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1 /**************************************************************************** |
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2 ** |
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3 ** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). |
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4 ** All rights reserved. |
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5 ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) |
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6 ** |
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7 ** This file is part of the QtGui module of the Qt Toolkit. |
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8 ** |
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9 ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ |
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10 ** No Commercial Usage |
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11 ** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. |
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12 ** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions |
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13 ** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying |
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14 ** this package. |
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15 ** |
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16 ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage |
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17 ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser |
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18 ** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software |
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19 ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the |
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20 ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to |
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21 ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements |
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22 ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. |
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23 ** |
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24 ** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional |
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25 ** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception |
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26 ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. |
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27 ** |
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28 ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact |
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29 ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. |
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30 ** |
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31 ** |
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32 ** |
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33 ** |
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34 ** |
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35 ** |
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36 ** |
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37 ** |
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38 ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ |
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39 ** |
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40 ****************************************************************************/ |
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41 |
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42 #include <qdebug.h> |
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43 |
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44 #include "qvalidator.h" |
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45 #ifndef QT_NO_VALIDATOR |
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46 #include "private/qobject_p.h" |
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47 #include "private/qlocale_p.h" |
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48 |
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49 #include <limits.h> |
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50 #include <math.h> |
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51 |
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52 QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE |
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53 |
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54 /*! |
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55 \class QValidator |
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56 \brief The QValidator class provides validation of input text. |
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57 |
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58 The class itself is abstract. Two subclasses, \l QIntValidator and |
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59 \l QDoubleValidator, provide basic numeric-range checking, and \l |
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60 QRegExpValidator provides general checking using a custom regular |
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61 expression. |
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62 |
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63 If the built-in validators aren't sufficient, you can subclass |
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64 QValidator. The class has two virtual functions: validate() and |
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65 fixup(). |
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66 |
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67 \l validate() must be implemented by every subclass. It returns |
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68 \l Invalid, \l Intermediate or \l Acceptable depending on whether |
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69 its argument is valid (for the subclass's definition of valid). |
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70 |
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71 These three states require some explanation. An \l Invalid string |
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72 is \e clearly invalid. \l Intermediate is less obvious: the |
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73 concept of validity is difficult to apply when the string is |
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74 incomplete (still being edited). QValidator defines \l Intermediate |
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75 as the property of a string that is neither clearly invalid nor |
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76 acceptable as a final result. \l Acceptable means that the string |
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77 is acceptable as a final result. One might say that any string |
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78 that is a plausible intermediate state during entry of an \l |
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79 Acceptable string is \l Intermediate. |
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80 |
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81 Here are some examples: |
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82 |
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83 \list |
