diff options
author | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2011-11-08 12:31:36 -0600 |
---|---|---|
committer | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2011-11-08 12:31:36 -0600 |
commit | d796c9dd933ab96ec83b9a634feedd5d32e1ba3f (patch) | |
tree | 6e3dcca4f77e20ec8966c666aac7c35bd4704053 /src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp | |
download | tqt3-d796c9dd933ab96ec83b9a634feedd5d32e1ba3f.tar.gz tqt3-d796c9dd933ab96ec83b9a634feedd5d32e1ba3f.zip |
Test conversion to TQt3 from Qt3 8c6fc1f8e35fd264dd01c582ca5e7549b32ab731
Diffstat (limited to 'src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp | 672 |
1 files changed, 672 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp b/src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d560205de --- /dev/null +++ b/src/widgets/qvalidator.cpp @@ -0,0 +1,672 @@ +/**************************************************************************** +** +** Implementation of validator classes +** +** Created : 970610 +** +** Copyright (C) 1992-2008 Trolltech ASA. All rights reserved. +** +** This file is part of the widgets module of the TQt GUI Toolkit. +** +** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU General +** Public License versions 2.0 or 3.0 as published by the Free +** Software Foundation and appearing in the files LICENSE.GPL2 +** and LICENSE.GPL3 included in the packaging of this file. +** Alternatively you may (at your option) use any later version +** of the GNU General Public License if such license has been +** publicly approved by Trolltech ASA (or its successors, if any) +** and the KDE Free TQt Foundation. +** +** Please review the following information to ensure GNU General +** Public Licensing retquirements will be met: +** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/opensource/. +** If you are unsure which license is appropriate for your use, please +** review the following information: +** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/licensingoverview +** or contact the sales department at sales@trolltech.com. +** +** This file may be used under the terms of the Q Public License as +** defined by Trolltech ASA and appearing in the file LICENSE.TQPL +** included in the packaging of this file. Licensees holding valid TQt +** Commercial licenses may use this file in accordance with the TQt +** Commercial License Agreement provided with the Software. +** +** This file is provided "AS IS" with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, +** INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF DESIGN, MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR +** A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Trolltech reserves all rights not granted +** herein. +** +**********************************************************************/ + +#include "qvalidator.h" +#ifndef QT_NO_VALIDATOR + +#include <limits.h> +#include <math.h> + +/*! + \class TQValidator + \brief The TQValidator class provides validation of input text. + + \ingroup misc + \mainclass + + The class itself is abstract. Two subclasses, \l TQIntValidator and + \l TQDoubleValidator, provide basic numeric-range checking, and \l + TQRegExpValidator provides general checking using a custom regular + expression. + + If the built-in validators aren't sufficient, you can subclass + TQValidator. The class has two virtual functions: validate() and + fixup(). + + \l validate() must be implemented by every subclass. It returns + \c Invalid, \c Intermediate or \c Acceptable depending on whether + its argument is valid (for the subclass's definition of valid). + + These three states retquire some explanation. An \c Invalid string + is \e clearly invalid. \c Intermediate is less obvious: the + concept of validity is slippery when the string is incomplete + (still being edited). TQValidator defines \c Intermediate as the + property of a string that is neither clearly invalid nor + acceptable as a final result. \c Acceptable means that the string + is acceptable as a final result. One might say that any string + that is a plausible intermediate state during entry of an \c + Acceptable string is \c Intermediate. + + Here are some examples: + + \list + + \i For a line edit that accepts integers from 0 to 999 inclusive, + 42 and 123 are \c Acceptable, the empty string and 1114 are \c + Intermediate and asdf is \c Invalid. + + \i For an editable combobox that accepts URLs, any well-formed URL + is \c Acceptable, "http://www.trolltech.com/," is \c Intermediate + (it might be a cut and paste operation that accidentally took in a + comma at the end), the empty string is \c Intermediate (the user + might select and delete all of the text in preparation for entering + a new URL), and "http:///./" is \c Invalid. + + \i For a spin box that accepts lengths, "11cm" and "1in" are \c + Acceptable, "11" and the empty string are \c Intermediate and + "http://www.trolltech.com" and "hour" are \c Invalid. + + \endlist + + \l fixup() is