Languages/Perl

From KDE TechBase
Revision as of 02:00, 19 June 2010 by Burel (talk | contribs)

Perl is a powerful and versatile high-level programming language. You can find out more about the language itself on the Perl website.

Qt 3

Complete object-oriented bindings for Qt 3, based on SMOKE, are available on the PerlQt project page. Those bindings provide virtual functions overloading, custom slots and signals, and Rapid Application Development (RAD) through puic, a Qt Designer compatible user interface compiler.

Qt 4

SMOKE based bindings

The Qt 3 bindings have been ported to work with Qt 4, and is included with the kdebindings module for KDE SC 4.5. The rest of this document supplies information about these bindings.

Non-SMOKE bindings

You can read more about Perl bindings for Qt 4 and download Perl Qt4.

Hello PerlQt4

  1. !/usr/bin/perl

use strict; use warnings; use QtCore4; use QtGui4;

my $app = Qt::Application( \@ARGV ); my $hello = Qt::Label( 'Hello, World!' ); $hello->show(); exit $app->exec();

API Overview

The PerlQt4 API mimics PerlQt3 very closely. So if you have written using PerlQt3, the transition should be very easy.

Coverage

PerlQt4 is modular, where one Perl module will load one Qt/KDE module. Modules currently exist for:

Qt

  • QtCore
  • QtGui
  • QtTest

KDE

  • KDECore
  • KDEUi
  • KIO
  • Plasma

Available methods

All Qt public and protected methods are supported, as well as friend methods.

Virtual Methods

All virtual methods can be overridden by Perl subroutines.

Properties

Some classes in Qt are implemented using publicly accessible properties, like the QStyleOption classes. To set properties, call a method called "set<PropertyName>", like $styleOption->setDirection();

Operator overloading

The full range of Qt operator methods is available, for example: my $p1 = Qt::Point(5,5) # (5, 5) my $p2 = Qt::Point(20,20) # (20, 20) $p1 + $p2 # (25, 25)

Subclassing

To define a subclass, declare a package, and then use the "QtCore4::isa" module. Pass the name of the class you're subclassing as an argument, similar to the syntax for "use base".

package MyWidget; use QtCore4; use QtCore4::isa qw( Qt::Widget );

Signals and Slots

Signals and slots are declared by use'ing the QtCore4::signals and QtCore4::slots modules. The arguments is an array of string/arrayref pairs, where the items in the array define the types of arguments that signal/slot accepts. In the background, it is building a C++ method signature.