QWebInspector Class ReferenceThe QWebInspector class allows the placement and control of a QWebPage's inspector. The inspector can display a page's hierarchy, its loading statistics and the current state of its individual elements. It is mostly used by web developers. More... #include <QWebInspector> Inherits: QWidget. This class was introduced in Qt 4.6. Public Functions
Reimplemented Public Functions
Reimplemented Protected Functions
Additional Inherited Members
Detailed DescriptionThe QWebInspector class allows the placement and control of a QWebPage's inspector. The inspector can display a page's hierarchy, its loading statistics and the current state of its individual elements. It is mostly used by web developers. The QWebPage to be inspected must be specified using the setPage() method. A typical use of QWebInspector follows: // ... QWebPage *page = new QWebPage; // ... QWebInspector *inspector = new QWebInspector; inspector->setPage(page); A QWebInspector can be made visible either programmatically using setVisible(), or by the user through the attached QWebPage's context menu. Note: A QWebInspector will display a blank widget if either:
ResourcesThis class acts mostly as a container and a controller for the inspector. Most of the resources needed by the inspector are owned by the associated QWebPage and are allocated the first time that:
Inspector configuration persistenceThe inspector allows the user to configure some options through its user interface (e.g. the resource tracking "Always enable" option). These settings will be persisted automatically by QtWebKit only if your application previously called QCoreApplication::setOrganizationName() and QCoreApplication::setApplicationName(). See QSettings's default constructor documentation for an explanation of why this is necessary. Member Function Documentation
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