author | Eckhart Koeppen <eckhart.koppen@nokia.com> |
Wed, 21 Apr 2010 11:15:19 +0300 | |
branch | RCL_3 |
changeset 11 | 25a739ee40f4 |
parent 4 | 3b1da2848fc7 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
0 | 1 |
/**************************************************************************** |
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** |
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3b1da2848fc7
Revision: 201003
Dremov Kirill (Nokia-D-MSW/Tampere) <kirill.dremov@nokia.com>
parents:
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diff
changeset
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** Copyright (C) 2010 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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** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. |
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** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions |
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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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** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser |
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** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software |
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** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the |
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** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to |
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** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements |
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** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. |
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** |
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** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional |
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** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception |
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** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. |
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** |
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** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact |
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** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. |
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** |
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** |
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** |
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** |
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** |
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** |
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** |
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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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\class QSet |
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\brief The QSet class is a template class that provides a hash-table-based set. |
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\ingroup tools |
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\ingroup shared |
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\reentrant |
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||
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||
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QSet<T> is one of Qt's generic \l{container classes}. It stores |
|
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values in an unspecified order and provides very fast lookup of |
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the values. Internally, QSet<T> is implemented as a QHash. |
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||
55 |
Here's an example QSet with QString values: |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 0 |
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To insert a value into the set, use insert(): |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 1 |
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Another way to insert items into the set is to use operator<<(): |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 2 |
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To test whether an item belongs to the set or not, use contains(): |
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68 |
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69 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 3 |
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If you want to navigate through all the values stored in a QSet, |
|
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you can use an iterator. QSet supports both \l{Java-style |
|
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iterators} (QSetIterator and QMutableSetIterator) and \l{STL-style |
|
74 |
iterators} (QSet::iterator and QSet::const_iterator). Here's how |
|
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to iterate over a QSet<QWidget *> using a Java-style iterator: |
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77 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 4 |
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Here's the same code, but using an STL-style iterator: |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 5 |
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QSet is unordered, so an iterator's sequence cannot be assumed to |
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be predictable. If ordering by key is required, use a QMap. |
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To navigate through a QSet, you can also use \l{foreach}: |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 6 |
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Items can be removed from the set using remove(). There is also a |
