Detailed Description
The QListView class implements a list/tree view.
It can display and control a hierarchy of multi-column items, and
provides the ability to add new items at any time. Among others
the user may select one or many items and sort the list in
increasing or decreasing order by any column.
The simplest mode of use is to create a QListView, add some column
headers using addColumn() and create one or more QListViewItem or
QCheckListItem objects with the QListView as parent:
QListView * table;
table->addColumn( "Qualified name" );
table->addColumn( "Namespace" );
element = new QListViewItem( table, qName, namespaceURI );
Further nodes can be added to the listview object (the root of the
tree) or as child nodes to QListViewItems:
for ( int i = 0 ; i < attributes.length(); i++ ) {
new QListViewItem( element, attributes.qName(i), attributes.uri(i) );
}
(From xml/tagreader-with-features/structureparser.cpp)
The main setup functions are:
Function | Action
|
addColumn()
| Adds a column with text and perhaps width. Columns are
counted from the left starting with column 0.
|
setColumnWidthMode()
| Sets the column to be resized automatically or not.
|
setAllColumnsShowFocus()
| Sets whether items should show keyboard focus using all
columns or just column 0. The default is to show focus
just using column 0.
|
setRootIsDecorated()
| Sets whether root items can be opened and closed by the
user and have open/close decoration to their left. The
default is FALSE.
|
setTreeStepSize()
| Sets how many pixels an item's children are indented
relative to their parent. The default is 20. This is
mostly a matter of taste.
|
setSorting()
| Sets whether the items should be sorted, whether it should
be in ascending or descending order, and by what column
they should be sorted. By default the list view is sorted
by the first column; to switch this off call setSorting( -1 ).
|
To handle events such as mouse presses on the list view, derived
classes can reimplement the QScrollView functions:
contentsMousePressEvent,
contentsMouseReleaseEvent,
contentsMouseDoubleClickEvent,
contentsMouseMoveEvent,
contentsDragEnterEvent,
contentsDragMoveEvent,
contentsDragLeaveEvent,
contentsDropEvent, and
contentsWheelEvent.
There are also several functions for mapping between items and
coordinates. itemAt() returns the item at a position on-screen,
itemRect() returns the rectangle an item occupies on the screen,
and itemPos() returns the position of any item (whether it is
on-screen or not). firstChild() returns the item at the top of the
view (not necessarily on-screen) so you can iterate over the items
using either QListViewItem::itemBelow() or a combination of
QListViewItem::firstChild() and QListViewItem::nextSibling().
If you need to move a list view item you can use takeItem() and
insertItem(). Item's are deleted with delete; to delete all items
use clear(). See the QListViewItem documentation for examples of
traversal.
There are a variety of selection modes described in the
QListView::SelectionMode documentation. The default is Single
selection, which you can change using setSelectionMode().
Because QListView offers multiple selection it must display
keyboard focus and selection state separately. Therefore there are
functions both to set the selection state of an item
(setSelected()) and to select which item displays keyboard focus
(setCurrentItem()).
QListView emits two groups of signals; one group signals changes
in selection/focus state and one indicates selection. The first
group consists of selectionChanged() (applicable to all list
views), selectionChanged( QListViewItem * ) (applicable only to
Single selection list view), and currentChanged( QListViewItem * ).
The second group consists of doubleClicked( QListViewItem * ),
returnPressed( QListViewItem * ),
rightButtonClicked( QListViewItem *, const QPoint&, int ), etc.
In Motif style, QListView deviates fairly strongly from the look
and feel of the Motif hierarchical tree view. This is done mostly
to provide a usable keyboard interface and to make the list view
look better with a white background.
If selectionMode() is Single (the default) the user can select
one item at a time, e.g. by clicking an item with the mouse, see
QListView::SelectionMode for details.
