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Qt 3 Support Members for QSettings

The following class members are part of the Qt 3 support layer. They are provided to help you port old code to Qt 4. We advise against using them in new code.

Public Types

Public Functions


Member Type Documentation

enum QSettings::System

ConstantValueDescription
QSettings::Unix0Unix systems (X11 and Embedded Linux)
QSettings::Windows1Microsoft Windows systems
QSettings::Mac2Mac OS X systems

See also insertSearchPath() and removeSearchPath().


Member Function Documentation

QStringList QSettings::entryList ( const QString & key ) const

Returns a list of all sub-keys of key.

Use childKeys() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 QSettings settings;
 QStringList keys = settings.entryList("cities");
 ...

you can rewrite it as

 QSettings settings;
 settings.beginGroup("cities");
 QStringList keys = settings.childKeys();
 ...
 settings.endGroup();

void QSettings::insertSearchPath ( System system, const QString & path )

This function is implemented as a no-op. It is provided for source compatibility with Qt 3. The new QSettings class has no concept of "search path".

bool QSettings::readBoolEntry ( const QString & key, bool defaultValue = false, bool * ok = 0 )

Returns the value for setting key converted to a bool. If the setting doesn't exist, returns defaultValue.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 bool grid = settings.readBoolEntry("showGrid", true, &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("showGrid");
 bool grid = settings.value("showGrid", true).toBool();

double QSettings::readDoubleEntry ( const QString & key, double defaultValue = 0, bool * ok = 0 )

Returns the value for setting key converted to a double. If the setting doesn't exist, returns defaultValue.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 double pi = settings.readDoubleEntry("pi", 3.141592, &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("pi");
 double pi = settings.value("pi", 3.141592).toDouble();

QString QSettings::readEntry ( const QString & key, const QString & defaultValue = QString(), bool * ok = 0 )

Returns the value for setting key converted to a QString. If the setting doesn't exist, returns defaultValue.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 QString str = settings.readEntry("userName", "administrator", &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("userName");
 QString str = settings.value("userName", "administrator").toString();

QStringList QSettings::readListEntry ( const QString & key, bool * ok = 0 )

Returns the value of setting key converted to a QStringList.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 QStringList list = settings.readListEntry("recentFiles", &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("recentFiles");
 QStringList list = settings.value("recentFiles").toStringList();

QStringList QSettings::readListEntry ( const QString & key, QChar separator, bool * ok = 0 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

Returns the value of setting key converted to a QStringList. separator is ignored.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 QStringList list = settings.readListEntry("recentFiles", ":", &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("recentFiles");
 QStringList list = settings.value("recentFiles").toStringList();

int QSettings::readNumEntry ( const QString & key, int defaultValue = 0, bool * ok = 0 )

Returns the value for setting key converted to an int. If the setting doesn't exist, returns defaultValue.

If ok is not 0, *ok is set to true if the key exists, otherwise *ok is set to false.

Use value() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 bool ok;
 int max = settings.readNumEntry("maxConnections", 30, &ok);

you can rewrite it as

 bool ok = settings.contains("maxConnections");
 int max = settings.value("maxConnections", 30).toInt();

bool QSettings::removeEntry ( const QString & key )

Use remove() instead.

void QSettings::removeSearchPath ( System system, const QString & path )

This function is implemented as a no-op. It is provided for source compatibility with Qt 3. The new QSettings class has no concept of "search path".

void QSettings::resetGroup ()

Sets the current group to be the empty string.

Use endGroup() instead (possibly multiple times).

For example, if you have code like

 QSettings settings;
 settings.beginGroup("mainWindow");
 settings.beginGroup("leftPanel");
 ...
 settings.resetGroup();

you can rewrite it as

 QSettings settings;
 settings.beginGroup("mainWindow");
 settings.beginGroup("leftPanel");
 ...
 settings.endGroup();
 settings.endGroup();

void QSettings::setPath ( const QString & organization, const QString & application, Scope scope = Global )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

Specifies the organization, application, and scope to use by the QSettings object.

Use the appropriate constructor instead, with QSettings::UserScope instead of QSettings::User and QSettings::SystemScope instead of QSettings::Global.

For example, if you have code like

 QSettings settings;
 settings.setPath("twikimaster.com", "Kanooth", QSettings::Global);

you can rewrite it as

 QSettings settings(QSettings::SystemScope, "twikimaster.com", "Kanooth");

QStringList QSettings::subkeyList ( const QString & key ) const

Returns a list of all sub-keys of key.

Use childGroups() instead.

For example, if you have code like

 QSettings settings;
 QStringList groups = settings.entryList("cities");
 ...

you can rewrite it as

 QSettings settings;
 settings.beginGroup("cities");
 QStringList groups = settings.childKeys();
 ...
 settings.endGroup();

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, bool value )

Sets the value of setting key to value.

Use setValue() instead.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, double value )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, int value )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, const char * value )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, const QString & value )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, const QStringList & value )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

bool QSettings::writeEntry ( const QString & key, const QStringList & value, QChar separator )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience.

Use setValue(key, value) instead. You don't need separator.


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Qt 4.4.3