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clear() function that removes all items. |
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QSet's value data type must be an \l{assignable data type}. You |
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cannot, for example, store a QWidget as a value; instead, store a |
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QWidget *. In addition, the type must provide \c operator==(), and |
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there must also be a global qHash() function that returns a hash |
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value for an argument of the key's type. See the QHash |
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documentation for a list of types supported by qHash(). |
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Internally, QSet uses a hash table to perform lookups. The hash |
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table automatically grows and shrinks to provide fast lookups |
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without wasting memory. You can still control the size of the hash |
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table by calling reserve(), if you already know approximately how |
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many elements the QSet will contain, but this isn't necessary to |
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obtain good performance. You can also call capacity() to retrieve |
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the hash table's size. |
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\sa QSetIterator, QMutableSetIterator, QHash, QMap |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn QSet::QSet() |
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Constructs an empty set. |
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\sa clear() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn QSet::QSet(const QSet<T> &other) |
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Constructs a copy of \a other. |
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This operation occurs in \l{constant time}, because QSet is |
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\l{implicitly shared}. This makes returning a QSet from a |
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function very fast. If a shared instance is modified, it will be |
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copied (copy-on-write), and this takes \l{linear time}. |
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\sa operator=() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator=(const QSet<T> &other) |
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Assigns the \a other set to this set and returns a reference to |
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this set. |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::operator==(const QSet<T> &other) const |
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Returns true if the \a other set is equal to this set; otherwise |
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returns false. |
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Two sets are considered equal if they contain the same elements. |
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This function requires the value type to implement \c operator==(). |
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\sa operator!=() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::operator!=(const QSet<T> &other) const |
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Returns true if the \a other set is not equal to this set; otherwise |
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returns false. |
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Two sets are considered equal if they contain the same elements. |
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This function requires the value type to implement \c operator==(). |
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\sa operator==() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn int QSet::size() const |
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Returns the number of items in the set. |
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\sa isEmpty(), count() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::isEmpty() const |
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Returns true if the set contains no elements; otherwise returns |
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false. |
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\sa size() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn int QSet::capacity() const |
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Returns the number of buckets in the set's internal hash |
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table. |
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The sole purpose of this function is to provide a means of fine |
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tuning QSet's memory usage. In general, you will rarely ever need |
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to call this function. If you want to know how many items are in |
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the set, call size(). |
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\sa reserve(), squeeze() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn void QSet::reserve(int size) |
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Ensures that the set's internal hash table consists of at |
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least \a size buckets. |
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This function is useful for code that needs to build a huge set |
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and wants to avoid repeated reallocation. For example: |
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\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 7 |