The listview can be navigated either using the mouse or the
keyboard. Clicking an - icon closes an item (hides its
children) and clicking an + icon opens an item (shows its
children). The keyboard controls are these:
Keypress | Action
|
Home
| Make the first item current and visible.
|
End
| Make the last item current and visible.
|
Page Up
| Make the item above the top visible item current and visible.
|
Page Down
| Make the item below the bottom visible item current and visible.
|
Up Arrow
| Make the item above the current item current and visible.
|
Down Arrow
| Make the item below the current item current and visible.
|
Left Arrow
| If the current item is closed (+ icon) or has no
children, make its parent item current and visible. If the
current item is open (- icon) close it, i.e. hide its
children. Exception: if the current item is the first item
and is closed and the horizontal scrollbar is offset to
the right the listview will be scrolled left.
|
Right Arrow
| If the current item is closed (+ icon) and has
children, the item is opened. If the current item is
opened (- icon) and has children the item's first
child is made current and visible. If the current item has
no children the listview is scrolled right.
|
If the user starts typing letters with the focus in the listview
an incremental search will occur. For example if the user types
'd' the current item will change to the first item that begins
with the letter 'd'; if they then type 'a', the current item will
change to the first item that begins with 'da', and so on. If no
item begins with the letters they type the current item doesn't
change.
Warning: The list view assumes ownership of all list view items
and will delete them when it does not need them any more.
See also QListViewItem, QCheckListItem and Advanced Widgets.
Member Type Documentation
QListView::RenameAction
This enum describes whether a rename operation is accepted if the
rename editor loses focus without the user pressing Enter.
- QListView::Accept - Rename if Enter is pressed or focus is lost.
- QListView::Reject - Discard the rename operation if focus is lost (and
Enter has not been pressed).
QListView::ResizeMode
This enum describes how the header adjusts to resize events which
affect the width of the listview.
- QListView::NoColumn - The columns do not get resized in resize events.
- QListView::AllColumns - All columns are resized equally to fit the width
of the listview.
- QListView::LastColumn - The last columns is resized to fit the with of
the listview.
QListView::SelectionMode
This enumerated type is used by QListView to indicate how it
reacts to selection by the user.
- QListView::Single - When the user selects an item, any already-selected
item becomes unselected, and the user cannot unselect the selected
item. This means that the user can never clear the selection, even
though the selection may be cleared by the application programmer
using QListView::clearSelection().
- QListView::Multi - When the user selects an item in the most ordinary
way, the selection status of that item is toggled and the other
items are left alone.
- QListView::Extended - When the user selects an item in the most ordinary
way, the selection is cleared and the new item selected. However,
if the user presses the Ctrl key when clicking on an item, the
clicked item gets toggled and all other items are left untouched.
And if the user presses the Shift key while clicking on an item,
all items between the current item and the clicked item get
selected or unselected, depending on the state of the clicked
item. Also, multiple items can be selected by dragging the mouse
while the left mouse button stays pressed.
- QListView::NoSelection - Items cannot be selected.
In other words, Single is a real single-selection list view, Multi a real multi-selection list view, Extended is a list view
where users can select multiple items but usually want to select
either just one or a range of contiguous items, and NoSelection
is a list view where the user can look but not touch.
QListView::WidthMode
This enum type describes how the width of a column in the view
changes.
- QListView::Manual - the column width does not change automatically.
- QListView::Maximum - the column is automatically sized according to the
widths of all items in the column. (Note: The column never shrinks
in this case.) This means the column is always resized to the
width of the item with the largest width in the column.
See also setColumnWidth(), setColumnWidthMode() and columnWidth().
Member Function Documentation
QListView::QListView ( QWidget * parent = 0, const char * name = 0, WFlags f = 0 )
Constructs a new empty list view called name with parent parent.
Performance is boosted by modifying the widget flags f so that
only part of the QListViewItem children is redrawn. This may be
unsuitable for custom QListViewItem classes, in which case WStaticContents and WRepaintNoErase should be cleared.
See also QWidget::clearWFlags() and Qt::WidgetFlags.
QListView::~QListView ()
Destroys the list view, deleting all its items, and frees up all
allocated resources.
int QListView::addColumn ( const QString & label, int width = -1 ) [virtual]
Adds a width pixels wide column with the column header label
to this QListView, and returns the index of the new column.
All columns apart from the first one are inserted to the right of
the existing ones.
