From ed99a30644c19b0a3cf0d2147243532df4daa16b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Timothy Pearson Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2013 21:57:54 -0600 Subject: Rename additional header files to avoid conflicts with KDE4 --- tdeabc/HOWTO | 372 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 372 insertions(+) create mode 100644 tdeabc/HOWTO (limited to 'tdeabc/HOWTO') diff --git a/tdeabc/HOWTO b/tdeabc/HOWTO new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3941b2033 --- /dev/null +++ b/tdeabc/HOWTO @@ -0,0 +1,372 @@ +The KDE Address Book Framework +=============================== + +The KDE address book framework tries to provide an easy to use and powerful +mechanism to handle contacts in all KDE applications. + +If you want to make use of it, this small introduction to programming +with libkabc may be helpful. + + +General Concepts +================= + +In libkabc the storage and management of contacts is devided in 2 layers. + +****************** +Management Layer * +****************** + + .-------------------. + | KABC::AddressBook | + .--------------------------------. + | KABC::Addressee | => Iterators + | KABC::Addressee | + | KABC::Addressee | => Search functions + | ... | + `--------------------------------' + | + - - - - - - - - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - + | +*************** | +Storage Layer * | +*************** | ....................... + | . . - Network + .---------------. | . .---------------. . + | ResourceFile |----+-----| ResourceLDAP | . + `---------------' | . `---------------' . + .---------------. | . .---------------. . + | ResourceDir |----+-----| ResourceNet | . + `---------------' . `---------------' . + . . + ....................... + + +The Management Layer +--------------------- +The Management Layer consists of the two classes KABC::AddressBook and +KABC::Addressee. KABC::AddressBook is a container for KABC::Addressee objects +and provides 2 kinds of access methods. +1) Iterators + With iterators you can iterate over each of the contacts of the + address book and perform an action on it + +2) Search functions + With search functions you can search for contacts with special attributes + such as "all contacts with the name 'Harald'" + +The class KABC::Addressee represents a single contact and contains all data +a vCard could store (as specified in RFC 2426). + +The Storage Layer +------------------ +The Storage Layer consists of the class KABC::Resource and its derived classes. +These classes are used by KABC::AddressBook to load and store the contacts to +the single backends. +At the moment libkabc provides 4 types of resources: +1) ResourceFile + - stores all contacts in a single file + +2) ResourceDir + - stores each contact in its own file with the unique identifier of the + contact as a filename, will all of the files together in one directory + +3) ResourceLDAP + - stores all of the contacts on a LDAP server + +4) ResourceNet + - stores all contacts in a single file, which can be accessable via HTTP, + FTP, Fish, WebDAV, POP3, IMAP or whatever the KIO frame work supports + +In general the developer does not have to take how to save the single contacts. +He just has to plug one of the above mentioned resources into KABC::AddressBook +and perform a save action. + +Examples +========= +Like a picture, C/C++ code is worth a 1000 words I'd like to give you a +lot of examples now, how to use libkabc for several tasks: + + +Using KABC::StdAddressBook and Iterators +----------------------------------------- +Normally you have to plugin the resources manually into the addressbook object +and call the load() function before you can access the contacts, but there is +a special class KABC::StdAddressBook, which loads all resources of the standard +address book of the user automatically. You can use it the following way: + + + #include + + 1: KABC::AddressBook *ab = KABC::StdAddressBook::self(); + 2: KABC::AddressBook::Iterator it; + 3: for ( it = ab->begin(); it != ab->end(); ++it ) { + 4: KABC::Addressee addr = (*it); + 5: + 6: kdDebug() << "Name = " << addr.formattedName() << endl; + 7: } + +The above example prints out the names of all the contacts in the user's address +book. In line 1 you retrieve a pointer to the user's standard address book +(provided by KABC::StdAddressBook via a singleton design pattern). +In line 2 an iterator is defined, which is used in line 3 to iterate over the +whole address book. The assignment in line 4 is intended only to show more +clearly how iterators function. +You could also use (*it).formattedName() directly. In line 6 the formatted name +of the current contact is printed out to stderr. +As you can see that's all magic, and it's quite easy ;) + + +Using KABC::AddressBook manually +--------------------------------- +In some cases you don't want to load the user's standard address book, but, +for example, just a single