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Ideally, \a size should be slightly more than the maximum number |
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of elements expected in the set. \a size doesn't have to be prime, |
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because QSet will use a prime number internally anyway. If \a size |
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is an underestimate, the worst that will happen is that the QSet |
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will be a bit slower. |
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In general, you will rarely ever need to call this function. |
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QSet's internal hash table automatically shrinks or grows to |
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provide good performance without wasting too much memory. |
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\sa squeeze(), capacity() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn void QSet::squeeze() |
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Reduces the size of the set's internal hash table to save |
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memory. |
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The sole purpose of this function is to provide a means of fine |
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tuning QSet's memory usage. In general, you will rarely ever |
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need to call this function. |
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\sa reserve(), capacity() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn void QSet::detach() |
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\internal |
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Detaches this set from any other sets with which it may share |
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data. |
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\sa isDetached() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn bool QSet::isDetached() const |
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\internal |
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Returns true if the set's internal data isn't shared with any |
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other set object; otherwise returns false. |
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\sa detach() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn void QSet::setSharable(bool sharable) |
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\internal |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn void QSet::clear() |
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Removes all elements from the set. |
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\sa remove() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::remove(const T &value) |
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Removes any occurrence of item \a value from the set. Returns |
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true if an item was actually removed; otherwise returns false. |
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\sa contains(), insert() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn QSet::iterator QSet::erase(iterator pos) |
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\since 4.2 |
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Removes the item at the iterator position \a pos from the set, and |
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returns an iterator positioned at the next item in the set. |
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Unlike remove(), this function never causes QSet to rehash its |
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internal data structure. This means that it can safely be called |
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while iterating, and won't affect the order of items in the set. |
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\sa remove(), find() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::find(const T &value) const |
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\since 4.2 |
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Returns a const iterator positioned at the item \a value in the |
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set. If the set contains no item \a value, the function returns |
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constEnd(). |
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\sa constFind(), contains() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::iterator QSet::find(const T &value) |
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\since 4.2 |
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\overload |
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Returns a non-const iterator positioned at the item \a value in |
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the set. If the set contains no item \a value, the function |
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returns end(). |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::constFind(const T &value) const |
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\since 4.2 |
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Returns a const iterator positioned at the item \a value in the |
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set. If the set contains no item \a value, the function returns |
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constEnd(). |
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\sa find(), contains() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::contains(const T &value) const |
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Returns true if the set contains item \a value; otherwise returns |
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false. |
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\sa insert(), remove(), find() |