If width is negative, the new column's WidthMode is set to
Maximum instead of Manual.
See also setColumnText(), setColumnWidth() and setColumnWidthMode().
Examples: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp, checklists/checklists.cpp, dirview/main.cpp, fileiconview/mainwindow.cpp, listviews/listviews.cpp and qdir/qdir.cpp.
int QListView::addColumn ( const QIconSet & iconset, const QString & label, int width = -1 ) [virtual]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
Adds a width pixels wide new column with the header label
and iconset to this QListView, and returns the index of the
column.
If width is negative, the new column's WidthMode is set to
Maximum, and to Manual otherwise.
See also setColumnText(), setColumnWidth() and setColumnWidthMode().
bool QListView::allColumnsShowFocus () const
Returns TRUE if items should show keyboard focus using all columns; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "allColumnsShowFocus" property for details.
int QListView::childCount () const
Returns the number of parentless (top level) QListViewItem objects in this QListView.
See the "childCount" property for details.
void QListView::clear () [virtual slot]
Removes and deletes all the items in this list view and triggers
an update.
See also triggerUpdate().
Examples: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp, checklists/checklists.cpp, listviews/listviews.cpp and network/ftpclient/ftpmainwindow.cpp.
void QListView::clearSelection () [virtual]
Sets all items to be not selected, updates the list view as
necessary and emits the selectionChanged() signals. Note that for
Multi selection list views this function needs to iterate over
all items.
See also setSelected() and multiSelection.
Example: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp.
void QListView::clicked ( QListViewItem * item ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the user clicks (mouse pressed and mouse released) in the list view. item is the pointer to
the clicked list view item, or 0 if the user didn't click on an
item.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
Example: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp.
void QListView::clicked ( QListViewItem * item, const QPoint & pnt, int c ) [signal]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
This signal is emitted whenever the user clicks (mouse pressed and mouse released) in the list view. item is the pointer to
the clicked list view item, or 0 if the user didn't click on an
item. pnt is the position where the user has clicked. If item is not 0, c is the list view column into which the user
pressed; if item is 0 c's value is undefined.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
void QListView::collapsed ( QListViewItem * item ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when the item has been collapsed, i.e.
when the children of item are hidden.
See also setOpen() and expanded().
int QListView::columnAlignment ( int column ) const
Returns the alignment of column column. The default is AlignAuto.
See also Qt::AlignmentFlags.
QString QListView::columnText ( int c ) const
Returns the text of column c.
See also setColumnText().
int QListView::columnWidth ( int c ) const
Returns the width of column c.
See also setColumnWidth().
WidthMode QListView::columnWidthMode ( int c ) const
Returns the WidthMode for column c.
See also setColumnWidthMode().
int QListView::columns () const
Returns the number of columns in this list view.
See the "columns" property for details.
void QListView::contentsMouseDoubleClickEvent ( QMouseEvent * e ) [virtual protected]
Processes the mouse double-click event e on behalf of the viewed widget.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void QListView::contentsMouseMoveEvent ( QMouseEvent * e ) [virtual protected]
Processes the mouse move event e on behalf of the viewed widget.
Example: dirview/dirview.cpp.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void QListView::contentsMousePressEvent ( QMouseEvent * e ) [virtual protected]
Processes the mouse move event e on behalf of the viewed widget.
Example: dirview/dirview.cpp.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void QListView::contentsMouseReleaseEvent ( QMouseEvent * e ) [virtual protected]
Processes the mouse move event e on behalf of the viewed widget.
Example: dirview/dirview.cpp.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void
This signal is emitted when the user invokes a context menu with
the right mouse button or with special system keys, with item
being the item under the mouse cursor or the current item if no
item is under the mouse cursor.
pos is the position for the context menu in the global
coordinate system.
col is the column on which the user pressed, or -1 if the
signal was triggered by a key event.
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
void QListView::currentChanged ( QListViewItem * ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the current item has changed
(normally after the screen update). The current item is the item
responsible for indicating keyboard focus.
The argument is the newly current item, or 0 if the change was to
make no item current. This can happen, for example, if all items
in the list view are deleted.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
See also setCurrentItem() and currentItem().
