Development/Tutorials/Plasma5/QML2/GettingStarted: Difference between revisions

From KDE TechBase
(Complet information concerning plasmoidviewer)
(Correct the plasmoidviewer section)
Line 243: Line 243:
=== plasmoidviewer ===
=== plasmoidviewer ===


Instead of plasmawindowed you can also use plasmoidviewer (in the plasmate repo) to test your Plasmoid without installing it.
Instead of plasmawindowed you can also use plasmoidviewer (in the plasmate repo):


{{Input|1=<nowiki>plasmoidviewer --applet package</nowiki>}}
{{Input|1=<nowiki>plasmoidviewer --applet org.kde.plasma.kickoff</nowiki>}}


[[File:Plasmoidviewer.png]]
[[File:Plasmoidviewer.png]]


The --applet parameter takes the path (full or relative) to the directory containing the metadata.desktop file of your Plasmoid.
For testing an installed Plasmoid, the --applet parameter takes the X-KDE-PluginInfo-Name of the plasmoid in its .desktop file.


The "FormFactors" and "Location" buttons help to see how the Plasmoid behaves in different situations.
The "FormFactors" and "Location" buttons help to see how the Plasmoid behaves in different situations.

Revision as of 14:13, 16 June 2017

Abstract

This tutorial needs KDE Frameworks 5 / Plasma 5 to build. We are going to create a simple plasmoid in this tutorial. To keep things simple, we are going to make have use QML 2.0 and it will use Plasma Components in our tutorial .

Package Structure

You create a .desktop file and the .qml file. They have to be in the usual Plasma package structure:

  • plasmoid/metadata.desktop
  • plasmoid/contents/ui/main.qml

Your directory structure should now be as follows:

myproject/CMakeLists.txt
myproject/plasmoid/
myproject/plasmoid/metadata.desktop
myproject/plasmoid/contents/
myproject/plasmoid/contents/ui/
myproject/plasmoid/contents/ui/main.qml

The Code

The .desktop file

Every Plasmoid needs a .desktop file to tell plasma how it should be started and what name it carries.

metadata.desktop

[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=Tutorial
Comment=Tutorial on getting started with Plasma 5 plasmoids.
Type=Service

X-KDE-Library=plasma_applet_tutorial
X-KDE-ParentApp=
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Author=Heena
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Email=[email protected]
X-KDE-PluginInfo-License=GPL
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Name=org.kde.tutorial
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Version=2.0
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Website=plasma.kde.org
X-KDE-ServiceTypes=Plasma/Applet
X-Plasma-API=declarativeappletscript
X-Plasma-MainScript=ui/main.qml
X-Plasma-RemoteLocation=
X-KDE-PluginInfo-Category=Windows and Tasks

The most important bits are:-

  • X-KDE-Library which specifies which library will provide the configuration dialog. In this example then "plasma_applet_tutorial" assignment is just a place holder.
  • X-KDE-PluginInfo-Name For X-KDE-PluginInfo-Category, refer to the PIG.


These are the "glue" between your class and plasma, without it, nothing will start.

main.qml

import QtQuick 2.0
import org.kde.plasma.components 2.0 as PlasmaComponents

PlasmaComponents.Label {
    text: "Hello world in Plasma 5 ";
}

CMakeLists.txt

This CMakeLists.txt file describes where your plasmoid will be installed.

# Set minimum CMake version (required for CMake 3.0 or later)
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.12)

# Use Extra CMake Modules (ECM) for common functionality.
# See http://api.kde.org/ecm/manual/ecm.7.html
# and http://api.kde.org/ecm/manual/ecm-kde-modules.7.html
find_package(ECM REQUIRED NO_MODULE)
# Needed by find_package(KF5Plasma) below.
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${ECM_MODULE_PATH} ${ECM_KDE_MODULE_DIR} ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH})

# Locate plasma_install_package macro.
find_package(KF5Plasma REQUIRED)

# Add installatation target ("make install").
plasma_install_package(plasmoid org.kde.tutorial)

For more details on CMake please read Development/Tutorials/CMake

Representations

The plasmoid can provide two components: compactRepresentation and FullRepresentation

import QtQuick 2.0
import QtQuick.Layouts 1.1
import org.kde.plasma.plasmoid 2.0
import org.kde.plasma.core 2.0 as PlasmaCore

Item {
    Plasmoid.compactRepresentation: CompactRepresentation {}
    Plasmoid.fullRepresentation: FullRepresentation {}
}

where the files CompactRepresentation.qml and FullRepresentation.qml exist in the plasmoid package. They are both optional: if compactRepresentation is not present, a default one will be created (the plasmoid icon) if fullRepresentation is not defined, the root item will be picked instead. If a fullRepresentaion is defined, the root item will not contain any graphical element (they will be never shown) but is only supposed to contain models and data that must be accessible from both the compact and the full representation.