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*/ |
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/*! |
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\fn bool QSet::contains(const QSet<T> &other) const |
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\since 4.6 |
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Returns true if the set contains all items from the \a other set; |
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otherwise returns false. |
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\sa insert(), remove(), find() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::begin() const |
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} positioned at the first |
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item in the set. |
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\sa constBegin(), end() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::iterator QSet::begin() |
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\since 4.2 |
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\overload |
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Returns a non-const \l{STL-style iterator} positioned at the first |
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item in the set. |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::constBegin() const |
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} positioned at the first |
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item in the set. |
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\sa begin(), constEnd() |
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*/ |
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/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::end() const |
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362 |
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363 |
Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} positioned at the imaginary |
|
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item after the last item in the set. |
|
365 |
||
366 |
\sa constEnd(), begin() |
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*/ |
|
368 |
||
369 |
/*! \fn QSet::iterator QSet::end() |
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\since 4.2 |
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\overload |
|
372 |
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373 |
Returns a non-const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the |
|
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imaginary item after the last item in the set. |
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*/ |
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376 |
||
377 |
/*! \fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::constEnd() const |
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378 |
||
379 |
Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the imaginary |
|
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item after the last item in the set. |
|
381 |
||
382 |
\sa constBegin(), end() |
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*/ |
|
384 |
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385 |
/*! |
|
386 |
\typedef QSet::Iterator |
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\since 4.2 |
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389 |
Qt-style synonym for QSet::iterator. |
|
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*/ |
|
391 |
||
392 |
/*! |
|
393 |
\typedef QSet::ConstIterator |
|
394 |
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395 |
Qt-style synonym for QSet::const_iterator. |
|
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*/ |
|
397 |
||
398 |
/*! |
|
399 |
\typedef QSet::const_pointer |
|
400 |
||
401 |
Typedef for const T *. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
402 |
*/ |
|
403 |
||
404 |
/*! |
|
405 |
\typedef QSet::const_reference |
|
406 |
||
407 |
Typedef for const T &. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
408 |
*/ |
|
409 |
||
410 |
/*! |
|
411 |
\typedef QSet::difference_type |
|
412 |
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413 |
Typedef for const ptrdiff_t. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
414 |
*/ |
|
415 |
||
416 |
/*! |
|
417 |
\typedef QSet::key_type |
|
418 |
||
419 |
Typedef for T. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
420 |
*/ |
|
421 |
||
422 |
/*! |
|
423 |
\typedef QSet::pointer |
|
424 |
||
425 |
Typedef for T *. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
426 |
*/ |
|
427 |
||
428 |
/*! |
|
429 |
\typedef QSet::reference |
|
430 |
||
431 |
Typedef for T &. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
432 |
*/ |
|
433 |
||
434 |
/*! |
|
435 |
\typedef QSet::size_type |
|
436 |
||
437 |
Typedef for int. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
438 |
*/ |
|
439 |
||
440 |
/*! |
|
441 |
\typedef QSet::value_type |
|
442 |
||
443 |
Typedef for T. Provided for STL compatibility. |
|
444 |
*/ |
|
445 |
||
446 |
/*! |
|
447 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::insert(const T &value) |
|
448 |
||
449 |
Inserts item \a value into the set, if \a value isn't already |
|
450 |
in the set, and returns an iterator pointing at the inserted |
|
451 |
item. |
|
452 |
||
453 |
\sa operator<<(), remove(), contains() |
|
454 |
*/ |
|
455 |
||
456 |
/*! |
|
457 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::unite(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
458 |
||
459 |
Each item in the \a other set that isn't already in this set is |
|
460 |
inserted into this set. A reference to this set is returned. |
|
461 |
||
462 |
\sa operator|=(), intersect(), subtract() |
|
463 |
*/ |
|
464 |
||
465 |
/*! |
|
466 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::intersect(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
467 |
||
468 |
Removes all items from this set that are not contained in the |
