KParts
KParts::GenericFactory< KTypeList< T1, T2 > > Class Template Reference
#include <genericfactory.h>
Inheritance diagram for KParts::GenericFactory< KTypeList< T1, T2 > >:
Public Member Functions | |
virtual KParts::Part * | createPartObject (QWidget *parentWidget, const char *widgetName, QObject *parent, const char *name, const char *className, const QStringList &args) |
GenericFactory () |
Detailed Description
template<class T1, class T2>
class KParts::GenericFactory< KTypeList< T1, T2 > >
Definition at line 123 of file genericfactory.h.
Constructor & Destructor Documentation
template<class T1 , class T2 >
KParts::GenericFactory< KTypeList< T1, T2 > >::GenericFactory | ( | ) | [inline] |
Definition at line 126 of file genericfactory.h.
Member Function Documentation
template<class T1 , class T2 >
virtual KParts::Part* KParts::GenericFactory< KTypeList< T1, T2 > >::createPartObject | ( | QWidget * | parentWidget, | |
const char * | widgetName, | |||
QObject * | parent, | |||
const char * | name, | |||
const char * | classname, | |||
const QStringList & | args | |||
) | [inline, virtual] |
Reimplement this method in your implementation to create the Part.
The QStringList can be used to pass additional arguments to the part. If the part needs additional arguments, it should take them as name="value" pairs. This is the way additional arguments will get passed to the part from eg. khtml. You can for example emebed the part into HTML by using the following code:
<object type="my_mimetype" data="url_to_my_data"> <param name="name1" value="value1"> <param name="name2" value="value2"> </object>
createPart( parentWidget, name, parentObject, parentName, "Kparts::Part", QStringList("name1="value1"", "name2="value2") );
- Returns:
- the newly created part.
Implements KParts::Factory.
Definition at line 128 of file genericfactory.h.
The documentation for this class was generated from the following file: