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/****************************************************************************
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**
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** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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** All rights reserved.
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** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
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**
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** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
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**
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** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
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** No Commercial Usage
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** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying
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** this package.
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**
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** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
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** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional
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**
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** $QT_END_LICENSE$
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**
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****************************************************************************/
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/*!
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\example itemviews/frozencolumn
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\title Frozen Column Example
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This example demonstrates how to freeze a column within a QTableView.
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\image frozencolumn-example.png "Screenshot of the example"
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We use Qt's model/view framework to implement a table with its first
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column frozen. This technique can be aplied to several columns or rows,
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as long as they are on the edge of the table.
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The model/view framework allows for one model to be displayed in different
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ways using multiple views. For this example, we use two views on the same
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model - two \l {QTableView}{table views} sharing one model. The frozen
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column is a child of the main tableview, and we provide the desired visual
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effect using an overlay technique which will be described step by step in
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the coming sections.
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\image frozencolumn-tableview.png
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\section1 FreezeTableWidget Class Definition
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The \c FreezeTableWidget class has a constructor and a destructor. Also, it
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has two private members: the table view that we will use as an overlay, and
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the shared model for both table views. Two slots are added to help keep the
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section sizes in sync, as well as a function to readjust the frozen
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column's geometry. In addition, we reimplement two functions:
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\l{QAbstractItemView::}{resizeEvent()} and \l{QTableView::}{moveCursor()}.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.h Widget definition
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\note QAbstractItemView is \l{QTableView}'s ancestor.
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\section1 FreezeTableWidget Class Implementation
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The constructor takes \a model as an argument and creates a table view that
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we will use to display the frozen column. Then, within the constructor, we
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invoke the \c init() function to set up the frozen column. Finally, we
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connect the \l{QHeaderView::sectionResized()} signals (for horizontal and
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vertical headers) to the appropriate slots. This ensures that our frozen
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column's sections are in sync with the headers. We also connect the
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vertical scrollbars together so that the frozen column scrolls vertically
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with the rest of our table.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp constructor
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In the \c init() function, we ensure that the overlay table view
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responsible for displaying the frozen column, is set up properly. This
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means that this table view, \c frozenTableView, has to have the same model
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as the main table view. However, the difference here is: \c frozenTableView's
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only visible column is its first column; we hide the others using
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\l{QTableView::}{setColumnHidden()}
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp init part1
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In terms of the frozen column's z-order, we stack it on top of the
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viewport. This is achieved by calling \l{QWidget::}{stackUnder()} on the
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viewport. For appearance's sake, we prevent the column from stealing focus
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from the main tableview. Also, we make sure that both views share the same
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selection model, so only one cell can be selected at a time. A few other
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tweaks are done to make our application look good and behave consistently
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with the main tableview. Note that we called \c updateFrozenTableGeometry()
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to make the column occupy the correct spot.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp init part2
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When you resize the frozen column, the same column on the main table view
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must resize accordingly, to provide seamless integration. This is
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accomplished by getting the new size of the column from the \c newSize
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value from the \l{QHeaderView::}{sectionResized()} signal, emitted by both
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the horizontal and vertical header.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp sections
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Since the width of the frozen column is modified, we adjust the geometry of
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the widget accordingly by invoking \c updateFrozenTableGeometry(). This
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function is further explained below.
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In our reimplementation of QTableView::resizeEvent(), we call
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\c updateFrozenTableGeometry() after invoking the base class
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implementation.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp resize
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When navigating around the table with the keyboard, we need to ensure that
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the current selection does not disappear behind the frozen column. To
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synchronize this, we reimplement QTableView::moveCursor() and adjust the
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scrollbar positions if needed, after calling the base class implementation.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp navigate
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The frozen column's geometry calculation is based on the geometry of the
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table underneath, so it always appears in the right place. Using the
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QFrame::frameWidth() function helps to calculate this geometry correctly,
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no matter which style is used. We rely on the geometry of the viewport and
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headers to set the boundaries for the frozen column.
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\snippet examples/itemviews/frozencolumn/freezetablewidget.cpp geometry
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*/
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