 0; i < childObjects.size(); i ++) { QObject *object = childObjects.at(i); if(object->isWindowType()) { QWindow *window = static_cast(object); if (window->d_func()->platformWindow) window->d_func()->platformWindow->setParent(d->platformWindow); } } } } /*! Returns the window's platform id. For platforms where this id might be useful, the value returned will uniquely represent the window inside the corresponding screen. \sa screen() */ WId QWindow::winId() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if(!d->platformWindow) const_cast(this)->create(); WId id = d->platformWindow->winId(); // See the QPlatformWindow::winId() documentation Q_ASSERT(id != WId(0)); return id; } /*! Returns the parent window, if any. A window without a parent is known as a top level window. */ QWindow *QWindow::parent() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->parentWindow; } /*! Sets the \a parent Window. This will lead to the windowing system managing the clip of the window, so it will be clipped to the \a parent window. Setting \a parent to be 0 will make the window become a top level window. */ void QWindow::setParent(QWindow *parent) { Q_D(QWindow); QObject::setParent(parent); if (d->platformWindow) { if (parent && parent->d_func()->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow->setParent(parent->d_func()->platformWindow); } else { d->platformWindow->setParent(0); } } d->parentWindow = parent; QGuiApplicationPrivate::updateBlockedStatus(this); } /*! Returns whether the window is top level, i.e. has no parent window. */ bool QWindow::isTopLevel() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->parentWindow == 0; } /*! Returns whether the window is modal. A modal window prevents other windows from getting any input. \sa QWindow::modality */ bool QWindow::isModal() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->modality != Qt::NonModal; } /*! \property QWindow::modality \brief the modality of the window A modal window prevents other windows from receiving input events. Qt supports two types of modality: Qt::WindowModal and Qt::ApplicationModal. By default, this property is Qt::NonModal \sa Qt::WindowModality */ Qt::WindowModality QWindow::modality() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->modality; } void QWindow::setModality(Qt::WindowModality modality) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->modality == modality) return; d->modality = modality; emit modalityChanged(modality); } /*! \fn void QWindow::modalityChanged(Qt::WindowModality modality) This signal is emitted when the Qwindow::modality property changes to \a modality. */ /*! Sets the window's surface \a format. The format determines properties such as color depth, alpha, depth and stencil buffer size, etc. For example, to give a window a transparent background (provided that the window system supports compositing, and provided that other content in the window does not make it opaque again): \code QSurfaceFormat format; format.setAlphaBufferSize(8); window.setFormat(format); \endcode The surface format will be resolved in the create() function. Calling this function after create() has been called will not re-resolve the surface format of the native surface. \sa create(), destroy() */ void QWindow::setFormat(const QSurfaceFormat &format) { Q_D(QWindow); d->requestedFormat = format; } /*! Returns the requested surfaceformat of this window. If the requested format was not supported by the platform implementation, the requestedFormat will differ from the actual window format. This is the value set with setFormat(). \sa setFormat(), format() */ QSurfaceFormat QWindow::requestedFormat() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->requestedFormat; } /*! Returns the actual format of this window. After the window has been created, this function will return the actual surface format of the window. It might differ from the requested format if the requested format could not be fulfilled by the platform. \sa create(), requestedFormat() */ QSurfaceFormat QWindow::format() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) return d->platformWindow->format(); return d->requestedFormat; } /*! \property QWindow::flags \brief the window flags of the window The window flags control the window's appearance in the windowing system, whether it's a dialog, popup, or a regular window, and whether it should have a title bar, etc. The actual window flags might differ from the flags set with setFlags() if the requested flags could not be fulfilled. */ void QWindow::setFlags(Qt::WindowFlags flags) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->setWindowFlags(flags); d->windowFlags = flags; } Qt::WindowFlags QWindow::flags() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowFlags; } /*! Returns the type of the window. This returns the part of the window flags that represents whether the window is a dialog, tooltip, popup, regular window, etc. \sa flags(), setFlags() */ Qt::WindowType QWindow::type() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return static_cast(int(d->windowFlags & Qt::WindowType_Mask)); } /*! \property QWindow::title \brief the window's title in the windowing system The window title might appear in the title area of the window decorations, depending on the windowing system and the window flags. It might also be used by the windowing system to identify the window in other contexts, such as in the task switcher. \sa flags() */ void QWindow::setTitle(const QString &title) { Q_D(QWindow); d->windowTitle = title; if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->setWindowTitle(title); } QString QWindow::title() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowTitle; } /*! \brief set the file name this window is representing. The windowing system might use \a filePath to display the path of the document this window is representing in the tile bar. */ void QWindow::setFilePath(const QString &filePath) { Q_D(QWindow); d->windowFilePath = filePath; if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->setWindowFilePath(filePath); } /*! \brief the file name this window is representing. \sa setFilePath() */ QString QWindow::filePath() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowFilePath; } /*! \brief set the window's \a icon in the windowing system The window icon might be used by the windowing system for example to decorate the window, and/or in the task switcher. */ void QWindow::setIcon(const QIcon &icon) { Q_D(QWindow); d->windowIcon = icon; if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->setWindowIcon(icon); } /*! \brief set the window's icon in the windowing system \sa setIcon() */ QIcon QWindow::icon() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowIcon; } /*! Raise the window in the windowing system. Requests that the window be raised to appear above other windows. */ void QWindow::raise() { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->raise(); } /*! Lower the window in the windowing system. Requests that the window be lowered to appear below other windows. */ void QWindow::lower() { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->lower(); } /*! Sets the window's opacity in the windowing system to \a level. If the windowing system supports window opacity, this can be used to fade the window in and out, or to make it semitransparent. A value of 1.0 or above is treated as fully opaque, whereas a value of 0.0 or below is treated as fully transparent. Values inbetween represent varying levels of translucency between the two extremes. */ void QWindow::setOpacity(qreal level) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow->setOpacity(level); } } /*! Requests the window to be activated, i.e. receive keyboard focus. \sa isActive(), QGuiApplication::focusWindow() */ void QWindow::requestActivate() { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->requestActivateWindow(); } /*! Returns if this window is exposed in the windowing system. When the window is not exposed, it is shown by the application but it is still not showing in the windowing system, so the application should minimize rendering and other graphical activities. An exposeEvent() is sent every time this value changes. \sa exposeEvent() */ bool QWindow::isExposed() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->exposed; } /*! Returns true if the window should appear active from a style perspective. This is the case for the window that has input focus as well as windows that are in the same parent / transient parent chain as the focus window. To get the window that currently has focus, use QGuiApplication::focusWindow(). */ bool QWindow::isActive() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (!d->platformWindow) return false; QWindow *focus = QGuiApplication::focusWindow(); // Means the whole application lost the focus if (!focus) return false; if (focus == this) return true; if (!parent() && !transientParent()) { return isAncestorOf(focus); } else { return (parent() && parent()->isActive()) || (transientParent() && transientParent()->isActive()); } } /*! \property QWindow::contentOrientation \brief the orientation of the window's contents This is a hint to the window manager in case it needs to display additional content like popups, dialogs, status bars, or similar in relation to the window. The recommended orientation