QPdfPageNavigator Class
Navigation history within a PDF document. More...
Header: | #include <QPdfPageNavigator> |
Since: | Qt 6.4 |
Inherits: | QObject |
Properties
|
|
Public Functions
QPdfPageNavigator(QObject *parent) | |
virtual | ~QPdfPageNavigator() override |
bool | backAvailable() const |
QPointF | currentLocation() const |
int | currentPage() const |
qreal | currentZoom() const |
bool | forwardAvailable() const |
Public Slots
void | back() |
void | clear() |
void | forward() |
void | jump(QPdfLink destination) |
void | jump(int page, const QPointF &location, qreal zoom = 0) |
void | update(int page, const QPointF &location, qreal zoom) |
Signals
void | backAvailableChanged(bool available) |
void | currentLocationChanged(QPointF location) |
void | currentPageChanged(int page) |
void | currentZoomChanged(qreal zoom) |
void | forwardAvailableChanged(bool available) |
void | jumped(QPdfLink current) |
Detailed Description
The QPdfPageNavigator class remembers which destinations the user has visited in a PDF document, and provides the ability to traverse backward and forward. It is used to implement back and forward actions similar to the back and forward buttons in a web browser.
See also QPdfDocument.
Property Documentation
[read-only]
backAvailable : const bool
Holds true
if a back destination is available in the history: that is, if push() or forward() has been called.
Access functions:
bool | backAvailable() const |
Notifier signal:
void | backAvailableChanged(bool available) |
[read-only]
currentLocation : const QPointF
This property holds the current location on the page that is being viewed (the location that was last given to jump() or update()). The default is 0, 0
.
Access functions:
QPointF | currentLocation() const |
Notifier signal:
void | currentLocationChanged(QPointF location) |
[read-only]
currentPage : const int
This property holds the current page that is being viewed. The default is 0
.
Access functions:
int | currentPage() const |
Notifier signal:
void | currentPageChanged(int page) |
[read-only]
currentZoom : const qreal
This property holds the magnification scale (1 logical pixel = 1 point) on the page that is being viewed. The default is 1
.
Access functions:
qreal | currentZoom() const |
Notifier signal:
void | currentZoomChanged(qreal zoom) |
[read-only]
forwardAvailable : const bool
Holds true
if a forward destination is available in the history: that is, if back() has been previously called.
Access functions:
bool | forwardAvailable() const |
Notifier signal:
void | forwardAvailableChanged(bool available) |
Member Function Documentation
[explicit]
QPdfPageNavigator::QPdfPageNavigator(QObject *parent)
Constructs a page navigation stack with parent object parent.
[override virtual noexcept]
QPdfPageNavigator::~QPdfPageNavigator()
Destroys the page navigation stack.
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::back()
Pops the stack, updates the currentPage, currentLocation and currentZoom properties to the most-recently-viewed destination, and then emits the jumped() signal.
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::clear()
Clear the history and restore currentPage, currentLocation and currentZoom to their default values.
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::forward()
Goes back to the page, location and zoom level that was being viewed before back() was called, and then emits the jumped() signal.
If a new destination was pushed since the last time back() was called, the forward() function does nothing, because there is a branch in the timeline which causes the "future" to be lost.
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::jump(QPdfLink destination)
Adds the given destination to the history of visited locations.
In this case, PDF views respond to the jumped signal by scrolling to place destination.rectangles
in the viewport, as opposed to placing destination.location
in the viewport. So it's appropriate to call this method to jump to a search result from QPdfSearchModel (because the rectangles cover the region of text found). To jump to a hyperlink destination, call jump(page, location, zoom) instead, because in that case the QPdfLink object's rectangles
cover the hyperlink origin location rather than the destination.
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::jump(int page, const QPointF &location, qreal zoom = 0)
Adds the given destination, consisting of page, location, and zoom, to the history of visited locations.
The zoom argument represents magnification (where 1
is the default scale, 1 logical pixel = 1 point). If zoom is not given or is 0
, currentZoom keeps its existing value, and currentZoomChanged is not emitted.
The location should be the same as QPdfLink::location() if the user is following a link; and since that is specified as the upper-left corner of the destination, it is best for consistency to always use the location visible in the upper-left corner of the viewport, in points.
If forwardAvailable is true
, calling this function represents a branch in the timeline which causes the "future" to be lost, and therefore forwardAvailable will change to false
.
[signal]
void QPdfPageNavigator::jumped(QPdfLink current)
This signal is emitted when an abrupt jump occurs, to the current page index, location on the page, and zoom level; but not when simply scrolling through the document one page at a time. That is, jump(), forward() and back() emit this signal, but update() does not.
If current.rectangles.length > 0
, they are rectangles that cover a specific destination area: a search result that should be made visible; otherwise, current.location
is the destination location on the page
(a hyperlink destination, or during forward/back navigation).
[slot]
void QPdfPageNavigator::update(int page, const QPointF &location, qreal zoom)
Modifies the current destination, consisting of page, location and zoom.
This can be called periodically while the user is manually moving around the document, so that after back() is called, forward() will jump back to the most-recently-viewed destination rather than the destination that was last specified by push().
The currentZoomChanged
, currentPageChanged
and currentLocationChanged
signals will be emitted if the respective properties are actually changed. The jumped signal is not emitted, because this operation represents smooth movement rather than a navigational jump.