Viadeo Twitter Google Bookmarks ! Facebook Digg del.icio.us MySpace Yahoo MyWeb Blinklist Netvouz Reddit Simpy StumbleUpon Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites 
Logo Documentation Qt ·  Page d'accueil  ·  Toutes les classes  ·  Classes principales  ·  Annotées  ·  Classes groupées  ·  Modules  ·  Fonctions  · 

QEasingCurve Class

 #include <QEasingCurve>

This class was introduced in Qt 4.6.

Public Types

typedef EasingFunction
enum Type { Linear, InQuad, OutQuad, InOutQuad, ..., Custom }

Public Functions

QEasingCurve(Type type = Linear)
QEasingCurve(const QEasingCurve & other)
~QEasingCurve()
void addCubicBezierSegment(const QPointF & c1, const QPointF & c2, const QPointF & endPoint)
void addTCBSegment(const QPointF & nextPoint, qreal t, qreal c, qreal b)
qreal amplitude() const
EasingFunction customType() const
qreal overshoot() const
qreal period() const
void setAmplitude(qreal amplitude)
void setCustomType(EasingFunction func)
void setOvershoot(qreal overshoot)
void setPeriod(qreal period)
void setType(Type type)
void swap(QEasingCurve & other)
QVector<QPointF> toCubicSpline() const
Type type() const
qreal valueForProgress(qreal progress) const
bool operator!=(const QEasingCurve & other) const
QEasingCurve & operator=(const QEasingCurve & other)
bool operator==(const QEasingCurve & other) const

Related Non-Members

QDataStream & operator<<(QDataStream & stream, const QEasingCurve & easing)
QDataStream & operator>>(QDataStream & stream, QEasingCurve & easing)

Detailed Description

\captioniefThe QEasingCurve class provides easing curves for controlling animation.

Easing curves describe a function that controls how the speed of the interpolation between 0 and 1 should be. Easing curves allow transitions from one value to another to appear more natural than a simple constant speed would allow. The QEasingCurve class is usually used in conjunction with the QVariantAnimation and QPropertyAnimation classes but can be used on its own. It is usually used to accelerate the interpolation from zero velocity (ease in) or decelerate to zero velocity (ease out). Ease in and ease out can also be combined in the same easing curve.

To calculate the speed of the interpolation, the easing curve provides the function valueForProgress(), where the progress argument specifies the progress of the interpolation: 0 is the start value of the interpolation, 1 is the end value of the interpolation. The returned value is the effective progress of the interpolation. If the returned value is the same as the input value for all input values the easing curve is a linear curve. This is the default behaviour.

For example,

 QEasingCurve easing(QEasingCurve::InOutQuad);

 for(qreal t = 0.0; t < 1.0; t+=0.1)
     qWarning() << "Effective progress" << t << " is
                << easing.valueForProgress(t);
 

will print the effective progress of the interpolation between 0 and 1.

When using a QPropertyAnimation, the associated easing curve will be used to control the progress of the interpolation between startValue and endValue:

 QPropertyAnimation animation;
 animation.setStartValue(0);
 animation.setEndValue(1000);
 animation.setDuration(1000);
 animation.setEasingCurve(QEasingCurve::InOutQuad);

The ability to set an amplitude, overshoot, or period depends on the QEasingCurve type. Amplitude access is available to curves that behave as springs such as elastic and bounce curves. Changing the amplitude changes the height of the curve. Period access is only available to elastic curves and setting a higher period slows the rate of bounce. Only curves that have "boomerang" behaviors such as the InBack, OutBack, InOutBack, and OutInBack have overshoot settings. These curves will interpolate beyond the end points and return to the end point, acting similar to a boomerang.

The Easing Curves Example contains samples of QEasingCurve types and lets you change the curve settings.