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84 |
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85 \i For a line edit that accepts integers from 10 to 1000 inclusive, |
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86 42 and 123 are \l Acceptable, the empty string and 5 are \l |
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87 Intermediate, and "asdf" and 1114 is \l Invalid. |
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88 |
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89 \i For an editable combobox that accepts URLs, any well-formed URL |
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90 is \l Acceptable, "http://example.com/," is \l Intermediate |
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91 (it might be a cut and paste action that accidentally took in a |
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92 comma at the end), the empty string is \l Intermediate (the user |
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93 might select and delete all of the text in preparation for entering |
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94 a new URL) and "http:///./" is \l Invalid. |
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95 |
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96 \i For a spin box that accepts lengths, "11cm" and "1in" are \l |
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97 Acceptable, "11" and the empty string are \l Intermediate, and |
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98 "http://example.com" and "hour" are \l Invalid. |
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99 |
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100 \endlist |
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101 |
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102 \l fixup() is provided for validators that can repair some user |
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103 errors. The default implementation does nothing. QLineEdit, for |
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104 example, will call fixup() if the user presses Enter (or Return) |
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105 and the content is not currently valid. This allows the fixup() |
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106 function the opportunity of performing some magic to make an \l |
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107 Invalid string \l Acceptable. |
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108 |
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109 A validator has a locale, set with setLocale(). It is typically used |
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110 to parse localized data. For example, QIntValidator and QDoubleValidator |
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111 use it to parse localized representations of integers and doubles. |
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112 |
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113 QValidator is typically used with QLineEdit, QSpinBox and |
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114 QComboBox. |
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115 |
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116 \sa QIntValidator, QDoubleValidator, QRegExpValidator, {Line Edits Example} |
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117 */ |
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118 |
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119 |
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120 /*! |
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121 \enum QValidator::State |
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122 |
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123 This enum type defines the states in which a validated string can |
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124 exist. |
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125 |
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126 \value Invalid The string is \e clearly invalid. |
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127 \value Intermediate The string is a plausible intermediate value. |
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128 \value Acceptable The string is acceptable as a final result; |
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129 i.e. it is valid. |
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130 |
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131 \omitvalue Valid |
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132 */ |
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133 |
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134 class QValidatorPrivate : public QObjectPrivate{ |
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135 Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC(QValidator) |
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136 public: |
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137 QValidatorPrivate() : QObjectPrivate() |
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138 { |
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139 } |
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140 |
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141 QLocale locale; |
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142 }; |
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143 |
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144 |
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145 /*! |
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146 Sets up the validator. The \a parent parameter is |
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147 passed on to the QObject constructor. |
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148 */ |
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149 |
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150 QValidator::QValidator(QObject * parent) |
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151 : QObject(*new QValidatorPrivate, parent) |
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152 { |
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153 } |
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154 |
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155 #ifdef QT3_SUPPORT |
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156 /*! |
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157 \obsolete |
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158 Sets up the validator. The \a parent and \a name parameters are |
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159 passed on to the QObject constructor. |
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160 */ |
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161 |
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162 QValidator::QValidator(QObject * parent, const char *name) |
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163 : QObject(*new QValidatorPrivate, parent) |
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164 { |
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165 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
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166 } |
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167 #endif |
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168 |
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169 /*! |
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170 Destroys the validator, freeing any storage and other resources |
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171 used. |