provided for validators that can repair some user + errors. The default implementation does nothing. TQLineEdit, for + example, will call fixup() if the user presses Enter (or Return) + and the content is not currently valid. This allows the fixup() + function the opportunity of performing some magic to make an \c + Invalid string \c Acceptable. + + TQValidator is typically used with TQLineEdit, TQSpinBox and + TQComboBox. +*/ + + +/*! + \enum TQValidator::State + + This enum type defines the states in which a validated string can + exist. + + \value Invalid the string is \e clearly invalid. + + \value Intermediate the string is a plausible intermediate value + during editing. + + \value Acceptable the string is acceptable as a final result, + i.e. it is valid. +*/ + + +/*! + Sets up the validator. The \a parent and \a name parameters are + passed on to the TQObject constructor. +*/ + +TQValidator::TQValidator( TQObject * parent, const char *name ) + : TQObject( parent, name ) +{ +} + + +/*! + Destroys the validator, freeing any storage and other resources + used. +*/ + +TQValidator::~TQValidator() +{ +} + + +/*! + \fn TQValidator::State TQValidator::validate( TQString& input, int& pos ) const + + This pure virtual function returns \c Invalid if \a input is + invalid according to this validator's rules, \c Intermediate if it + is likely that a little more editing will make the input + acceptable (e.g. the user types '4' into a widget which accepts + integers between 10 and 99) and \c Acceptable if the input is + valid. + + The function can change \a input and \a pos (the cursor position) + if it wants to. +*/ + + +/*! + \fn void TQValidator::fixup( TQString & input ) const + + This function attempts to change \a input to be valid according to + this validator's rules. It need not result in a valid string: + callers of this function must re-test afterwards; the default does + nothing. + + Reimplementations of this function can change \a input even if + they do not produce a valid string. For example, an ISBN validator + might want to delete every character except digits and "-", even + if the result is still not a valid ISBN; a surname validator might + want to remove whitespace from the start and end of the string, + even if the resulting string is not in the list of accepted + surnames. +*/ + +void TQValidator::fixup( TQString & ) const +{ +} + + +/*! + \class TQIntValidator + \brief The TQIntValidator class provides a validator which ensures + that a string contains a valid integer within a specified range. + + \ingroup misc + + Example of use: + + \code + TQValidator* validator = new TQIntValidator( 100, 999, this ); + TQLineEdit* edit = new TQLineEdit( this ); + + // the edit lineedit will only accept integers between 100 and 999 + edit->setValidator( validator ); + \endcode + + Below we present some examples of validators. In practice they would + normally be associated with a widget as in the example above. + + \code + TQString str; + int pos = 0; + TQIntValidator v( 100, 999, this ); + + str = "1"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Intermediate + str = "12"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Intermediate + + str = "123"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Acceptable + str = "678"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Acceptable + + str = "1234"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Invalid + str = "-123"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Invalid + str = "abc"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Invalid + str = "12cm"; + v.validate( str, pos ); // returns Invalid + \endcode + + The minimum and maximum values are set in one call with setRange() + or individually with setBottom() and setTop(). + + \sa TQDoubleValidator TQRegExpValidator +*/ + + +/*! + Constructs a validator called \a name with parent \a parent, that + accepts all integers. +*/ + +TQIntValidator::TQIntValidator( TQObject * parent, const char *name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ) +{ + b = INT_MIN; + t = INT_MAX; +} + + +/*! + Constructs a validator called \a name with parent \a parent, that + accepts integers from \a minimum to \a maximum inclusive. +*/ + +TQIntValidator::TQIntValidator( int minimum, int maximum, + TQObject * parent, const char* name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ) +{ + b = minimum; + t = maximum; +} + + +/*! + Destroys the validator, freeing any resources allocated. +*/ + +TQIntValidator::~TQIntValidator() +{ + // nothing +} + + +/*! + Returns \c Acceptable if the \a input is an integer within the + valid range, \c Intermediate if the \a input is an integer outside + the valid range and \c Invalid if the \a input is not an integer. + + Note: If the valid range consists of just positive integers (e.g. 32 - 100) + and \a input is a negative integer then Invalid is returned. + + \code + int pos = 0; + s = "abc"; + v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Invalid + + s = "5"; + v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Intermediate + + s = "50"; + v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Valid + \endcode +*/ + +TQValidator::State TQIntValidator::validate( TQString & input, int & ) const +{ + TQString stripped = input.stripWhiteSpace(); + if ( stripped.isEmpty() || (b < 0 && stripped == "-") ) + return Intermediate; + bool ok; + long entered = input.toLong( &ok ); + if ( !ok || (entered < 0 && b >= 0) ) { + return Invalid; + } else if ( entered >= b && entered <= t ) { + return Acceptable; + } else { + if ( entered >= 0 ) + return ( entered > t ) ? Invalid : Intermediate; + else + return ( entered < b ) ? Invalid : Intermediate; + } +} + + +/*! + Sets the range of the validator to only accept integers between \a + bottom and \a top inclusive. +*/ + +void TQIntValidator::setRange( int bottom, int top ) +{ + b = bottom; + t = top; +} + + +/*! + \property TQIntValidator::bottom + \brief the validator's lowest acceptable value + + \sa setRange() +*/ +void TQIntValidator::setBottom( int bottom ) +{ + setRange( bottom, top() ); +} + +/*! + \property TQIntValidator::top + \brief the validator's highest acceptable value + + \sa setRange() +*/ +void TQIntValidator::setTop( int top ) +{ + setRange( bottom(), top ); +} + + +#ifndef QT_NO_REGEXP + +/*! + \class TQDoubleValidator + + \brief The TQDoubleValidator class provides range checking of + floating-point numbers. + + \ingroup misc + + TQDoubleValidator provides an upper bound, a lower bound and a + limit on the number of digits after the decimal point. It does not + provide a fixup() function. + + You can set the acceptable range in one call with setRange(), or + with setBottom() and setTop(). Set the number of decimal places + with setDecimals(). The validate() function returns the validation + state. + + \sa TQIntValidator TQRegExpValidator +*/ + +/*! + Constructs a validator object with parent \a parent, called \a + name, which accepts any double. +*/ + +TQDoubleValidator::TQDoubleValidator( TQObject * parent, const char *name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ) +{ + b = -HUGE_VAL; + t = HUGE_VAL; + d = 1000; +} + + +/*! + Constructs a validator object with parent \a parent, called \a + name. This validator will accept doubles from \a bottom to \a top + inclusive, with up to \a decimals digits after the decimal point. +*/ + +TQDoubleValidator::TQDoubleValidator( double bottom, double top, int decimals, + TQObject * parent, const char* name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ) +{ + b = bottom; + t = top; + d = decimals; +} + + +/*! + Destroys the validator, freeing any resources used. +*/ + +TQDoubleValidator::~TQDoubleValidator() +{ +} + + +/*! + Returns \c Acceptable if the string \a input contains a double + that is within the valid range and is in the correct format. + + Returns \c Intermediate if \a input contains a double that is + outside the range or is in the wrong format, e.g. with too many + digits after the decimal point or is empty. + + Returns \c Invalid if the \a input is not a double. + + Note: If the valid range consists of just positive doubles (e.g. 0.0 - 100.0) + and \a input is a negative double then Invalid is returned. +*/ + +TQValidator::State TQDoubleValidator::validate( TQString & input, int & ) const +{ + TQRegExp empty( TQString::fromLatin1(" *-?\\.? *") ); + if ( b >= 0 && + input.stripWhiteSpace().startsWith(TQString::fromLatin1("-")) ) + return Invalid; + if ( empty.exactMatch(input) ) + return Intermediate; + bool ok = TRUE; + double entered = input.toDouble( &ok ); + int nume = input.contains( 'e', FALSE ); + if ( !ok ) { + // explicit exponent regexp + TQRegExp expexpexp( TQString::fromLatin1("[Ee][+-]?\\d*$") ); + int eeePos = expexpexp.search( input ); + if ( eeePos > 0 && nume == 1 ) { + TQString mantissa = input.left( eeePos ); + entered = mantissa.toDouble( &ok ); + if ( !ok ) + return Invalid; + } else if ( eeePos == 0 ) { + return Intermediate; + } else { + return Invalid; + } + } + + int i = input.find( '.' ); + if ( i >= 0 && nume == 0 ) { + // has decimal point (but no E), now count digits after that + i++; + int j = i; + while( input[j].isDigit() ) + j++; + if ( j - i > d ) + return Intermediate; + } + + if ( entered < b || entered > t ) + return Intermediate; + else + return Acceptable; +} + + +/*! + Sets the validator to accept doubles from \a minimum to \a maximum + inclusive, with at most \a decimals digits after the decimal + point. +*/ + +void TQDoubleValidator::setRange( double minimum, double maximum, int decimals ) +{ + b = minimum; + t = maximum; + d = decimals; +} + +/*! + \property TQDoubleValidator::bottom + \brief the validator's minimum acceptable value + + \sa setRange() +*/ + +void TQDoubleValidator::setBottom( double bottom ) +{ + setRange( bottom, top(), decimals() ); +} + + +/*! + \property TQDoubleValidator::top + \brief the validator's maximum acceptable value + + \sa setRange() +*/ + +void