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
QListViewItem * QListView::currentItem () const
Returns a pointer to the currently highlighted item, or 0 if there
isn't one.
See also setCurrentItem().
Examples: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp and listviews/listviews.cpp.
RenameAction QListView::defaultRenameAction () const
Returns TRUE if the list view accepts the rename operation by default; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "defaultRenameAction" property for details.
void QListView::doAutoScroll () [protected slot]
This slot handles auto-scrolling when the mouse button is pressed
and the mouse is outside the widget.
void QListView::doubleClicked ( QListViewItem * item ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever an item is double-clicked. It's
emitted on the second button press, not the second button release.
item is the list view item on which the user did the
double-click.
QDragObject * QListView::dragObject () [virtual protected]
If the user presses the mouse on an item and starts moving the
mouse, and the item allow dragging (see
QListViewItem::setDragEnabled()), this function is called to get a
drag object and a drag is started unless dragObject() returns 0.
By default this function returns 0. You should reimplement it and
create a QDragObject depending on the selected items.
void QListView::drawContentsOffset ( QPainter * p, int ox, int oy, int cx, int cy, int cw, int ch ) [virtual protected]
Calls QListViewItem::paintCell() and
QListViewItem::paintBranches() as necessary for all list view
items that require repainting in the cw pixels wide and ch
pixels high bounding rectangle starting at position cx, cy
with offset ox, oy. Uses the painter p.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void QListView::dropped ( QDropEvent * e ) [signal]
This signal is emitted, when a drop event occurred onto the
viewport (not onto an item).
e provides all information about the drop.
void QListView::ensureItemVisible ( const QListViewItem * i )
Ensures that item i is made visible, scrolling the list view
vertically as required and also opening (expanding) any parent
items if this is necessary to show the item.
See also itemRect() and QScrollView::ensureVisible().
bool QListView::eventFilter ( QObject * o, QEvent * e ) [virtual]
Redirects the event e relating to object o, for the viewport
to mousePressEvent(), keyPressEvent() and friends.
Reimplemented from QScrollView.
void QListView::expanded ( QListViewItem * item ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when item has been expanded, i.e. when
the children of item are shown.
See also setOpen() and collapsed().
QListViewItem * QListView::findItem ( const QString & text, int column, ComparisonFlags compare = ExactMatch | CaseSensitive ) const
Finds the first list view item in column column, that matches
text and returns the item, or returns 0 of no such item could
be found. Pass OR-ed together Qt::StringComparisonMode values
in the compare flag, to control how the matching is performed.
The default comparison mode is case-sensitive, exact match.
QListViewItem * QListView::firstChild () const
Returns the first item in this QListView. You can use its firstChild() and nextSibling() functions to
traverse the entire tree of items.
Returns 0 if there is no first item.
See also itemAt(), QListViewItem::itemBelow() and QListViewItem::itemAbove().
Examples: addressbook/centralwidget.cpp and listviews/listviews.cpp.
Returns a pointer to the QHeader object that manages this list
view's columns. Please don't modify the header behind the list
view's back.
You may safely call QHeader::setClickEnabled(),
QHeader::setResizeEnabled(), QHeader::setMovingEnabled() and all
the const QHeader functions.
Examples: listviews/listviews.cpp and qdir/qdir.cpp.
void QListView::insertItem ( QListViewItem * i ) [virtual]
Inserts item i into the list view as a top-level item. You do
not need to call this unless you've called takeItem(i) or
QListViewItem::takeItem(i) and need to reinsert i elsewhere.
See also QListViewItem::takeItem() and takeItem().
void QListView::invertSelection () [virtual slot]
Inverts the selection. Only works in Multi and Extended
selection modes.
bool QListView::isMultiSelection () const
Returns TRUE if the list view is in multi-selection or extended-selection mode; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "multiSelection" property for details.
bool QListView::isOpen ( const QListViewItem * item ) const
Identical to item->isOpen(). Provided for completeness.