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172 */ |
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173 |
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174 QValidator::~QValidator() |
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175 { |
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176 } |
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177 |
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178 /*! |
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179 Returns the locale for the validator. The locale is by default initialized to the same as QLocale(). |
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180 |
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181 \sa setLocale() |
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182 \sa QLocale::QLocale() |
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183 */ |
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184 QLocale QValidator::locale() const |
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185 { |
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186 Q_D(const QValidator); |
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187 return d->locale; |
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188 } |
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189 |
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190 /*! |
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191 Sets the \a locale that will be used for the validator. Unless |
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192 setLocale has been called, the validator will use the default |
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193 locale set with QLocale::setDefault(). If a default locale has not |
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194 been set, it is the operating system's locale. |
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195 |
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196 \sa locale() QLocale::setDefault() |
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197 */ |
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198 void QValidator::setLocale(const QLocale &locale) |
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199 { |
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200 Q_D(QValidator); |
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201 d->locale = locale; |
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202 } |
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203 |
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204 /*! |
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205 \fn QValidator::State QValidator::validate(QString &input, int &pos) const |
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206 |
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207 This virtual function returns \l Invalid if \a input is invalid |
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208 according to this validator's rules, \l Intermediate if it |
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209 is likely that a little more editing will make the input |
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210 acceptable (e.g. the user types "4" into a widget which accepts |
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211 integers between 10 and 99), and \l Acceptable if the input is |
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212 valid. |
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213 |
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214 The function can change both \a input and \a pos (the cursor position) |
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215 if required. |
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216 */ |
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217 |
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218 |
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219 /*! |
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220 \fn void QValidator::fixup(QString & input) const |
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221 |
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222 This function attempts to change \a input to be valid according to |
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223 this validator's rules. It need not result in a valid string: |
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224 callers of this function must re-test afterwards; the default does |
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225 nothing. |
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226 |
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227 Reimplementations of this function can change \a input even if |
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228 they do not produce a valid string. For example, an ISBN validator |
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229 might want to delete every character except digits and "-", even |
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230 if the result is still not a valid ISBN; a surname validator might |
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231 want to remove whitespace from the start and end of the string, |
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232 even if the resulting string is not in the list of accepted |
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233 surnames. |
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234 */ |
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235 |
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236 void QValidator::fixup(QString &) const |
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237 { |
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238 } |
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239 |
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240 |
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241 /*! |
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242 \class QIntValidator |
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243 \brief The QIntValidator class provides a validator that ensures |
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244 a string contains a valid integer within a specified range. |
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245 |
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246 Example of use: |
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247 |
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248 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_widgets_qvalidator.cpp 0 |
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249 |
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250 Below we present some examples of validators. In practice they would |
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251 normally be associated with a widget as in the example above. |
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252 |
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253 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_widgets_qvalidator.cpp 1 |
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254 |
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255 Notice that the value \c 999 returns Intermediate. Values |
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256 consisting of a number of digits equal to or less than the max |
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257 value are considered intermediate. This is intended because the |
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258 digit that prevents a number to be in range is not necessarily the |
