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/***************************************************************************
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* (C) 2003 Richard Dale All rights reserved. *
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* *
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* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify *
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* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as *
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* published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the *
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* License, or (at your option) any later version. *
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* *
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***************************************************************************/
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Here is a Ruby SMOKE adaptor for Qt
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Why ruby? From the rubytalk list
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On 8/28/03 8:56 PM, "Scott Thompson" wrote:
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>> : Can anyone give me a good reason why I would want to use Ruby over
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>> Python?
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>>
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>> Ruby smells better than Python. Also, it has cuter girls.
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>>
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>> Python sometimes tastes better if you prepare it right.
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>
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> I hadn't noticed the odor thing. It does have a faintly floral aroma
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> doesn't it.
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>
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> Of course it is no surprise that you can get more and cuter girls with
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> Rubies than you can with Pythons.
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>
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> Scott
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So there you have it! :)
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Here is 'Hello World' in QtRuby:
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#!/usr/bin/ruby -w
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require 'Qt'
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a = TQt::Application.new(ARGV)
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hello = TQt::PushButton.new("Hello World!", nil)
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hello.resize(100, 30)
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a.setMainWidget(hello)
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hello.show()
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a.exec()
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Ruby 1.8 is unfortunately implicitly required as with 1.6.x it is not possible to:
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Make dynamic constants available (thus forcing syntax such as Qt.RichText rather than TQt::RichText)<br>
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Call super in the initialize method thus making subclassing of non trivial classes impossible
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QtRuby features a very complete coverage of the Qt api:
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- You can call all Qt public and protected methods, and all friend methods
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such as bitBlt() etc
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- Virtual methods
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All virtual methods can be overriden, not just event handlers
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- Properties
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'fooBar = 5' is a synonym for 'setFooBar(5)'
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- Predicates
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'if foo?' is a synonym for 'if isFoo()' or 'if hasFoo()'
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- Use underscore naming for method names instead of camel case if you
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prefer. Any underscores in method names are removed, and the following
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character is capitalised. For example, you can use either of these two
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forms to call the same method:
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create_standard_status_bar_action()
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createStandardStatusBarAction()
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- Operator overloading
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The full range of Qt operator methods is available, for example:
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p1 = TQt::Point.new(5,5) => (5, 5)
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p2 = TQt::Point.new(20,20) => (20, 20)
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p1 + p2 => (25, 25)
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- Declare signals and slots
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Signals and slots are declared as list of strings like this:
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slots 'setColor(TQColor)', 'slotLoad(const TQString&)'..
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signals 'clicked()'..
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Currently C++ type signatures must be used, a future version of QtRuby
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will allow ruby type signatures instead.
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Connect slots and signals like this:
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TQt::Object.connect( @_colormenu, SIGNAL( "activated( int )" ),
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self, SLOT( "slotColorMenu( int )" ) )
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And emit signals like this:
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emit colorChanged( black )
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- Constructors
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You can call constructors in the conventional style:
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quit = TQt::PushButton.new("Quit", self, "quit")
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Or you can pass a block if you prefer:
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w = MyWidget.new { setCaption("foobar") }
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The block will be called in the context of the newly created instance.
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Ordinary arguments can be provided as well as a block at the end:
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w = MyWidget.new(nil) { setCaption("foobar") }
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They are run in the context of the new instance.
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And there's more! You can also pass an arg to the block, and it will
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be run in the context of the arg:
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w = MyWidget.new { |theWidget| theWidget.setCaption "foobar" }
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- Garbage Collection
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When a ruby instance is garbage collected, the underlying C++ instance will only be
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deleted if it isn't 'owned' by a parent object. Normally this will 'just work', but
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there are occasions when you need to delete the C++ ahead of garbage collection, and
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whether or not it has a parent. Use the dispose() and isDisposed() methods like this:
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item2.dispose
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if item2.isDisposed
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puts "item2 is disposed"
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end
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- C++ 'int*' and 'int&' argument types
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Ruby passes numeric values by value, and so they can't be changed when passed to a
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method. The TQt::Integer class provides a mutable numeric type which does get updated
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when passed as an argument. For example, this C++ method 'findByFileContent()':
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# static Ptr findByFileContent( const TQString &fileName, int *accuracy=0 );
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acc = TQt::Integer.new(0)
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fc = KDE::MimeType.findByFileContent("mimetype.rb", acc)
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It supports the arithmetic operators, and so expressions such as 'acc + 3' will work.
