Home · All Namespaces · All Classes · Main Classes · Grouped Classes · Modules · Functions |
The QXmlReader class provides an interface for XML readers (i.e. parsers). More...
#include <QXmlReader>
Inherited by QXmlSimpleReader.
Note: All the functions in this class are reentrant.
The QXmlReader class provides an interface for XML readers (i.e. parsers).
This abstract class provides an interface for all of Qt's XML readers. Currently there is only one implementation of a reader included in Qt's XML module: QXmlSimpleReader. In future releases there might be more readers with different properties available (e.g. a validating parser).
The design of the XML classes follows the SAX2 Java interface, with the names adapted to fit Qt naming conventions. It should be very easy for anybody who has worked with SAX2 to get started with the Qt XML classes.
All readers use the class QXmlInputSource to read the input document. Since you are normally interested in particular content in the XML document, the reader reports the content through special handler classes (QXmlDTDHandler, QXmlDeclHandler, QXmlContentHandler, QXmlEntityResolver, QXmlErrorHandler and QXmlLexicalHandler), which you must subclass, if you want to process the contents.
Since the handler classes only describe interfaces you must implement all the functions. We provide the QXmlDefaultHandler class to make this easier: it implements a default behavior (do nothing) for all functions, so you can subclass it and just implement the functions you are interested in.
Features and properties of the reader can be set with setFeature() and setProperty() respectively. You can set the reader to use your own subclasses with setEntityResolver(), setDTDHandler(), setContentHandler(), setErrorHandler(), setLexicalHandler() and setDeclHandler(). The parse itself is started with a call to parse().
See also QXmlSimpleReader.
Destroys the reader.
Returns the DTD handler or 0 if none was set.
See also setDTDHandler().
Returns the content handler or 0 if none was set.
See also setContentHandler().
Returns the declaration handler or 0 if none was set.
See also setDeclHandler().
Returns the entity resolver or 0 if none was set.
See also setEntityResolver().
Returns the error handler or 0 if none is set.
See also setErrorHandler().
If the reader has the feature called name, the feature's value is returned. If no such feature exists the return value is undefined.
If ok is not 0: *ok is set to true if the reader has the feature called name; otherwise *ok is set to false.
See also setFeature() and hasFeature().
Returns true if the reader has the feature called name; otherwise returns false.
See also feature() and setFeature().
Returns true if the reader has the property name; otherwise returns false.
See also property() and setProperty().
Returns the lexical handler or 0 if none was set.
See also setLexicalHandler().
Reads an XML document from input and parses it. Returns true if the parsing was successful; otherwise returns false.
If the reader has the property name, this function returns the value of the property; otherwise the return value is undefined.
If ok is not 0: if the reader has the name property *ok is set to true; otherwise *ok is set to false.
See also setProperty() and hasProperty().
Sets the content handler to handler.
See also contentHandler().
Sets the DTD handler to handler.
See also DTDHandler().
Sets the declaration handler to handler.
See also declHandler().
Sets the entity resolver to handler.
See also entityResolver().
Sets the error handler to handler. Clears the error handler if handler is 0.
See also errorHandler().
Sets the feature called name to the given value. If the reader doesn't have the feature nothing happens.
See also feature() and hasFeature().
Sets the lexical handler to handler.
See also lexicalHandler().
Sets the property name to value. If the reader doesn't have the property nothing happens.
See also property() and hasProperty().
Copyright © 2008 Nokia | Trademarks | Qt 4.4.3 |