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author | Michele Calgaro <michele.calgaro@yahoo.it> | 2024-10-11 22:21:44 +0900 |
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committer | Michele Calgaro <michele.calgaro@yahoo.it> | 2024-10-11 22:21:44 +0900 |
commit | e93b60dfa24c4b72c1cffa7556949afe69654c02 (patch) | |
tree | c4ace60cd76f8f464683925074cb981f528b93e3 /doc/html/designer-manual-6.html | |
parent | 8066b05478ac646d0410fc9cedca5f82163b53d3 (diff) | |
download | tqt3-e93b60dfa24c4b72c1cffa7556949afe69654c02.tar.gz tqt3-e93b60dfa24c4b72c1cffa7556949afe69654c02.zip |
Rename uic to tquic
Signed-off-by: Michele Calgaro <michele.calgaro@yahoo.it>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/html/designer-manual-6.html')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/html/designer-manual-6.html | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/html/designer-manual-6.html b/doc/html/designer-manual-6.html index efb9b3536..1b2e796d9 100644 --- a/doc/html/designer-manual-6.html +++ b/doc/html/designer-manual-6.html @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ body { background: #ffffff; color: black; } <h3><a name="1"></a>Subclassing</h3> <p>We'll start with a general description of how to subclass a form and follow with a short example. Note that subclassing has some disadvantages compared with putting your code into a form directly; see <a href="designer-manual-5.html#3">Extending the functionality of a form</a> in <a href="designer-manual-5.html#the-designer-approach">The Designer Approach</a> chapter for details.</p> <h4><a name="1-1"></a>Generating Source Code from <em>TQt Designer</em> .ui Files</h4> -<p><em>TQt Designer</em> reads and writes <tt>qmake</tt><!-- index .pro --> <tt>.pro</tt> (project) files which are used to record the files used to build the application and from which Makefiles are generated. <em>TQt Designer</em> also reads and writes<!-- index .ui --> <tt>.ui</tt> (user interface) files. These are XML files that record the widgets, layouts, source code and settings you've used for a form. Every<!-- index .ui --> <tt>.ui</tt> file is converted by the <tt>uic</tt> (user interface compiler) into a C++<!-- index .h --> <tt>.h</tt> file and a C++<!-- index .cpp --> <tt>.cpp</tt> file. These C++ files are then read by <tt>tqmoc</tt> (meta object compiler), and finally compiled by your compiler into a working application.</p> +<p><em>TQt Designer</em> reads and writes <tt>qmake</tt><!-- index .pro --> <tt>.pro</tt> (project) files which are used to record the files used to build the application and from which Makefiles are generated. <em>TQt Designer</em> also reads and writes<!-- index .ui --> <tt>.ui</tt> (user interface) files. These are XML files that record the widgets, layouts, source code and settings you've used for a form. Every<!-- index .ui --> <tt>.ui</tt> file is converted by the <tt>tquic</tt> (user interface compiler) into a C++<!-- index .h --> <tt>.h</tt> file and a C++<!-- index .cpp --> <tt>.cpp</tt> file. These C++ files are then read by <tt>tqmoc</tt> (meta object compiler), and finally compiled by your compiler into a working application.</p> <!-- index Makefiles --><!-- index Projects!Adding Files --><!-- index Adding!Files to Projects --><p>If you create applications wholly within <em>TQt Designer</em> you only need to create a<!-- index main.cpp --> <tt>main.cpp</tt>.</p> <p>If you create the <tt>main.cpp</tt> file within <em>TQt Designer</em>, it will automatically be added to your project file by <em>TQt Designer</em>. If you create the <tt>main.cpp</tt> file outside of <em>TQt Designer</em> you must add it to the project file manually by adding the following line at the end of your project's<!-- index .pro --> <tt>.pro</tt> file:</p> <pre> |