|
469 |
\a other set. A reference to this set is returned. |
|
470 |
||
471 |
\sa operator&=(), unite(), subtract() |
|
472 |
*/ |
|
473 |
||
474 |
/*! |
|
475 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::subtract(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
476 |
||
477 |
Removes all items from this set that are contained in the |
|
478 |
\a other set. Returns a reference to this set. |
|
479 |
||
480 |
\sa operator-=(), unite(), intersect() |
|
481 |
*/ |
|
482 |
||
483 |
/*! |
|
484 |
\fn bool QSet::empty() const |
|
485 |
||
486 |
Returns true if the set is empty. This function is provided |
|
487 |
for STL compatibility. It is equivalent to isEmpty(). |
|
488 |
*/ |
|
489 |
||
490 |
/*! |
|
491 |
\fn bool QSet::count() const |
|
492 |
||
493 |
Same as size(). |
|
494 |
*/ |
|
495 |
||
496 |
/*! |
|
497 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator<<(const T &value) |
|
498 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator+=(const T &value) |
|
499 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator|=(const T &value) |
|
500 |
||
501 |
Inserts a new item \a value and returns a reference to the set. |
|
502 |
If \a value already exists in the set, the set is left unchanged. |
|
503 |
||
504 |
\sa insert() |
|
505 |
*/ |
|
506 |
||
507 |
/*! |
|
508 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator-=(const T &value) |
|
509 |
||
510 |
Removes the occurrence of item \a value from the set, if |
|
511 |
it is found, and returns a reference to the set. If the |
|
512 |
\a value is not contained the set, nothing is removed. |
|
513 |
||
514 |
\sa remove() |
|
515 |
*/ |
|
516 |
||
517 |
/*! |
|
518 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator|=(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
519 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator+=(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
520 |
||
521 |
Same as unite(\a other). |
|
522 |
||
523 |
\sa operator|(), operator&=(), operator-=() |
|
524 |
*/ |
|
525 |
||
526 |
/*! |
|
527 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator&=(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
528 |
||
529 |
Same as intersect(\a other). |
|
530 |
||
531 |
\sa operator&(), operator|=(), operator-=() |
|
532 |
*/ |
|
533 |
||
534 |
/*! |
|
535 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator&=(const T &value) |
|
536 |
||
537 |
\overload |
|
538 |
||
539 |
Same as intersect(\e{other}), if we consider \e{other} to be a set |
|
540 |
that contains the singleton \a value. |
|
541 |
*/ |
|
542 |
||
543 |
||
544 |
/*! |
|
545 |
\fn QSet<T> &QSet::operator-=(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
546 |
||
547 |
Same as subtract(\a{other}). |
|
548 |
||
549 |
\sa operator-(), operator|=(), operator&=() |
|
550 |
*/ |
|
551 |
||
552 |
/*! |
|
553 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator|(const QSet<T> &other) const |
|
554 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator+(const QSet<T> &other) const |
|
555 |
||
556 |
Returns a new QSet that is the union of this set and the |
|
557 |
\a other set. |
|
558 |
||
559 |
\sa unite(), operator|=(), operator&(), operator-() |
|
560 |
*/ |
|
561 |
||
562 |
/*! |
|
563 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator&(const QSet<T> &other) const |
|
564 |
||
565 |
Returns a new QSet that is the intersection of this set and the |
|
566 |
\a other set. |
|
567 |
||
568 |
\sa intersect(), operator&=(), operator|(), operator-() |
|
569 |
*/ |
|
570 |
||
571 |
/*! |
|
572 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator-(const QSet<T> &other) const |
|
573 |
||
574 |
Returns a new QSet that is the set difference of this set and |
|
575 |
the \a other set, i.e., this set - \a other set. |
|
576 |
||
577 |
\sa subtract(), operator-=(), operator|(), operator&() |
|
578 |
*/ |
|
579 |
||
580 |
/*! |
|
581 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator-(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
582 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator|(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
583 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator+(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
584 |
\fn QSet<T> QSet::operator&(const QSet<T> &other) |
|
585 |
\internal |
|
586 |
||
587 |
These will go away in Qt 5. |
|
588 |
*/ |
|
589 |
||
590 |
/*! |
|
591 |
\class QSet::iterator |
|
592 |
\since 4.2 |
|
593 |
\brief The QSet::iterator class provides an STL-style non-const iterator for QSet. |
|
594 |
||
595 |
QSet features both \l{STL-style iterators} and |
|
596 |
\l{Java-style iterators}. The STL-style iterators are more |
|
597 |
low-level and more cumbersome to use; on the other hand, they are |
|
598 |
slightly faster and, for developers who already know STL, have |
|
599 |
the advantage of familiarity. |
|
600 |
||
601 |
QSet<T>::iterator allows you to iterate over a QSet and to remove |
|
602 |
items (using QSet::erase()) while you iterate. (QSet doesn't let |
|
603 |
you \e modify a value through an iterator, because that |
|
604 |
would potentially require moving the value in the internal hash |
|
605 |
table used by QSet.) If you want to iterate over a const QSet, |
|
606 |
you should use QSet::const_iterator. It is generally good |
|
607 |
practice to use QSet::const_iterator on a non-const QSet as well, |
|
608 |
unless you need to change the QSet through the iterator. Const |
|
609 |
iterators are slightly faster, and can improve code readability. |
|
610 |
||
611 |
QSet\<T\>::iterator allows you to iterate over a QSet\<T\> and |
|
612 |
modify it as you go (using QSet::erase()). However, |
|
613 |
||
614 |
The default QSet::iterator constructor creates an uninitialized |
|
615 |
iterator. You must initialize it using a function like |
|
616 |
QSet::begin(), QSet::end(), or QSet::insert() before you can |
|
617 |
start iterating. Here's a typical loop that prints all the items |
|
618 |