Member Type Documentation

typedef QEasingCurve::EasingFunction

This is a typedef for a pointer to a function with the following signature:

 qreal myEasingFunction(qreal progress);

enum QEasingCurve::Type

The type of easing curve.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::Linear0

Easing curve for a linear (t) function: velocity is constant.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InQuad1

Easing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutQuad2

Easing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: decelerating to zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutQuad3

Easing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInQuad4

Easing curve for a quadratic (t^2) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InCubic5

Easing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutCubic6

Easing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: decelerating to zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutCubic7

Easing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInCubic8

Easing curve for a cubic (t^3) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InQuart9

Easing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutQuart10

Easing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: decelerating to zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutQuart11

Easing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInQuart12

Easing curve for a quartic (t^4) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InQuint13

Easing curve for a quintic (t^5) easing in: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutQuint14

Easing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: decelerating to zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutQuint15

Easing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInQuint16

Easing curve for a quintic (t^5) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InSine17

Easing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutSine18

Easing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: decelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutSine19

Easing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInSine20

Easing curve for a sinusoidal (sin(t)) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InExpo21

Easing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutExpo22

Easing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: decelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutExpo23

Easing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInExpo24

Easing curve for an exponential (2^t) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InCirc25

Easing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutCirc26

Easing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: decelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutCirc27

Easing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInCirc28

Easing curve for a circular (sqrt(1-t^2)) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InElastic29

Easing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: accelerating from zero velocity. The peak amplitude can be set with the amplitude parameter, and the period of decay by the period parameter.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutElastic30

Easing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: decelerating from zero velocity. The peak amplitude can be set with the amplitude parameter, and the period of decay by the period parameter.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutElastic31

Easing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInElastic32

Easing curve for an elastic (exponentially decaying sine wave) function: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InBack33

Easing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing in: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutBack34

Easing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing out: decelerating to zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutBack35

Easing curve for a back (overshooting cubic function: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing in/out: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInBack36

Easing curve for a back (overshooting cubic easing: (s+1)*t^3 - s*t^2) easing out/in: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InBounce37

Easing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function: accelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutBounce38

Easing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function: decelerating from zero velocity.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::InOutBounce39

Easing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function easing in/out: acceleration until halfway, then deceleration.

ConstantValue
QEasingCurve::OutInBounce40

Easing curve for a bounce (exponentially decaying parabolic bounce) function easing out/in: deceleration until halfway, then acceleration.

ConstantValueDescription
QEasingCurve::BezierSpline45Allows defining a custom easing curve using a cubic bezier spline
QEasingCurve::TCBSpline46Allows defining a custom easing curve using a TCB spline
QEasingCurve::Custom47This is returned if the user specified a custom curve type with setCustomType(). Note that you cannot call setType() with this value, but type() can return it.

See also addCubicBezierSegment() and addTCBSegment.

Member Function Documentation

QEasingCurve::QEasingCurve(Type type = Linear)

Constructs an easing curve of the given type.

QEasingCurve::QEasingCurve(const QEasingCurve & other)

Construct a copy of other.

QEasingCurve::~QEasingCurve()

Destructor.

void QEasingCurve::addCubicBezierSegment(const QPointF & c1, const QPointF & c2, const QPointF & endPoint)

Adds a segment of a cubic bezier spline to define a custom easing curve. It is only applicable if type() is QEasingCurve::BezierSpline. Note that the spline implicitly starts at (0.0, 0.0) and has to end at (1.0, 1.0) to be a valid easing curve.

void QEasingCurve::addTCBSegment(const QPointF & nextPoint, qreal t, qreal c, qreal b)

Adds a segment of a TCB bezier spline to define a custom easing curve. It is only applicable if type() is QEasingCurve::TCBSpline. The spline has to start explitly at (0.0, 0.0) and has to end at (1.0, 1.0) to be a valid easing curve. The three parameters are called tension, continuity and bias. All three parameters are valid between -1 and 1 and define the tangent of the control point. If all three parameters are 0 the resulting spline is a Catmull-Rom spline. The begin and endpoint always have a bias of -1 and 1, since the outer tangent is not defined.

qreal QEasingCurve::amplitude() const

Returns the amplitude. This is not applicable for all curve types. It is only applicable for bounce and elastic curves (curves of type() QEasingCurve::InBounce, QEasingCurve::OutBounce, QEasingCurve::InOutBounce, QEasingCurve::OutInBounce, QEasingCurve::InElastic, QEasingCurve::OutElastic, QEasingCurve::InOutElastic or QEasingCurve::OutInElastic).

See also setAmplitude().

EasingFunction QEasingCurve::customType() const

Returns the function pointer to the custom easing curve. If type() does not return QEasingCurve::Custom, this function will return 0.

