ad97aba452
Ensure comma between elements (757 missing), single space and curly- braces around title elements, etc. Change-Id: Id16c3fda7fc47a12a0682f8720214f4990609a97 Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com> Reviewed-by: Casper van Donderen <casper.vandonderen@nokia.com>
698 lines
22 KiB
C++
698 lines
22 KiB
C++
/****************************************************************************
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**
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** Copyright (C) 2012 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/
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**
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** This file is part of the QtCore module of the Qt Toolkit.
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**
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** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
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** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
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** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
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** License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software Foundation and
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** appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the packaging of this
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** file. Please review the following information to ensure the GNU Lesser
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** General Public License version 2.1 requirements will be met:
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** http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html.
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**
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** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional
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** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception
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** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package.
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**
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** GNU General Public License Usage
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** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU General
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** Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software Foundation
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** and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the packaging of this
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** file. Please review the following information to ensure the GNU General
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** Public License version 3.0 requirements will be met:
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** http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html.
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**
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** Other Usage
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** Alternatively, this file may be used in accordance with the terms and
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** conditions contained in a signed written agreement between you and Nokia.
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**
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**
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**
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**
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**
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**
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** $QT_END_LICENSE$
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**
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****************************************************************************/
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/*! \class QFuture
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\threadsafe
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\brief The QFuture class represents the result of an asynchronous computation.
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\since 4.4
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\ingroup thread
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To start a computation, use one of the APIs in the
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\l {Concurrent Programming}{Qt Concurrent} framework.
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QFuture allows threads to be synchronized against one or more results
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which will be ready at a later point in time. The result can be of any type
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that has a default constructor and a copy constructor. If a result is not
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available at the time of calling the result(), resultAt(), or results()
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functions, QFuture will wait until the result becomes available. You can
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use the isResultReadyAt() function to determine if a result is ready or
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not. For QFuture objects that report more than one result, the
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resultCount() function returns the number of continuous results. This
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means that it is always safe to iterate through the results from 0 to
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resultCount().
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QFuture provides a \l{Java-style iterators}{Java-style iterator}
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(QFutureIterator) and an \l{STL-style iterators}{STL-style iterator}
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(QFuture::const_iterator). Using these iterators is another way to access
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results in the future.
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QFuture also offers ways to interact with a runnning computation. For
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instance, the computation can be canceled with the cancel() function. To
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pause the computation, use the setPaused() function or one of the pause(),
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resume(), or togglePaused() convenience functions. Be aware that not all
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asynchronous computations can be canceled or paused. For example, the
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future returned by QtConcurrent::run() cannot be canceled; but the
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future returned by QtConcurrent::mappedReduced() can.
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Progress information is provided by the progressValue(),
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progressMinimum(), progressMaximum(), and progressText() functions. The
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waitForFinished() function causes the calling thread to block and wait for
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the computation to finish, ensuring that all results are available.
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The state of the computation represented by a QFuture can be queried using
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the isCanceled(), isStarted(), isFinished(), isRunning(), or isPaused()
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functions.
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QFuture is a lightweight reference counted class that can be passed by
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value.
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QFuture<void> is specialized to not contain any of the result fetching
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functions. Any QFuture<T> can be assigned or copied into a QFuture<void>
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as well. This is useful if only status or progress information is needed
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- not the actual result data.
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To interact with running tasks using signals and slots, use QFutureWatcher.
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\sa QFutureWatcher, {Concurrent Programming}{Qt Concurrent}
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::QFuture()
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Constructs an empty future.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::QFuture(const QFuture &other)
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Constructs a copy of \a other.
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\sa operator=()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::QFuture(QFutureInterface<T> *resultHolder)
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\internal
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::~QFuture()
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Destroys the future.
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Note that this neither waits nor cancels the asynchronous computation. Use
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waitForFinished() or QFutureSynchronizer when you need to ensure that the
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computation is completed before the future is destroyed.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture &QFuture::operator=(const QFuture &other)
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Assigns \a other to this future and returns a reference to this future.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::operator==(const QFuture &other) const
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Returns true if \a other is a copy of this future; otherwise returns false.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::operator!=(const QFuture &other) const
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Returns true if \a other is \e not a copy of this future; otherwise returns
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false.
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::cancel()
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Cancels the asynchronous computation represented by this future. Note that
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the cancelation is asynchronous. Use waitForFinished() after calling
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cancel() when you need synchronous cancelation.
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Results currently available may still be accessed on a canceled future,
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but new results will \e not become available after calling this function.
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Any QFutureWatcher object that is watching this future will not deliver
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progress and result ready signals on a canceled future.
