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// Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GFDL-1.3-no-invariants-only
/*!
\example calculatorform
\ingroup examples-designer
\title Calculator Form
\brief Using a form created with \QD in an application.
The Calculator Form Example shows how to use a form created with
\QD in an application by using the user interface information from
a QWidget subclass.
\image calculatorform-example.webp Screenshot of the Calculator Form example
The example presents two spin boxes that are used to input integer values
and a label that shows their sum. Whenever either of the spin boxes are
updated, the signal-slot connections between the widgets and the form
ensure that the label is also updated.
\section1 Preparation
The user interface for this example is designed completely using \QD. The
result is a UI file describing the form, the widgets used, any signal-slot
connections between them, and other standard user interface properties.
To ensure that the example can use this file, we enable the \c CMAKE_AUTOUIC
feature and list the UI file in the source files:
\snippet calculatorform/CMakeLists.txt 0
\codeline
\snippet calculatorform/CMakeLists.txt 1
For \c qmake, we need to include a \c FORMS declaration in the example's project file:
\snippet calculatorform/calculatorform.pro 1
When the project is built, \c uic will create a header file that lets us
construct the form.
\section1 CalculatorForm Class Definition
The \c CalculatorForm class uses the user interface described in the
\c calculatorform.ui file. To access the form and its contents, we need
to include the \c ui_calculatorform.h header file created by \c uic
during the build process:
\snippet calculatorform/calculatorform.h 0
We define the \c CalculatorForm class by subclassing QWidget because the
form itself is based on QWidget:
\snippet calculatorform/calculatorform.h 1
Apart from the constructor, the class contains a private slot
\c updateResult() that performs the calculation and updates the output
widget accordingly.
The private \c ui member variable refers to the form, and is used to
access the contents of the user interface.
\section1 CalculatorForm Class Implementation
The constructor simply calls the base class's constructor,
sets up the form's user interface and connects
the signals \l{QSpinBox::valueChanged()} to the slot \c updateResult().
\snippet calculatorform/calculatorform.cpp 0
The user interface is set up with the \c setupUI() function. We pass
\c this as the argument to this function to use the \c CalculatorForm
widget itself as the container for the user interface.
Slot \c updateResult() adds the values and sets the result on
the output widget:
\snippet calculatorform/calculatorform.cpp 1
It is called whenever the value of one of the spin boxes changes.
*/
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