vCard. For this purpose you have to use the +class KABC::AddressBook and handle the resource stuff manually. +The following code will create a file resource and save a contact into it: + + + #include + #include + + 1: KABC::AddressBook ab; + 2: + 3: // create a file resource + 4: KABC::Resource *res = new KABC::ResourceFile( "/home/user/myvcard.vcf", "vcard" ); + 5: + 6: if ( !ab.addResource( res ) ) { + 7: kdDebug() << "Unable to open resource" << endl; + 8: return 1; + 9: } +10: +11: if ( !ab.load() ) { +12: kdDebug() << "Unable to load address book!" << endl; +13: return 2; +14: } +15: +16: KABC::Addressee addr; +17: addr.setNameFromString( "Otto Harald Meyer" ); +18: addr.setBirthday( QDate( 1982, 07, 19 ) ); +19: addr.setNickName( "otto" ); +20: addr.setMailer( "kmail" ); +21: +22: // TZ +23: KABC::TimeZone tz( 60 ); // takes time shift in minutes as argument +24: addr.setTimeZone( tz ); +25: +26: // GEO +27: KABC::Geo geo( 52.5, 13.36 ); // takes latitude and longitude as argument +28: addr.setGeo( geo ); +29: +30: addr.setTitle( "dude, the" ); +31: addr.setRole( "developer" ); +32: addr.setOrganization( "KDE e.V." ); +33: addr.setNote( "Yet another senseless note..." ); +34: addr.setUrl( KURL( "http://kaddressbook.org" ) ); +35: +36: // CLASS +37: KABC::Secrecy secrecy( KABC::Secrecy::Confidential ); +38: addr.setSecrecy( secrecy ); +39: +40: // PHOTO or LOGO +41: KABC::Picture photo; +42: QImage img; +43: if ( img.load( "face.png", "PNG" ) ) { +44: photo.setData( img ); +45: photo.setType( "image/png" ); +46: addr.setPhoto( photo ); +47: } +48: +49: addr.insertEmail( "otto@kde.se", true ); // preferred email +50: addr.insertEmail( "otti@yahoo.com", false ); +51: +52: // TEL +53: KABC::PhoneNumber phoneHome( "0351 5466738", KABC::PhoneNumber::Home ); +54: KABC::PhoneNumber phoneWork( "0351 2335411", KABC::PhoneNumber::Work ); +55: addr.insertPhoneNumber( phoneHome ); +56: addr.insertPhoneNumber( phoneWork ); +57: +58: // ADR +59: KABC::Address homeAddr( KABC::Address::Home ); +60: homeAddr.setStreet( "Milliwaystreet 42" ); +61: homeAddr.setLocality( "London" ); +62: homeAddr.setRegion( "Saxony" ); +63: homeAddr.setPostalCode( "43435" ); +64: homeAddr.setCountry( "Germany" ); +65: addr.insertAddress( homeAddr ); +66: +67: addr.insertCategory( "LUG-Dresden-Members" ); +68: +69: addr.insertCustom( "KADDRESSBOOK", "X-Anniversary", "21.04.2009" ); +70: +71: ab.insertAddressee( addr ); // will be assigned to the standard resource +72: // automatically +73: +74: KABC::Ticket *ticket = ab.requestSaveTicket( res ); +75: if ( !ticket ) { +76: kdError() << "Resource is locked by other application!" << endl; +77: } else { +78: if ( !ab.save( ticket ) ) { +79: kdError() << "Saving failed!" << endl; +80: ab.releaseSaveTicket( ticket ); +81: } +82: +83: } +84: +85: return 0; + +In line 1 the KABC::AddressBook is created. In line 4 you creat the +KABC::ResourceFile (which will handle the loading/saving). +The resource takes 2 arguments, the first is the file name and the +second one the file format. At the moment libkabc supports two file formats: +1) vCard, as specified in RFC 2426 +2) Binary, which increases performance during loading and saving + +In line 6 we try to plug the resource into the addressbook. The addressbook +class tries to open the resource immediately and returns whether opening was +successful. We add here only one resource, but you can add as many resources +as you want. + +In line 11 we try to load all contacts from the backends into the address book. +As before, it returns whether opening was successful. + +In line 16 a KABC::Addressee is created, which we will fill now with data, +before inserting it into the KABC::AddressBook. +The setNameFromString() function in the following line takes a string as +argument and tries to parse it into the single name components such as: given +name, family name, additional names, honoric prefix and honoric suffix. +You can set these values manually as well by calling + addr.setGivenName( "Otto" ); +and + addr.setFamilyName( "Meyer" ); +etc. etc. + +In line 23 we use the class KABC::TimeZone to store the timezone. This class +takes the time shift in minutes. + +In line 27 the KABC::Geo class is used for storing the geographical +information. The arguments are the latitude and longitude as float values. + +KABC::Secrecy in line 37 represents the CLASS entity of a vCard and can take +KABC::Secrecy::Public, KABC::Secrecy::Private or KABC::Secrecy::Confidential +as argument. + +In line 41 we make use of KABC::Picture class to store the photo of the +contact. This class can contain either an URL or the raw image data in form +of a QImage, in this example we use the latter. + +In line 43 we try to load the image "face.png" from the local directory and +assign this QImage to the KABC::Picture class via the setData() function. +Additionally we set the type of the picture to "image/png". + +From 49 - 50 we insert 2 