Hey Greg,

Thanks for sharing the scrollbar, just a suggestion, as the rest of the QML API 
seems to use 'target' for components that affect other components, perhaps you 
should change the 'attachTo' to 'target'

So .. Who's going to make a web 2.0 site for sharing QML bits?

=)

Alan

On Aug 12, 2010, at 8:18 PM, ext Gregory Schlomoff wrote:

Hi guys,

Since there were a few people asking for our Scrollbar component, I just 
published it in a public Mercurial repository. It lives here:

https://bitbucket.org/gregschlom/qmlscrollbar

<https://bitbucket.org/gregschlom/qmlscrollbar>If you're not using mercurial, 
there's a "get sources" link on the right that allows you to download a zip 
file.

I've included a sample qml file demonstrating the usage, as well as the images 
and the photoshop file for the Scrollbar. Obvioously, you'll want to change 
that to use yours.

The code is released under the MIT license. It may have bugs, and it probabably 
can be enhanced (adding support for horizontal scrolling, for example). If you 
make any changes that make this code better, please feel free to submit patches 
/ merge requests.

Cheers,

Greg



On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 8:40 PM, Gregory Schlomoff 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
We are using QML ListViews in our desktop app. It works well... Now that a lot 
of bugs have been fixed, and that we really understand how ListView works :)

As for the scrollbar, we made a quick Scrollbar component that works very well. 
The code looks like this:

ListView {
  id: myList
...
}
ScrollBar {
  attachTo: myList
}

The scrollbar can be attached to any Flickable (so that includes ListView). But 
it only works for vertical scrolling, as of now. We may share the code for this 
component, if it's of any interest to you. Just drop me a mail.

(By the way, that raises again the question of a public place to share qml 
componentns :) )

Cheers

greg


On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 8:31 PM, Riaan Kruger 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I am playing with QML and is considering replacing a listview in a C++ 
(desktop) application with a QML based listview using qdeclarativeview.
I want to do this to demonstrate the capabilities of QML and because I find 
customizing list/tree views in Qt C++ hard.

Is this a good idea, or am I in for some hurt?
What is the best strategy for handling scrolling; scrollbars are normally 
preferred on the desktop


Riaan

_______________________________________________
Qt-qml mailing list
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://lists.trolltech.com/mailman/listinfo/qt-qml



<ATT00001..txt>

_______________________________________________
Qt-qml mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.trolltech.com/mailman/listinfo/qt-qml

Reply via email to