See also setCustomType().

qreal QEasingCurve::overshoot() const

Returns the overshoot. This is not applicable for all curve types. It is only applicable if type() is QEasingCurve::InBack, QEasingCurve::OutBack, QEasingCurve::InOutBack or QEasingCurve::OutInBack.

See also setOvershoot().

qreal QEasingCurve::period() const

Returns the period. This is not applicable for all curve types. It is only applicable if type() is QEasingCurve::InElastic, QEasingCurve::OutElastic, QEasingCurve::InOutElastic or QEasingCurve::OutInElastic.

See also setPeriod().

void QEasingCurve::setAmplitude(qreal amplitude)

Sets the amplitude to amplitude.

This will set the amplitude of the bounce or the amplitude of the elastic "spring" effect. The higher the number, the higher the amplitude.

See also amplitude().

void QEasingCurve::setCustomType(EasingFunction func)

Sets a custom easing curve that is defined by the user in the function func. The signature of the function is qreal myEasingFunction(qreal progress), where progress and the return value is considered to be normalized between 0 and 1. (In some cases the return value can be outside that range) After calling this function type() will return QEasingCurve::Custom. func cannot be zero.

See also customType() and valueForProgress().

void QEasingCurve::setOvershoot(qreal overshoot)

Sets the overshoot to overshoot.

0 produces no overshoot, and the default value of 1.70158 produces an overshoot of 10 percent.

See also overshoot().

void QEasingCurve::setPeriod(qreal period)

Sets the period to period. Setting a small period value will give a high frequency of the curve. A large period will give it a small frequency.

See also period().

void QEasingCurve::setType(Type type)

Sets the type of the easing curve to type.

See also type().

void QEasingCurve::swap(QEasingCurve & other)

Swaps curve other with this curve. This operation is very fast and never fails.

This function was introduced in Qt 5.0.

QVector<QPointF> QEasingCurve::toCubicSpline() const

Returns the cubicBezierSpline that defines a custom easing curve. If the easing curve does not have a custom bezier easing curve the list is empty.

This function was introduced in Qt 5.0.

Type QEasingCurve::type() const

Returns the type of the easing curve.

See also setType().

qreal QEasingCurve::valueForProgress(qreal progress) const

Return the effective progress for the easing curve at progress. While progress must be between 0 and 1, the returned effective progress can be outside those bounds. For instance, QEasingCurve::InBack will return negative values in the beginning of the function.

bool QEasingCurve::operator!=(const QEasingCurve & other) const

Compare this easing curve with other and returns true if they are not equal. It will also compare the properties of a curve.

See also operator==().

QEasingCurve & QEasingCurve::operator=(const QEasingCurve & other)

Copy other.

bool QEasingCurve::operator==(const QEasingCurve & other) const

Compare this easing curve with other and returns true if they are equal. It will also compare the properties of a curve.

Related Non-Members

QDataStream & operator<<(QDataStream & stream, const QEasingCurve & easing)

Writes the given easing curve to the given stream and returns a reference to the stream.

See also Serializing Qt Data Types.

QDataStream & operator>>(QDataStream & stream, QEasingCurve & easing)

Reads an easing curve from the given stream into the given easing curve and returns a reference to the stream.

See also Serializing Qt Data Types.

Cette page est une traduction d'une page de la documentation de Qt, écrite par Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). Les éventuels problèmes résultant d'une mauvaise traduction ne sont pas imputables à Nokia. Qt 5.0-snapshot
Copyright © 2012 Developpez LLC. Tous droits réservés Developpez LLC. Aucune reproduction, même partielle, ne peut être faite de ce site et de l'ensemble de son contenu : textes, documents et images sans l'autorisation expresse de Developpez LLC. Sinon, vous encourez selon la loi jusqu'à 3 ans de prison et jusqu'à 300 000 E de dommages et intérêts. Cette page est déposée à la SACD.
Vous avez déniché une erreur ? Un bug ? Une redirection cassée ? Ou tout autre problème, quel qu'il soit ? Ou bien vous désirez participer à ce projet de traduction ? N'hésitez pas à nous contacter ou par MP !
 
 
 
 
Partenaires

Hébergement Web