QStyleSheet Class Reference
The QStyleSheet class is a collection of styles for rich text
rendering and a generator of tags.
More...
#include <qstylesheet.h>
Inherits QObject.
List of all member functions.
Public Members
QStyleSheet ( QObject * parent = 0, const char * name = 0 )
QStyleSheetItem *
item ( const QString & name )
const QStyleSheetItem *
item ( const QString & name ) const
virtual QTextCustomItem *
tag ( const QString & name, const QMap<QString, QString> & attr, const QString & context, const QMimeSourceFactory & factory, bool emptyTag, QTextDocument * doc ) const
virtual void
scaleFont ( QFont & font, int logicalSize ) const
virtual void
error ( const QString & msg ) const
Static Public Members
QString
escape ( const QString & plain )
QString
convertFromPlainText ( const QString & plain, QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpaceMode mode = QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpacePre )
Detailed Description
The QStyleSheet class is a collection of styles for rich text
rendering and a generator of tags.
By creating QStyleSheetItem objects for a style sheet you build a
definition of a set of tags. This definition will be used by the
internal rich text rendering system to parse and display text
documents to which the style sheet applies. Rich text is normally
visualized in a QTextView or a QTextBrowser. However, QLabel,
QWhatsThis and QMessageBox also support it, and other classes are
likely to follow. With QSimpleRichText it is possible to use the
rich text renderer for custom widgets as well.
The default QStyleSheet object has the following style bindings,
sorted by structuring bindings, anchors, character style bindings
(i.e. inline styles), special elements such as horizontal lines or
images, and other tags. In addition, rich text supports simple HTML
tables.
The structuring tags are
- <qt>...</qt>
- A Qt rich text document. It understands the following attributes:
- title
- The caption of the document. This attribute is easily accessible with
QTextView::documentTitle().
- type
- The type of the document. The default type is page . It
indicates that the document is displayed in a page of its
own. Another style is detail, which can be used to
explain certain expressions in more detail in a few
sentences. The QTextBrowser will then keep the current page
and display the new document in a small popup similar to
QWhatsThis. Note that links will not work in documents with
<qt type="detail">...</qt>.
- bgcolor
- The background color, for example bgcolor="yellow" or bgcolor="#0000FF".
- background
- The background pixmap, for example background="granit.xpm". The pixmap name will be resolved by
a QMimeSourceFactory().
- text
- The default text color, for example text="red".
- link
- The link color, for example link="green".
- <h1>...</h1>
- A top-level heading.
- <h2>...</h2>
- A sublevel heading.
- <h3>...</h3>
- A sub-sublevel heading.
- <p>...</p>
- A left-aligned paragraph. Adjust the alignment with
the align attribute. Possible values are
left, right and center.
- <center>...</center>
- A centered paragraph.
- <blockquote>...</blockquote>
- An indented paragraph that is useful for quotes.
- <ul>...</ul>
- An unordered list. You can also pass a type argument to
define the bullet style. The default is type=disc; other
types are circle and square.
- <ol>...</ol>
- An ordered list. You can also pass a type argument to define
the enumeration label style. The default is type="1"; other
types are "a" and "A".
- <li>...</li>
- A list item. This tag can be used only within the context of
ol or ul.
- <pre>...</pre>
- For larger chunks of code. Whitespaces in the contents are preserved.
For small bits of code use the inline-style code.
Anchors and links are done with a single tag:
- <a>...</a>
- An anchor or link. The reference target is defined in the href attribute of the tag as in <a href="target.qml">...</a>. You can also specify an
additional anchor within the specified target document, for
example <a href="target.qml#123">...</a>. If a is
meant to be an anchor, the reference source is given in the
name attribute.
The default character style bindings are
- <em>...</em>
- Emphasized. By default this is the same as
<i>...</i> (italic).
- <strong>...</strong>
- Strong. By default this is the same as
<b>...</b> (bold).
- <i>...</i>
- Italic font style.
- <b>...</b>
- Bold font style.
- <u>...</u>
- Underlined font style.
- <big>...</big>
- A larger font size.
- <small>...</small>
- A smaller font size.
- <code>...</code>
- Indicates code. By default this is the same as
<tt>...</tt> (typewriter). For
larger junks of code use the block-tag pre.
- <tt>...</tt>
- Typewriter font style.
- <font>...</font>
- Customizes the font size, family and text color. The tag understands
the following attributes:
- color
- The text color, for example color="red" or color="#FF0000".
- size
- The logical size of the font. Logical sizes 1 to 7 are supported.
The value may either be absolute (for example,
size=3) or relative (size=-2). In the latter case the sizes
are simply added.
- face
- The family of the font, for example face=times.
Special elements are:
Another tag not in any of the above cathegories is
- <nobr>...</nobr>
- No break. Prevents word wrap.
In addition, rich text supports simple HTML tables. A table consists
of one or more rows each of which contains one or more cells. Cells
are either data cells or header cells, depending on their
content. Cells which span rows and columns are supported.