is QScreen::orientation() but an application doesn't have to support all possible orientations, and thus can opt to ignore the current screen orientation. The difference between the window and the content orientation determines how much to rotate the content by. QScreen::angleBetween(), QScreen::transformBetween(), and QScreen::mapBetween() can be used to compute the necessary transform. The default value is Qt::PrimaryOrientation \sa requestOrientation(), QScreen::orientation() */ void QWindow::reportContentOrientationChange(Qt::ScreenOrientation orientation) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->contentOrientation == orientation) return; if (!d->platformWindow) create(); Q_ASSERT(d->platformWindow); d->contentOrientation = orientation; d->platformWindow->handleContentOrientationChange(orientation); emit contentOrientationChanged(orientation); } Qt::ScreenOrientation QWindow::contentOrientation() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->contentOrientation; } /*! Requests the given window \a orientation. The window \a orientation specifies how the window should be rotated by the window manager in order to be displayed. Input events will be correctly mapped to the given \a orientation. The return value is false if the system doesn't support the given \a orientation (for example when requesting a portrait orientation on a device that only handles landscape buffers, typically a desktop system). If the return value is false, call \l orientation() to get the actual supported orientation. \sa orientation(), reportContentOrientationChange(), QScreen::orientation() */ bool QWindow::requestOrientation(Qt::ScreenOrientation orientation) { Q_D(QWindow); if (!d->platformWindow) create(); Q_ASSERT(d->platformWindow); d->windowOrientation = d->platformWindow->requestWindowOrientation(orientation); return d->windowOrientation == orientation; } /*! Returns the actual window orientation. The default value is Qt::PrimaryOrientation. \sa requestOrientation() */ Qt::ScreenOrientation QWindow::orientation() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowOrientation; } /*! \brief set the screen-occupation state of the window The window \a state represents whether the window appears in the windowing system as maximized, minimized, fullscreen, or normal. The enum value Qt::WindowActive is not an accepted parameter. \sa showNormal(), showFullScreen(), showMinimized(), showMaximized() */ void QWindow::setWindowState(Qt::WindowState state) { if (state == Qt::WindowActive) { qWarning() << "QWindow::setWindowState does not accept Qt::WindowActive"; return; } Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) d->platformWindow->setWindowState(state); d->windowState = state; emit windowStateChanged(d->windowState); } /*! \brief the screen-occupation state of the window \sa setWindowState() */ Qt::WindowState QWindow::windowState() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->windowState; } /*! \fn QWindow::windowStateChanged(Qt::WindowState windowState) This signal is emitted when the \a windowState changes, either by being set explicitly with setWindowState(), or automatically when the user clicks one of the titlebar buttons or by other means. */ /*! Sets the transient \a parent This is a hint to the window manager that this window is a dialog or pop-up on behalf of the given window. \sa transientParent(), parent() */ void QWindow::setTransientParent(QWindow *parent) { Q_D(QWindow); d->transientParent = parent; QGuiApplicationPrivate::updateBlockedStatus(this); } /*! Returns the transient parent of the window. \sa setTransientParent(), parent() */ QWindow *QWindow::transientParent() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->transientParent.data(); } /*! \enum QWindow::AncestorMode This enum is used to control whether or not transient parents should be considered ancestors. \value ExcludeTransients Transient parents are not considered ancestors. \value IncludeTransients Transient parents are considered ancestors. */ /*! Returns true if the window is an ancestor of the given \a child. If \a mode is IncludeTransients, then transient parents are also considered ancestors. */ bool QWindow::isAncestorOf(const QWindow *child, AncestorMode mode) const { if (child->parent() == this || (mode == IncludeTransients && child->transientParent() == this)) return true; return (child->parent() && isAncestorOf(child->parent(), mode)) || (mode == IncludeTransients && child->transientParent() && isAncestorOf(child->transientParent(), mode)); } /*! Returns the minimum size of the window. \sa setMinimumSize() */ QSize QWindow::minimumSize() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->minimumSize; } /*! Returns