/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2012 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/ ** ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$ ** GNU Free Documentation License ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free ** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of ** this file. ** ** 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. ** ** ** ** ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \page qtsensors-porting.html \title Porting Applications from QtMobility Sensors to Qt Sensors \tableofcontents \section1 Overview The initial release of Qt Sensors (5.0) is generally expected to be source compatible with QtMobility Sensors 1.2. This document attempts to explain where things must be changed in order to port applications to Qt Sensors. \section1 QML Compatibility for QML applications is provided by shipping the legacy \c QtMobility.sensors QML import. QML applications should not require any changes to continue operating. Applications using the legacy QML import may not be able to trivially port over to the new QML import because the new QML import does not provide elements for every sensor like the legacy QML import does. \table \row \li \l {Qt Sensors QML API}{QML API} \li Information about the Qt Sensors QML API \row \li \l {QtMobility.sensors 1.x}{Legacy QML API} \li Information about the legacy QtMobility.sensors QML API \endtable \section1 C++ \section2 Includes QtMobility Sensors installed headers into a \c Qt Sensors directory. This is also the directory that Qt Sensors uses. It is therefore expected that includes that worked with QtMobility Sensors should continue to work. For example: \code #include #include #include #include \endcode \section2 Macros and Namespace QtMobility Sensors was built in a \c QtMobility namespace. This was enabled by the use of various macros. Qt Sensors does not normally build into a namespace and the macros from QtMobility no longer exist. \list \li QTM_BEGIN_NAMESPACE \li QTM_END_NAMESPACE \li QTM_USE_NAMESPACE \li QTM_PREPEND_NAMESPACE(x) \endlist Note that Qt can be configured to build into a namespace. If Qt is built in this way then Qt Sensors is also built into the nominated namespace. However, as this is optional, the macros for this are typically defined to do nothing. \list \li QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE \li QT_END_NAMESPACE \li QT_USE_NAMESPACE \li QT_PREPEND_NAMESPACE(x) \endlist \section2 qtimestamp qtimestamp was previously defined as an opaque type equivalent to a quint64. It existed as a class due to an implementation detail. In Qt Sensors, the API uses quint64 instead of qtimestamp. qtimestamp still exists as a typedef so that applications that refer to qtimestamp can be compiled. \section1 Project Files QtMobility Sensors applications used this in their project files to enable the Sensors API. \code CONFIG += mobility MOBILITY += sensors \endcode Applications should remove these lines and instead use this to enable the Qt Sensors API. \code QT += sensors \endcode */