See also setOpen().
bool QListView::isRenaming () const
Returns TRUE if an item is being renamed; otherwise returns FALSE.
bool QListView::isSelected ( const QListViewItem * i ) const
Returns TRUE if the list view item i is selected; otherwise
returns FALSE.
See also QListViewItem::isSelected().
QListViewItem * QListView::itemAt ( const QPoint & viewPos ) const
Returns a pointer to the QListViewItem at viewPos. Note that viewPos is in the coordinate system of viewport(), not in the list
view's own, much larger, coordinate system.
itemAt() returns 0 if there is no such item.
Note that you also get the pointer to the item if viewPos
points to the root decoration (see setRootIsDecorated()) of the
item. To check whether or not viewPos is on the root decoration
of the item, you can do something like this:
QListViewItem *i = itemAt( p );
if ( i ) {
if ( p.x() > header()->cellPos( header()->mapToActual( 0 ) ) +
treeStepSize() * ( i->depth() + ( rootIsDecorated() ? 1 : 0) ) + itemMargin() ||
p.x() < header()->cellPos( header()->mapToActual( 0 ) ) ) {
; // p is not on root decoration
else
; // p is on the root decoration
}
This might be interesting if you use this function to find out
where the user clicked and if you want to start a drag (which you
do not want to do if the user clicked onto the root decoration of
an item).
See also itemPos() and itemRect().
int QListView::itemMargin () const
Returns the advisory item margin that list items may use.
See the "itemMargin" property for details.
int QListView::itemPos ( const QListViewItem * item )
Returns the y-coordinate of item in the list view's coordinate
system. This function is normally much slower than itemAt() but it
works for all items, whereas itemAt() normally works only for
items on the screen.
This is a thin wrapper around QListViewItem::itemPos().
See also itemAt() and itemRect().
QRect QListView::itemRect ( const QListViewItem * i ) const
Returns the rectangle on the screen that item i occupies in
viewport()'s coordinates, or an invalid rectangle if i is 0 or
is not currently visible.
The rectangle returned does not include any children of the
rectangle (i.e. it uses QListViewItem::height(), rather than
QListViewItem::totalHeight()). If you want the rectangle to
include children you can use something like this:
QRect r( listView->itemRect( item ) );
r.setHeight( (QCOORD)(QMIN( item->totalHeight(),
listView->viewport->height() - r.y() ) ) )
Note the way it avoids too-high rectangles. totalHeight() can be
much larger than the window system's coordinate system allows.
itemRect() is comparatively slow. It's best to call it only for
items that are probably on-screen.
void QListView::itemRenamed ( QListViewItem * item, int col, const QString & text ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when item has been renamed to text,
e.g. by in in-place renaming, in column col.
void QListView::itemRenamed ( QListViewItem * item, int col ) [signal]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
This signal is emitted when item has been renamed, e.g. by
in-place renaming, in column col.
QListViewItem * QListView::lastItem () const
Returns the last item in the list view tree.
Returns 0 if there are no items in the QListView.
This function is slow because it traverses the entire tree to find
the last item.
void QListView::mouseButtonClicked ( int button, QListViewItem * item, const QPoint & pos, int c ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the user clicks (mouse pressed and mouse released) in the list view at position pos. button
is the mouse button that the user pressed, item is the pointer
to the clicked list view item or 0 if the user didn't click on an
item. If item is not 0, c is the list view column into which
the user pressed; if item is 0 c's value is undefined.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
void QListView::mouseButtonPressed ( int button, QListViewItem * item, const QPoint & pos, int c ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the user pressed the mouse button
in the list view at position pos. button is the mouse button
which the user pressed, item is the pointer to the pressed list
view item or 0 if the user didn't press on an item. If item is
not 0, c is the list view column into which the user pressed; if
item is 0 c's value is undefined.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
void QListView::onItem ( QListViewItem * i ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when the user moves the mouse cursor onto
the item i, similar to the QWidget::enterEvent() function.
void QListView::onViewport () [signal]
This signal is emitted when the user moves the mouse cursor from
an item to an empty part of the list view.
void QListView::paintEmptyArea ( QPainter * p, const QRect & rect ) [virtual protected]
Paints rect so that it looks like empty background using
painter p. rect is in widget coordinates, ready to be fed to
p.