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259 last digit typed. This also means that an intermediate number can |
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260 have leading zeros. |
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261 |
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262 The minimum and maximum values are set in one call with setRange(), |
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263 or individually with setBottom() and setTop(). |
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264 |
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265 QIntValidator uses its locale() to interpret the number. For example, |
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266 in Arabic locales, QIntValidator will accept Arabic digits. In addition, |
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267 QIntValidator is always guaranteed to accept a number formatted according |
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268 to the "C" locale. |
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269 |
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270 \sa QDoubleValidator, QRegExpValidator, {Line Edits Example} |
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271 */ |
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272 |
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273 /*! |
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274 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object that |
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275 accepts all integers. |
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276 */ |
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277 |
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278 QIntValidator::QIntValidator(QObject * parent) |
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279 : QValidator(parent) |
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280 { |
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281 b = INT_MIN; |
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282 t = INT_MAX; |
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283 } |
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284 |
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285 |
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286 /*! |
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287 Constructs a validator with a \a parent, that accepts integers |
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288 from \a minimum to \a maximum inclusive. |
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289 */ |
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290 |
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291 QIntValidator::QIntValidator(int minimum, int maximum, |
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292 QObject * parent) |
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293 : QValidator(parent) |
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294 { |
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295 b = minimum; |
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296 t = maximum; |
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297 } |
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298 |
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299 |
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300 #ifdef QT3_SUPPORT |
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301 /*! |
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302 \obsolete |
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303 |
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304 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object and a \a name that |
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305 accepts all integers. |
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306 */ |
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307 |
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308 QIntValidator::QIntValidator(QObject * parent, const char *name) |
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309 : QValidator(parent) |
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310 { |
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311 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
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312 b = INT_MIN; |
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313 t = INT_MAX; |
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314 } |
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315 |
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316 |
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317 /*! |
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318 \obsolete |
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319 |
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320 Constructs a validator called \a name with a \a parent, that |
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321 accepts integers from \a minimum to \a maximum inclusive. |
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322 */ |
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323 |
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324 QIntValidator::QIntValidator(int minimum, int maximum, |
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325 QObject * parent, const char* name) |
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326 : QValidator(parent) |
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327 { |
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328 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
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329 b = minimum; |
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330 t = maximum; |
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331 } |
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332 #endif |
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333 |
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334 /*! |
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335 Destroys the validator. |
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336 */ |
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337 |
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338 QIntValidator::~QIntValidator() |
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339 { |
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340 // nothing |
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341 } |
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342 |
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343 |
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344 /*! |
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345 \fn QValidator::State QIntValidator::validate(QString &input, int &pos) const |
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346 |
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347 Returns \l Acceptable if the \a input is an integer within the |
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348 valid range, \l Intermediate if the \a input is a prefix of an integer in the |
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349 valid range, and \l Invalid otherwise. |
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350 |
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351 If the valid range consists of just positive integers (e.g., 32 to 100) |
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352 and \a input is a negative integer, then Invalid is returned. (On the other |
