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tqt3/doc/man/man1/tqmoc.1

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.TH tqmoc 1 "24 June 2001" "Trolltech AS" \" -*- nroff -*-
.\"
.\" $Id: qt/tqmoc.1 3.3.8 edited Jan 11 14:38 $
.\"
.\" Copyright (C) 1992-2007 Trolltech ASA. All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" This file is part of TQt and may be distributed and used according to
.\" the terms and conditions described in the LICENSE file.
.\"
.nh
.SH NAME
tqmoc \- generate TQt meta object support code
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B tqmoc
[-o file] [-i] [-f] [-k] [-ldbg] [-nw] [-p path] [-q path] [-v] file
.SH DESCRIPTION
This page documents the
.B Meta Object Compiler
for the TQt GUI application framework. The
.B tqmoc
reads one or more C++ class declarations from a C++ header or source
file and generates one C++ source file containing meta object
information for the classes. The C++ source file generated by the
.B tqmoc
must be compiled and linked with the implementation of the class (or it
can be #included into the class's source file).
.PP
If you use
.B tqmake
to create your Makefiles, build rules will be included that call the
.B tqmoc
when required, so you will not need to use the
.B tqmoc
directly.
.PP
In brief, the meta object system is a structure used by TQt (see
.BR https://trinitydesktop.org/docs/qt3/ ")"
for component programming and run time type information. It adds
properties and inheritance information to (some) classes and
provides a new type of communication between those instances of those
classes, signal-slot
connections.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.I "-o file"
Write output to
.I file
rather than to stdout.
.TP
.I -f
Force the generation of an #include statement in the output.
This is the default for files whose name matches the regular
expression .[hH][^.]* (i.e. the extension starts with
.B H
or
.B h
). This
option is only useful if you have header files that do not follow the
standard naming conventions.
.TP
.I "-i"
Do not generate an #include statement in the output. This may be used
to run
.B tqmoc
on a C++ file containing one or more class declarations. You should then
#include the meta object code in the .cpp file (see USAGE below). If both
.I -f
and
.I -i
are present, the last one wins.
.TP
.I "-nw"
Do not generate any warnings. Not recommended.
.TP
.I "-ldbg"
Write a flood of lex debug information to stdout.
.TP
.I "-p path"
Makes
.B tqmoc
prepend
.IR path /
to the file name in the generated #include statement (if one is generated).
.TP
.I "-q path"
Makes
.B tqmoc
prepend
.IR path /
to the file name of qt #include files in the generated code.
.TP
.I "-v"
Displays the version of
.B tqmoc
and TQt.
.PP
You can explicitly tell the
.B tqmoc
not to parse parts of a header
file. It recognizes any C++ comment (//) that contains the substrings
MOC_SKIP_BEGIN or MOC_SKIP_END. They work as you would expect and you
can have several levels of them. The net result as seen by the
.B tqmoc
is as if you had removed all lines between a MOC_SKIP_BEGIN and a
MOC_SKIP_END
.SH USAGE
.B tqmoc
is almost always invoked by
.BR make (1),
not by hand.
.PP
.B tqmoc
is typically used with an input file containing class declarations
like this:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class YourClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
TQ_PROPERTY( ... )
TQ_CLASSINFO( ... )
public:
YourClass( TQObject * parent=0, const char * name=0 );
~YourClass();
signals:
public slots:
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
Here is a useful makefile rule if you only use GNU make:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
m%.cpp: %.h
tqmoc $< -o $@
.fi
.in -4
.PP
If you want to write portably, you can use individual rules of the
following form:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
mNAME.cpp: NAME.h
tqmoc $< -o $@
.fi
.in -4
.PP
You must also remember to add
.I mNAME.cpp
to your SOURCES (substitute your favorite name) variable and
.I mNAME.o
to your OBJECTS variable.
.PP
(While we prefer to name our C++ source files .cpp, the
.B tqmoc
doesn't know that, so you can use .C, .cc, .CC, .cxx or even .c++ if
you prefer.)
.PP
If you have class declarations in C++ files, we recommend that you use
a makefile rule like this:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
NAME.o: mNAME.cpp
mNAME.cpp: NAME.cpp
tqmoc -i $< -o $@
.fi
.in -4
.PP
This guarantees that
.BR make (1)
will run the
.B tqmoc
before it compiles
.IR NAME.cpp .
You can then put
.PP
.ti +4
#include "nNAME.cpp"
.PP
at the end of
.IR NAME.cpp ,
where all the classes declared in that file are fully known.
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
Sometimes you may get linkage errors, saying that
YourClass::className() is undefined or that YourClass lacks a vtbl.
Those errors happen most often when you forget to compile the
tqmoc-generated C++ code or include that object file in the link
command.
.PP
The
.B tqmoc
will warn you about a number of dangerous or illegal constructs.