stored in a set: |
|
619 |
||
620 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 8 |
|
621 |
||
622 |
Here's a loop that removes certain items (all those that start |
|
623 |
with 'J') from a set while iterating: |
|
624 |
||
625 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 9 |
|
626 |
||
627 |
STL-style iterators can be used as arguments to \l{generic |
|
628 |
algorithms}. For example, here's how to find an item in the set |
|
629 |
using the qFind() algorithm: |
|
630 |
||
631 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 10 |
|
632 |
||
633 |
Multiple iterators can be used on the same set. However, you may |
|
634 |
not attempt to modify the container while iterating on it. |
|
635 |
||
636 |
\sa QSet::const_iterator, QMutableSetIterator |
|
637 |
*/ |
|
638 |
||
639 |
/*! |
|
640 |
\class QSet::const_iterator |
|
641 |
\brief The QSet::const_iterator class provides an STL-style const iterator for QSet. |
|
642 |
\since 4.2 |
|
643 |
||
644 |
QSet features both \l{STL-style iterators} and |
|
645 |
\l{Java-style iterators}. The STL-style iterators are more |
|
646 |
low-level and more cumbersome to use; on the other hand, they are |
|
647 |
slightly faster and, for developers who already know STL, have |
|
648 |
the advantage of familiarity. |
|
649 |
||
650 |
QSet\<Key, T\>::const_iterator allows you to iterate over a QSet. |
|
651 |
If you want to modify the QSet as you iterate over it, you must |
|
652 |
use QSet::iterator instead. It is generally good practice to use |
|
653 |
QSet::const_iterator on a non-const QSet as well, unless you need |
|
654 |
to change the QSet through the iterator. Const iterators are |
|
655 |
slightly faster, and can improve code readability. |
|
656 |
||
657 |
The default QSet::const_iterator constructor creates an |
|
658 |
uninitialized iterator. You must initialize it using a function |
|
659 |
like QSet::begin(), QSet::end(), or QSet::insert() before you can |
|
660 |
start iterating. Here's a typical loop that prints all the items |
|
661 |
stored in a set: |
|
662 |
||
663 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 11 |
|
664 |
||
665 |
STL-style iterators can be used as arguments to \l{generic |
|
666 |
algorithms}. For example, here's how to find an item in the set |
|
667 |
using the qFind() algorithm: |
|
668 |
||
669 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 12 |
|
670 |
||
671 |
Multiple iterators can be used on the same set. However, you may |
|
672 |
not attempt to modify the container while iterating on it. |
|
673 |
||
674 |
\sa QSet::iterator, QSetIterator |
|
675 |
*/ |
|
676 |
||
677 |
/*! |
|
678 |
\fn QSet::iterator::iterator() |
|
679 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator::const_iterator() |
|
680 |
||
681 |
Constructs an uninitialized iterator. |
|
682 |
||
683 |
Functions like operator*() and operator++() should not be called |
|
684 |
on an uninitialized iterator. Use operator=() to assign a value |
|
685 |
to it before using it. |
|
686 |
||
687 |
\sa QSet::begin(), QSet::end() |
|
688 |
*/ |
|
689 |
||
690 |
/*! |
|
691 |
\fn QSet::iterator::iterator(typename Hash::iterator i) |
|
692 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator::const_iterator(typename Hash::const_iterator i) |
|
693 |
||
694 |
\internal |
|
695 |
*/ |
|
696 |
||
697 |
/*! |
|
698 |
\typedef QSet::iterator::iterator_category |
|
699 |
\typedef QSet::const_iterator::iterator_category |
|
700 |
||
701 |
Synonyms for \e {std::bidirectional_iterator_tag} indicating |
|
702 |
these iterators are bidirectional iterators. |
|
703 |
*/ |
|
704 |
||
705 |
/*! |
|
706 |
\typedef QSet::iterator::difference_type |
|
707 |
\typedef QSet::const_iterator::difference_type |
|
708 |
||
709 |
\internal |
|
710 |
*/ |
|
711 |
||
712 |
/*! |
|
713 |
\typedef QSet::iterator::value_type |
|
714 |
\typedef QSet::const_iterator::value_type |
|
715 |
||
716 |
\internal |
|
717 |
*/ |
|
718 |
||
719 |
/*! |
|
720 |
\typedef QSet::iterator::pointer |
|
721 |
\typedef QSet::const_iterator::pointer |
|
722 |
||
723 |
\internal |
|
724 |
*/ |
|
725 |
||
726 |
/*! |
|
727 |
\typedef QSet::iterator::reference |
|
728 |
\typedef QSet::const_iterator::reference |
|
729 |
||
730 |
\internal |
|
731 |
*/ |
|
732 |
||
733 |
/*! |
|
734 |
\fn QSet::iterator::iterator(const iterator &other) |
|
735 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator::const_iterator(const const_iterator &other) |
|
736 |
||
737 |
Constructs a copy of \a other. |
|
738 |
*/ |
|
739 |
||
740 |
/*! |
|
741 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator::const_iterator(const iterator &other) |
|
742 |
\since 4.2 |
|
743 |
\overload |
|
744 |
||
745 |
Constructs a copy of \a other. |
|
746 |
*/ |
|
747 |
||
748 |
/*! |
|
749 |
\fn QSet::iterator &QSet::iterator::operator=(const iterator &other) |
|
750 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator &QSet::const_iterator::operator=(const const_iterator &other) |
|
751 |
||
752 |
Assigns \a other to this iterator. |
|
753 |
*/ |
|
754 |
||
755 |
/*! |
|
756 |
\fn const T &QSet::iterator::operator*() const |
|
757 |
\fn const T &QSet::const_iterator::operator*() const |
|
758 |
||
759 |
Returns a reference to the current item. |
|
760 |
||
761 |
\sa operator->() |
|
762 |
*/ |
|
763 |
||
764 |
/*! |
|
765 |
\fn const T *QSet::iterator::operator->() const |
|
766 |
\fn const T *QSet::const_iterator::operator->() const |
|
767 |
||
768 |
Returns a pointer to the current item. |
|
769 |
||
770 |
\sa operator*() |
|
771 |
*/ |
|
772 |
||
773 |
/*! |
|
774 |
\fn bool QSet::iterator::operator==(const iterator &other) const |
|
775 |
\fn bool QSet::const_iterator::operator==(const const_iterator &other) const |
|
776 |
||
777 |
Returns true if \a other points to the same item as this |
|
778 |
iterator; otherwise returns false. |
|
779 |
||
780 |
\sa operator!=() |
|
781 |
*/ |
|
782 |
||
783 |
/*! |
|
784 |
\fn bool QSet::iterator::operator==(const const_iterator &other) const |