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Be aware that not all asynchronous computations can be canceled. For
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example, the future returned by QtConcurrent::run() cannot be canceled;
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but the future returned by QtConcurrent::mappedReduced() can.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isCanceled() const
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Returns true if the asynchronous computation has been canceled with the
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cancel() function; otherwise returns false.
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Be aware that the computation may still be running even though this
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function returns true. See cancel() for more details.
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::setPaused(bool paused)
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If \a paused is true, this function pauses the asynchronous computation
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represented by the future. If the computation is already paused, this
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function does nothing. Any QFutureWatcher object that is watching this
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future will stop delivering progress and result ready signals while the
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future is paused. Signal delivery will continue once the future is
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resumed.
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If \a paused is false, this function resumes the asynchronous computation.
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If the computation was not previously paused, this function does nothing.
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Be aware that not all computations can be paused. For example, the future
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returned by QtConcurrent::run() cannot be paused; but the future returned
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by QtConcurrent::mappedReduced() can.
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\sa pause(), resume(), togglePaused()
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isPaused() const
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Returns true if the asynchronous computation has been paused with the
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pause() function; otherwise returns false.
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Be aware that the computation may still be running even though this
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function returns true. See setPaused() for more details.
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\sa setPaused(), togglePaused()
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::pause()
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Pauses the asynchronous computation represented by this future. This is a
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convenience method that simply calls setPaused(true).
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\sa resume()
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::resume()
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Resumes the asynchronous computation represented by this future. This is a
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convenience method that simply calls setPaused(false).
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\sa pause()
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::togglePaused()
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Toggles the paused state of the asynchronous computation. In other words,
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if the computation is currently paused, calling this function resumes it;
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if the computation is running, it is paused. This is a convenience method
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for calling setPaused(!isPaused()).
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\sa setPaused(), pause(), resume()
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isStarted() const
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Returns true if the asynchronous computation represented by this future
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has been started; otherwise returns false.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isFinished() const
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Returns true if the asynchronous computation represented by this future
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has finished; otherwise returns false.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isRunning() const
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Returns true if the asynchronous computation represented by this future is
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currently running; otherwise returns false.
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*/
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/*! \fn int QFuture::resultCount() const
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Returns the number of continuous results available in this future. The real
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number of results stored might be different from this value, due to gaps
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in the result set. It is always safe to iterate through the results from 0
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to resultCount().
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\sa result(), resultAt(), results()
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*/
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/*! \fn int QFuture::progressValue() const
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Returns the current progress value, which is between the progressMinimum()
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and progressMaximum().
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\sa progressMinimum(), progressMaximum()
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*/
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/*! \fn int QFuture::progressMinimum() const
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Returns the minimum progressValue().
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\sa progressValue(), progressMaximum()
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*/
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/*! \fn int QFuture::progressMaximum() const
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Returns the maximum progressValue().
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\sa progressValue(), progressMinimum()
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*/
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/*! \fn QString QFuture::progressText() const
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Returns the (optional) textual representation of the progress as reported
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by the asynchronous computation.
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Be aware that not all computations provide a textual representation of the
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progress, and as such, this function may return an empty string.
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*/
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/*! \fn void QFuture::waitForFinished()
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Waits for the asynchronous computation to finish (including cancel()ed
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computations).
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*/
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/*! \fn T QFuture::result() const
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Returns the first result in the future. If the result is not immediately
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available, this function will block and wait for the result to become
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available. This is a convenience method for calling resultAt(0).
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\sa resultAt(), results()
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*/
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/*! \fn T QFuture::resultAt(int index) const
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Returns the result at \a index in the future. If the result is not
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immediately available, this function will block and wait for the result to
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become available.
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\sa result(), results(), resultCount()
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::isResultReadyAt(int index) const
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Returns true if the result at \a index is immediately available; otherwise
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returns false.
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\sa resultAt(), resultCount()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::operator T() const
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Returns the first result in the future. If the result is not immediately
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available, this function will block and wait for the result to become
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available. This is a convenience method for calling result() or
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resultAt(0).
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\sa result(), resultAt(), results()
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*/
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/*! \fn QList<T> QFuture::results() const
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Returns all results from the future. If the results are not immediately
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available, this function will block and wait for them to become available.
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\sa result(), resultAt(), resultCount()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::begin() const
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the first result in the
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future.
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\sa constBegin(), end()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::end() const
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the imaginary result
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after the last result in the future.
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\sa begin(), constEnd()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::constBegin() const
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the first result in the
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future.
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\sa begin(), constEnd()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::constEnd() const
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Returns a const \l{STL-style iterator} pointing to the imaginary result
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after the last result in the future.
