The capability flags indicate which information is valid in the touch
points. Previously there was no way to tell if e.g. the value returned
by pressure() is actually the value provided by the driver/device or
it is just something bogus due to pressure not being supported.
The points' flags return information about the individual touch
points. One use case is to differentiate between touches made by
finger and pen.
Velocity, if available, is now also exposed.
Each touch point can now contain an additional list of "raw"
positions. These points are not reported individually but are taken
into account in some way by the underlying device and drivers to
generate the final, "accurate" touch point. In case the underlying
drivers expose these additional positions, they are made available in
the lists returned by the touch points' rawScreenPosition().
The raw positions are only available in screen coordinates to prevent
wasting time with mapping from global positions in applications that
do not use this data. Instead, apps can query the QWindow to which the
touch event was sent via QTouchEvent::window() and can call
mapFromGlobal() manually if they need local raw positions.
The capability and device type information is now held in a new
QTouchDevice class. Each touch event will contain only a pointer to
one of the global QTouchDevice instances. On top of type and
capability, the new class also contains a name which can be used to
differentiate between multiple touch input devices (i.e. to tell from
which one a given QTouchEvent originates from).
The introduction of QTouchDevice has three implications: The
QTouchEvent constructor and QWindowSystemInterface::handleTouchEvent
need to be changed (to pass a QTouchDevice pointer instead of merely a
device type value), and each platform or generic plug-in is now
responsible for registering one or more devices using the new API
QWindowSystemInterface::registerTouchDevice.
Change-Id: Ic1468d3e43933d8b5691d75aa67c43e1bc7ffe3e
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
The overload of QTest::qExec() that takes a QStringList is not used
anywhere in Qt's autotests, despite having been in the qtestlib API
since Qt 4.4.
This lack of use most likely derives from the fact that none of the
QTEST_MAIN macros use the overload, and more than 99% of Qt's tests
use those macros to avoid explicitly calling QTest::qExec().
Change-Id: I264b21d7fe1a9f2d565f748cf8bbe32414a73bb0
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Which currently causes tests not to compile on Windows
due to missing symbols in QtWidgets (QSound::QSound() ,etc).
Change-Id: I87f0a403e61c3a67f9a758f114e33db1012e33e8
Reviewed-by: Michael Goddard <michael.goddard@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This is a source-incompatible change.
TlsV1 is ambiguous; what is actually meant is TLS version 1.0. There are
also TLS versions 1.1 and 1.2; we might want to add options for these
once OpenSSL supports them (apparently they will be with OpenSSL version
1.0.1).
Change-Id: I940d020b181b5fa528788ef0c3c47e8ef873796a
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
In Qt 4.x the serial number is reported by a mixture of the hex value
and the number, The hex is what is used by other tools, and we should do
the same.
Change-Id: Ia0361d43fb5b920d053c95e932e0c8a012436e5e
Reviewed-by: Peter Hartmann <peter.hartmann@nokia.com>
Currently isValid wrongly gives the impression it checks a certificate
for validity - it doesn't. It merely checks if the certificate dates
are valid and if the certificate is blacklisted. Since it's already
easy for users to check the dates, let's just give them access to the
ability to check for blacklisting.
Change-Id: I25be3bde6a01063034702a9574b28469bf4882cd
Reviewed-by: Peter Hartmann <peter.hartmann@nokia.com>
The standard IPv4 loopback address is 127.0.0.1, however anything in
the 127.0.0.0/8 range is also a loopback address.
isLoopback returns true for any address that is in the IPv4 loopback
address range, or is the single IPv6 loopback address ::1
Task-number: QTBUG-22246
Change-Id: Ic39100e2e97a52db700e01b109998a1cfd4335e3
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira (Intel) <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
create() is symmetric with destroy().
Also rename the internal methods and fields to be
consistent (qDeleteHelper already had the "right"
name, though!).
This change will allow us to use construct() and
destruct() for something else: Placement new-style
allocation (QTBUG-12574).
The old construct() is still kept for now, until
the other repositories have been updated to use
create().
Change-Id: Iceb184af6cffcb0a634359cfc3516c718ba0c2f5
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt-project.org/6342
Sanity-Review: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
QInputContext is migrated to QInputPanel, which allows only one
instance.
Change-Id: I4912164790d5a6bdff41e11cbe4bc4e2f9f111ec
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt-project.org/5641
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
this makes QCoreApplication::translate() consistent with
QTranslator::translate(), and is semantically cleaner.
users wishing to shrink their QM files can do that properly by using
lrelease -removeidentical.
Change-Id: I2b367314cfb985c3d130c7c6347e2742311f497a
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt-project.org/5165
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: hjk <qthjk@ovi.com>
The build-key is an old mechanism to work around binary
incompatibilities in GCC 3.x versions. Modern GCC has not broken binary
compatibility since 3.4, making this mechanism obsolete.
The cache value stored now only includes Qt version, the debug/release
boolean, and the last modified time for the plugin. Old 4-value keys
will be replaced with new keys as the plugins are reloaded the first
time.
This also removes QLibraryInfo::buildKey(), which is a source-incompatible
change.
The UNIX and Windows configure tools have been updated to stop
outputting the QT_BUILD_KEY preprocessor directive.
See also:
http://lists.qt.nokia.com/pipermail/qt5-feedback/2011-August/000892.html
Change-Id: I7d06969a370d3d2c6de413c1230d9d6789cbf195
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/3977
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
... and add a new method subjectAlternativeNames() instead. This was
a typo in the API.
Change-Id: Id8704c387c9ff8e1af2b9a524ff628f5c053a294
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/2618
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
According to the C++ standard, there is no guarantee that
you can cast between function pointers and void pointers
without data loss (section 5.2.10-6).
Change-Id: I27f4d835e4c8ca8ecca0d76cfea9ce34491956bd
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/1995
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
this makes the version based checks a bit simpler (and thus faster)
Change-Id: I975c6d043d238a5c16a4b13f8379e87fbade23cc
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/1586
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
there is no such category in the Unicode specs. the QChar::NoCategory
was a subject of bugs since it was introduced. int 4.6 it's meaning was
limited to mention ucs4 > UNICODE_LAST_CODEPOINT only (which is useless anyways)
in order to preserve the old (wrong) behavior.
fix it now for qtbase
Change-Id: I630534824e071090b39772881e747c1fdb758719
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/1584
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>