Using such approach you have to write something like readonly property QtObject backgroundColor: QtObject { ...
On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 2:04 PM Viktória Nemkin <viktoria.nem...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello! > > What is a clean way to define and categorize constants in QML? > > I have came up with this so far: > > I have a QML singleton element, named Theme. There I keep a few constant > things, like different background and font colors. > > Theme.qml: > > pragma Singleton > > import QtQuick 2.0 > > QtObject { > > readonly property color backgroundRed: "#FF2510" > > readonly property color backgroundWhite: "#F0F0F0" > > readonly property color backgroundPurple: "#930083" > > readonly property color fontRed: "#FF1010" > > readonly property color fontWhite: "#F6F6F6" > > } > > > When I want to use one of the colors I write: > > > color: Theme.backgroundRed > > > I don't like this approach. What I would like to be able to write is this: > > > color: Theme.background.red > > > I have tried adding nested QtObjects inside Theme but I could not get it > working. > > > QtObject { > > QtObject { > > id: background > > readonly property color red: "#FF2510" > > readonly property color white: "#F0F0F0" > > readonly property color purple: "#930083" > > } > > > QtObject { > > id: font > > readonly property color red: "#FF1010" > > readonly property color white: "#F6F6F6" > > } > > } > > > When I run it like this, I get an error: Theme.qml: Cannot assign to > non-existent default property. > > Is there a way to accomplish this? Is there any clean way to define and > categorize constants in QML? > > Thank you, > Viki > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest >
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