kdelibs/kparts/factory.h
Ivailo Monev f43675b01d kparts: format and indent
Signed-off-by: Ivailo Monev <xakepa10@gmail.com>
2023-08-31 01:59:18 +03:00

130 lines
4.8 KiB
C++

/* This file is part of the KDE project
Copyright (C) 1999 Simon Hausmann <hausmann@kde.org>
(C) 1999 David Faure <faure@kde.org>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License
along with this library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, write to
the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
#ifndef __kparts_factory_h__
#define __kparts_factory_h__
#include <kpluginfactory.h>
#include <kparts/kparts_export.h>
#include <QWidget>
namespace KParts
{
class Part;
/**
* A generic factory object to create a Part.
*
* Factory is an abstract class. Reimplement the
* createPartObject() method to give it functionality.
*
* @see KPluginFactory.
*/
class KPARTS_EXPORT Factory : public KPluginFactory
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
Factory(QObject *parent = nullptr);
virtual ~Factory();
/**
* Creates a part.
*
* The QStringList can be used to pass additional arguments to the part.
* If the part needs additional arguments, it should take them as
* name="value" pairs. This is the way additional arguments will get passed
* to the part from eg. khtml. You can for example emebed the part into HTML
* by using the following code:
* \code
* <object type="my_mimetype" data="url_to_my_data">
* <param name="name1" value="value1">
* <param name="name2" value="value2">
* </object>
* \endcode
* This could result in a call to
* \code
* createPart( parentWidget, parentObject, "KParts::Part",
* QStringList("name1="value1"", "name2="value2") );
* \endcode
*
* @returns the newly created part.
*
* createPart() automatically emits a signal KPluginFactory::objectCreated to tell
* the library about its newly created object. This is very
* important for reference counting, and allows unloading the
* library automatically once all its objects have been destroyed.
*/
Part* createPart(QWidget *parentWidget = nullptr, QObject *parent = nullptr,
const char *classname = "KParts::Part", const QStringList &args = QStringList());
/**
* If you have a part contained in a shared library you might want to query
* for meta-information like the about-data, or the KComponentData in general.
* If the part is exported using KParts::GenericFactory then this method will
* return the instance that belongs to the part without the need to instantiate
* the part component.
*/
virtual KComponentData partComponentData();
/**
* A convenience method for partComponentData that takes care of retrieving
* the factory for a given library name and calling partComponentData on it.
*
* @param libraryName name of the library to query the instance from
*/
static KComponentData partComponentDataFromLibrary(const QString &libraryName);
protected:
/**
* Reimplement this method in your implementation to create the Part.
*
* The QStringList can be used to pass additional arguments to the part.
* If the part needs additional arguments, it should take them as
* name="value" pairs. This is the way additional arguments will get passed
* to the part from eg. khtml. You can for example emebed the part into HTML
* by using the following code:
* \code
* <object type="my_mimetype" data="url_to_my_data">
* <param name="name1" value="value1">
* <param name="name2" value="value2">
* </object>
* \endcode
* This could result in a call to
* \code
* createPart( parentWidget, parentObject, "KParts::Part",
* QStringList("name1="value1"", "name2="value2") );
* \endcode
*
* @returns the newly created part.
*/
virtual Part* createPartObject(QWidget *parentWidget = nullptr, QObject *parent = nullptr,
const char *classname = "KParts::Part", const QStringList &args = QStringList()) = 0;
/**
* Reimplemented from KPluginFactory. Calls createPart()
*/
virtual QObject* createObject(QObject *parent = nullptr,
const char *classname = "QObject", const QStringList &args = QStringList());
};
}
#endif