|
785 |
\fn bool QSet::iterator::operator!=(const const_iterator &other) const |
|
786 |
||
787 |
\overload |
|
788 |
*/ |
|
789 |
||
790 |
/*! |
|
791 |
\fn bool QSet::iterator::operator!=(const iterator &other) const |
|
792 |
\fn bool QSet::const_iterator::operator!=(const const_iterator &other) const |
|
793 |
||
794 |
Returns true if \a other points to a different item than this |
|
795 |
iterator; otherwise returns false. |
|
796 |
||
797 |
\sa operator==() |
|
798 |
*/ |
|
799 |
||
800 |
/*! |
|
801 |
\fn QSet::iterator &QSet::iterator::operator++() |
|
802 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator &QSet::const_iterator::operator++() |
|
803 |
||
804 |
The prefix ++ operator (\c{++it}) advances the iterator to the |
|
805 |
next item in the set and returns an iterator to the new current |
|
806 |
item. |
|
807 |
||
808 |
Calling this function on QSet::constEnd() leads to |
|
809 |
undefined results. |
|
810 |
||
811 |
\sa operator--() |
|
812 |
*/ |
|
813 |
||
814 |
/*! |
|
815 |
\fn QSet::iterator QSet::iterator::operator++(int) |
|
816 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::const_iterator::operator++(int) |
|
817 |
||
818 |
\overload |
|
819 |
||
820 |
The postfix ++ operator (\c{it++}) advances the iterator to the |
|
821 |
next item in the set and returns an iterator to the previously |
|
822 |
current item. |
|
823 |
*/ |
|
824 |
||
825 |
/*! |
|
826 |
\fn QSet::iterator &QSet::iterator::operator--() |
|
827 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator &QSet::const_iterator::operator--() |
|
828 |
||
829 |
The prefix -- operator (\c{--it}) makes the preceding item |
|
830 |
current and returns an iterator to the new current item. |
|
831 |
||
832 |
Calling this function on QSet::begin() leads to undefined |
|
833 |
results. |
|
834 |
||
835 |
\sa operator++() |
|
836 |
*/ |
|
837 |
||
838 |
/*! |
|
839 |
\fn QSet::iterator QSet::iterator::operator--(int) |
|
840 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::const_iterator::operator--(int) |
|
841 |
||
842 |
\overload |
|
843 |
||
844 |
The postfix -- operator (\c{it--}) makes the preceding item |
|
845 |
current and returns an iterator to the previously current item. |
|
846 |
*/ |
|
847 |
||
848 |
/*! |
|
849 |
\fn QSet::iterator QSet::iterator::operator+(int j) const |
|
850 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::const_iterator::operator+(int j) const |
|
851 |
||
852 |
Returns an iterator to the item at \a j positions forward from |
|
853 |
this iterator. (If \a j is negative, the iterator goes backward.) |
|
854 |
||
855 |
This operation can be slow for large \a j values. |
|
856 |
||
857 |
\sa operator-() |
|
858 |
*/ |
|
859 |
||
860 |
/*! |
|
861 |
\fn QSet::iterator QSet::iterator::operator-(int j) const |
|
862 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator QSet::const_iterator::operator-(int j) const |
|
863 |
||
864 |
Returns an iterator to the item at \a j positions backward from |
|
865 |
this iterator. (If \a j is negative, the iterator goes forward.) |
|
866 |
||
867 |
This operation can be slow for large \a j values. |
|
868 |
||
869 |
\sa operator+() |
|
870 |
*/ |
|
871 |
||
872 |
/*! |
|
873 |
\fn QSet::iterator &QSet::iterator::operator+=(int j) |
|
874 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator &QSet::const_iterator::operator+=(int j) |
|
875 |
||
876 |
Advances the iterator by \a j items. (If \a j is negative, the |
|
877 |
iterator goes backward.) |
|
878 |
||
879 |
This operation can be slow for large \a j values. |
|
880 |
||
881 |
\sa operator-=(), operator+() |
|
882 |
*/ |
|
883 |
||
884 |
/*! |
|
885 |
\fn QSet::iterator &QSet::iterator::operator-=(int j) |
|
886 |
\fn QSet::const_iterator &QSet::const_iterator::operator-=(int j) |
|
887 |
||
888 |
Makes the iterator go back by \a j items. (If \a j is negative, |
|
889 |
the iterator goes forward.) |
|
890 |
||
891 |
This operation can be slow for large \a j values. |
|
892 |
||
893 |
\sa operator+=(), operator-() |
|
894 |
*/ |
|
895 |
||
896 |
/*! \fn QList<T> QSet<T>::toList() const |
|
897 |
||
898 |
Returns a new QList containing the elements in the set. The |
|
899 |
order of the elements in the QList is undefined. |
|
900 |
||
901 |
Example: |
|
902 |
||
903 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 13 |
|
904 |
||
905 |
\sa fromList(), QList::fromSet(), qSort() |
|
906 |
*/ |
|
907 |
||
908 |
/*! \fn QList<T> QSet<T>::values() const |
|
909 |
||
910 |
Returns a new QList containing the elements in the set. The |
|
911 |
order of the elements in the QList is undefined. |
|
912 |
||
913 |
This is the same as toList(). |
|
914 |
||
915 |
\sa fromList(), QList::fromSet(), qSort() |
|
916 |
*/ |
|
917 |
||
918 |
||
919 |
/*! \fn QSet<T> QSet<T>::fromList(const QList<T> &list) |
|
920 |
||
921 |
Returns a new QSet object containing the data contained in \a |
|
922 |
list. Since QSet doesn't allow duplicates, the resulting QSet |
|
923 |
might be smaller than the \a list, because QList can contain |
|
924 |
duplicates. |
|
925 |
||
926 |
Example: |
|
927 |
||
928 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qset.qdoc 14 |
|
929 |
||
930 |
\sa toList(), QList::toSet() |
|
931 |
*/ |
|
932 |
||
933 |
/*! |
|
934 |
\fn QDataStream &operator<<(QDataStream &out, const QSet<T> &set) |
|
935 |
\relates QSet |
|
936 |
||
937 |
Writes the \a set to stream \a out. |
|
938 |
||
939 |
This function requires the value type to implement \c operator<<(). |
|
940 |
||
941 |
\sa \link datastreamformat.html Format of the QDataStream operators \endlink |
|
942 |
*/ |
|
943 |
||
944 |
/*! |
|
945 |
\fn QDataStream &operator>>(QDataStream &in, QSet<T> &set) |
|
946 |
\relates QSet |
|
947 |
||
948 |
Reads a set from stream \a in into \a set. |
|
949 |
||
950 |
This function requires the value type to implement \c operator>>(). |
|
951 |
||
952 |
\sa \link datastreamformat.html Format of the QDataStream operators \endlink |
|
953 |
*/ |