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1 /**************************************************************************** |
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2 ** |
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3 ** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). |
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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 /*! |
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43 \example webkit/fancybrowser |
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44 \title Fancy Browser Example |
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45 |
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46 The Fancy Browser example shows how to use jQuery with QtWebKit to |
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47 create a web browser with special effects and content |
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48 manipulation. |
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49 |
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50 \image fancybrowser-example.png |
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51 |
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52 The application makes use of QWebFrame::evaluateJavaScript to |
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53 evaluate the jQuery JavaScript code. A QMainWindow with a QWebView |
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54 as central widget builds up the browser itself. |
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55 |
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56 \section1 MainWindow Class Definition |
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57 |
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58 The \c MainWindow class inherits QMainWindow. It implements a number of |
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59 slots to perform actions on both the application and on the web content. |
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60 |
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61 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.h 1 |
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62 |
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63 We also declare a QString that contains the jQuery, a QWebView |
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64 that displays the web content, and a QLineEdit that acts as the |
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65 address bar. |
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66 |
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67 \section1 MainWindow Class Implementation |
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68 |
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69 We start by implementing the constructor. |
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70 |
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71 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 1 |
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72 |
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73 The first part of the constructor sets the value of \c progress to |
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74 0. This value will be used later in the code to visualize the |
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75 loading of a webpage. |
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76 |
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77 Next, the jQuery library is loaded using a QFile and reading the file |
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78 content. The jQuery library is a JavaScript library that provides different |
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79 functions for manipulating HTML. |
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80 |
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81 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 2 |
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82 |
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83 The second part of the constructor creates a QWebView and connects |
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84 slots to the views signals. Furthermore, we create a QLineEdit as |
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85 the browsers address bar. We then set the horizontal QSizePolicy |
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86 to fill the available area in the browser at all times. We add the |
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87 QLineEdit to a QToolbar together with a set of navigation actions |
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88 from QWebView::pageAction. |
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89 |
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90 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 3 |
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91 |
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92 The third and last part of the constructor implements two QMenus and assigns |
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93 a set of actions to them. The last line sets the QWebView as the central |
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94 widget in the QMainWindow. |
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95 |
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96 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 4 |
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97 |
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98 When the page is loaded, \c adjustLocation() updates the address |
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99 bar; \c adjustLocation() is triggered by the \c loadFinished() |
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100 signal in QWebView. In \c changeLocation() we create a QUrl |
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101 object, and then use it to load the page into the QWebView. When |
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102 the new web page has finished loading, \c adjustLocation() will be |
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103 run once more to update the address bar. |
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104 |
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105 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 5 |
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106 |
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107 \c adjustTitle() sets the window title and displays the loading |
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108 progress. This slot is triggered by the \c titleChanged() signal |
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109 in QWebView. |
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110 |
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111 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 6 |
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112 |
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113 When a web page has loaded, \c finishLoading() is triggered by the |
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114 \c loadFinished() signal in QWebView. \c finishLoading() then updates the |
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115 progress in the title bar and calls \c evaluateJavaScript() to evaluate the |
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116 jQuery library. This evaluates the JavaScript against the current web page. |
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117 What that means is that the JavaScript can be viewed as part of the content |
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118 loaded into the QWebView, and therefore needs to be loaded every time a new |
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119 page is loaded. Once the jQuery library is loaded, we can start executing |
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120 the different jQuery functions in the browser. |
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121 |
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122 The rotateImages() function is then called explicitely to make sure |
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123 that the images of the newly loaded page respect the state of the toggle |
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124 action. |
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125 |
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126 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 7 |
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127 |
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128 The first jQuery-based function, \c highlightAllLinks(), is designed to |
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129 highlight all links in the current webpage. The JavaScript code looks |
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130 for web elements named \e {a}, which is the tag for a hyperlink. |
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131 For each such element, the background color is set to be yellow by |
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132 using CSS. |
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133 |
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134 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 8 |
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135 |
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136 The \c rotateImages() function rotates the images on the current |
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137 web page. Webkit supports CSS transforms and this JavaScript code |
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138 looks up all \e {img} elements and rotates the images 180 degrees |
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139 and then back again. |
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140 |
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141 \snippet examples/webkit/fancybrowser/mainwindow.cpp 9 |
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142 |
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143 The remaining four methods remove different elements from the current web |
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144 page. \c removeGifImages() removes all Gif images on the page by looking up |
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145 the \e {src} attribute of all the elements on the web page. Any element with |
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146 a \e {gif} file as its source is removed. \c removeInlineFrames() removes all |
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147 \e {iframe} or inline elements. \c removeObjectElements() removes all |
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148 \e {object} elements, and \c removeEmbeddedElements() removes any elements |
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149 such as plugins embedded on the page using the \e {embed} tag. |
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150 |
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151 */ |
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152 |