.SH BUGS
The
.B tqmoc
does not expand #include or #define, it simply skips any preprocessor
directives it encounters. This is regrettable, but is normally not a
problem in practice.
The
.B tqmoc
does not handle all of C++. The main problem is that class templates
cannot have signals or slots. This is an important bug. Here is an
example:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeTemplate<int> : public TQFrame {
TQ_OBJECT
....
signals:
void bugInMocDetected( int );
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
Less importantly, the following constructs are illegal. All of them
have have alternatives which we think are usually better, so removing
these limitations is not a high priority for us.
.SS "Multiple inheritance requires TQObject to be first."
If you are using multiple inheritance,
.B tqmoc
assumes that the
.B first
inherited class is a subclass of TQObject. Also, be sure that
.B only
the first inherited class is a TQObject.
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject, public OtherClass {
...
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
This bug is almost impossible to fix; since the
.B tqmoc
does not expand
#include or #define, it cannot find out which one of the base classes is a
TQObject.
.SS "Function pointers cannot be arguments to signals or slots."
In most cases where you would consider that, we think inheritance is a
better alternative. Here is an example of illegal syntax:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
...
public slots:
// illegal
void apply( void (*apply)(List *, void *), void * );
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
You can work around this restriction like this:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
typedef void (*ApplyFunctionType)( List *, void * );
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
...
public slots:
void apply( ApplyFunctionType, char * );
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
It may sometimes be even better to replace the function pointer with
inheritance and virtual functions, signals or slots.
.SS "Friend declarations cannot be placed in signals or slots sections"
Sometimes it will work, but in general, friend declarations cannot be
placed in
.B signals
or
.B slots
sections. Put them in the good old
.BR private ", " protected
or
.B public
sections instead. Here is an example of the illegal syntax:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
...
signals:
friend class ClassTemplate<char>; // illegal
};
.fi
.in -4
.SS "Signals and slots cannot be upgraded"
The C++ feature of upgrading an inherited member function to
.B public
status is not extended to cover signals and slots. Here is an illegal
example:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class Whatever : public TQButtonGroup {
...
public slots:
TQButtonGroup::buttonPressed; // illegal
...
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
The TQButtonGroup::buttonPressed() slot is protected.
.PP
C++ quiz: What happens if you try to upgrade a protected member
function which is overloaded?
.IP
- All the functions are upgraded.
.IP
- That is not legal C++.
.\" Good idea, but look in the SEE ALSO section...
.SS "Type macros cannot be used for signal and slot arguments"
Since the
.B tqmoc
does not expand #define, type macros that take an argument
will not work in signals and slots. Here is an illegal example:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
#ifdef ultrix
#define SIGNEDNESS(a) unsigned a
#else
#define SIGNEDNESS(a) a
#endif
class Whatever : public TQObject {
...
signals:
void someSignal( SIGNEDNESS(int) ); // illegal
};
.PP
A #define without arguments works.
.fi
.in -4
.SS "Nested classes cannot be in the signals or slots sections nor have signals or slots"
Here's an example:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class A {
TQ_OBJECT
public:
class B {
public slots: // illegal
void b();
...
};
signals:
class B { // illegal
void b();
...
}:
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
.SS "Constructors cannot be used in signals or slots sections"
It is a mystery to us why anyone would put a constructor on either the
.B signals
or
.B slots
sections. You can't, anyway (except that it happens to work in some
cases). Put them in
.BR private ", " protected
or
.B public
sections, where they belong. Here is an example of the illegal syntax:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
public slots:
SomeClass( TQObject *parent, const char *name )
: TQObject( parent, name ) {} // illegal
...
};
.fi
.in -4
.SS "Properties need to be declared before the public section that contains the respective get and set functions"
.PP
Declaring the first property within or after the public section that
contains the type definition and the respective get and set functions
does not work as expected. The
.B tqmoc
will complain that it can neither
find the functions nor resolve the type. Here is an example of the
illegal syntax:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
public:
...
// illegal
TQ_PROPERTY( Priority priority READ priority WRITE setPriority )
TQ_ENUMS( Priority )
enum Priority { High, Low, VeryHigh, VeryLow };
void setPriority( Priority );
Priority priority() const;
...
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
Work around this limitation by declaring all properties at the
beginning of the class declaration, right after TQ_OBJECT:
.PP
.in +4
.nf
class SomeClass : public TQObject {
TQ_OBJECT
TQ_PROPERTY( Priority priority READ priority WRITE setPriority )
TQ_ENUMS( Priority )
public:
...
enum Priority { High, Low, VeryHigh, VeryLow };
void setPriority( Priority );
Priority priority() const;
...
};
.fi
.in -4
.PP
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR http://www.trolltech.com ", "
.BR "C++ ARM, section r.11.3" " (for the answer to the quiz), and"
.BR https://trinitydesktop.org/docs/qt3/ " (for complete TQt documentation)."