As in the past, to avoid rewriting various autotests that contain
line-number information, an extra blank line has been inserted at the
end of the license text to ensure that this commit does not change the
total number of lines in the license header.
Change-Id: I311e001373776812699d6efc045b5f742890c689
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
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 moc tool is not aware of all defines (particularly those that are
compiler builtins) and does not correctly evaluate others that depend
on compiler builtins, such as Q_OS_FOO.
This commit reverts parts of the following commits, but is not a
complete fix as there were many instances of this problem in the tests
prior to those commits:
924d810dbd8aaff67510338d3f1197a55034062b253497b7447cfad460c59d2ff58f360cf6baa2d6
Change-Id: I947d797fe3ec76139ba1b55561cea569895662c5
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>