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353 hand, if the range consists of negative integers (e.g., -100 to -32) and |
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354 \a input is a positive integer, then Intermediate is returned, because |
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355 the user might be just about to type the minus (especially for right-to-left |
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356 languages). |
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357 |
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358 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_widgets_qvalidator.cpp 2 |
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359 |
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360 By default, the \a pos parameter is not used by this validator. |
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361 */ |
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362 |
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363 static int numDigits(qlonglong n) |
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364 { |
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365 if (n == 0) |
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366 return 1; |
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367 return (int)log10(double(n)) + 1; |
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368 } |
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369 |
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370 static qlonglong pow10(int exp) |
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371 { |
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372 qlonglong result = 1; |
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373 for (int i = 0; i < exp; ++i) |
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374 result *= 10; |
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375 return result; |
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376 } |
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377 |
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378 QValidator::State QIntValidator::validate(QString & input, int&) const |
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379 { |
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380 QByteArray buff; |
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381 if (!locale().d()->validateChars(input, QLocalePrivate::IntegerMode, &buff)) { |
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382 QLocale cl(QLocale::C); |
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383 if (!cl.d()->validateChars(input, QLocalePrivate::IntegerMode, &buff)) |
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384 return Invalid; |
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385 } |
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386 |
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387 if (buff.isEmpty()) |
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388 return Intermediate; |
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389 |
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390 if (b >= 0 && buff.startsWith('-')) |
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391 return Invalid; |
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392 |
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393 if (t < 0 && buff.startsWith('+')) |
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394 return Invalid; |
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395 |
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396 if (buff.size() == 1 && (buff.at(0) == '+' || buff.at(0) == '-')) |
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397 return Intermediate; |
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398 |
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399 bool ok, overflow; |
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400 qlonglong entered = QLocalePrivate::bytearrayToLongLong(buff.constData(), 10, &ok, &overflow); |
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401 if (overflow || !ok) |
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402 return Invalid; |
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403 if (entered >= b && entered <= t) |
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404 return Acceptable; |
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405 |
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406 if (entered >= 0) { |
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407 // the -entered < b condition is necessary to allow people to type |
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408 // the minus last (e.g. for right-to-left languages) |
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409 return (entered > t && -entered < b) ? Invalid : Intermediate; |
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410 } else { |
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411 return (entered < b) ? Invalid : Intermediate; |
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412 } |
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413 } |
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414 |
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415 |
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416 /*! |
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417 Sets the range of the validator to only accept integers between \a |
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418 bottom and \a top inclusive. |
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419 */ |
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420 |
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421 void QIntValidator::setRange(int bottom, int top) |
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422 { |
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423 b = bottom; |
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424 t = top; |
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425 } |
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426 |
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427 |
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428 /*! |
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429 \property QIntValidator::bottom |
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430 \brief the validator's lowest acceptable value |
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431 |
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432 By default, this property's value is derived from the lowest signed |
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433 integer available (typically -2147483647). |
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434 |
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435 \sa setRange() |
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436 */ |
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437 void QIntValidator::setBottom(int bottom) |
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438 { |
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439 setRange(bottom, top()); |
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440 } |
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441 |
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442 /*! |
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443 \property QIntValidator::top |
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444 \brief the validator's highest acceptable value |
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445 |
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446 By default, this property's value is derived from the highest signed |
