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+<!-- /home/espenr/tmp/qt-3.3.8-espenr-2499/qt-x11-free-3.3.8/doc/dnd.doc:36 -->
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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
+<title>Drag and Drop</title>
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+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
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+ <a href="index.html">
+<font color="#004faf">Home</font></a>
+ | <a href="classes.html">
+<font color="#004faf">All&nbsp;Classes</font></a>
+ | <a href="mainclasses.html">
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+<font color="#004faf">Functions</font></a>
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+<td align="right" valign="center"><img src="logo32.png" align="right" width="64" height="32" border="0"></td></tr></table><h1 align=center>Drag and Drop</h1>
+
+
+
+<p> Drag and drop provides a simple visual mechanism which users can use
+to transfer information between and within applications. (In the
+literature this is referred to as a "direct manipulation model".) Drag
+and drop is similar in function to the clipboard's cut-and-paste
+mechanism.
+<p> <!-- toc -->
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#1"> Dragging
+</a>
+<li><a href="#2"> Dropping
+</a>
+<li><a href="#3"> The Clipboard
+</a>
+<li><a href="#4"> Drag and Drop Actions
+</a>
+<li><a href="#5"> Adding New Drag and Drop Types
+</a>
+<li><a href="#6"> Advanced Drag-and-Drop
+</a>
+<li><a href="#7"> Inter-operating with Other Applications
+</a>
+</ul>
+<!-- endtoc -->
+
+<p> For drag and drop examples see (in increasing order of
+sophistication): <tt>qt/examples/iconview/simple_dd</tt>, <tt>qt/examples/dragdrop</tt> and <tt>qt/examples/fileiconview</tt>. See also the
+<a href="qtextedit.html">TQTextEdit</a> widget source code.
+<p> <h2> Dragging
+</h2>
+<a name="1"></a><p> To start a drag, for example in a <a href="qwidget.html#mouseMoveEvent">mouse motion event</a>, create an object of the <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a>
+subclass appropriate for your media, such as <a href="qtextdrag.html">TQTextDrag</a> for text and
+<a href="qimagedrag.html">TQImageDrag</a> for images. Then call the drag() method. This is all you
+need for simple dragging of existing types.
+<p> For example, to start dragging some text from a widget:
+<pre>
+void MyWidget::startDrag()
+{
+ <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a> *d = new <a href="qtextdrag.html">TQTextDrag</a>( myHighlightedText(), this );
+ d-&gt;<a href="qdragobject.html#dragCopy">dragCopy</a>();
+ // do NOT delete d.
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p> Note that the TQDragObject is not deleted after the drag. The
+TQDragObject needs to persist after the drag is apparently finished
+since it may still be communicating with another process. Eventually
+TQt will delete the object. If the widget owning the drag object is
+deleted before then, any pending drop will be canceled and the drag
+object deleted. For this reason, you should be careful what the object
+references.
+<p> <h2> Dropping
+</h2>
+<a name="2"></a><p> To be able to receive media dropped on a widget, call
+<a href="qwidget.html#setAcceptDrops">setAcceptDrops(TRUE)</a>
+for the widget (e.g. in its constructor), and override the
+event handler methods
+<a href="qwidget.html#dragEnterEvent">dragEnterEvent()</a> and
+<a href="qwidget.html#dropEvent">dropEvent()</a>.
+For more sophisticated applications overriding
+<a href="qwidget.html#dragMoveEvent">dragMoveEvent()</a> and
+<a href="qwidget.html#dragLeaveEvent">dragLeaveEvent()</a> will also be
+necessary.
+<p> For example, to accept text and image drops:
+<pre>
+MyWidget::MyWidget(...) :
+ <a href="qwidget.html">TQWidget</a>(...)
+{
+ ...
