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174 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
174 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
// Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GFDL-1.3-no-invariants-only
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/*!
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\example widgets/codeeditor
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\title Code Editor Example
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\ingroup examples-widgets
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\brief The Code Editor example shows how to create a simple editor that
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has line numbers and that highlights the current line.
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\borderedimage codeeditor-example.png
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As can be seen from the image, the editor displays the line
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numbers in an area to the left of the area for editing. The editor
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will highlight the line containing the cursor.
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We implement the editor in \c CodeEditor, which is a widget that
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inherits QPlainTextEdit. We keep a separate widget in \c
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CodeEditor (\c LineNumberArea) onto which we draw the line
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numbers.
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QPlainTextEdit inherits from QAbstractScrollArea, and editing
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takes place within its \l{QAbstractScrollArea::}{viewport()}'s
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margins. We make room for our line number area by setting the left
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margin of the viewport to the size we need to draw the line
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numbers.
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When it comes to editing code, we prefer QPlainTextEdit over
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QTextEdit because it is optimized for handling plain text. See
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the QPlainTextEdit class description for details.
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QPlainTextEdit lets us add selections in addition to the
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selection the user can make with the mouse or keyboard. We use
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this functionality to highlight the current line. More on this
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later.
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We will now move on to the definitions and implementations of \c
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CodeEditor and \c LineNumberArea. Let's start with the \c
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LineNumberArea class.
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\section1 The LineNumberArea Class
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We paint the line numbers on this widget, and place it over the \c
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CodeEditor's \l{QAbstractScrollArea::}{viewport()}'s left margin
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area.
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We need to use protected functions in QPlainTextEdit while
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painting the area. So to keep things simple, we paint the area in
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the \c CodeEditor class. The area also asks the editor to
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calculate its size hint.
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Note that we could simply paint the line numbers directly on the
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code editor, and drop the LineNumberArea class. However, the
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QWidget class helps us to \l{QWidget::}{scroll()} its contents.
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Also, having a separate widget is the right choice if we wish to
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extend the editor with breakpoints or other code editor features.
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The widget would then help in the handling of mouse events.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.h extraarea
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\section1 CodeEditor Class Definition
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Here is the code editor's class definition:
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.h codeeditordefinition
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In the editor we resize and draw the line numbers on the \c
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LineNumberArea. We need to do this when the number of lines in the
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editor changes, and when the editor's viewport() is scrolled. Of
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course, it is also done when the editor's size changes. We do
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this in \c updateLineNumberWidth() and \c updateLineNumberArea().
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Whenever, the cursor's position changes, we highlight the current
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line in \c highlightCurrentLine().
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\section1 CodeEditor Class Implementation
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We will now go through the code editors implementation, starting
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off with the constructor.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp constructor
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In the constructor we connect our slots to signals in
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QPlainTextEdit. It is necessary to calculate the line number area
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width and highlight the first line when the editor is created.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp extraAreaWidth
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The \c lineNumberAreaWidth() function calculates the width of the
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\c LineNumberArea widget. We take the number of digits in the last
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line of the editor and multiply that with the maximum width of a
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digit.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp slotUpdateExtraAreaWidth
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When we update the width of the line number area, we simply call
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QAbstractScrollArea::setViewportMargins().
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp slotUpdateRequest
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This slot is invoked when the editors viewport has been scrolled.
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The QRect given as argument is the part of the editing area that
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is do be updated (redrawn). \c dy holds the number of pixels the
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view has been scrolled vertically.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp resizeEvent
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When the size of the editor changes, we also need to resize the
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line number area.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp cursorPositionChanged
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When the cursor position changes, we highlight the current line,
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i.e., the line containing the cursor.
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QPlainTextEdit gives the possibility to have more than one
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selection at the same time. we can set the character format
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(QTextCharFormat) of these selections. We clear the cursors
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selection before setting the new new
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QPlainTextEdit::ExtraSelection, else several lines would get
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highlighted when the user selects multiple lines with the mouse.
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\omit ask someone how this works \endomit
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One sets the selection with a text cursor. When using the
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FullWidthSelection property, the current cursor text block (line)
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will be selected. If you want to select just a portion of the text
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block, the cursor should be moved with QTextCursor::movePosition()
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from a position set with \l{QTextCursor::}{setPosition()}.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp extraAreaPaintEvent_0
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The \c lineNumberAreaPaintEvent() is called from \c LineNumberArea
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whenever it receives a paint event. We start off by painting the
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widget's background.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp extraAreaPaintEvent_1
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We will now loop through all visible lines and paint the line
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numbers in the extra area for each line. Notice that in a plain
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text edit each line will consist of one QTextBlock; though, if
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line wrapping is enabled, a line may span several rows in the text
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edit's viewport.
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We get the top and bottom y-coordinate of the first text block,
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and adjust these values by the height of the current text block in
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each iteration in the loop.
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\snippet widgets/codeeditor/codeeditor.cpp extraAreaPaintEvent_2
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Notice that we check if the block is visible in addition to check
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if it is in the areas viewport - a block can, for example, be
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hidden by a window placed over the text edit.
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\section1 Suggestions for Extending the Code Editor
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No self-respecting code editor is without a syntax
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highligther; the \l{Syntax Highlighter Example} shows how to
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create one.
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In addition to line numbers, you can add more to the extra area,
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for instance, break points.
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QSyntaxHighlighter gives the possibility to add user data to each
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text block with
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\l{QSyntaxHighlighter::}{setCurrentBlockUserData()}. This can be
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used to implement parenthesis matching. In the \c
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highlightCurrentLine(), the data of the currentBlock() can be
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fetched with QTextBlock::userData(). Matching parentheses can be
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highlighted with an extra selection. The "Matching Parentheses
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with QSyntaxHighlighter" article in Qt Quarterly 31 implements
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this. You find it here: \l{http://doc.qt.io/archives/qq/}.
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*/
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