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Please review the following information to ensure ** the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 requirements ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \page qtquick-modelviewsdata-modelview.html \title Models and Views in Qt Quick \brief how to display and form data in Qt Quick Simply put, applications need to form data and display the data. Qt Quick has the notion of \e models, \e views, and \e delegates to display data. They modularize the visualization of data in order to give the developer or designer control over the different aspects of the data. A developer can swap a list view with a grid view with little changes to the data. Similarly, encapsulating an instance of the data in a delegate allows the developer to dictate how to present or handle the data. \image modelview-overview.png \list \li \b Model - contains the data and its structure. There are several QML types for creating models. \li \b View - a container that displays the data. The view might display the data in a list or a grid. \li \b Delegate - dictates how the data should appear in the view. The delegate takes each data in the model and encapsulates it. The data is accessible through the delegate. \endlist To visualize data, bind the view's \c model property to a model and the \c delegate property to a component or another compatible type. \section1 Displaying Data with Views Views are containers for collections of items. They are feature-rich and can be customizable to meet style or behavior requirements. \target qtquick-views A set of standard views are provided in the basic set of Qt Quick graphical types: \list \li \l{ListView} - arranges items in a horizontal or vertical list \li \l{GridView} - arranges items in a grid within the available space \li \l{PathView} - arranges items on a path \endlist These types have properties and behaviors exclusive to each type. Visit their respective documentation for more information. \section2 Decorating Views Views allow visual customization through \e decoration properties such as the \c header, \c footer, and \c section properties. By binding an object, usually another visual object, to these properties, the views are decoratable. A footer may include a \l Rectangle type showcasing borders or a header that displays a logo on top of the list. Suppose that a specific club wants to decorate its members list with its brand colors. A member list is in a \c model and the \c delegate will display the model's content. \snippet qml/listview-decorations.qml model \snippet qml/listview-decorations.qml delegate The club may decorate the members list by binding visual objects to the \c header and \c footer properties. The visual object may be defined inline, in another file, or in a \l {Component} type. \snippet qml/listview-decorations.qml decorations \image listview-decorations.png \section2 Mouse and Touch Handling The views handle dragging and flicking of their content, however they do not handle touch interaction with the individual delegates. In order for the delegates to react to touch input, e.g. to set the \c currentIndex, a MouseArea with the appropriate touch handling logic must be provided by the delegate. Note that if \c highlightRangeMode is set to \c StrictlyEnforceRange the currentIndex will be affected by dragging/flicking the view, since the view will always ensure that the \c currentIndex is within the highlight range specified. \section2 ListView Sections \l {ListView} contents may be grouped into \e sections, where related list items are labeled according to their sections. Further, the sections may be decorated with \l{qml-view-delegate}{delegates}. A list may contain a list indicating people's names and the team on which team the person belongs. \snippet qml/listview-sections.qml model \snippet qml/listview-sections.qml delegate The ListView type has the \c section \l{qtqml-syntax-objectattributes.html#Attached-properties-and-attached-signal-handlers} {attached property} that can combine adjacent and related types into a section. The \c section.property determines which list type property to use as sections. The \c section.criteria can dictate how the section names are displayed and the \c section.delegate is similar to the views' \l {qml-view-delegate}{delegate} property. \snippet qml/listview-sections.qml section \image listview-section.png \target qml-view-delegate \section1 View Delegates Views need a \e delegate to visually represent an item in a list. A view will visualize each item list according to the template defined by the delegate. Items in a model are accessible through the \c index property as well as the item's properties. \snippet qml/listview.qml delegate \image listview-setup.png \section2 Accessing Views and Models from Delegates The list view to which the delegate is bound is accessible from the delegate through the \c{ListView.view} property. Likewise, the GridView \c{GridView.view} is available to delegates. The corresponding model and its properties, therefore, are available through \c{ListView.view.model}. In addition, any defined signals or methods in the model are also accessible. This mechanism is useful when you want to use the same delegate for a number of views, for example, but you want decorations or other features to be different for each view, and you would like these different settings to be properties of each of the views. Similarly, it might be of interest to access or show some properties of the model. In the following example, the delegate shows the property \e{language} of the model, and the color of one of the fields depends on the property \e{fruit_color} of the view. \snippet qml/models/views-models-delegates.qml rectangle \target qml-data-models \section1 Models Data is provided to the delegate via named data roles which the delegate may bind to. Here is a ListModel with two roles, \e type and \e age, and a ListView with a delegate that binds to these roles to display their values: \snippet qml/qml-data-models/listmodel-listview.qml document If there is a naming clash between the model's properties and the delegate's properties, the roles can be accessed with the qualified \e model name instead. For example, if a \l Text type had \e type or \e age properties, the text in the above example would display those property values instead of the \e type and \e age values from the model item. In this case, the properties could have been referenced as \c model.type and \c model.age instead to ensure the delegate displays the property values from the model item. A special \e index role containing the index of the item in the model is also available to the delegate. Note this index is set to -1 if the item is removed from the model. If you bind to the index role, be sure that the logic accounts for the possibility of index being -1, i.e. that the item is no longer valid. (Usually the item will shortly be destroyed, but it is possible to delay delegate destruction in some views via a \c delayRemove attached property.) Models that do not have named roles (such as the ListModel