TQDoubleValidator::setTop( double top ) +{ + setRange( bottom(), top, decimals() ); +} + +/*! + \property TQDoubleValidator::decimals + \brief the validator's maximum number of digits after the decimal point + + \sa setRange() +*/ + +void TQDoubleValidator::setDecimals( int decimals ) +{ + setRange( bottom(), top(), decimals ); +} + + +/*! + \class TQRegExpValidator + \brief The TQRegExpValidator class is used to check a string + against a regular expression. + + \ingroup misc + + TQRegExpValidator contains a regular expression, "regexp", used to + determine whether an input string is \c Acceptable, \c + Intermediate or \c Invalid. + + The regexp is treated as if it begins with the start of string + assertion, <b>^</b>, and ends with the end of string assertion + <b>$</b> so the match is against the entire input string, or from + the given position if a start position greater than zero is given. + + For a brief introduction to TQt's regexp engine see \l TQRegExp. + + Example of use: + \code + // regexp: optional '-' followed by between 1 and 3 digits + TQRegExp rx( "-?\\d{1,3}" ); + TQValidator* validator = new TQRegExpValidator( rx, this ); + + TQLineEdit* edit = new TQLineEdit( this ); + edit->setValidator( validator ); + \endcode + + Below we present some examples of validators. In practice they would + normally be associated with a widget as in the example above. + + \code + // integers 1 to 9999 + TQRegExp rx( "[1-9]\\d{0,3}" ); + // the validator treats the regexp as "^[1-9]\\d{0,3}$" + TQRegExpValidator v( rx, 0 ); + TQString s; + int pos = 0; + + s = "0"; v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Invalid + s = "12345"; v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Invalid + s = "1"; v.validate( s, pos ); // returns Acceptable + + rx.setPattern( "\\S+" ); // one or more non-whitespace characters + v.setRegExp( rx ); + s = "myfile.txt"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Acceptable + s = "my file.txt"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Invalid + + // A, B or C followed by exactly five digits followed by W, X, Y or Z + rx.setPattern( "[A-C]\\d{5}[W-Z]" ); + v.setRegExp( rx ); + s = "a12345Z"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Invalid + s = "A12345Z"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Acceptable + s = "B12"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Intermediate + + // match most 'readme' files + rx.setPattern( "read\\S?me(\.(txt|asc|1st))?" ); + rx.setCaseSensitive( FALSE ); + v.setRegExp( rx ); + s = "readme"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Acceptable + s = "README.1ST"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Acceptable + s = "read me.txt"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Invalid + s = "readm"; v.validate( s, pos ); // Returns Intermediate + \endcode + + \sa TQRegExp TQIntValidator TQDoubleValidator +*/ + +/*! + Constructs a validator that accepts any string (including an empty + one) as valid. The object's parent is \a parent and its name is \a + name. +*/ + +TQRegExpValidator::TQRegExpValidator( TQObject *parent, const char *name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ), r( TQString::fromLatin1(".*") ) +{ +} + +/*! + Constructs a validator which accepts all strings that match the + regular expression \a rx. The object's parent is \a parent and its + name is \a name. + + The match is made against the entire string, e.g. if the regexp is + <b>[A-Fa-f0-9]+</b> it will be treated as <b>^[A-Fa-f0-9]+$</b>. +*/ + +TQRegExpValidator::TQRegExpValidator( const TQRegExp& rx, TQObject *parent, + const char *name ) + : TQValidator( parent, name ), r( rx ) +{ +} + +/*! + Destroys the validator, freeing any resources allocated. +*/ + +TQRegExpValidator::~TQRegExpValidator() +{ +} + +/*! + Returns \c Acceptable if \a input is matched by the regular + expression for this validator, \c Intermediate if it has matched + partially (i.e. could be a valid match if additional valid + characters are added), and \c Invalid if \a input is not matched. + + The \a pos parameter is set to the length of the \a input parameter. + + For example, if the regular expression is <b>\\w\\d\\d</b> (that + is, word-character, digit, digit) then "A57" is \c Acceptable, + "E5" is \c Intermediate and "+9" is \c Invalid. + + \sa TQRegExp::match() TQRegExp::search() +*/ + +TQValidator::State TQRegExpValidator::validate( TQString& input, int& pos ) const +{ + if ( r.exactMatch(input) ) { + return Acceptable; + } else { + if ( ((TQRegExp&) r).matchedLength() == (int) input.length() ) { + return Intermediate; + } else { + pos = input.length(); + return Invalid; + } + } +} + +/*! + Sets the regular expression used for validation to \a rx. + + \sa regExp() +*/ + +void TQRegExpValidator::setRegExp( const TQRegExp& rx ) +{ + r = rx; +} + +/*! + \fn const TQRegExp& TQRegExpValidator::regExp() const + + Returns the regular expression used for validation. + + \sa setRegExp() +*/ + +#endif + +#endif |