QGesture Class ReferenceThe QGesture class represents a gesture, containing properties that describe the corresponding user input. More... #include <QGesture> Inherits QObject. Inherited by QPanGesture, QPinchGesture, QSwipeGesture, QTapAndHoldGesture, and QTapGesture. This class was introduced in Qt 4.6. Public Types
Properties
Public Functions
Additional Inherited Members
Detailed DescriptionThe QGesture class represents a gesture, containing properties that describe the corresponding user input. Gesture objects are not constructed directly by developers. They are created by the QGestureRecognizer object that is registered with the application; see QGestureRecognizer::registerRecognizer(). For an overview of gesture handling in Qt and information on using gestures in your applications, see the Gestures Programming document. Gesture PropertiesThe class has a list of properties that can be queried by the user to get some gesture-specific arguments. For example, the pinch gesture has a scale factor that is exposed as a property. Developers of custom gesture recognizers can add additional properties in order to provide additional information about a gesture. This can be done by adding new dynamic properties to a QGesture object, or by subclassing the QGesture class (or one of its subclasses). Lifecycle of a Gesture ObjectA QGesture instance is implicitly created when needed and is owned by Qt. Developers should never destroy them or store them for later use as Qt may destroy particular instances of them and create new ones to replace them. The registered gesture recognizer monitors the input events for the target object via its recognize() function, updating the properties of the gesture object as required. The gesture object may be delivered to the target object in a QGestureEvent if the corresponding gesture is active or has just been canceled. Each event that is delivered contains a list of gesture objects, since support for more than one gesture may be enabled for the target object. Due to the way events are handled in Qt, gesture events may be filtered by other objects. See also QGestureEvent and QGestureRecognizer. Member Type Documentationenum QGesture::GestureCancelPolicyThis enum describes how accepting a gesture can cancel other gestures automatically.
Property DocumentationgestureCancelPolicy : QGesture::GestureCancelPolicyThis property holds the policy for deciding what happens on accepting a gesture. On accepting one gesture Qt can automatically cancel other gestures that belong to other targets. The policy is normally set to not cancel any other gestures and can be set to cancel all active gestures in the context. For example for all child widgets. Access functions:
gestureType : const Qt::GestureTypeThis property holds the type of the gesture. Access functions:
hasHotSpot : const boolThis property holds whether the gesture has a hot-spot. Access functions:
hotSpot : QPointFThis property holds the point that is used to find the receiver for the gesture event. The hot-spot is a point in the global coordinate system, use QWidget::mapFromGlobal() or QGestureEvent::mapToGraphicsScene() to get a local hot-spot. The hot-spot should be set by the gesture recognizer to allow gesture event delivery to a QGraphicsObject. Access functions:
state : const Qt::GestureStateThis property holds the current state of the gesture. Access functions:
Member Function DocumentationQGesture::QGesture ( QObject * parent = 0 )Constructs a new gesture object with the given parent. QGesture objects are created by gesture recognizers in the QGestureRecognizer::create() function. QGesture::~QGesture ()Destroys the gesture object. X
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