+ setAcceptDrops(TRUE);
+}
+
+void MyWidget::dragEnterEvent(TQDragEnterEvent* event)
+{
+ event-&gt;accept(
+ TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#canDecode">canDecode</a>(event) ||
+ TQImageDrag::<a href="qimagedrag.html#canDecode">canDecode</a>(event)
+ );
+}
+
+void MyWidget::dropEvent(TQDropEvent* event)
+{
+ <a href="qimage.html">TQImage</a> image;
+ <a href="qstring.html">TQString</a> text;
+
+ if ( TQImageDrag::<a href="qimagedrag.html#decode">decode</a>(event, image) ) {
+ insertImageAt(image, event-&gt;pos());
+ } else if ( TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#decode">decode</a>(event, text) ) {
+ insertTextAt(text, event-&gt;pos());
+ }
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p> <h2> The Clipboard
+</h2>
+<a name="3"></a><p> The <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a>, <a href="qdragenterevent.html">TQDragEnterEvent</a>, <a href="qdragmoveevent.html">TQDragMoveEvent</a>, and <a href="qdropevent.html">TQDropEvent</a>
+classes are all subclasses of TQMimeSource: the class of objects which
+provide typed information. If you base your data transfers on
+TQDragObject, you not only get drag-and-drop, but you also get
+traditional cut-and-paste for free. The <a href="qclipboard.html">TQClipboard</a> has two functions:
+<pre>
+ setData(TQMimeSource*)
+ <a href="qmimesource.html">TQMimeSource</a>* data()const
+</pre>
+
+With these functions you can trivially put your drag-and-drop oriented
+information on the clipboard:
+<pre>
+void MyWidget::copy()
+{
+ TQApplication::<a href="qapplication.html#clipboard">clipboard</a>()-&gt;setData(
+ new <a href="qtextdrag.html">TQTextDrag</a>(myHighlightedText()) );
+}
+
+void MyWidget::paste()
+{
+ <a href="qstring.html">TQString</a> text;
+ if ( TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#decode">decode</a>(TQApplication::<a href="qapplication.html#clipboard">clipboard</a>()-&gt;data(), text) )
+ insertText( text );
+}
+</pre>
+
+You can even use <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a> subclasses as part of file IO. For
+example, if your application has a subclass of TQDragObject that
+encodes CAD designs in DXF format, your saving and loading code might
+be:
+<pre>
+void MyWidget::save()
+{
+ <a href="qfile.html">TQFile</a> out(current_file_name);
+ if ( out.<a href="qfile.html#open">open</a>(IO_WriteOnly) ) {
+ MyCadDrag tmp(current_design);
+ out.<a href="qiodevice.html#writeBlock">writeBlock</a>( tmp-&gt;encodedData( "image/x-dxf" ) );
+ }
+}
+
+void MyWidget::load()
+{
+ <a href="qfile.html">TQFile</a> in(current_file_name);
+ if ( in.<a href="qfile.html#open">open</a>(IO_ReadOnly) ) {
+ if ( !MyCadDrag::decode(in.<a href="qiodevice.html#readAll">readAll</a>(), current_design) ) {
+ TQMessageBox::<a href="qmessagebox.html#warning">warning</a>( this, "Format error",
+ tr("The file \"%1\" is not in any supported format")
+ .arg(current_file_name)
+ );
+ }
+ }
+}
+</pre>
+
+Note how the <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a> subclass is called "MyCadDrag", not
+"MyDxfDrag": because in the future you might extend it to provide
+DXF, DWG, SVF, WMF, or even <a href="qpicture.html">TQPicture</a> data to other applications.
+<p> <h2> Drag and Drop Actions
+</h2>
+<a name="4"></a><p> In the simpler cases, the target of a drag-and-drop receives a copy of
+the data being dragged and the source decides whether to delete the
+original. This is the "Copy" action in <a href="qdropevent.html">TQDropEvent</a>. The target may also
+choose to understand other actions, specifically the Move and Link
+actions. If the target understands the Move action, <em>the target</em> is responsible for both the copy and delete operations and
+the source will not attempt to delete the data itself. If the target
+understands the Link, it stores its own reference to the original
+information, and again the source does not delete the original. The
+most common use of drag-and-drop actions is when performing a Move
+within the same widget: see the <a href="#advanced">Advanced
+Drag-and-Drop</a> section below.
+<p> The other major use of drag actions is when using a reference type
+such as text/uri-list, where the dragged data are actually references
+to files or objects.