email addresses with the first one as preferred +(second argument is true). + +In 53 and the following 3 lines we add two telephone numbers. For this purpose +libkabc provides the KABC::PhoneNumber class, which takes the phone number in +string representation as first argument and the type as second. The types can +be combined, so 'KABC::PhoneNumber::Home | KABC::PhoneNumber::Fax' would be +the Home Fax. + +In line 59 we create a KABC::Address object and set the single parts in the +following lines. + +In line 67 we assign the contact to a special category. + +A contact can also contain custom entries, which are not specified in the API, +so you can add custom values with insertCustom() as shown in line 69. +The first argument of this function should be the name of the application, so +2 applications which use the same custom entry accidentally, do not overwrite +the data for each other. The second argument contains the name of the +custom entry and the third argument the value in string representation. + +In line 71 we finally insert the KABC::Addressee object into the +KABC::AddressBook. Since we have only one resource loaded, the contact is +automatically assigned to this resource. If you have several writeable +resources loaded, you should ask the user which resource the contact shall +belong to and assign the selected resource to the contact with + KABC::Addressee.setResource( KABC::Resource *resource ); +before inserting it into the address book. + +To prevent multiple access to one resource and possible resulting data loss +we have to lock the resource before saving our changes. +For this purpose KABC::AddressBook provides the function + requestSaveTicket( KABC::Resource* ) +which takes a pointer to the resource which shall be saved as argument and +returns a so called 'Save Ticket' if locking succeeded or a null pointer +if the resource is already locked by another application. + +So when we retrieved a valid ticket in line 74, we try to save our changes in +line 78. +The KABC::AddressBook::save() function takes the save ticket as argument and +returns whether saving succeeded. It also releases the save ticket when successful. + +Important! +If the save() call fails, you have to release the save ticket manually, as is +done in line 80, otherwise possible locks, created by the resources, won't be +removed. + +You can see also, that manual use is quite easy for the KABC::AddressBook class +and for the ResourceFile. For more information about the API of KABC::Addressee +please take a look at the official API documentation or the header files. + + +Distribution Lists +------------------- +libkabc provides so called distribution lists to group contacts. These lists +just store the uid of contacts, so they can be used for every kind of contact +grouping. There are 2 classes which handle the whole distribution list tasks, +KABC::DistributionListManager and KABC::DistributionList. The first one keeps +track of all available distribution lists and the latter one is the +representation of one list. + + + #include + #include + + 1: KABC::DistributionListManager manager( KABC::StdAddressBook::self() ); + 2: + 3: // load the lists + 4: manager.load(); + 5: + 6: QStringList listNames = manager.listNames(); + 7: QStringList::Iterator it; + 8: for ( it = listNames.begin(); it != listNames.end(); ++it ) { + 9: KABC::DistributionList *list = manager.list( *it ); +10: kdDebug() << list->name() << endl; +11: +12: QStringList emails = list->emails(); +13: QStringList::Iterator eit; +14: for ( eit = emails.begin(); eit != emails.end(); ++eit ) +15: kdDebug() << QString( "\t%1" ).arg( (*eit).latin1() ) << endl; +16: } + +In the first line a KABC::DistributionListManager is created. The manager takes +a pointer to a KABC::AddressBook, because he has to resolve the stored uids to +currently available email addresses. +In line 4 the manager loads all distribution lists from the central config file +$HOME/.trinity/share/apps/tdeabc/distlists. +The next line queries the names of all available distribution lists, which are +used in line 9 to retrieve a pointer to the specific list. +Now that you have a KABC::DistributionList object, you can performe the +following actions on it: + - set / get the name + - insert an entry + - remove an entry + - get a list of all email addresses + - get a list of all entries (which includes the uids) + +In line 12 we query all email addresses of every resource and print them out. + + contains also the declaration for the class +KABC::DistributionListWatcher. This class exists only once per application and +its only job is to emit a signal as soon as the distribution list file has +changed. So to make your application aware of changes use the following code: + + + #include + + 1: connect( KABC::DistributionListWatcher::self(), SIGNAL( changed() ), + 2: this, SLOT( slotDistributionListChanged() ) ); + +You see, as usual, easy ;) + -- cgit v1.2.1