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/****************************************************************************
**
** Copyright (C) 2012 Digia Plc and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/legal
**
** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
**
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$
** Commercial License Usage
** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in
** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the
** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in
** a written agreement between you and Digia.  For licensing terms and
** conditions see http://qt.digia.com/licensing.  For further information
** use the contact form at http://qt.digia.com/contact-us.
**
** GNU Free Documentation License Usage
** 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.  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 gruesensorexample.html
    \title Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example
    \brief The Qt Sensors - Grue sensor example demonstrates all the steps from creating a new sensor to using it.
    \ingroup qtsensors-examples

    The Qt Sensors - Grue sensor example demonstrates all the steps from creating a new sensor to using it.

    The sensor definition is placed in a library where client apps can access it. The actual implementation
    lives in a plugin.

    \list
    \li \l{Grue Sensor Definition}
    \li \l{Grue Sensor Implementation}
    \endlist

    The sensor can now be used by a C++ application, even if the application does not have access to the
    definition.

    \list
    \li \l{Grue Sensor Console Application}
    \endlist

    To make the sensor available to a QML application an import must be created.

    \list
    \li \l{Grue Sensor QML Import}
    \li \l{Grue Sensor QML Application}
    \endlist
*/

/*!
    \example sensors/grue/lib
    \title Grue Sensor Definition
    \brief The Grue sensor is defined in a library so that applications can use it.

    First up is the sensor type. This is the interface for sensors that report
    on your likelihood of being eaten by a Grue. Such sensors are very important
    to adventurers, particularly if they are going into dark places as this is
    where Grues live.

    The interface is a simple one. It provides only 1 piece of information, your
    chance of being eaten. For the details on how this is property should be
    interpreted please see the documentation in gruesensor.cpp.

    This example was created using the make_sensor.pl script which can be found in
    src/sensors. As such, it contains some generated code that defines the convenience
    classes GrueFilter and GrueSensor.

    \sa {Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example}
*/

/*!
    \example sensors/grue/plugin
    \title Grue Sensor Implementation
    \brief The Grue sensor implementation lives in a plugin that is loaded by the Qt Sensors library.

    The Grue sensor needs a backend before it can be used. The backend provided
    is rather basic and it relies on some kind of light sensor to work but it
    gets the job done. If new hardware that can detect the actual presence of Grues
    becomes available a backend could be created that supports this hardware and
    applications using the Grue sensor would be able to use it without any changes.

    There are a few mandatory parts to a backend. They are the start and stop methods
    and the setReading call. The start and stop methods are used to start and stop
    any underlying hardware. In the case of this backend they start and stop a
    light sensor. In the start method, the backend should be sure to call the
    sensorStopped() or sensorBusy() methods if it cannot start.

    \snippet ../examples/sensors/grue/plugin/gruesensorimpl.cpp start

    The setReading method is needed so that the sensors library knows where the
    readings are coming from. This backend has a local copy of the reading so
    it passes a pointer to the function.

    \snippet ../examples/sensors/grue/plugin/gruesensorimpl.cpp setReading

    However it is also possible to pass null to the setReading method in which
    case the sensors library will create an instance and return a pointer.

    \code
    // Create a reading instance for us to use
    m_reading = setReading<GrueSensorReading>(0);
    \endcode

    The Grue sensor backend also supplies some metadata.

    The backend checks 2 things, how dark it is and how long you have been in the dark.
    It uses the readingChanged() signal to know when to check the light sensor's
    value. Once it is dark, it uses a timer to increase your chance of being eaten.

    The Grue sensor backend is delivered as a plugin. The plugin has a factory object
    that registers the types available and does the actual instantiation of the backend.

    \sa {Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example}
*/

/*!
    \example sensors/grue/console_app
    \title Grue Sensor Console Application
    \brief The Grue sensor console application demonstrates use of the Grue sensor.

    This is a simple commandline application. It demonstrates how to use the generic
    access feature of Qt Sensors to avoid a link-time dependency on the Grue Sensor
    library.

    \sa {Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example}
*/

/*!
    \example sensors/grue/import
    \title Grue Sensor QML Import
    \brief The Grue sensor QML import exports the GrueSensor class as a QML type.

    This example creates the \e {Grue 1.0} import.

    \sa {Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example}
*/

/*!
    \example sensors/grue
    \title Grue Sensor QML Application
    \brief The Grue sensor QML application demonstrates use of the GrueSensor QML type.

    This is a pure QML application that can be run from Qt Creator or directly using the
    \c qmlscene binary. You should install the other projects before trying to run
    this example or it will not be able to find its dependencies.

    \code
    qmlscene grue.qml
    \endcode

    \sa {Qt Sensors - Grue Sensor Example}
*/