the maximum size of the window. \sa setMaximumSize() */ QSize QWindow::maximumSize() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->maximumSize; } /*! Returns the base size of the window. \sa setBaseSize() */ QSize QWindow::baseSize() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->baseSize; } /*! Returns the size increment of the window. \sa setSizeIncrement() */ QSize QWindow::sizeIncrement() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->sizeIncrement; } /*! Sets the minimum size of the window. This is a hint to the window manager to prevent resizing below the specified \a size. \sa setMaximumSize(), minimumSize() */ void QWindow::setMinimumSize(const QSize &size) { Q_D(QWindow); QSize adjustedSize = QSize(qBound(0, size.width(), QWINDOWSIZE_MAX), qBound(0, size.height(), QWINDOWSIZE_MAX)); if (d->minimumSize == adjustedSize) return; QSize oldSize = d->minimumSize; d->minimumSize = adjustedSize; if (d->platformWindow && isTopLevel()) d->platformWindow->propagateSizeHints(); if (d->minimumSize.width() != oldSize.width()) emit minimumWidthChanged(d->minimumSize.width()); if (d->minimumSize.height() != oldSize.height()) emit minimumHeightChanged(d->minimumSize.height()); } void QWindow::setMinimumWidth(int w) { setMinimumSize(QSize(w, minimumHeight())); } void QWindow::setMinimumHeight(int h) { setMinimumSize(QSize(minimumWidth(), h)); } /*! Sets the maximum size of the window. This is a hint to the window manager to prevent resizing above the specified \a size. \sa setMinimumSize(), maximumSize() */ void QWindow::setMaximumSize(const QSize &size) { Q_D(QWindow); QSize adjustedSize = QSize(qBound(0, size.width(), QWINDOWSIZE_MAX), qBound(0, size.height(), QWINDOWSIZE_MAX)); if (d->maximumSize == adjustedSize) return; QSize oldSize = d->maximumSize; d->maximumSize = adjustedSize; if (d->platformWindow && isTopLevel()) d->platformWindow->propagateSizeHints(); if (d->maximumSize.width() != oldSize.width()) emit maximumWidthChanged(d->maximumSize.width()); if (d->maximumSize.height() != oldSize.height()) emit maximumHeightChanged(d->maximumSize.height()); } void QWindow::setMaximumWidth(int w) { setMaximumSize(QSize(w, maximumHeight())); } void QWindow::setMaximumHeight(int h) { setMaximumSize(QSize(maximumWidth(), h)); } /*! Sets the base \a size of the window. The base size is used to calculate a proper window size if the window defines sizeIncrement(). \sa setMinimumSize(), setMaximumSize(), setSizeIncrement(), baseSize() */ void QWindow::setBaseSize(const QSize &size) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->baseSize == size) return; d->baseSize = size; if (d->platformWindow && isTopLevel()) d->platformWindow->propagateSizeHints(); } /*! Sets the size increment (\a size) of the window. When the user resizes the window, the size will move in steps of sizeIncrement().width() pixels horizontally and sizeIncrement().height() pixels vertically, with baseSize() as the basis. By default, this property contains a size with zero width and height. The windowing system might not support size increments. \sa setBaseSize(), setMinimumSize(), setMaximumSize() */ void QWindow::setSizeIncrement(const QSize &size) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->sizeIncrement == size) return; d->sizeIncrement = size; if (d->platformWindow && isTopLevel()) d->platformWindow->propagateSizeHints(); } /*! \fn void QWindow::setGeometry(int posx, int posy, int w, int h) Sets the geometry of the window, excluding its window frame, to a rectangle constructed from \a posx, \a posy, \a w and \a h. \sa geometry() */ /*! \brief Sets the geometry of the window, excluding its window frame, to \a rect. \sa geometry() */ void QWindow::setGeometry(const QRect &rect) { Q_D(QWindow); if (rect == geometry()) return; QRect oldRect = geometry(); d->positionPolicy = QWindowPrivate::WindowFrameExclusive; if (d->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow->setGeometry(rect); } else { d->geometry = rect; } if (rect.x() != oldRect.x()) emit xChanged(rect.x()); if (rect.y() != oldRect.y()) emit yChanged(rect.y()); if (rect.width() != oldRect.width()) emit widthChanged(rect.width()); if (rect.height() != oldRect.height()) emit heightChanged(rect.height()); } /*! \property QWindow::x \brief the x position of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::y \brief the y position of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::width \brief the width of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::height \brief the height of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::minimumWidth \brief the minimum width