+<p> <h2> Adding New Drag and Drop Types
+</h2>
+<a name="5"></a><p> As suggested in the DXF example above, drag-and-drop is not limited to
+text and images. Any information can be dragged and dropped. To drag
+information between applications, the applications must be able to
+indicate to each other which data formats they can accept and which
+they can produce. This is achieved using <a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1341.txt">MIME types</a>: the drag
+source provides a list of MIME types that it can produce (ordered from
+most appropriate to least appropriate), and the drop target chooses
+which of those it can accept. For example, <a href="qtextdrag.html">TQTextDrag</a> provides support
+for the "<tt>text/plain</tt>" MIME type (ordinary unformatted text), and
+the Unicode formats "<tt>text/utf16</tt>" and "<tt>text/utf8</tt>"; <a href="qimagedrag.html">TQImageDrag</a>
+provides for "<tt>image/*</tt>", where <tt>*</tt> is any image format that
+<a href="qimageio.html">TQImageIO</a> supports; and the <a href="quridrag.html">TQUriDrag</a> subclass provides
+"<tt>text/uri-list</tt>", a standard format for transferring a list of
+filenames (or URLs).
+<p> To implement drag-and-drop of some type of information for which there
+is no available <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a> subclass, the first and most important
+step is to look for existing formats that are appropriate: the
+Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (<a href="http://www.iana.org">IANA</a>) provides a <a href="http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/">hierarchical
+list of MIME media types</a> at the Information Sciences Institute
+(<a href="http://www.isi.edu">ISI</a>). Using standard MIME types
+maximizes the inter-operability of your application with other
+software now and in the future.
+<p> To support an additional media type, subclass either TQDragObject or
+<a href="qstoreddrag.html">TQStoredDrag</a>. Subclass TQDragObject when you need to provide support for
+multiple media types. Subclass the simpler TQStoredDrag when one type
+is sufficient.
+<p> Subclasses of TQDragObject will override the
+<a href="qmimesource.html#format">const char* format(int i) const</a> and
+<a href="qmimesource.html#encodedData">TQByteArray encodedData(const char* mimetype) const</a>
+members, and provide a set-method to encode the media data and static
+members canDecode() and decode() to decode incoming data, similar to
+<a href="qimagedrag.html#canDecode">bool canDecode(TQMimeSource*) const</a> and
+<a href="qimagedrag.html#decode">TQByteArray decode(TQMimeSource*) const</a>
+of <a href="qimagedrag.html">TQImageDrag</a>.
+Of course, you can provide drag-only or drop-only support for a media
+type by omitting some of these methods.
+<p> Subclasses of TQStoredDrag provide a set-method to encode the media
+data and the same static members canDecode() and decode() to decode
+incoming data.
+<p> <a name="advanced"></a>
+<h2> Advanced Drag-and-Drop
+</h2>
+<a name="6"></a><p> In the clipboard model, the user can <em>cut</em> or <em>copy</em> the source
+information, then later paste it. Similarly in the drag-and-drop
+model, the user can drag a <em>copy</em> of the information or they can drag
+the information itself to a new place (<em>moving</em> it). The
+drag-and-drop model however has an additional complication for the
+programmer: the program doesn't know whether the user wants to cut or
+copy until the drop (paste) is done! For dragging between
+applications, it makes no difference, but for dragging within an
+application, the application must take a little extra care not to
+tread on its own feet. For example, to drag text around in a document,
+the drag start point and the drop event might look like this:
+<p> <pre>
+void MyEditor::startDrag()
+{
+ <a href="qdragobject.html">TQDragObject</a> *d = new <a href="qtextdrag.html">TQTextDrag</a>(myHighlightedText(), this);
+ if ( d-&gt;<a href="qdragobject.html#drag">drag</a>() &amp;&amp; d-&gt;<a href="qdragobject.html#target">target</a>() != this )
+ cutMyHighlightedText();
+}
+
+void MyEditor::dropEvent(TQDropEvent* event)
+{
+ <a href="qstring.html">TQString</a> text;
+
+ if ( TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#decode">decode</a>(event, text) ) {
+ if ( event-&gt;source() == this &amp;&amp; event-&gt;action() == TQDropEvent::Move ) {
