Development/Tutorials/KDevelop/Creating a class template
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Tutorial Series | KDevelop Templates |
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Further Reading | Class template specification |
Introduction
In this tutorial, we will create a template for a basic C++ class. It will demonstrate using the Grantlee template language, as well features specific to KDevelop class templates.
We chose C++ because even the simplest class definition often consists of two separate files, header and implementation. It is possible to include any number of files in a class template (there should be at least one, obviously).
Creating the directory structure
We will start with an empty directory. Name it something unique, like kdev_class_tutorial.
The description file
Every class template needs a description file. It is a regular desktop file with an extension of .desktop. Its base name must match the name of the generated archive, so let's call it kdev_class_tutorial.desktop. Paste in these contents:
[General]
Name=Tutorial
Comment=An example C++ class template, suitable for a tutorial
Category=C++
Files=Header,Implementation
[Header]
Name=Header
File=class.h
OutputFile={{ name }}.h
[Implementation]
Name=Implementation
File=class.cpp
OutputFile={{ name }}.cpp
You can see there are three sections in the description file: one for general properties, and one for each output file. In order for a file to be generated, it has to be listed in the Files entry, as well as have its own section with the same name.
In the output file sections, we already used template variables: {{ name }}
will be replaced with the class name. The actual generated header file will not be {{ name }}.h, but rather Exmample.h, assuming we name our class Example.
The class header file
Now, let's move on to the class declaration.
Template header
In most free software projects, source files start with a license header. This header varies with the chosen license, author, and the programming language's comment characters. When using our template, the user choose one of the suggested licenses or write his own. In either case, the full text of the license header is available to the template as the license variable.
Since C++ has block-style comments, we could write the license simply as
/*
{{ license }}
*/
However, it might be easier to read if the license had some kind of formatting. For this purpose, KDevPlatform includes a template filter library that makes it possible to write a nicely-formatted license header. We can use it like this:
{% load kdev_filters %}
/*
{{ license|lines_prepend:" * " }}
*/
The lines_prened filter prepends its argument (in our case " * ") to every line of its input (in our case the license). This can produce licenses like the following
/* * This file is part of KDevelop * Copyright 2012 Example Developer <[email protected]> */
Include guards
If our file is to be included somewhere, it is good practice to provide an include guard macro. KDevPlatform ships a convenience template for generating such a macro called include_guard_cpp.txt. We can use it like this
#ifndef {% include "include_guard_cpp.txt" %}
#define {% include "include_guard_cpp.txt" %}
// Class declaration goes here
#endif // {% include "include_guard_cpp.txt" %}
{{ name|upper }}_H
. However, the include guard template also supports namespaces.
Class declaration
Members
Installing the template
Now we have all the template contents prepared. We only need to compress the directory and make it available to KDevelop.
There are three ways for doing that:
- compressing and loading it manually
- loading it from within KDevelop
- using a CMake macro.
Manually
First create an archive out of the kdev_tutorial directory. Many archive formats are accepted, but for best compatibility use .zip in Windows and .tar.bz2 everywhere else. In Dolphin, this can be achieved by right clicking within the directory, choosing
, and entering the filename as kdev_tutorial.tar.bz2.Now copy the new archive somewhere where KDevelop will find it. It looks for template archives in the ${PREFIX}/share/apps/kdevappwizard/templates, where prefix is either the system directory where KDE is installed (for example /usr) or the the local KDE configuration (for example ~/.kde or ~/.kde4). Copying our template to either is fine, choose dependeng on whether you want the template available only to you or all users on your computer.
After a run of kbuildsycoca4, KDevelop should pick up and offer you new template when creating a new project.
From KDevelop
You can have KDevelop do all this. Select , then in the dialog click the . Navigate to the kdev_tutorial directory, and open the kdev_tutorial.kdevtemplate file. Your template directory will be compressed and install into the local directory (usually ~/.kde/share/apps/kdevappwizard/templates).
With CMake
KDevPlatform includes a CMake macro that takes care of compressing and installing templates. This has the disadvantage of requiring a large library for installing a simple archive file, but may be useful especially for project that already depend on it. Alternatively, you may copy KDevPlatformMacros.cmake and put it into your project.
The macro requires that each template is in a separate directory, so create a new kdev_tutorial_templates directory and move kdev_tutorial into it. Then add the following CMakeLists.txt file to the top-level directory
project(kdevelop_template_tutorial)
find_package(KDE4 REQUIRED)
find_package(KDevPlatform REQUIRED)
set(TEMPLATE_DIRS kdev_tutorial)
kdevplatform_add_app_templates(${TEMPLATE_DIRS})
Build and install the project with the usual CMake steps
mkdir build cd build cmake .. make make install
Note that this will install the template into ${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}, for which you may need root privileges.