of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::minimumHeight \brief the minimum height of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::maximumWidth \brief the maximum width of the window's geometry */ /*! \property QWindow::maximumHeight \brief the maximum height of the window's geometry */ /*! Returns the geometry of the window, excluding its window frame. \sa frameMargins(), frameGeometry() */ QRect QWindow::geometry() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) return d->platformWindow->geometry(); return d->geometry; } /*! Returns the window frame margins surrounding the window. \sa geometry(), frameGeometry() */ QMargins QWindow::frameMargins() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) return d->platformWindow->frameMargins(); return QMargins(); } /*! Returns the geometry of the window, including its window frame. \sa geometry(), frameMargins() */ QRect QWindow::frameGeometry() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) { QMargins m = frameMargins(); return d->platformWindow->geometry().adjusted(-m.left(), -m.top(), m.right(), m.bottom()); } return d->geometry; } /*! Returns the top left position of the window, including its window frame. This returns the same value as frameGeometry().topLeft(). \sa geometry(), frameGeometry() */ QPoint QWindow::framePos() const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) { QMargins margins = frameMargins(); return d->platformWindow->geometry().topLeft() - QPoint(margins.left(), margins.top()); } return d->geometry.topLeft(); } /*! Sets the upper left position of the window (\a point) including its window frame. \sa setGeometry(), frameGeometry() */ void QWindow::setFramePos(const QPoint &point) { Q_D(QWindow); d->positionPolicy = QWindowPrivate::WindowFrameInclusive; if (d->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow->setGeometry(QRect(point, size())); } else { d->geometry.setTopLeft(point); } } /*! \fn void QWindow::setPosition(const QPoint &pt) \brief set the position of the window on the desktop to \a pt \sa position() */ /*! \fn void QWindow::setPosition(int posx, int posy) \brief set the position of the window on the desktop to \a posx, \a posy \sa position() */ /*! \fn QPoint QWindow::position() const \brief get the position of the window on the desktop excluding any window frame \sa setPosition() */ /*! \fn QSize QWindow::size() const \brief get the size of the window excluding any window frame \sa resize() */ /*! \fn void QWindow::resize(int w, int h) set the size of the window, excluding any window frame, to a QSize constructed from width \a w and height \a h \sa size(), geometry() */ /*! \brief set the size of the window, excluding any window frame, to \a newSize \sa size(), geometry() */ void QWindow::resize(const QSize &newSize) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) { d->platformWindow->setGeometry(QRect(position(), newSize)); } else { d->geometry.setSize(newSize); } } /*! Releases the native platform resources associated with this window. \sa create() */ void QWindow::destroy() { Q_D(QWindow); QObjectList childrenWindows = children(); for (int i = 0; i < childrenWindows.size(); i++) { QObject *object = childrenWindows.at(i); if (object->isWindowType()) { QWindow *w = static_cast(object); QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.removeAll(w); w->destroy(); } } setVisible(false); delete d->platformWindow; d->resizeEventPending = true; d->receivedExpose = false; d->exposed = false; d->platformWindow = 0; } /*! Returns the platform window corresponding to the window. \internal */ QPlatformWindow *QWindow::handle() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->platformWindow; } /*! Returns the platform surface corresponding to the window. \internal */ QPlatformSurface *QWindow::surfaceHandle() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->platformWindow; } /*! Set whether keyboard grab should be enabled or not (\a grab). If the return value is true, the window receives all key events until setKeyboardGrabEnabled(false) is called; other windows get no key events at all. Mouse events are not affected. Use setMouseGrabEnabled() if you want to grab that. \sa setMouseGrabEnabled() */ bool QWindow::setKeyboardGrabEnabled(bool grab) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) return d->platformWindow->setKeyboardGrabEnabled(grab); return false; } /*! Sets whether mouse grab should be enabled or not (\a grab). If the return value is true, the window receives all mouse events until setMouseGrabEnabled(false) is called; other windows get no mouse events at all. Keyboard events are not affected. Use setKeyboardGrabEnabled() if you