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- C++ 'bool*' and 'bool&' argument types
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There is a similar problem for bool arg types, and the mutable TQt::Boolean class can be
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used like this:
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# TQFont getFont(bool * ok, const TQFont&initial, TQWidget* parent = 0, const char *name = 0);
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ok = TQt::Boolean.new
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font = TQt::FontDialog.getFont(ok, TQt::Font.new("Helvetica [Cronyx]", 10), self)
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if !ok.nil?
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# font is set to the font the user selected
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else
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# the user canceled the dialog
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end
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Use 'nil?' to test the value returned in the Boolean
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- Debugging
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If a method call can't be matched in the Smoke library giving a 'method_missing'
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error, you can turn on debugging to trace the matching process:
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a = TQt::Application.new(ARGV)
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Qt.debug_level = TQt::DebugLevel::High
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a.loadLibrary("foo") # Non existent method
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Will give the following output:
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classname == TQApplication
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:: method == loadLibrary$
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-> methodIds == []
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candidate list:
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Possible prototypes:
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static TQWidget* TQApplication::widgetAt(int, int, bool)
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...
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Here, the list of candidate methods 'methodIds' is empty
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Another debugging mechanism allows various trace 'channels' to be switched on.
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You can trace virtual method callbacks:
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TQt::Internal::setDebug(TQt::QtDebugChannel::TQTDB_VIRTUAL)
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Or trace QtRuby garbage collection:
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TQt::Internal::setDebug(TQt::QtDebugChannel::TQTDB_GC)
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- String i18n
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QtRuby supports $KCODE values of 'u', 'e' and
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's' or the corresponding '-K' options from the command line. Qt Designer
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.ui files have UTF-8 strings so if you use any 8 bit UTF-8 characters, you
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will need to set $KCODE='u' or use the -Ku command line option.
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- Qt Designer
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A 'rbuic' tool is included in qtruby/rubylib/designer/rbuic to compile
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.ui files into ruby code. As described above, Qt Designer uses UTF-8.
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In addition to the options in the original uic C++ utility an '-x' flag
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has been added. This will generate a top level stub in the code:
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$ rbuic mainform.ui -x -o mainform.rb
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Will add this to the end of the generated code:
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if $0 == __FILE__
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a = TQt::Application.new(ARGV)
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w = MainForm.new
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a.setMainWidget(w)
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w.show
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a.exec
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end
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Then you can test the example code straight away:
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$ ruby mainform.rb
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- Loading .ui files at runtime with TQWidgetFactory
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You can load a Qt Designer .ui file at runtime with the tqui extension,
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for example:
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require 'Qt'
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require 'tqui'
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a = TQt::Application.new(ARGV)
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if ARGV.length == 0
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exit
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end
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if ARGV.length == 2
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QUI::WidgetFactory.loadImages( ARGV[ 0 ] )
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w = QUI::WidgetFactory.create( ARGV[ 1 ] )
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if w.nil?
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exit
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end
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w.show()
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a.connect( a, SIGNAL('lastWindowClosed()'), a, SLOT('quit()') )
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a.exec()
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end
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- QtRuby shell
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You can use the QtRuby shell in bin/rbqtsh to create widgets
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interactively from the command line.
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- API reference
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Use the bin/rbqtapi tool to discover which methods are available in
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the QtRuby api.
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- Example programs
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The best way to start programming QtRuby is to look at some existing
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code and start messing with it..
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The are various samples under qtruby/rubylib/examples.
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- Optional TQScintilla text editing widget support
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Great for building your own ruby IDE..
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Have Fun!
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-- Richard
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