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/*!
\page dnd.html
\title Drag and Drop
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.
\tableofcontents
For drag and drop examples see (in increasing order of
sophistication): \c qt/examples/iconview/simple_dd, \c
qt/examples/dragdrop and \c qt/examples/fileiconview. See also the
QTextEdit widget source code.
\section1 Dragging
To start a drag, for example in a \link QWidget::mouseMoveEvent()
mouse motion event\endlink, create an object of the QDragObject
subclass appropriate for your media, such as QTextDrag for text and
QImageDrag for images. Then call the drag() method. This is all you
need for simple dragging of existing types.
For example, to start dragging some text from a widget:
\code
void MyWidget::startDrag()
{
QDragObject *d = new QTextDrag( myHighlightedText(), this );
d->dragCopy();
// do NOT delete d.
}
\endcode
Note that the QDragObject is not deleted after the drag. The
QDragObject needs to persist after the drag is apparently finished
since it may still be communicating with another process. Eventually
Qt 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.
\section1 Dropping
To be able to receive media dropped on a widget, call
\link QWidget::setAcceptDrops() setAcceptDrops(TRUE)\endlink
for the widget (e.g. in its constructor), and override the
event handler methods
\link QWidget::dragEnterEvent() dragEnterEvent()\endlink and
\link QWidget::dropEvent() dropEvent()\endlink.
For more sophisticated applications overriding
\link QWidget::dragMoveEvent() dragMoveEvent()\endlink and
\link QWidget::dragLeaveEvent() dragLeaveEvent()\endlink will also be
necessary.
For example, to accept text and image drops:
\code
MyWidget::MyWidget(...) :
QWidget(...)
{
...
setAcceptDrops(TRUE);
}
void MyWidget::dragEnterEvent(QDragEnterEvent* event)
{
event->accept(
QTextDrag::canDecode(event) ||
QImageDrag::canDecode(event)
);
}
void MyWidget::dropEvent(QDropEvent* event)
{
QImage image;
QString text;
if ( QImageDrag::decode(event, image) ) {
insertImageAt(image, event->pos());
} else if ( QTextDrag::decode(event, text) ) {
insertTextAt(text, event->pos());
}
}
\endcode
\section1 The Clipboard
The QDragObject, QDragEnterEvent, QDragMoveEvent, and QDropEvent
classes are all subclasses of QMimeSource: the class of objects which
provide typed information. If you base your data transfers on
QDragObject, you not only get drag-and-drop, but you also get
traditional cut-and-paste for free. The QClipboard has two functions:
\code
setData(QMimeSource*)
QMimeSource* data()const
\endcode
With these functions you can trivially put your drag-and-drop oriented
information on the clipboard:
\code
void MyWidget::copy()
{
QApplication::clipboard()->setData(
new QTextDrag(myHighlightedText()) );
}
void MyWidget::paste()
{
QString text;
if ( QTextDrag::decode(QApplication::clipboard()->data(), text) )
insertText( text );
}
\endcode
You can even use QDragObject subclasses as part of file IO. For
example, if your application has a subclass of QDragObject that
encodes CAD designs in DXF format, your saving and loading code might
be:
\code
void MyWidget::save()
{
QFile out(current_file_name);
if ( out.open(IO_WriteOnly) ) {
MyCadDrag tmp(current_design);
out.writeBlock( tmp->encodedData( "image/x-dxf" ) );
}
}
void MyWidget::load()
{
QFile in(current_file_name);
if ( in.open(IO_ReadOnly) ) {
if ( !MyCadDrag::decode(in.readAll(), current_design) ) {
QMessageBox::warning( this, "Format error",
tr("The file \"%1\" is not in any supported format")
.arg(current_file_name)
);
}
}
}
\endcode
Note how the QDragObject subclass is called "MyCadDrag", not
"MyDxfDrag": because in the future you might extend it to provide
DXF, DWG, SVF, WMF, or even QPicture data to other applications.
\section1 Drag and Drop Actions
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 QDropEvent. The target may also
choose to understand other actions, specifically the Move and Link
actions. If the target understands the Move action, \e{the
target} 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 \link #advanced Advanced
Drag-and-Drop\endlink section below.
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.
