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* Run optipng on all imagesMitch Curtis2019-11-041-0/+0
| | | | | | | | find . -name "*.png" -exec optipng -o 7 -strip all {} \; Change-Id: I2238b2dd38813d33ed48d79817f872f922cfa28d Fixes: QTBUG-79275 Reviewed-by: Mitch Curtis <mitch.curtis@qt.io>
* Add SplitViewMitch Curtis2018-11-131-0/+0
SplitView is an important tool for desktop applications that do not want to use a dock widget-style approach for their user interface. It allows users to have some degree of control over the sizing of elements in the UI, as well as the ability to conveniently serialize those sizes so that they're remembered across sessions. The main differences between this and the SplitView in Qt Quick Controls 1 are: - Has its own SplitView attached properties, rather than relying on the Layout attached properties (which required an additional import). - Uses the attached preferredWidth and preferredHeight properties as well as Item's implicitWidth/implicitHeight properties for the preferred size of items, rather than using the width and height properties. - Inherits from Container, so supports most of its API (though some parts of the API, like the currentIndex-related stuff, make no sense for SplitView). - Uses attached SplitHandle properties for the handle delegate to visualize hovered/pressed effects. - Offers convenience API for serializing the user's preferred sizes. [ChangeLog][Controls][SplitView] Introduced SplitView, a control that lays out items horizontally or vertically with a draggable splitter between each item. Task-number: QTBUG-56318 Change-Id: I3da91643ab312eb9ef5b0567da4e758f17747192 Reviewed-by: Richard Moe Gustavsen <richard.gustavsen@qt.io>