Many applications offer shortcuts for quick interaction with the application. It is also common in such applications to offer a shortcut editor in the preferences or separately in a dialog. However, even though this is a fairly common use case for applications with more than a couple of shortcuts, there is no good and comprehensive official Qt example how this could be achieved. This change is an attempt to bridge the gap. Change-Id: Ic01a404e6157bda1b0a75a0b792cbfe5d910d48f Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io> |
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|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| analogclock | ||
| calculator | ||
| calendarwidget | ||
| charactermap | ||
| codeeditor | ||
| digitalclock | ||
| elidedlabel | ||
| groupbox | ||
| icons | ||
| imageviewer | ||
| lineedits | ||
| mousebuttons | ||
| movie | ||
| scribble | ||
| shapedclock | ||
| shortcuteditor | ||
| sliders | ||
| spinboxes | ||
| styles | ||
| stylesheet | ||
| tablet | ||
| tetrix | ||
| tooltips | ||
| validators | ||
| wiggly | ||
| windowflags | ||
| CMakeLists.txt | ||
| README | ||
| widgets.pro | ||
README
Qt comes with a large range of standard widgets that users of modern applications have come to expect. You can also develop your own custom widgets and controls, and use them alongside standard widgets. It is even possible to provide custom styles and themes for widgets that can be used to change the appearance of standard widgets and appropriately written custom widgets. Documentation for these examples can be found via the Examples link in the main Qt documentation.