Minimum size

if the root object of the plasmoid (or the fullRepresentation if present) has the Layout attached property exposed, they will be used as the minimum size for the plasmoid. If they will change during the plasmoid execution, the plasmoid minimum size will be updated accordingly.

import QtQuick 2.0
import QtQuick.Layouts 1.1
import org.kde.plasma.components 2.0 as PlasmaComponents


PlasmaComponents.Label {
    Layout.minimumWidth : formFactor == PlasmaCore.Types.Horizontal ? height : 1
    Layout. minimumHeight : formFactor == PlasmaCore.Types.Vertical ? width  : 1
    text: "Hello world in plasma5 ";
}

In the above example, the minimum width will be the height in case the formFactor is Horizontal .Similarly , if the formFactor is Vertical then minimumHeight shall be the width as shown in the above example .

Localization

It is possible to localize strings with the usual i18n(), i18nc(), i18np() global functions.


Install and Test

Since this plasmoid contains no native (compiled) code you can directly try and execute it using XXX (!! FixMe !!).

To Install, Test and Remove your new plasmoid.

Kpackagetool5

The Plasma Package Manager.

You can install your plasmoid, though obviously this is just temporary. CMake, below, is recommended.

From the myproject folder defined above, use the Plasma Package Manager:

kpackagetool5 -t Plasma/Applet --install plasmoid

You can pass to the --install option of kpackagetool5 the full path of the directory containing the metadata.desktop file or any relative path to it.

Notice that your Plasmoid is now available via the +Add Widgets function from the (Right Click Menu) on Plasma Desktop. For clarity of this tutorial, note that the name of your Plasmoid is Tutorial, as defined by the Name in your .desktop file

  • Name=Tutorial


After updating your code, to install the new version of your Plasmoid, from the myproject folder defined above, use the Plasma Package Manager:

kpackagetool5 -t Plasma/Applet --upgrade plasmoid


To remove the plasmoid, use the Plasma Package Manager:

kpackagetool5 -t Plasma/Applet --remove org.kde.tutorial

Testing the Applet

If your current Development Environment differs from the Test Installation, you have to run cmake with -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$KF5. Then run make. If successful the applet can be installed by running sudo make install

and run kbuildsycoca5 (so that KDE apps will know about the new desktop files). In order to test your Applet you can load the Plasma 5 plasmoid in plasmashell as shown :

kbuildsycoca5 #Needed once to let KDE know there is a new plugin
plasmashell

You can even find your plasmoid in ~./local5 after you build it . Where applet_name is the value specified into .desktop for the X-KDE-PluginInfo-Name key.

Wow that was fun!

Congrats! you just made your first qml 2.0 Plasmoid.

Find and try out existing Plasmoids

Here you will learn how to find existing installed plasmoid packages and selectively start one from command line.

If you are working from within Plasma you can call

eval $(dbus-launch)

first which will speed things up. But beware that a second DBUS can interfere with your existing Plasma session.

To get a list of installed Plasma packages call

plasmapkg2 --list

The result will look similar to this:

org.kde.desktopcontainment
org.kde.milou
org.kde.muonnotifier
org.kde.panel
org.kde.plasma.activitybar
org.kde.plasma.analogclock
org.kde.plasma.battery
org.kde.plasma.calculator
org.kde.plasma.calendar
org.kde.plasma.clipboard
org.kde.plasma.devicenotifier
org.kde.plasma.digitalclock
org.kde.plasma.fifteenpuzzle
org.kde.plasma.folder
org.kde.plasma.fuzzyclock
org.kde.plasma.icon
org.kde.plasma.katesessions
org.kde.plasma.kicker
org.kde.plasma.kickoff
org.kde.plasma.kimpanel
org.kde.plasma.lock_logout
org.kde.plasma.mediacontroller
org.kde.plasma.networkmanagement
org.kde.plasma.notes
org.kde.plasma.notifications
org.kde.plasma.pager
org.kde.plasma.panelspacer
org.kde.plasma.printmanager
org.kde.plasma.showActivityManager
org.kde.plasma.showdesktop
org.kde.plasma.systemloadviewer
org.kde.plasma.systemmonitor.cpu
org.kde.plasma.systemmonitor.diskactivity
org.kde.plasma.systemmonitor.diskusage
org.kde.plasma.systemmonitor.memory
org.kde.plasma.systemmonitor.net
org.kde.plasma.systemtray
org.kde.plasma.taskmanager
org.kde.plasma.timer
org.kde.plasma.trash
org.kde.plasma.webbrowser
org.kde.plasma.windowlist

plasmawindowed

Pick one of those lines of your choice and run for example

plasmawindowed org.kde.plasma.kickoff

which will launch the Kickoff Application Launcher in a separate window.

plasmoidviewer

Instead of plasmawindowed you can also use plasmoidviewer (in the plasmate repo):

plasmoidviewer --applet org.kde.plasma.kickoff

For testing an installed Plasmoid, the --applet parameter takes the X-KDE-PluginInfo-Name of the plasmoid in its .desktop file.

The "FormFactors" and "Location" buttons help to see how the Plasmoid behaves in different situations.