shown below) will have the data provided via the \e modelData role. The \e modelData role is also provided for models that have only one role. In this case the \e modelData role contains the same data as the named role. QML provides several types of data models among the built-in set of QML types. In addition, models can be created with Qt C++ and then made available to \l{QQmlEngine} for use by QML components. For information about creating these models, visit the \l{Using C++ Models with Qt Quick Views} and \l{qtqml-typesystem-topic.html#qml-object-types} {creating QML types} articles. Positioning of items from a model can be achieved using a \l{Repeater}. \section2 List Model ListModel is a simple hierarchy of types specified in QML. The available roles are specified by the \l ListElement properties. \snippet qml/qml-data-models/listelements.qml model The above model has two roles, \e name and \e cost. These can be bound to by a ListView delegate, for example: \snippet qml/qml-data-models/listelements.qml view ListModel provides methods to manipulate the ListModel directly via JavaScript. In this case, the first item inserted determines the roles available to any views that are using the model. For example, if an empty ListModel is created and populated via JavaScript, the roles provided by the first insertion are the only roles that will be shown in the view: \snippet qml/qml-data-models/dynamic-listmodel.qml model \dots \snippet qml/qml-data-models/dynamic-listmodel.qml mouse area When the MouseArea is clicked, \c fruitModel will have two roles, \e cost and \e name. Even if subsequent roles are added, only the first two will be handled by views using the model. To reset the roles available in the model, call ListModel::clear(). \section2 XML Model XmlListModel allows construction of a model from an XML data source. The roles are specified via the \l XmlRole type. The type needs to be imported. \code import QtQuick.XmlListModel 2.0 \endcode The following model has three roles, \e title, \e link and \e description: \qml XmlListModel { id: feedModel source: "http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/oceania" query: "/rss/channel/item" XmlRole { name: "title"; query: "title/string()" } XmlRole { name: "link"; query: "link/string()" } XmlRole { name: "description"; query: "description/string()" } } \endqml The \c query property specifies that the XmlListModel generates a model item for each \c in the XML document. The \l{Qt Quick Demo - RSS News}{RSS News demo} shows how XmlListModel can be used to display an RSS feed. \section2 Object Model ObjectModel contains the visual items to be used in a view. When an ObjectModel is used in a view, the view does not require a delegate because the ObjectModel already contains the visual delegate (items). The example below places three colored rectangles in a ListView. \code import QtQuick 2.0 import QtQml.Models 2.1 Rectangle { ObjectModel { id: itemModel Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "red" } Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "green" } Rectangle { height: 30; width: 80; color: "blue" } } ListView { anchors.fill: parent model: itemModel } } \endcode \note VisualItemModel can also be used, but it is only provided for compatibility reasons. VisualItemModel allows a QML item to be provided as a model. This model contains both the data and delegate; the child items of a VisualItemModel provide the contents of the delegate. The model does not provide any roles. \section2 Integers as Models An integer can be used as a model that contains a certain number of types. In this case, the model does not have any data roles. The following example creates a ListView with five elements: \qml Item { width: 200; height: 250 Component { id: itemDelegate Text { text: "I am item number: " + index } } ListView { anchors.fill: parent model: 5 delegate: itemDelegate } } \endqml \section2 Object Instances as Models An object instance can be used to specify a model with a single object type. The properties of the object are provided as roles. The example below creates a list with one item, showing the color of the \e myText text. Note the use of the fully qualified \e model.color property to avoid clashing with \e color property of the Text type in the delegate. \qml Rectangle { width: 200; height: 250 Text { id: myText text: "Hello" color: "#dd44ee" } Component { id: myDelegate Text { text: model.color } } ListView { anchors.fill: parent anchors.topMargin: 30 model: myText delegate: myDelegate } } \endqml \target qml-c++-models \section2 C++ Data Models Models can be defined in C++ and then made available to QML. This mechanism is useful for exposing existing C++ data models or otherwise complex datasets to QML. For information, visit the \l{Using C++ Models with Qt Quick Views} article. \section1 Repeaters \div {class="float-right"} \inlineimage repeater-index.png \enddiv Repeaters create items from a template for use with positioners, using data from a model. Combining repeaters and positioners is an easy way to lay out lots of items. A \l Repeater item is placed inside a positioner, and generates items that the enclosing positioner arranges. Each Repeater creates a number of items by combining each element of data from a model, specified using the \l{Repeater::model}{model} property, with the template item, defined as a child item within the Repeater. The total number of items is determined by the amount of data in the model. The following example shows a repeater used with a Grid item to arrange a set of Rectangle items. The Repeater item creates a series of 24 rectangles for the Grid item to position in a 5 by 5 arrangement. \snippet qml/repeaters/repeater-grid-index.qml document The number of items created by a Repeater is held by its \l{Repeater::}{count} property. It is not possible to set this property to determine the number of items to be created. Instead, as in the above example, we use an integer as the model. For more details, see the \l{qtquick-modelviewsdata-modelview.html#integers-as-models}{QML Data Models} document. If the model is a string list, the delegate is also exposed to a read-only \c modelData property that holds the string. For example: \table \row \li \snippet qml/repeaters/repeater.qml modeldata \li \image repeater-modeldata.png \endtable It is also possible to use a delegate as the template for the items created by a Repeater. This is specified using the \l{Repeater::}{delegate} property. \section1 Using Transitions Transitions can be used to animate items that are added to, moved within, or removed from a positioner. Transitions for adding items apply to items that are created as part of a positioner, as well as those that are reparented to become children of a positioner. Transitions for removing items apply to items within a positioner that are deleted, as well as those that are removed from a positioner and given new parents in a document. \note Changing the opacity of items to zero will not cause them to disappear from the positioner. They can be removed and re-added by changing the visible property. */