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447 integer available (typically 2147483647). |
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448 |
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449 \sa setRange() |
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450 */ |
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451 void QIntValidator::setTop(int top) |
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452 { |
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453 setRange(bottom(), top); |
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454 } |
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455 |
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456 |
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457 #ifndef QT_NO_REGEXP |
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458 |
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459 /*! |
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460 \internal |
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461 */ |
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462 QValidator::QValidator(QObjectPrivate &d, QObject *parent) |
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463 : QObject(d, parent) |
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464 { |
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465 } |
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466 |
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467 /*! |
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468 \internal |
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469 */ |
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470 QValidator::QValidator(QValidatorPrivate &d, QObject *parent) |
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471 : QObject(d, parent) |
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472 { |
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473 } |
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474 |
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475 class QDoubleValidatorPrivate : public QValidatorPrivate |
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476 { |
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477 Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC(QDoubleValidator) |
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478 public: |
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479 QDoubleValidatorPrivate() |
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480 : QValidatorPrivate() |
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481 , notation(QDoubleValidator::ScientificNotation) |
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482 { |
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483 } |
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484 |
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485 QDoubleValidator::Notation notation; |
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486 }; |
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487 |
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488 |
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489 /*! |
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490 \class QDoubleValidator |
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491 |
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492 \brief The QDoubleValidator class provides range checking of |
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493 floating-point numbers. |
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494 |
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495 QDoubleValidator provides an upper bound, a lower bound, and a |
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496 limit on the number of digits after the decimal point. It does not |
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497 provide a fixup() function. |
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498 |
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499 You can set the acceptable range in one call with setRange(), or |
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500 with setBottom() and setTop(). Set the number of decimal places |
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501 with setDecimals(). The validate() function returns the validation |
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502 state. |
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503 |
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504 QDoubleValidator uses its locale() to interpret the number. For example, |
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505 in the German locale, "1,234" will be accepted as the fractional number |
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506 1.234. In Arabic locales, QDoubleValidator will accept Arabic digits. |
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507 |
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508 In addition, QDoubleValidator is always guaranteed to accept a number |
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509 formatted according to the "C" locale. QDoubleValidator will not accept |
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510 numbers with thousand-seperators. |
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511 |
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512 \sa QIntValidator, QRegExpValidator, {Line Edits Example} |
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513 */ |
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514 |
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515 /*! |
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516 \enum QDoubleValidator::Notation |
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517 \since 4.3 |
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518 This enum defines the allowed notations for entering a double. |
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519 |
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520 \value StandardNotation The string is written as a standard number |
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521 (i.e. 0.015). |
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522 \value ScientificNotation The string is written in scientific |
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523 form. It may have an exponent part(i.e. 1.5E-2). |
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524 */ |
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525 |
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526 /*! |
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527 Constructs a validator object with a \a parent object |
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528 that accepts any double. |
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529 */ |
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530 |
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531 QDoubleValidator::QDoubleValidator(QObject * parent) |
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532 : QValidator(*new QDoubleValidatorPrivate , parent) |
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533 { |
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534 b = -HUGE_VAL; |
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535 t = HUGE_VAL; |
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536 dec = 1000; |
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537 } |
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538 |
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539 |