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\sa constBegin(), end()
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*/
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/*! \class QFuture::const_iterator
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\reentrant
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\since 4.4
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\brief The QFuture::const_iterator class provides an STL-style const
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iterator for QFuture.
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QFuture provides both \l{STL-style iterators} and \l{Java-style iterators}.
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The STL-style iterators are more low-level and more cumbersome to use; on
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the other hand, they are slightly faster and, for developers who already
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know STL, have the advantage of familiarity.
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The default QFuture::const_iterator constructor creates an uninitialized
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iterator. You must initialize it using a QFuture function like
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QFuture::constBegin() or QFuture::constEnd() before you start iterating.
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Here's a typical loop that prints all the results available in a future:
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\snippet code/src_concurrent_qfuture.cpp 0
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\sa QFutureIterator, QFuture
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::const_iterator::iterator_category
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Typedef for std::bidirectional_iterator_tag. Provided for STL compatibility.
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::const_iterator::difference_type
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Typedef for ptrdiff_t. Provided for STL compatibility.
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::const_iterator::value_type
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Typedef for T. Provided for STL compatibility.
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::const_iterator::pointer
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Typedef for const T *. Provided for STL compatibility.
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::const_iterator::reference
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Typedef for const T &. Provided for STL compatibility.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator::const_iterator()
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Constructs an uninitialized iterator.
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Functions like operator*() and operator++() should not be called on an
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uninitialized iterartor. Use operator=() to assign a value to it before
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using it.
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\sa QFuture::constBegin(), QFuture::constEnd()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator::const_iterator(QFuture const * const future, int index)
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\internal
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator::const_iterator(const const_iterator &other)
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Constructs a copy of \a other.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator &QFuture::const_iterator::operator=(const const_iterator &other)
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Assigns \a other to this iterator.
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*/
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/*! \fn const T &QFuture::const_iterator::operator*() const
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Returns the current result.
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*/
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/*! \fn const T *QFuture::const_iterator::operator->() const
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Returns a pointer to the current result.
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::const_iterator::operator!=(const const_iterator &other) const
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Returns true if \a other points to a different result than this iterator;
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otherwise returns false.
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\sa operator==()
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*/
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/*! \fn bool QFuture::const_iterator::operator==(const const_iterator &other) const
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Returns true if \a other points to the same result as this iterator;
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otherwise returns false.
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\sa operator!=()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator &QFuture::const_iterator::operator++()
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The prefix ++ operator (\c{++it}) advances the iterator to the next result
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in the future and returns an iterator to the new current result.
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Calling this function on QFuture::constEnd() leads to undefined results.
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\sa operator--()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::const_iterator::operator++(int)
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\overload
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The postfix ++ operator (\c{it++}) advances the iterator to the next
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result in the future and returns an iterator to the previously current
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result.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator &QFuture::const_iterator::operator--()
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The prefix -- operator (\c{--it}) makes the preceding result current and
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returns an iterator to the new current result.
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Calling this function on QFuture::constBegin() leads to undefined results.
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\sa operator++()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::const_iterator::operator--(int)
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\overload
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The postfix -- operator (\c{it--}) makes the preceding result current and
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returns an iterator to the previously current result.
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator &QFuture::const_iterator::operator+=(int j)
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Advances the iterator by \a j results. (If \a j is negative, the iterator
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goes backward.)
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\sa operator-=(), operator+()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator &QFuture::const_iterator::operator-=(int j)
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Makes the iterator go back by \a j results. (If \a j is negative, the
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iterator goes forward.)
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\sa operator+=(), operator-()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::const_iterator::operator+(int j) const
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Returns an iterator to the results at \a j positions forward from this
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iterator. (If \a j is negative, the iterator goes backward.)
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\sa operator-(), operator+=()
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*/
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/*! \fn QFuture::const_iterator QFuture::const_iterator::operator-(int j) const
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Returns an iterator to the result at \a j positions backward from this
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iterator. (If \a j is negative, the iterator goes forward.)
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\sa operator+(), operator-=()
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*/
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/*! \typedef QFuture::ConstIterator
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Qt-style synonym for QFuture::const_iterator.
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*/
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/*!
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\class QFutureIterator
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\reentrant
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\since 4.4
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\inmodule QtCore
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\brief The QFutureIterator class provides a Java-style const iterator for
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QFuture.
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QFuture has both \l{Java-style iterators} and \l{STL-style iterators}. The
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Java-style iterators are more high-level and easier to use than the
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STL-style iterators; on the other hand, they are slightly less efficient.
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An alternative to using iterators is to use index positions. Some QFuture
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member functions take an index as their first parameter, making it
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possible to access results without using iterators.
