Development/Tutorials/Programming Tutorial KDE 4/KDirWatch: Difference between revisions
m (→main.cpp) |
m (→main.cpp) |
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<code cppqt> | <code cppqt> | ||
/* | /* | ||
This program | This program is a demo how to react on file changes. | ||
*/ | */ | ||
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static const char description[] = | static const char description[] = | ||
I18N_NOOP(" | I18N_NOOP("An "); | ||
static const char version[] = "0.1"; | static const char version[] = "0.1"; |
Revision as of 13:15, 19 June 2007
Using KDirWatch
If you want your program to be notified upon file changes, use KDirWatch. Here is an example.
khello.h
- ifndef _KHELLO_H_
- define _KHELLO_H_
- include <kmainwindow.h>
- include <kdirwatch.h>
/**
* @short Application Main Window
* @author Thorsten Staerk <[email protected]>
* @version 0.1
*/
class khello : public KMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
KDirWatch dw;
/**
* Default Constructor
*/
khello(char* args);
public slots:
void slotdirty();
};
- endif // _KHELLO_H_
This subclasses KMainWindow.
khello.cpp
- include "khello.h"
- include <qlabel.h>
- include <kdebug.h>
- include <kmainwindow.h>
- include <klocale.h>
- include <kmessagebox.h>
khello::khello(char* args)
: KMainWindow()
{
kdDebug() << "args = " << args << endl;
dw.addFile(args);
kdDebug() << "Watching file " << args << endl;
connect(&dw, SIGNAL(dirty(const QString & ) ),
SLOT( slotdirty() ) );
}
void khello::slotdirty()
{
kdDebug() << "File has changed" << endl;
}
- include "khello.moc"
When instanciated, the class creates a KDirWatcher object and tells it to watch the file passed in by the arguments (
dw.addFile(args)
). The DirWatcher will now emit a SIGNAL dirty each time this file gets modified. This signal is connected to khello's slot slotdirty(). So, every time the file gets modified, slotdirty is called.
main.cpp
/*
This program is a demo how to react on file changes.
- /
- include "khello.h"
- include <kapplication.h>
- include <kaboutdata.h>
- include <kcmdlineargs.h>
- include <kdebug.h>
- include <klocale.h>
static const char description[] =
I18N_NOOP("An ");
static const char version[] = "0.1";
static KCmdLineOptions options[] =
{
{ "+[URL]", I18N_NOOP( "Document to open" ), 0 },
KCmdLineLastOption
};
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
KAboutData about("khello", I18N_NOOP("khello"), version,
description, KAboutData::License_GPL,
"(C) %{YEAR} Thorsten Staerk", 0, 0, "[email protected]");
about.addAuthor( "Thorsten Staerk", 0, "[email protected]" );
KCmdLineArgs::init(argc, argv, &about);
KCmdLineArgs::addCmdLineOptions( options );
KApplication app;
khello *mainWin = 0;
KCmdLineArgs *args = KCmdLineArgs::parsedArgs();
kdDebug() << argv[1] << endl;
mainWin = new khello(argv[1]);
mainWin->show();
args->clear();
return app.exec();
}
CMake
The best way to build the program is to use CMake.
CMakeLists.txt
project (tutorial2)
find_package(KDE4 REQUIRED KIO KDIRWATCH)
include_directories( ${KDE4_INCLUDES} )
set(tutorial2_SRCS
main.cpp
khello.cpp
)
KDE4_AUTOMOC( ${tutorial2_SRCS} )
kde4_add_executable(tutorial2 ${tutorial2_SRCS})
target_link_libraries( tutorial2 ${KDE4_KDEUI_LIBS} ${KDE4_KIO_LIBS})
Note that we added ${KDE4_KIO_LIBS} to the target_link_libraries. If we do not do it, the linker complains about undefined symbols. In the kio-libs, KDirWatch is defined.
Kompile it
To compile, link and run it, use:
cmake . && make && ./tutorial2 /var/log/messages