want to grab that. \sa setKeyboardGrabEnabled() */ bool QWindow::setMouseGrabEnabled(bool grab) { Q_D(QWindow); if (d->platformWindow) return d->platformWindow->setMouseGrabEnabled(grab); return false; } /*! Returns the screen on which the window is shown. The value returned will not change when the window is moved between virtual screens (as returned by QScreen::virtualSiblings()). \sa setScreen(), QScreen::virtualSiblings() */ QScreen *QWindow::screen() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->screen; } /*! Sets the screen on which the window should be shown. If the window has been created, it will be recreated on the \a newScreen. Note that if the screen is part of a virtual desktop of multiple screens, the window can appear on any of the screens returned by QScreen::virtualSiblings(). \sa screen(), QScreen::virtualSiblings() */ void QWindow::setScreen(QScreen *newScreen) { Q_D(QWindow); if (!newScreen) newScreen = QGuiApplication::primaryScreen(); if (newScreen != screen()) { const bool wasCreated = d->platformWindow != 0; if (wasCreated) destroy(); if (d->screen) disconnect(d->screen, SIGNAL(destroyed(QObject*)), this, SLOT(screenDestroyed(QObject*))); d->screen = newScreen; if (newScreen) { connect(d->screen, SIGNAL(destroyed(QObject*)), this, SLOT(screenDestroyed(QObject*))); if (wasCreated) create(); } emit screenChanged(newScreen); } } void QWindow::screenDestroyed(QObject *object) { Q_D(QWindow); if (object == static_cast(d->screen)) setScreen(0); } /*! \fn QWindow::screenChanged(QScreen *screen) This signal is emitted when a window's \a screen changes, either by being set explicitly with setScreen(), or automatically when the window's screen is removed. */ /*! Returns the accessibility interface for the object that the window represents \internal \sa QAccessible */ QAccessibleInterface *QWindow::accessibleRoot() const { return 0; } /*! \fn QWindow::focusObjectChanged(QObject *focusObject) This signal is emitted when final receiver of events tied to focus is changed to \a focusObject. \sa focusObject() */ /*! Returns the QObject that will be the final receiver of events tied focus, such as key events. */ QObject *QWindow::focusObject() const { return const_cast(this); } /*! Shows the window. This equivalent to calling showFullScreen() or showNormal(), depending on whether the platform defaults to windows being fullscreen or not. \sa showFullScreen(), showNormal(), hide(), QStyleHints::showIsFullScreen() */ void QWindow::show() { if (qApp->styleHints()->showIsFullScreen()) showFullScreen(); else showNormal(); } /*! Hides the window. Equivalent to calling setVisible(false). \sa show(), setVisible() */ void QWindow::hide() { setVisible(false); } /*! Shows the window as minimized. Equivalent to calling setWindowState(Qt::WindowMinimized) and then setVisible(true). \sa setWindowState(), setVisible() */ void QWindow::showMinimized() { setWindowState(Qt::WindowMinimized); setVisible(true); } /*! Shows the window as maximized. Equivalent to calling setWindowState(Qt::WindowMaximized) and then setVisible(true). \sa setWindowState(), setVisible() */ void QWindow::showMaximized() { setWindowState(Qt::WindowMaximized); setVisible(true); } /*! Shows the window as fullscreen. Equivalent to calling setWindowState(Qt::WindowFullScreen) and then setVisible(true). \sa setWindowState(), setVisible() */ void QWindow::showFullScreen() { setWindowState(Qt::WindowFullScreen); setVisible(true); requestActivate(); } /*! Shows the window as normal, i.e. neither maximized, minimized, nor fullscreen. Equivalent to calling setWindowState(Qt::WindowNoState) and then setVisible(true). \sa setWindowState(), setVisible() */ void QWindow::showNormal() { setWindowState(Qt::WindowNoState); setVisible(true); } /*! Close the window. This closes the window, effectively calling destroy(), and potentially quitting the application. Returns true on success, false if it has a parent window (in which case the top level window should be closed instead). \sa destroy(), QGuiApplication::quitOnLastWindowClosed() */ bool QWindow::close() { Q_D(QWindow); // Do not close non top level windows if (parent()) return false; if (QGuiApplicationPrivate::focus_window == this) QGuiApplicationPrivate::focus_window = 0; if (QGuiApplicationPrivate::currentMouseWindow == this) QGuiApplicationPrivate::currentMouseWindow = 0; QGuiApplicationPrivate::window_list.removeAll(this); destroy(); d->maybeQuitOnLastWindowClosed(); return true; } /*! The expose event (\a ev) is sent by the window system whenever the window's exposure on screen changes. The application can start rendering into the window with QBackingStore and QOpenGLContext