/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2012 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** All rights reserved. ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) ** ** This file is part of the QtDeclarative module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** 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, Nokia gives you certain additional ** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia 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. ** ** Other Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used in accordance with the terms and ** conditions contained in a signed written agreement between you and Nokia. ** ** ** ** ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qdeclarativelist.h" #include "private/qdeclarativelist_p.h" #include "private/qdeclarativeengine_p.h" #include "private/qdeclarativeproperty_p.h" QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate::QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate() : propertyType(-1), refCount(1) { } QDeclarativeListReference QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate::init(const QDeclarativeListProperty &prop, int propType, QDeclarativeEngine *engine) { QDeclarativeListReference rv; if (!prop.object) return rv; QDeclarativeEnginePrivate *p = engine?QDeclarativeEnginePrivate::get(engine):0; int listType = p?p->listType(propType):QDeclarativeMetaType::listType(propType); if (listType == -1) return rv; rv.d = new QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate; rv.d->object = prop.object; rv.d->elementType = p?p->rawMetaObjectForType(listType):QDeclarativeMetaType::qmlType(listType)->baseMetaObject(); rv.d->property = prop; rv.d->propertyType = propType; return rv; } void QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate::addref() { Q_ASSERT(refCount > 0); ++refCount; } void QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate::release() { Q_ASSERT(refCount > 0); --refCount; if (!refCount) delete this; } /*! \class QDeclarativeListReference \since 4.7 \module QtDeclarative \brief The QDeclarativeListReference class allows the manipulation of QDeclarativeListProperty properties. QDeclarativeListReference allows C++ programs to read from, and assign values to a QML list property in a simple and type safe way. A QDeclarativeListReference can be created by passing an object and property name or through a QDeclarativeProperty instance. These two are equivalant: \code QDeclarativeListReference ref1(object, "children"); QDeclarativeProperty ref2(object, "children"); QDeclarativeListReference ref2 = qvariant_cast(ref2.read()); \endcode Not all QML list properties support all operations. A set of methods, canAppend(), canAt(), canClear() and canCount() allow programs to query whether an operation is supported on a given property. QML list properties are typesafe. Only QObject's that derive from the correct base class can be assigned to the list. The listElementType() method can be used to query the QMetaObject of the QObject type supported. Attempting to add objects of the incorrect type to a list property will fail. Like with normal lists, when accessing a list element by index, it is the callers responsibility to ensure that it does not request an out of range element using the count() method before calling at(). */ /*! Constructs an invalid instance. */ QDeclarativeListReference::QDeclarativeListReference() : d(0) { } /*! Constructs a QDeclarativeListReference for \a object's \a property. If \a property is not a list property, an invalid QDeclarativeListReference is created. If \a object is destroyed after the reference is constructed, it will automatically become invalid. That is, it is safe to hold QDeclarativeListReference instances even after \a object is deleted. Passing \a engine is required to access some QML created list properties. If in doubt, and an engine is available, pass it. */ QDeclarativeListReference::QDeclarativeListReference(QObject *object, const char *property, QDeclarativeEngine *engine) : d(0) { if (!object || !property) return; QDeclarativePropertyCache::Data local; QDeclarativePropertyCache::Data *data = QDeclarativePropertyCache::property(engine, object, QLatin1String(property), local); if (!data || !(data->flags & QDeclarativePropertyCache::Data::IsQList)) return; QDeclarativeEnginePrivate *p = engine?QDeclarativeEnginePrivate::get(engine):0; int listType = p?p->listType(data->propType):QDeclarativeMetaType::listType(data->propType); if (listType == -1) return; d = new QDeclarativeListReferencePrivate; d->object = object; d->elementType = p?p->rawMetaObjectForType(listType):QDeclarativeMetaType::qmlType(listType)->baseMetaObject(); d->propertyType = data->propType; void *args[] = { &d->property, 0 }; QMetaObject::metacall(object, QMetaObject::ReadProperty, data->coreIndex, args); } /*! \internal */ QDeclarativeListReference::QDeclarativeListReference(const QDeclarativeListReference &o) : d(o.d) { if (d) d->addref(); } /*! \internal */ QDeclarativeListReference &QDeclarativeListReference::operator=(const QDeclarativeListReference &o) { if (o.d) o.d->addref(); if (d) d->release(); d = o.d; return *this; } /*! \internal */ QDeclarativeListReference::~QDeclarativeListReference() { if (d) d->release(); } /*! Returns true if the instance refers to a valid list property, otherwise false. */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::isValid() const { return d && d->object; } /*! Returns the list property's object. Returns 0 if the reference is invalid. */ QObject *QDeclarativeListReference::object() const { if (isValid()) return d->object; else return 