- <table>...</table>
- A table. Tables support the following attributes:
- bgcolor
- The background color.
- width
- The table width. This is either an absolute pixel width or a relative
percentage of the table's width, for example width=80%.
- border
- The width of the table border. The default is 0 (= no border).
- cellspacing
- Additional space around the table cells. The default is 2.
- cellpadding
- Additional space around the contents of table cells. The default is 1.
- <tr>...</tr>
- A table row. This is only valid within a table. Rows support
the following attribute:
- bgcolor
- The background color.
- <th>...</th>
- A table header cell. Similar to td, but defaults to center alignment
and a bold font.
- <td>...</td>
- A table data cell. This is only valid within a tr. Cells
support the following attributes:
- bgcolor
- The background color.
- width
- The cell width. This is either an absolute pixel width or a relative
percentage of table's width, for example width=50%.
- colspan
- Specifies how many columns this cell spans. The default is 1.
- rowspan
- Specifies how many rows this cell spans. The default is 1.
- align
- Alignment; possible values are left, right, and center. The
default is left.
See also Graphics Classes, Help System and Text Related Classes.
Member Function Documentation
QStyleSheet::QStyleSheet ( QObject * parent = 0, const char * name = 0 )
Creates a style sheet with parent parent and name name. Like
any QObject it will be deleted when its parent is
destroyed (if the child still exists).
By default the style sheet has the tag definitions defined above.
QStyleSheet::~QStyleSheet () [virtual]
Destroys the style sheet. All styles inserted into the style sheet
will be deleted.
QString QStyleSheet::convertFromPlainText ( const QString & plain, QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpaceMode mode = QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpacePre ) [static]
Auxiliary function. Converts the plain text string plain to a
rich text formatted paragraph while preserving its look.
mode defines the whitespace mode. Possible values are QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpacePre (no wrapping, all whitespaces
preserved) and QStyleSheetItem::WhiteSpaceNormal (wrapping,
simplified whitespaces).
See also escape().
QStyleSheet * QStyleSheet::defaultSheet () [static]
Returns the application-wide default style sheet. This style sheet is
used by rich text rendering classes such as QSimpleRichText,
QWhatsThis and QMessageBox to define the rendering style and
available tags within rich text documents. It serves also as initial
style sheet for the more complex render widgets QTextEdit and
QTextBrowser.
See also setDefaultSheet().
void QStyleSheet::error ( const QString & msg ) const [virtual]
This virtual function is called when an error occurs when
processing rich text. Reimplement it if you need to catch
error messages.
Errors might occur if some rich text strings contain tags that are
not understood by the stylesheet, if some tags are nested incorrectly, or
if tags are not closed properly.
msg is the error message.
QString QStyleSheet::escape ( const QString & plain ) [static]
Auxiliary function. Converts the plain text string plain to a
rich text formatted string with any HTML meta-characters escaped.
See also convertFromPlainText().
Returns the style with name name or 0 if there is no such style.
const QStyleSheetItem * QStyleSheet::item ( const QString & name ) const
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It behaves essentially like the above function.
Returns the style with name name or 0 if there is no such style (const version)
bool QStyleSheet::mightBeRichText ( const QString & text ) [static]
Returns TRUE if the string text is likely to be rich text;
otherwise returns FALSE.
Note: The function uses a fast and therefore simple heuristic. It
mainly checks whether there is something that looks like a tag
before the first line break. Although the result may be correct for
most common cases, there is no guarantee.
void QStyleSheet::scaleFont ( QFont & font, int logicalSize ) const [virtual]
Scales the font font to the appropriate physical point size
corresponding to the logical font size logicalSize.
When calling this function, font has a point size corresponding to
the logical font size 3.
Logical font sizes range from 1 to 7, with 1 being the smallest.
See also QStyleSheetItem::logicalFontSize(), QStyleSheetItem::logicalFontSizeStep() and QFont::setPointSize().
void QStyleSheet::setDefaultSheet ( QStyleSheet * sheet ) [static]
Sets the application-wide default style sheet to sheet, deleting
any style sheet previously set. The ownership is transferred to
QStyleSheet.
See also defaultSheet().
QTextCustomItem * QStyleSheet::tag ( const QString & name, const QMap<QString, QString> & attr, const QString & context, const QMimeSourceFactory & factory, bool emptyTag, QTextDocument * doc ) const [virtual]
This function is under development and is subject to change.
Generates an internal object for the tag called name, given the
attributes attr, and using additional information provided
by the mime source factory factory.
context is the optional context of the document, i.e. the path to
look for relative links. This becomes important if the text contains
relative references, for example within image tags. QSimpleRichText
always uses the default mime source factory (see
QMimeSourceFactory::defaultFactory()) to resolve these references.
The context will then be used to calculate the absolute path. See
QMimeSourceFactory::makeAbsolute() for details.
emptyTag and doc are for internal use only.
This function should not (yet) be used in application code.
This file is part of the Qt toolkit.
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