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540 /*! |
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541 Constructs a validator object with a \a parent object. This |
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542 validator will accept doubles from \a bottom to \a top inclusive, |
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543 with up to \a decimals digits after the decimal point. |
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544 */ |
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545 |
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546 QDoubleValidator::QDoubleValidator(double bottom, double top, int decimals, |
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547 QObject * parent) |
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548 : QValidator(*new QDoubleValidatorPrivate , parent) |
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549 { |
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550 b = bottom; |
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551 t = top; |
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552 dec = decimals; |
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553 } |
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554 |
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555 #ifdef QT3_SUPPORT |
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556 /*! |
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557 \obsolete |
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558 |
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559 Constructs a validator object with a \a parent object and a \a name |
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560 that accepts any double. |
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561 */ |
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562 |
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563 QDoubleValidator::QDoubleValidator(QObject * parent, const char *name) |
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564 : QValidator(*new QDoubleValidatorPrivate , parent) |
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565 { |
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566 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
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567 b = -HUGE_VAL; |
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568 t = HUGE_VAL; |
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569 dec = 1000; |
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570 } |
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571 |
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572 |
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573 /*! |
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574 \obsolete |
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575 |
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576 Constructs a validator object with a \a parent object, called \a |
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577 name. This validator will accept doubles from \a bottom to \a top |
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578 inclusive, with up to \a decimals digits after the decimal point. |
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579 */ |
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580 |
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581 QDoubleValidator::QDoubleValidator(double bottom, double top, int decimals, |
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582 QObject * parent, const char* name) |
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583 : QValidator(*new QDoubleValidatorPrivate, parent) |
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584 { |
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585 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
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586 b = bottom; |
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587 t = top; |
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588 dec = decimals; |
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589 } |
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590 #endif |
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591 |
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592 /*! |
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593 Destroys the validator. |
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594 */ |
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595 |
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596 QDoubleValidator::~QDoubleValidator() |
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597 { |
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598 } |
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599 |
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600 |
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601 /*! |
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602 \fn QValidator::State QDoubleValidator::validate(QString &input, int &pos) const |
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603 |
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604 Returns \l Acceptable if the string \a input contains a double |
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605 that is within the valid range and is in the correct format. |
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606 |
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607 Returns \l Intermediate if \a input contains a double that is |
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608 outside the range or is in the wrong format; e.g. with too many |
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609 digits after the decimal point or is empty. |
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610 |
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611 Returns \l Invalid if the \a input is not a double. |
|
612 |
|
613 Note: If the valid range consists of just positive doubles (e.g. 0.0 to 100.0) |
|
614 and \a input is a negative double then \l Invalid is returned. If notation() |
|
615 is set to StandardNotation, and the input contains more digits before the |
|
616 decimal point than a double in the valid range may have, \l Invalid is returned. |
|
617 If notation() is ScientificNotation, and the input is not in the valid range, |
|
618 \l Intermediate is returned. The value may yet become valid by changing the exponent. |
|
619 |
|
620 By default, the \a pos parameter is not used by this validator. |
|
621 */ |
|
622 |
|
623 #ifndef LLONG_MAX |
|
624 # define LLONG_MAX Q_INT64_C(0x7fffffffffffffff) |
|
625 #endif |
|
626 |
|
627 QValidator::State QDoubleValidator::validate(QString & input, int &) const |
|
628 { |
|
629 Q_D(const QDoubleValidator); |
|
630 |
|
631 QLocalePrivate::NumberMode numMode = QLocalePrivate::DoubleStandardMode; |
|
632 switch (d->notation) { |
|
633 case StandardNotation: |
|
634 numMode = QLocalePrivate::DoubleStandardMode; |
|
635 break; |
|
636 case ScientificNotation: |
|
637 numMode = QLocalePrivate::DoubleScientificMode; |
|
638 break; |
|
639 } |
|
640 |
|
641 QByteArray buff; |
|
642 if (!locale().d()->validateChars(input, numMode, &buff, dec)) { |
|
643 QLocale cl(QLocale::C); |
|
644 if (!cl.d()->validateChars(input, numMode, &buff, dec)) |
|
645 return Invalid; |
|
646 } |
|
647 |
|
648 if (buff.isEmpty()) |
|
649 return Intermediate; |
|
650 |
|
651 if (b >= 0 && buff.startsWith('-')) |
|
652 return Invalid; |
|
653 |
|
654 if (t < 0 && buff.startsWith('+')) |
|
655 return Invalid; |
|
656 |
|
657 bool ok, overflow; |
|
