IdentifiantMot de passe
Loading...
Mot de passe oublié ?Je m'inscris ! (gratuit)

Shape QML Type

Renders a path.

This type was introduced in Qt 5.10.

Article lu   fois.

L'auteur

Liens sociaux

Viadeo Twitter Facebook Share on Google+   

Shape QML Type

  • Import Statement: import QtQuick.Shapes 1.4

  • Since:: Qt 5.10

  • Inherited By:: EllipseShape, LineShape, and MaskShape

  • Inherits:: Item

  • Group: Shape is part of qtquick-paths, qtquick-views

Detailed Description

Renders a path either by generating geometry via QPainterPath and manual triangulation or by using a GPU vendor extension.

This approach is different from rendering shapes via QQuickPaintedItem or the 2D Canvas because the path never gets rasterized in software. Therefore Shape is suitable for creating shapes spreading over larger areas of the screen, avoiding the performance penalty for texture uploads or framebuffer blits. In addition, the declarative API allows manipulating, binding to, and even animating the path element properties like starting and ending position, the control points, and so on.

The types for specifying path elements are shared between PathView and Shape. However, not all Shape implementations support all path element types, while some may not make sense for PathView. Shape's currently supported subset is: PathMove, PathLine, PathQuad, PathCubic, PathArc, and PathSvg.

See Path for a detailed overview of the supported path elements.

 
Sélectionnez
Shape {
    width: 200
    height: 150
    anchors.centerIn: parent
    ShapePath {
        strokeWidth: 4
        strokeColor: "red"
        fillGradient: LinearGradient {
            x1: 20; y1: 20
            x2: 180; y2: 130
            GradientStop { position: 0; color: "blue" }
            GradientStop { position: 0.2; color: "green" }
            GradientStop { position: 0.4; color: "red" }
            GradientStop { position: 0.6; color: "yellow" }
            GradientStop { position: 1; color: "cyan" }
        }
        strokeStyle: ShapePath.DashLine
        dashPattern: [ 1, 4 ]
        startX: 20; startY: 20
        PathLine { x: 180; y: 130 }
        PathLine { x: 20; y: 130 }
        PathLine { x: 20; y: 20 }
    }
}
Image non disponible

Like Item, Shape also allows any visual or non-visual objects to be declared as children. ShapePath objects are handled specially. This is useful since it allows adding visual items, like Rectangle or Image, and non-visual objects, like Timer directly as children of Shape.

The following list summarizes the available Shape rendering approaches:

  • When running with the OpenGL backend of Qt Quick, only the generic, triangulation-based approach is available. When OpenGL is not used directly by the scene graph, for example because it is using the graphics abstraction layer (QRhi), only the generic shape renderer is available.

  • The software backend is fully supported. The path is rendered via QPainter::strokePath() and QPainter::fillPath() in this case.

  • The OpenVG backend is not currently supported.

When using Shape, it is important to be aware of potential performance implications:

  • When the application is running with the generic, triangulation-based Shape implementation, the geometry generation happens entirely on the CPU. This is potentially expensive. Changing the set of path elements, changing the properties of these elements, or changing certain properties of the Shape itself all lead to retriangulation of the affected paths on every change. Therefore, applying animation to such properties can affect performance on less powerful systems.

  • However, the data-driven, declarative nature of the Shape API often means better cacheability for the underlying CPU and GPU resources. A property change in one ShapePath will only lead to reprocessing the affected ShapePath, leaving other parts of the Shape unchanged. Therefore, a frequently changing property can still result in a lower overall system load than with imperative painting approaches (for example, QPainter).

  • At the same time, attention must be paid to the number of Shape elements in the scene. The way such a Shape item is represented in the scene graph is different from an ordinary geometry-based item, and incurs a certain cost when it comes to OpenGL state changes.

  • As a general rule, scenes should avoid using separate Shape items when it is not absolutely necessary. Prefer using one Shape item with multiple ShapePath elements over multiple Shape items.

See Also

Property Documentation

 

asynchronous : bool

When rendererType is Shape.GeometryRenderer, the input path is triangulated on the CPU during the polishing phase of the Shape. This is potentially expensive. To offload this work to separate worker threads, set this property to true.

When enabled, making a Shape visible will not wait for the content to become available. Instead, the GUI/main thread is not blocked and the results of the path rendering are shown only when all the asynchronous work has been finished.

The default value is false.

[since QtQuick.Shapes 1.11] containsMode : enumeration

This property determines the definition of contains() for the Shape. It is useful in case you add Qt Quick Input Handlers and you want to react only when the mouse or touchpoint is fully inside the Shape.

Constant

Description

Shape.BoundingRectContains

The default implementation of QQuickItem::contains() checks only whether the given point is inside the rectangular bounding box. This is the most efficient implementation, which is why it's the default.

Shape.FillContains

Check whether the interior (the part that would be filled if you are rendering it with fill) of any ShapePath that makes up this Shape contains the given point. The more complex and numerous ShapePaths you add, the less efficient this is to check, which can potentially slow down event delivery in your application. So it should be used with care.

One way to speed up the FillContains check is to generate an approximate outline with as few points as possible, place that in a transparent Shape on top, and add your Pointer Handlers to that, so that the containment check is cheaper during event delivery.

This property was introduced in QtQuick.Shapes 1.11.

[default] data : list<Object>

This property holds the ShapePath objects that define the contents of the Shape. It can also contain any other type of objects, since Shape, like Item, allows adding any visual or non-visual objects as children.

rendererType : enumeration

This property determines which path rendering backend is active.

Constant

Description

Shape.UnknownRenderer

The renderer is unknown.

Shape.GeometryRenderer

The generic, driver independent solution for OpenGL. Uses the same CPU-based triangulation approach as QPainter's OpenGL 2 paint engine. This is the default when the OpenGL Qt Quick scenegraph backend is in use.

Shape.SoftwareRenderer

Pure QPainter drawing using the raster paint engine. This is the default, and only, option when the Qt Quick scenegraph is running with the software backend.

status : enumeration

This property determines the status of the Shape and is relevant when Shape.asynchronous is set to true.

Constant

Description

Shape.Null

Not yet initialized.

Shape.Ready

The Shape has finished processing.

Shape.Processing

The path is being processed.

vendorExtensionsEnabled : bool

This property controls the usage of non-standard OpenGL extensions.

The default value is false.

As of Qt 6.0 there are no vendor-specific rendering paths implemented.

Vous avez aimé ce tutoriel ? Alors partagez-le en cliquant sur les boutons suivants : Viadeo Twitter Facebook Share on Google+