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QFutureIterator\<T\> allows you to iterate over a QFuture\<T\>. Note that
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there is no mutable iterator for QFuture (unlike the other Java-style
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iterators).
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The QFutureIterator constructor takes a QFuture as its argument. After
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construction, the iterator is located at the very beginning of the result
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list (i.e. before the first result). Here's how to iterate over all the
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results sequentially:
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\snippet code/src_concurrent_qfuture.cpp 1
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The next() function returns the next result (waiting for it to become
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available, if necessary) from the future and advances the iterator. Unlike
|
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STL-style iterators, Java-style iterators point \e between results rather
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|
than directly \e at results. The first call to next() advances the iterator
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to the position between the first and second result, and returns the first
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|
result; the second call to next() advances the iterator to the position
|
|
between the second and third result, and returns the second result; and
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so on.
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\img javaiterators1.png
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Here's how to iterate over the elements in reverse order:
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|
\snippet code/src_concurrent_qfuture.cpp 2
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|
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If you want to find all occurrences of a particular value, use findNext()
|
|
or findPrevious() in a loop.
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|
|
|
Multiple iterators can be used on the same future. If the future is
|
|
modified while a QFutureIterator is active, the QFutureIterator will
|
|
continue iterating over the original future, ignoring the modified copy.
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|
|
|
\sa QFuture::const_iterator, QFuture
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|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*!
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|
\fn QFutureIterator::QFutureIterator(const QFuture<T> &future)
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|
|
|
Constructs an iterator for traversing \a future. The iterator is set to be
|
|
at the front of the result list (before the first result).
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|
|
|
\sa operator=()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn QFutureIterator &QFutureIterator::operator=(const QFuture<T> &future)
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|
|
|
Makes the iterator operate on \a future. The iterator is set to be at the
|
|
front of the result list (before the first result).
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|
|
|
\sa toFront(), toBack()
|
|
*/
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|
|
|
/*! \fn void QFutureIterator::toFront()
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|
|
|
Moves the iterator to the front of the result list (before the first
|
|
result).
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|
|
|
\sa toBack(), next()
|
|
*/
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|
|
|
/*! \fn void QFutureIterator::toBack()
|
|
|
|
Moves the iterator to the back of the result list (after the last result).
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|
|
|
\sa toFront(), previous()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn bool QFutureIterator::hasNext() const
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|
|
|
Returns true if there is at least one result ahead of the iterator, e.g.,
|
|
the iterator is \e not at the back of the result list; otherwise returns
|
|
false.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasPrevious(), next()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn const T &QFutureIterator::next()
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|
|
|
Returns the next result and advances the iterator by one position.
|
|
|
|
Calling this function on an iterator located at the back of the result
|
|
list leads to undefined results.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasNext(), peekNext(), previous()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn const T &QFutureIterator::peekNext() const
|
|
|
|
Returns the next result without moving the iterator.
|
|
|
|
Calling this function on an iterator located at the back of the result
|
|
list leads to undefined results.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasNext(), next(), peekPrevious()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn bool QFutureIterator::hasPrevious() const
|
|
|
|
Returns true if there is at least one result ahead of the iterator, e.g.,
|
|
the iterator is \e not at the front of the result list; otherwise returns
|
|
false.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasNext(), previous()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn const T &QFutureIterator::previous()
|
|
|
|
Returns the previous result and moves the iterator back by one position.
|
|
|
|
Calling this function on an iterator located at the front of the result
|
|
list leads to undefined results.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasPrevious(), peekPrevious(), next()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn const T &QFutureIterator::peekPrevious() const
|
|
|
|
Returns the previous result without moving the iterator.
|
|
|
|
Calling this function on an iterator located at the front of the result
|
|
list leads to undefined results.
|
|
|
|
\sa hasPrevious(), previous(), peekNext()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn bool QFutureIterator::findNext(const T &value)
|
|
|
|
Searches for \a value starting from the current iterator position forward.
|
|
Returns true if \a value is found; otherwise returns false.
|
|
|
|
After the call, if \a value was found, the iterator is positioned just
|
|
after the matching result; otherwise, the iterator is positioned at the
|
|
back of the result list.
|
|
|
|
\sa findPrevious()
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*! \fn bool QFutureIterator::findPrevious(const T &value)
|
|
|
|
Searches for \a value starting from the current iterator position
|
|
backward. Returns true if \a value is found; otherwise returns false.
|
|
|
|
After the call, if \a value was found, the iterator is positioned just
|
|
before the matching result; otherwise, the iterator is positioned at the
|
|
front of the result list.
|
|
|
|
\sa findNext()
|
|
*/
|