The default function fills rect with the
viewport()->backgroundBrush().
void QListView::pressed ( QListViewItem * item ) [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the user presses the mouse button
in a list view. item is the pointer to the list view item on
which the user pressed the mouse button, or 0 if the user didn't
press the mouse on an item.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
void QListView::pressed ( QListViewItem * item, const QPoint & pnt, int c ) [signal]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
This signal is emitted whenever the user presses the mouse button
in a list view. item is the pointer to the list view item on
which the user pressed the mouse button, or 0 if the user didn't
press the mouse on an item. pnt is the position of the mouse
cursor, and c is the column where the mouse cursor was when the
user pressed the mouse button.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
void QListView::removeColumn ( int index ) [virtual]
Removes the column at position index.
void QListView::removeItem ( QListViewItem * item ) [virtual]
This function is obsolete. It is provided to keep old source working. We strongly advise against using it in new code.
This function has been renamed takeItem().
void QListView::repaintItem ( const QListViewItem * item ) const
Repaints item on the screen if item is currently visible.
Takes care to avoid multiple repaints.
void QListView::resizeEvent ( QResizeEvent * e ) [virtual protected]
Ensures that the header is correctly sized and positioned when the
resize event e occurs.
ResizeMode QListView::resizeMode () const
Returns TRUE if all, none or the only the last column should be resized; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "resizeMode" property for details.
void QListView::returnPressed ( QListViewItem * ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when Enter or Return is pressed. The
argument is the currentItem().
void QListView::rightButtonClicked ( QListViewItem *, const QPoint &, int ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when the right button is clicked (i.e. when
it's released). The arguments are the relevant QListViewItem (may
be 0), the point in global coordinates and the relevant column (or
-1 if the click was outside the list).
void QListView::rightButtonPressed ( QListViewItem *, const QPoint &, int ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when the right button is pressed. The
arguments are the relevant QListViewItem (may be 0), the point in
global coordinates and the relevant column (or -1 if the click was
outside the list).
bool QListView::rootIsDecorated () const
Returns TRUE if the list view shows open/close signs on root items; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "rootIsDecorated" property for details.
void QListView::selectAll ( bool select ) [virtual slot]
If select is TRUE, all items get selected; otherwise all items
get unselected. This works only in the selection modes Multi
and Extended. In Single and NoSelection mode the
selection of the current item is just set to select.
QListViewItem * QListView::selectedItem () const
Returns a pointer to the selected item if the list view is in
Single selection mode and an item is selected.
If no items are selected or the list view is in Multi selection
mode this function returns 0.
See also setSelected() and multiSelection.
void QListView::selectionChanged () [signal]
This signal is emitted whenever the set of selected items has
changed (normally before the screen update). It is available both
in Single selection and Multi selection mode but is most
useful in Multi selection mode.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
See also setSelected() and QListViewItem::setSelected().
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
void QListView::selectionChanged ( QListViewItem * ) [signal]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
This signal is emitted whenever the selected item has changed in
Single selection mode (normally after the screen update). The
argument is the newly selected item.
The no argument overload of this signal is more useful in Multi
selection mode.
Warning: Do not delete any QListViewItem objects in slots
connected to this signal.
See also setSelected(), QListViewItem::setSelected() and currentChanged().
SelectionMode QListView::selectionMode () const
Returns the list view's selection mode.
See the "selectionMode" property for details.
void QListView::setAllColumnsShowFocus ( bool ) [virtual]
Sets whether items should show keyboard focus using all columns.
See the "allColumnsShowFocus" property for details.
void QListView::setColumnAlignment ( int column, int align ) [virtual]
Sets column column's alignment to align. The alignment is
ultimately passed to QListViewItem::paintCell() for each item in
the list view.
See also Qt::AlignmentFlags.
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
void QListView::setColumnText ( int column, const QString & label ) [virtual]
Sets the heading of column column to label.
See also columnText().
void QListView::setColumnText ( int column, const QIconSet & iconset, const QString & label ) [virtual]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
Sets the heading of column column to iconset and label.