658 double i = QLocalePrivate::bytearrayToDouble(buff.constData(), &ok, &overflow); |
|
659 if (overflow) |
|
660 return Invalid; |
|
661 if (!ok) |
|
662 return Intermediate; |
|
663 |
|
664 if (i >= b && i <= t) |
|
665 return Acceptable; |
|
666 |
|
667 if (d->notation == StandardNotation) { |
|
668 double max = qMax(qAbs(b), qAbs(t)); |
|
669 if (max < LLONG_MAX) { |
|
670 qlonglong n = pow10(numDigits(qlonglong(max))) - 1; |
|
671 if (qAbs(i) > n) |
|
672 return Invalid; |
|
673 } |
|
674 } |
|
675 |
|
676 return Intermediate; |
|
677 } |
|
678 |
|
679 |
|
680 /*! |
|
681 Sets the validator to accept doubles from \a minimum to \a maximum |
|
682 inclusive, with at most \a decimals digits after the decimal |
|
683 point. |
|
684 */ |
|
685 |
|
686 void QDoubleValidator::setRange(double minimum, double maximum, int decimals) |
|
687 { |
|
688 b = minimum; |
|
689 t = maximum; |
|
690 dec = decimals; |
|
691 } |
|
692 |
|
693 /*! |
|
694 \property QDoubleValidator::bottom |
|
695 \brief the validator's minimum acceptable value |
|
696 |
|
697 By default, this property contains a value of -infinity. |
|
698 |
|
699 \sa setRange() |
|
700 */ |
|
701 |
|
702 void QDoubleValidator::setBottom(double bottom) |
|
703 { |
|
704 setRange(bottom, top(), decimals()); |
|
705 } |
|
706 |
|
707 |
|
708 /*! |
|
709 \property QDoubleValidator::top |
|
710 \brief the validator's maximum acceptable value |
|
711 |
|
712 By default, this property contains a value of infinity. |
|
713 |
|
714 \sa setRange() |
|
715 */ |
|
716 |
|
717 void QDoubleValidator::setTop(double top) |
|
718 { |
|
719 setRange(bottom(), top, decimals()); |
|
720 } |
|
721 |
|
722 /*! |
|
723 \property QDoubleValidator::decimals |
|
724 \brief the validator's maximum number of digits after the decimal point |
|
725 |
|
726 By default, this property contains a value of 1000. |
|
727 |
|
728 \sa setRange() |
|
729 */ |
|
730 |
|
731 void QDoubleValidator::setDecimals(int decimals) |
|
732 { |
|
733 setRange(bottom(), top(), decimals); |
|
734 } |
|
735 |
|
736 /*! |
|
737 \property QDoubleValidator::notation |
|
738 \since 4.3 |
|
739 \brief the notation of how a string can describe a number |
|
740 |
|
741 By default, this property is set to ScientificNotation. |
|
742 |
|
743 \sa Notation |
|
744 */ |
|
745 |
|
746 void QDoubleValidator::setNotation(Notation newNotation) |
|
747 { |
|
748 Q_D(QDoubleValidator); |
|
749 d->notation = newNotation; |
|
750 } |
|
751 |
|
752 QDoubleValidator::Notation QDoubleValidator::notation() const |
|
753 { |
|
754 Q_D(const QDoubleValidator); |
|
755 return d->notation; |
|
756 } |
|
757 |
|
758 /*! |
|
759 \class QRegExpValidator |
|
760 \brief The QRegExpValidator class is used to check a string |
|
761 against a regular expression. |
|
762 |
|
763 QRegExpValidator uses a regular expression (regexp) to |
|
764 determine whether an input string is \l Acceptable, \l |
|
765 Intermediate, or \l Invalid. The regexp can either be supplied |
|
766 when the QRegExpValidator is constructed, or at a later time. |
|
767 |
|
768 When QRegExpValidator determines whether a string is \l Acceptable |
|
769 or not, the regexp is treated as if it begins with the start of string |
|
770 assertion (\bold{^}) and ends with the end of string assertion |
|
771 (\bold{$}); the match is against the entire input string, or from |
|
772 the given position if a start position greater than zero is given. |
|
773 |
|
774 If a string is a prefix of an \l Acceptable string, it is considered |
|
775 \l Intermediate. For example, "" and "A" are \l Intermediate for the |
|
776 regexp \bold{[A-Z][0-9]} (whereas "_" would be \l Invalid). |
|
777 |
|
778 For a brief introduction to Qt's regexp engine, see \l QRegExp. |
|
779 |
|
780 Example of use: |
|
781 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_widgets_qvalidator.cpp 3 |
|
782 |
|
783 Below we present some examples of validators. In practice they would |
|
784 normally be associated with a widget as in the example above. |
|
785 |
|
786 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_widgets_qvalidator.cpp 4 |
|
787 |
|
788 \sa QRegExp, QIntValidator, QDoubleValidator, {Settings Editor Example} |
|
789 */ |
|
790 |
|
791 /*! |
|
792 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object that accepts |
|
793 any string (including an empty one) as valid. |
|
794 */ |
|
795 |
|
796 QRegExpValidator::QRegExpValidator(QObject *parent) |
|
797 : QValidator(parent), r(QString::fromLatin1(".*")) |
|
798 { |
|
799 } |
|
800 |
|
801 /*! |
|
802 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object that |
|
803 accepts all strings that match the regular expression \a rx. |
|
804 |
|
805 The match is made against the entire string; e.g. if the regexp is |
|
806 \bold{[A-Fa-f0-9]+} it will be treated as \bold{^[A-Fa-f0-9]+$}. |
|
807 */ |
|
808 |
|
809 QRegExpValidator::QRegExpValidator(const QRegExp& rx, QObject *parent) |
|
810 : QValidator(parent), r(rx) |
|
811 { |
|
812 } |
|
813 |
|
814 #ifdef QT3_SUPPORT |
|
815 /*! |
|
816 \obsolete |
|
817 |
|
818 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object and \a name that accepts |
|
819 any string (including an empty one) as valid. |
|
820 */ |
|
821 |
|
822 QRegExpValidator::QRegExpValidator(QObject *parent, const char *name) |
|
823 : QValidator(parent), r(QString::fromLatin1(".*")) |
|
824 { |
|
825 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
|
826 } |
|
827 |
|
828 /*! |
|
829 \obsolete |
|
830 |
|
831 Constructs a validator with a \a parent object and a \a name that |
|
832 accepts all strings that match the regular expression \a rx. |
|
833 |
|
834 The match is made against the entire string; e.g. if the regexp is |
|
835 \bold{[A-Fa-f0-9]+} it will be treated as \bold{^[A-Fa-f0-9]+$}. |
|
836 */ |
|
837 |
|
838 QRegExpValidator::QRegExpValidator(const QRegExp& rx, QObject *parent, |
|
839 const char *name) |
|
840 : QValidator(parent), r(rx) |
|
841 { |
|
842 setObjectName(QString::fromAscii(name)); |
|
843 } |
|
844 #endif |
|
845 |
|
846 /*! |
|
847 Destroys the validator. |
|
848 */ |
|
849 |
|
850 QRegExpValidator::~QRegExpValidator() |
|
851 { |
|
852 } |
|
853 |
|
854 /*! |
|
855 Returns \l Acceptable if \a input is matched by the regular |
|
856 expression for this validator, \l Intermediate if it has matched |
|
857 partially (i.e. could be a valid match if additional valid |
|
858 characters are added), and \l Invalid if \a input is not matched. |
|
859 |
|
860 The \a pos parameter is set to the length of the \a input parameter. |
|
861 |
|
862 For example, if the regular expression is \bold{\\w\\d\\d} |
|
863 (word-character, digit, digit) then "A57" is \l Acceptable, |
|
864 "E5" is \l Intermediate, and "+9" is \l Invalid. |
|
865 |
|
866 \sa QRegExp::exactMatch() |
|
867 */ |
|
868 |
|
869 QValidator::State QRegExpValidator::validate(QString &input, int& pos) const |
|
870 { |
|
871 if (r.exactMatch(input)) { |
|
872 return Acceptable; |
|
873 } else { |
|
874 if (const_cast<QRegExp &>(r).matchedLength() == input.size()) { |
|
875 return Intermediate; |
|
876 } else { |
|
877 pos = input.size(); |
|
878 return Invalid; |
|
879 } |
|
880 } |
|
881 } |
|
882 |
|
883 /*! |
|
884 \property QRegExpValidator::regExp |
|
885 \brief the regular expression used for validation |
|
886 |
|
887 By default, this property contains a regular expression with the pattern \c{.*} |
|
888 that matches any string. |
|
889 */ |
|
890 |
|
891 void QRegExpValidator::setRegExp(const QRegExp& rx) |
|
892 { |
|
893 r = rx; |
|
894 } |
|
895 |
|
896 #endif |
|
897 |
|
898 QT_END_NAMESPACE |
|
899 |
|
900 #endif // QT_NO_VALIDATOR |