KTextEditor
Coding Guidelines and API Conventions
Overview | Design | Coding Guidelines | Porting to KDE 4 | Using
All KTextEditor interfaces have a consistent design.
- naming follows Qt style. Avoid Java style getters like getSomeData() for example,
- core interfaces (see Overview of the Core Interface Design) which inherit QObject declare all signals as real signals,
- all other interfaces, which do not subclass QObject, must declare their signals as virtual private member functions. An implementation must reimplement this virtual member function as a real signal.
- all signals have the sender object as first parameter, for example all document signals have to look like this: This allows easy and consistent query which object did send the signal, which is important for most applications, as they listen to multiple documents/views/editors/...void signalFromDocument (KTextEditor::Document *doc, ...);
- all interface functions should be virtual, to allow subclasses to overwrite them, most members should even be pure virtual, beside additional convenience/helper functions.
The interface KTextEditor::Cursor represents a cursorposition, i.e. a line/column tuple. The same holds for KTextEditor::Range. As both of this concepts are much cleaner than tuples, please keep the following guidelines:
- never use line/column tuples in parameter lists, use KTextEditor::Cursor instead,
- never use Cursor/Cursor tuples for ranges, use KTextEditor::Range instead of two Cursors.
This file is part of the KDE documentation.
Documentation copyright © 1996-2014 The KDE developers.
Generated on Tue Oct 14 2014 22:31:41 by doxygen 1.8.7 written by Dimitri van Heesch, © 1997-2006
Documentation copyright © 1996-2014 The KDE developers.
Generated on Tue Oct 14 2014 22:31:41 by doxygen 1.8.7 written by Dimitri van Heesch, © 1997-2006
KDE's Doxygen guidelines are available online.