See also columnText().
void QListView::setColumnWidth ( int column, int w ) [virtual]
Sets the width of column column to w pixels. Note that if
the column has a WidthMode other than Manual, this width setting
may be subsequently overridden.
See also columnWidth().
void QListView::setColumnWidthMode ( int c, WidthMode mode ) [virtual]
Sets column c's width mode to mode. The default depends on
the original width argument to addColumn().
See also QListViewItem::width().
void QListView::setCurrentItem ( QListViewItem * i ) [virtual]
Sets item i to be the current highlighted item and repaints
appropriately. This highlighted item is used for keyboard
navigation and focus indication; it doesn't mean anything else,
i.e. it is different from selection.
See also currentItem() and setSelected().
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
void QListView::setDefaultRenameAction ( RenameAction a ) [virtual]
Sets whether the list view accepts the rename operation by default to a.
See the "defaultRenameAction" property for details.
void QListView::setItemMargin ( int ) [virtual]
Sets the advisory item margin that list items may use.
See the "itemMargin" property for details.
void QListView::setMultiSelection ( bool enable ) [virtual]
Sets whether the list view is in multi-selection or extended-selection mode to enable.
See the "multiSelection" property for details.
void QListView::setOpen ( QListViewItem * item, bool open ) [virtual]
Sets item to be open if open is TRUE and item is
expandable, and to be closed if open is FALSE. Repaints
accordingly.
See also QListViewItem::setOpen() and QListViewItem::setExpandable().
void QListView::setResizeMode ( ResizeMode m ) [virtual]
Sets whether all, none or the only the last column should be resized to m.
See the "resizeMode" property for details.
void QListView::setRootIsDecorated ( bool ) [virtual]
Sets whether the list view shows open/close signs on root items.
See the "rootIsDecorated" property for details.
void QListView::setSelected ( QListViewItem * item, bool selected ) [virtual]
If selected is TRUE the item is selected; otherwise it is
unselected.
If the list view is in Single selection mode and selected is
TRUE, the currently selected item is unselected and item is
made current. Unlike QListViewItem::setSelected(), this function
updates the list view as necessary and emits the
selectionChanged() signals.
See also isSelected(), multiSelection, multiSelection and setCurrentItem().
Example: listviews/listviews.cpp.
void QListView::setSelectionMode ( SelectionMode mode )
Sets the list view's selection mode to mode.
See the "selectionMode" property for details.
void QListView::setShowSortIndicator ( bool show ) [virtual]
Sets whether the list view header should display a sort indicator to show.
See the "showSortIndicator" property for details.
void QListView::setShowToolTips ( bool b ) [virtual]
Sets whether this list view should show tooltips for truncated column texts to b.
See the "showToolTips" property for details.
void QListView::setSorting ( int column, bool ascending = TRUE ) [virtual]
Sets the list view to be sorted by column and in ascending
order if ascending is TRUE or descending order if it is FALSE.
If column is -1, sorting is disabled and the user cannot sort
columns by clicking on the column headers. If column is larger
than the number of columns the user must click on a column
header to sort the list view.
void QListView::setTreeStepSize ( int ) [virtual]
Sets the number of pixels a child is offset from its parent.
See the "treeStepSize" property for details.
bool QListView::showSortIndicator () const
Returns TRUE if the list view header should display a sort indicator; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "showSortIndicator" property for details.
bool QListView::showToolTips () const
Returns TRUE if this list view should show tooltips for truncated column texts; otherwise returns FALSE.
See the "showToolTips" property for details.
void QListView::sort () [virtual]
(Re)sorts the list view using the last sorting configuration (sort
column and ascending/descending).
void QListView::spacePressed ( QListViewItem * ) [signal]
This signal is emitted when Space is pressed. The argument is
currentItem().
void QListView::startDrag () [virtual protected]
Starts a drag.
void QListView::takeItem ( QListViewItem * i ) [virtual]
Removes item i from the list view; i must be a top-level
item. The warnings regarding QListViewItem::takeItem() apply to
this function, too.