as soon as it gets an exposeEvent() such that isExposed() is true. If the window is moved off screen, is made totally obscured by another window, iconified or similar, this function might be called and the value of isExposed() might change to false. When this happens, an application should stop its rendering as it is no longer visible to the user. A resize event will always be sent before the expose event the first time a window is shown. \sa isExposed() */ void QWindow::exposeEvent(QExposeEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle mouse events (\a ev). */ void QWindow::moveEvent(QMoveEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle resize events (\a ev). The resize event is called whenever the window is resized in the windowing system, either directly through the windowing system acknowledging a setGeometry() or resize() request, or indirectly through the user resizing the window manually. */ void QWindow::resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle show events (\a ev). The function is called when the window has requested becoming visible. If the window is successfully shown by the windowing system, this will be followed by a resize and an expose event. */ void QWindow::showEvent(QShowEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle hide events (\a ev). The function is called when the window has requested being hidden in the windowing system. */ void QWindow::hideEvent(QHideEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle any event (\a ev) sent to the window. Return \c true if the event was recognized and processed. Remember to call the base class version if you wish for mouse events, key events, resize events, etc to be dispatched as usual. */ bool QWindow::event(QEvent *ev) { switch (ev->type()) { case QEvent::MouseMove: mouseMoveEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::MouseButtonPress: mousePressEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::MouseButtonRelease: mouseReleaseEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::MouseButtonDblClick: mouseDoubleClickEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::TouchBegin: case QEvent::TouchUpdate: case QEvent::TouchEnd: case QEvent::TouchCancel: touchEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::Move: moveEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::Resize: resizeEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::KeyPress: keyPressEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::KeyRelease: keyReleaseEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::FocusIn: { focusInEvent(static_cast(ev)); #ifndef QT_NO_ACCESSIBILITY QAccessible::State state; state.active = true; QAccessibleStateChangeEvent event(this, state); QAccessible::updateAccessibility(&event); #endif break; } case QEvent::FocusOut: { focusOutEvent(static_cast(ev)); #ifndef QT_NO_ACCESSIBILITY QAccessible::State state; state.active = true; QAccessibleStateChangeEvent event(this, state); QAccessible::updateAccessibility(&event); #endif break; } #ifndef QT_NO_WHEELEVENT case QEvent::Wheel: wheelEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; #endif case QEvent::Close: { Q_D(QWindow); bool wasVisible = isVisible(); destroy(); if (wasVisible) d->maybeQuitOnLastWindowClosed(); break; } case QEvent::Expose: exposeEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::Show: showEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::Hide: hideEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; case QEvent::WindowStateChange: { Q_D(QWindow); emit windowStateChanged(d->windowState); } #ifndef QT_NO_TABLETEVENT case QEvent::TabletPress: case QEvent::TabletMove: case QEvent::TabletRelease: tabletEvent(static_cast(ev)); break; #endif default: return QObject::event(ev); } return true; } /*! Override this to handle key press events (\a ev). \sa keyReleaseEvent() */ void QWindow::keyPressEvent(QKeyEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle key release events (\a ev). \sa keyPressEvent() */ void QWindow::keyReleaseEvent(QKeyEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle focus in events (\a ev). Focus in events are sent when the window receives keyboard focus. \sa focusOutEvent() */ void QWindow::focusInEvent(QFocusEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle focus out events (\a ev). Focus out events are sent when the window loses keyboard focus. \sa focusInEvent() */ void QWindow::focusOutEvent(QFocusEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle mouse press events (\a ev). \sa mouseReleaseEvent() */ void QWindow::mousePressEvent(QMouseEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle mouse release