0; } /*! Returns the QMetaObject for the elements stored in the list property. Returns 0 if the reference is invalid. The QMetaObject can be used ahead of time to determine whether a given instance can be added to a list. */ const QMetaObject *QDeclarativeListReference::listElementType() const { if (isValid()) return d->elementType; else return 0; } /*! Returns true if the list property can be appended to, otherwise false. Returns false if the reference is invalid. \sa append() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::canAppend() const { return (isValid() && d->property.append); } /*! Returns true if the list property can queried by index, otherwise false. Returns false if the reference is invalid. \sa at() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::canAt() const { return (isValid() && d->property.at); } /*! Returns true if the list property can be cleared, otherwise false. Returns false if the reference is invalid. \sa clear() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::canClear() const { return (isValid() && d->property.clear); } /*! Returns true if the list property can be queried for its element count, otherwise false. Returns false if the reference is invalid. \sa count() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::canCount() const { return (isValid() && d->property.count); } /*! Appends \a object to the list. Returns true if the operation succeeded, otherwise false. \sa canAppend() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::append(QObject *object) const { if (!canAppend()) return false; if (object && !QDeclarativePropertyPrivate::canConvert(object->metaObject(), d->elementType)) return false; d->property.append(&d->property, object); return true; } /*! Returns the list element at \a index, or 0 if the operation failed. \sa canAt() */ QObject *QDeclarativeListReference::at(int index) const { if (!canAt()) return 0; return d->property.at(&d->property, index); } /*! Clears the list. Returns true if the operation succeeded, otherwise false. \sa canClear() */ bool QDeclarativeListReference::clear() const { if (!canClear()) return false; d->property.clear(&d->property); return true; } /*! Returns the number of objects in the list, or 0 if the operation failed. */ int QDeclarativeListReference::count() const { if (!canCount()) return 0; return d->property.count(&d->property); } /*! \class QDeclarativeListProperty \since 4.7 \brief The QDeclarativeListProperty class allows applications to expose list-like properties to QML. QML has many list properties, where more than one object value can be assigned. The use of a list property from QML looks like this: \code FruitBasket { fruit: [ Apple {}, Orange{}, Banana{} ] } \endcode The QDeclarativeListProperty encapsulates a group of function pointers that represet the set of actions QML can perform on the list - adding items, retrieving items and clearing the list. In the future, additional operations may be supported. All list properties must implement the append operation, but the rest are optional. To provide a list property, a C++ class must implement the operation callbacks, and then return an appropriate QDeclarativeListProperty value from the property getter. List properties should have no setter. In the example above, the Q_PROPERTY() declarative will look like this: \code Q_PROPERTY(QDeclarativeListProperty fruit READ fruit); \endcode QML list properties are typesafe - in this case \c {Fruit} is a QObject type that \c {Apple}, \c {Orange} and \c {Banana} all derive from. \note QDeclarativeListProperty can only be used for lists of QObject-derived object pointers. \sa {Object and List Property Types} */ /*! \fn QDeclarativeListProperty::QDeclarativeListProperty() \internal */ /*! \fn QDeclarativeListProperty::QDeclarativeListProperty(QObject *object, QList &list) Convenience constructor for making a QDeclarativeListProperty value from an existing QList \a list. The \a list reference must remain valid for as long as \a object exists. \a object must be provided. Generally this constructor should not be used in production code, as a writable QList violates QML's memory management rules. However, this constructor can very useful while prototyping. */ /*! \fn QDeclarativeListProperty::QDeclarativeListProperty(QObject *object, void *data, AppendFunction append, CountFunction count = 0, AtFunction at = 0, ClearFunction clear = 0) Construct a QDeclarativeListProperty from a set of operation functions. An opaque \a data handle may be passed which can be accessed from within the operation functions. The list property remains valid while \a object exists. The \a append operation is compulsory and must be provided, while the \a count, \a at and \a clear methods are optional. */ /*! \typedef QDeclarativeListProperty::AppendFunction Synonym for \c {void (*)(QDeclarativeListProperty *property, T *value)}. Append the \a value to the list \a property. */ /*! \typedef QDeclarativeListProperty::CountFunction Synonym for \c {int (*)(QDeclarativeListProperty *property)}. Return the number of elements in the list \a property. */ /*! \fn bool QDeclarativeListProperty::operator==(const QDeclarativeListProperty &other) const Returns true if this QDeclarativeListProperty is equal to \a other, otherwise false. */ /*! \typedef QDeclarativeListProperty::AtFunction Synonym for \c {T *(*)(QDeclarativeListProperty *property, int index)}. Return the element at position \a index in the list \a property. */ /*! \typedef QDeclarativeListProperty::ClearFunction Synonym for \c {void (*)(QDeclarativeListProperty *property)}. Clear the list \a property. */ QT_END_NAMESPACE