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authorLiang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>2018-02-18 13:37:02 +0100
committerLiang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>2018-02-18 13:37:02 +0100
commitba05397ad723fa19125eb5ca2f91c7f437b21484 (patch)
treee236df3317828f02ec1e8f28d87125bcc286b2d9 /src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp
parentb2c71d6518143b3d2a9bd3aef1d72ee5929891fc (diff)
parent0e64bd96fbf26855a65e38847083dbd2c6bee4ac (diff)
Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/5.9' into 5.11
Conflicts: .qmake.conf tests/auto/qml/qqmlcontext/tst_qqmlcontext.cpp Change-Id: I7feb9772fc35066f56b7c073482b53ca8c86c70b
Diffstat (limited to 'src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp')
-rw-r--r--src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp86
1 files changed, 81 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp b/src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp
index adfa98bd46..c4090ac482 100644
--- a/src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp
+++ b/src/qml/jsapi/qjsvalue.cpp
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@
QJSValue supports the types defined in the \l{ECMA-262}
standard: The primitive types, which are Undefined, Null, Boolean,
- Number, and String; and the Object type. Additionally, built-in
+ Number, and String; and the Object and Array types. Additionally, built-in
support is provided for Qt/C++ types such as QVariant and QObject.
For the object-based types (including Date and RegExp), use the
@@ -108,6 +108,38 @@
script code, or QJSValueIterator in C++.
\sa QJSEngine, QJSValueIterator
+
+ \section1 Working With Arrays
+
+ To create an array using QJSValue, use \l QJSEngine::newArray():
+
+ \code
+ // Assumes that this class was declared in QML.
+ QJSValue jsArray = engine->newArray(3);
+ \endcode
+
+ To set individual elements in the array, use
+ the \l {QJSValue::}{setProperty(quint32 arrayIndex, const QJSValue &value)}
+ overload. For example, to fill the array above with integers:
+
+ \code
+ for (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
+ jsArray.setProperty(i, QRandomGenerator::global().generate());
+ }
+ \endcode
+
+ To determine the length of the array, access the \c "length" property.
+ To access array elements, use the
+ \l {QJSValue::}{property(quint32 arrayIndex)} overload. The following code
+ reads the array we created above back into a list:
+
+ \code
+ QVector<int> integers;
+ const int length = jsArray.property("length").toInt();
+ for (int i = 0; i < length; ++i) {
+ integers.append(jsArray.property(i).toInt());
+ }
+ \endcode
*/
/*!
@@ -1008,6 +1040,10 @@ bool QJSValue::strictlyEquals(const QJSValue& other) const
occurred, property() returns the value that was thrown (typically
an \c{Error} object).
+ To access array elements, use the
+ \l {QJSValue::}{setProperty(quint32 arrayIndex, const QJSValue &value)}
+ overload instead.
+
\sa setProperty(), hasProperty(), QJSValueIterator
*/
QJSValue QJSValue::property(const QString& name) const
@@ -1039,8 +1075,25 @@ QJSValue QJSValue::property(const QString& name) const
Returns the property at the given \a arrayIndex.
- This function is provided for convenience and performance when
- working with array objects.
+ It is possible to access elements in an array in two ways. The first is to
+ use the array index as the property name:
+
+ \code
+ qDebug() << jsValueArray.property(QLatin1String("4")).toString();
+ \endcode
+
+ The second is to use the overload that takes an index:
+
+ \code
+ qDebug() << jsValueArray.property(4).toString();
+ \endcode
+
+ Both of these approaches achieve the same result, except that the latter:
+
+ \list
+ \li Is easier to use (can use an integer directly)
+ \li Is faster (no conversion to integer)
+ \endlist
If this QJSValue is not an Array object, this function behaves
as if property() was called with the string representation of \a
@@ -1072,6 +1125,10 @@ QJSValue QJSValue::property(quint32 arrayIndex) const
If this QJSValue does not already have a property with name \a name,
a new property is created.
+ To modify array elements, use the
+ \l {QJSValue::}{setProperty(quint32 arrayIndex, const QJSValue &value)}
+ overload instead.
+
\sa property(), deleteProperty()
*/
void QJSValue::setProperty(const QString& name, const QJSValue& value)
@@ -1109,12 +1166,31 @@ void QJSValue::setProperty(const QString& name, const QJSValue& value)
Sets the property at the given \a arrayIndex to the given \a value.
- This function is provided for convenience and performance when
- working with array objects.
+ It is possible to modify elements in an array in two ways. The first is to
+ use the array index as the property name:
+
+ \code
+ jsValueArray.setProperty(QLatin1String("4"), value);
+ \endcode
+
+ The second is to use the overload that takes an index:
+
+ \code
+ jsValueArray.setProperty(4, value);
+ \endcode
+
+ Both of these approaches achieve the same result, except that the latter:
+
+ \list
+ \li Is easier to use (can use an integer directly)
+ \li Is faster (no conversion to integer)
+ \endlist
If this QJSValue is not an Array object, this function behaves
as if setProperty() was called with the string representation of \a
arrayIndex.
+
+ \sa {QJSValue::}{property(quint32 arrayIndex)}, {Working With Arrays}
*/
void QJSValue::setProperty(quint32 arrayIndex, const QJSValue& value)
{