events (\a ev). \sa mousePressEvent() */ void QWindow::mouseReleaseEvent(QMouseEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle mouse double click events (\a ev). \sa mousePressEvent(), QStyleHints::mouseDoubleClickInterval() */ void QWindow::mouseDoubleClickEvent(QMouseEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } /*! Override this to handle mouse move events (\a ev). */ void QWindow::mouseMoveEvent(QMouseEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } #ifndef QT_NO_WHEELEVENT /*! Override this to handle mouse wheel or other wheel events (\a ev). */ void QWindow::wheelEvent(QWheelEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } #endif //QT_NO_WHEELEVENT /*! Override this to handle touch events (\a ev). */ void QWindow::touchEvent(QTouchEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } #ifndef QT_NO_TABLETEVENT /*! Override this to handle tablet press, move, and release events (\a ev). Proximity enter and leave events are not sent to windows, they are delivered to the application instance. */ void QWindow::tabletEvent(QTabletEvent *ev) { ev->ignore(); } #endif /*! Override this to handle platform dependent events. Will be given \a eventType, \a message and \a result. This might make your application non-portable. Should return true only if the event was handled. */ bool QWindow::nativeEvent(const QByteArray &eventType, void *message, long *result) { Q_UNUSED(eventType); Q_UNUSED(message); Q_UNUSED(result); return false; } /*! \fn QPoint QWindow::mapToGlobal(const QPoint &pos) const Translates the window coordinate \a pos to global screen coordinates. For example, \c{mapToGlobal(QPoint(0,0))} would give the global coordinates of the top-left pixel of the window. \sa mapFromGlobal() */ QPoint QWindow::mapToGlobal(const QPoint &pos) const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow && d->platformWindow->isEmbedded(0)) return d->platformWindow->mapToGlobal(pos); else return pos + d_func()->globalPosition(); } /*! \fn QPoint QWindow::mapFromGlobal(const QPoint &pos) const Translates the global screen coordinate \a pos to window coordinates. \sa mapToGlobal() */ QPoint QWindow::mapFromGlobal(const QPoint &pos) const { Q_D(const QWindow); if (d->platformWindow && d->platformWindow->isEmbedded(0)) return d->platformWindow->mapFromGlobal(pos); else return pos - d_func()->globalPosition(); } Q_GUI_EXPORT QWindowPrivate *qt_window_private(QWindow *window) { return window->d_func(); } void QWindowPrivate::maybeQuitOnLastWindowClosed() { Q_Q(QWindow); // Attempt to close the application only if this has WA_QuitOnClose set and a non-visible parent bool quitOnClose = QGuiApplication::quitOnLastWindowClosed() && !q->parent(); if (quitOnClose) { QWindowList list = QGuiApplication::topLevelWindows(); bool lastWindowClosed = true; for (int i = 0; i < list.size(); ++i) { QWindow *w = list.at(i); if (!w->isVisible() || w->transientParent()) continue; lastWindowClosed = false; break; } if (lastWindowClosed) { QGuiApplicationPrivate::emitLastWindowClosed(); QCoreApplicationPrivate *applicationPrivate = static_cast(QObjectPrivate::get(QCoreApplication::instance())); applicationPrivate->maybeQuit(); } } } #ifndef QT_NO_CURSOR /*! \brief set the cursor shape for this window The mouse \a cursor will assume this shape when it is over this window, unless an override cursor is set. See the \l{Qt::CursorShape}{list of predefined cursor objects} for a range of useful shapes. By default, the cursor has the Qt::ArrowCursor shape. Some underlying window implementations will reset the cursor if it leaves a window even if the mouse is grabbed. If you want to have a cursor set for all windows, even when outside the window, consider QGuiApplication::setOverrideCursor(). \sa QGuiApplication::setOverrideCursor() */ void QWindow::setCursor(const QCursor &cursor) { Q_D(QWindow); d->cursor = cursor; // Only attempt to set cursor and emit signal if there is an actual platform cursor if (d->screen->handle()->cursor()) { d->applyCursor(); QEvent event(QEvent::CursorChange); QGuiApplication::sendEvent(this, &event); } } /*! \brief Restores the default arrow cursor for this window. */ void QWindow::unsetCursor() { setCursor(Qt::ArrowCursor); } /*! \brief the cursor shape for this window \sa setCursor(), unsetCursor() */ QCursor QWindow::cursor() const { Q_D(const QWindow); return d->cursor; } void QWindowPrivate::applyCursor() { Q_Q(QWindow); if (platformWindow) { if (QPlatformCursor *platformCursor = screen->handle()->cursor()) { QCursor *oc = QGuiApplication::overrideCursor(); QCursor c = oc ? *oc : cursor; platformCursor->changeCursor(&c, q); } } } #endif // QT_NO_CURSOR QT_END_NAMESPACE