See also insertItem().
int QListView::treeStepSize () const
Returns the number of pixels a child is offset from its parent.
See the "treeStepSize" property for details.
void QListView::triggerUpdate () [slot]
Triggers a size, geometry and content update during the next
iteration of the event loop. Ensures that there'll be just one
update to avoid flicker.
void QListView::updateContents () [protected slot]
Updates the sizes of the viewport, header, scroll bars and so on.
Warning: Don't call this directly; call triggerUpdate() instead.
Property Documentation
bool allColumnsShowFocus
This property holds whether items should show keyboard focus using all columns.
If this property is TRUE all columns will show focus and selection
states, otherwise only column 0 will show focus.
The default is FALSE.
Setting this to TRUE if it's not necessary may cause noticeable
flicker.
Set this property's value with setAllColumnsShowFocus() and get this property's value with allColumnsShowFocus().
int childCount
This property holds the number of parentless (top level) QListViewItem objects in this QListView.
Represents the current number of parentless (top level)
QListViewItem objects in this QListView, like
QListViewItem::childCount() returns the number of child items for
a QListViewItem.
See also QListViewItem::childCount().
Get this property's value with childCount().
int columns
This property holds the number of columns in this list view.
Get this property's value with columns().
See also addColumn() and removeColumn().
This property holds whether the list view accepts the rename operation by default.
If this property is Accept, and the user renames an item and
the editor loses focus (without the user pressing Enter), the
item will still be renamed. If the property's value is Reject,
the item will not be renamed unless the user presses Enter. The
default is Reject.
Set this property's value with setDefaultRenameAction() and get this property's value with defaultRenameAction().
int itemMargin
This property holds the advisory item margin that list items may use.
The item margin defaults to one pixel and is the margin between
the item's edges and the area where it draws its contents.
QListViewItem::paintFocus() draws in the margin.
See also QListViewItem::paintCell().
Set this property's value with setItemMargin() and get this property's value with itemMargin().
bool multiSelection
This property holds whether the list view is in multi-selection or extended-selection mode.
If you enable multi-selection, Multi, mode, it is possible to
specify whether or not this mode should be extended. Extended
means that the user can select multiple items only when pressing
the Shift or Ctrl key at the same time.
The default selection mode is Single.
See also selectionMode.
Set this property's value with setMultiSelection() and get this property's value with isMultiSelection().
This property holds whether all, none or the only the last column should be resized.
Specifies whether all, none or only the last column should be
resized to fit the full width of the listview. The values for this
property can be one of: NoColumn (the default), AllColumns
or LastColumn.
Note: Setting the resize mode should be done after all necessary
columns have been added to the listview, otherwise the behavior is
undefined.
See also QHeader and header().
Set this property's value with setResizeMode() and get this property's value with resizeMode().
bool rootIsDecorated
This property holds whether the list view shows open/close signs on root items.
Open/close signs are small + or - symbols in windows
style, or arrows in Motif style. The default is FALSE.
Set this property's value with setRootIsDecorated() and get this property's value with rootIsDecorated().
This property holds the list view's selection mode.
The mode can be Single (the default), Extended, Multi or
NoSelection.
See also multiSelection.
Set this property's value with setSelectionMode() and get this property's value with selectionMode().
bool showSortIndicator
This property holds whether the list view header should display a sort indicator.
If this property is TRUE, an arrow is drawn in the header of the
list view to indicate the sort order of the list view contents.
The arrow will be drawn in the correct column and will point up or
down, depending on the current sort direction. The default is
FALSE (don't show an indicator).
See also QHeader::setSortIndicator().
Set this property's value with setShowSortIndicator() and get this property's value with showSortIndicator().
bool showToolTips
This property holds whether this list view should show tooltips for truncated column texts.
The default is TRUE.
Set this property's value with setShowToolTips() and get this property's value with showToolTips().
int treeStepSize
This property holds the number of pixels a child is offset from its parent.
The default is 20 pixels.
Of course, this property is only meaningful for hierarchical list
views.
Set this property's value with setTreeStepSize() and get this property's value with treeStepSize().
This file is part of the Qt toolkit.
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