+ // Careful not to tread on my own feet
+ event-&gt;acceptAction();
+ moveMyHighlightedTextTo(event-&gt;pos());
+ } else {
+ pasteTextAt(text, event-&gt;pos());
+ }
+ }
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p> Some widgets are more specific than just a "yes" or "no" response when
+data is dragged onto them. For example, a CAD program might only
+accept drops of text onto text objects in the view. In these cases,
+the <a href="qwidget.html#dragMoveEvent">dragMoveEvent()</a> is used and
+an <em>area</em> is given for which the drag is accepted or ignored:
+<pre>
+void MyWidget::dragMoveEvent(TQDragMoveEvent* event)
+{
+ if ( TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#canDecode">canDecode</a>(event) ) {
+ MyCadItem* item = findMyItemAt(event-&gt;pos());
+ if ( item )
+ event-&gt;accept();
+ }
+}
+</pre>
+
+If the computations to find objects are particularly slow, you might
+achieve improved performance if you tell the system an area for which
+you promise the acceptance persists:
+<pre>
+void MyWidget::dragMoveEvent(TQDragMoveEvent* event)
+{
+ if ( TQTextDrag::<a href="qtextdrag.html#canDecode">canDecode</a>(event) ) {
+ MyCadItem* item = findMyItemAt(event-&gt;pos());
+ if ( item ) {
+ <a href="qrect.html">TQRect</a> r = item-&gt;areaRelativeToMeClippedByAnythingInTheWay();
+ if ( item-&gt;type() == MyTextType )
+ event-&gt;accept( r );
+ else
+ event-&gt;ignore( r );
+ }
+ }
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p> The dragMoveEvent() can also be used if you need to give visual
+feedback as the drag progresses, to start timers, to scroll the
+window, or whatever is appropriate (don't forget to stop the scrolling
+and timers in a dragLeaveEvent() though).
+<p> The <a href="qapplication.html">TQApplication</a> object (available as the <tt>qApp</tt> global) also
+provides some drag and drop related functions:
+<a href="qapplication.html#setStartDragTime">TQApplication::setStartDragTime</a>(),
+<a href="qapplication.html#setStartDragDistance">TQApplication::setStartDragDistance</a>(), and their corresponding
+getters, <a href="qapplication.html#startDragTime">TQApplication::startDragTime</a>() and
+<a href="qapplication.html#startDragDistance">TQApplication::startDragDistance</a>().
+<p> <h2> Inter-operating with Other Applications
+</h2>
+<a name="7"></a><p> On X11, the public <a class="r"
+href="http://www.newplanetsoftware.com/xdnd/">XDND protocol</a> is
+used, while on Windows TQt uses the OLE standard, and TQt/Mac uses the
+Carbon Drag Manager. On X11, XDND uses MIME, so no translation is
+necessary. The TQt API is the same regardless of the platform. On
+Windows, MIME-aware applications can communicate by using clipboard
+format names that are MIME types. Already some Windows applications
+use MIME naming conventions for their clipboard formats. Internally,
+TQt has facilities for translating proprietary clipboard formats to and
+from MIME types. This interface will be made public at some time, but
+if you need to do such translations now, contact your TQt Technical
+Support service.
+<p> On X11, TQt also supports drops via the <a href="motif-extension.html#Motif">Motif</a> Drag&amp;Drop Protocol. The
+implementation incorporates some code that was originally written by
+Daniel Dardailler, and adapted for TQt by Matt Koss &lt;koss@napri.sk&gt;
+and Trolltech. Here is the original copyright notice:
+<p>
+<p> Copyright 1996 Daniel Dardailler.
+<p> Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software
+for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that the above
+copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright
+notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation,
+and that the name of Daniel Dardailler not be used in advertising or
+publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific,
+written prior permission. Daniel Dardailler makes no representations
+about the suitability of this software for any purpose. It is
+provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
+<p> Modifications Copyright 1999 Matt Koss, under the same license as
+above.
+<p>
+<!-- eof -->
+<p><address><hr><div align=center>
+<table width=100% cellspacing=0 border=0><tr>
+<td>Copyright &copy; 2007
+<a href="troll.html">Trolltech</a><td align=center><a href="trademarks.html">Trademarks</a>
+<td align=right><div align=right>TQt 3.3.8</div>
+</table></div></address></body>
+</html>