\section1 Adding New Drag and Drop Types
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 \link
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1341.txt MIME types\endlink: 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, QTextDrag provides support
for the "\c{text/plain}" MIME type (ordinary unformatted text), and
the Unicode formats "\c{text/utf16}" and "\c{text/utf8}"; QImageDrag
provides for "\c{image/*}", where \c{*} is any image format that
\l QImageIO supports; and the QUriDrag subclass provides
"\c{text/uri-list}", a standard format for transferring a list of
filenames (or URLs).
To implement drag-and-drop of some type of information for which there
is no available QDragObject subclass, the first and most important
step is to look for existing formats that are appropriate: the
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (\link http://www.iana.org
IANA\endlink) provides a \link
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/ hierarchical
list of MIME media types\endlink at the Information Sciences Institute
(\link http://www.isi.edu ISI\endlink). Using standard MIME types
maximizes the inter-operability of your application with other
software now and in the future.
To support an additional media type, subclass either QDragObject or
QStoredDrag. Subclass QDragObject when you need to provide support for
multiple media types. Subclass the simpler QStoredDrag when one type
is sufficient.
Subclasses of QDragObject will override the
\link QDragObject::format()
const char* format(int i) const
\endlink and
\link QDragObject::encodedData()
QByteArray encodedData(const char* mimetype) const
\endlink
members, and provide a set-method to encode the media data and static
members canDecode() and decode() to decode incoming data, similar to
\link QImageDrag::canDecode()
bool canDecode(QMimeSource*) const
\endlink and
\link QImageDrag::decode()
QByteArray decode(QMimeSource*) const
\endlink
of QImageDrag.
Of course, you can provide drag-only or drop-only support for a media
type by omitting some of these methods.
Subclasses of QStoredDrag provide a set-method to encode the media
data and the same static members canDecode() and decode() to decode
incoming data.
\target advanced
\section1 Advanced Drag-and-Drop
In the clipboard model, the user can \e cut or \e copy the source
information, then later paste it. Similarly in the drag-and-drop
model, the user can drag a \e copy of the information or they can drag
the information itself to a new place (\e moving 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:
\code
void MyEditor::startDrag()
{
QDragObject *d = new QTextDrag(myHighlightedText(), this);
if ( d->drag() && d->target() != this )
cutMyHighlightedText();
}
void MyEditor::dropEvent(QDropEvent* event)
{
QString text;
if ( QTextDrag::decode(event, text) ) {
if ( event->source() == this && event->action() == QDropEvent::Move ) {
// Careful not to tread on my own feet
event->acceptAction();
moveMyHighlightedTextTo(event->pos());
} else {
pasteTextAt(text, event->pos());
}
}
}
\endcode
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 \link QWidget::dragMoveEvent() dragMoveEvent()\endlink is used and
an \e area is given for which the drag is accepted or ignored:
\code
void MyWidget::dragMoveEvent(QDragMoveEvent* event)
{
if ( QTextDrag::canDecode(event) ) {
MyCadItem* item = findMyItemAt(event->pos());
if ( item )
event->accept();
}
}
\endcode
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:
\code
void MyWidget::dragMoveEvent(QDragMoveEvent* event)
{
if ( QTextDrag::canDecode(event) ) {
MyCadItem* item = findMyItemAt(event->pos());
if ( item ) {
QRect r = item->areaRelativeToMeClippedByAnythingInTheWay();
if ( item->type() == MyTextType )
event->accept( r );
else
event->ignore( r );
}
}
}
\endcode
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).
The QApplication object (available as the \c tqApp global) also
provides some drag and drop related functions:
\l{QApplication::setStartDragTime()},
\l{QApplication::setStartDragDistance()}, and their corresponding
getters, \l{QApplication::startDragTime()} and
\l{QApplication::startDragDistance()}.
\section1 Inter-operating with Other Applications
On X11, the public XDND protocol is
used, while on Windows TQt uses the OLE standard, and Qt/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,
Qt 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.
On X11, TQt also supports drops via the Motif Drag\&Drop Protocol. The
implementation incorporates some code that was originally written by
Daniel Dardailler, and adapted for TQt by Matt Koss \
and Trolltech. Here is the original copyright notice:
\legalese
Copyright 1996 Daniel Dardailler.
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.
Modifications Copyright 1999 Matt Koss, under the same license as
above.
*/ // NOTE: That notice is from qmotifdnd_x11.cpp.