Volker Hilsheimer f4b338833e Move the addressbook tutorial into manual tests
The tutorial is building an elaborate UI around a QMap. It doesn't use
structured data, and it doesn't use model/view (which the dedicated
addressbook example in itemviews does).

It's not a good way of building an application, and the individual APIs
for creating layouts, dialogs, or import/export are explained well
enough in other examples.

Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: Iffe47a0f6e04a933edb917c877ae845f50b74b4a
Reviewed-by: Axel Spoerl <axel.spoerl@qt.io>
2023-05-15 14:52:17 +02:00

52 lines
1.3 KiB
C++

// Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR BSD-3-Clause
#include <QtWidgets>
#include "finddialog.h"
//! [constructor]
FindDialog::FindDialog(QWidget *parent)
: QDialog(parent)
{
QLabel *findLabel = new QLabel(tr("Enter the name of a contact:"));
lineEdit = new QLineEdit;
findButton = new QPushButton(tr("&Find"));
findText = "";
QHBoxLayout *layout = new QHBoxLayout;
layout->addWidget(findLabel);
layout->addWidget(lineEdit);
layout->addWidget(findButton);
setLayout(layout);
setWindowTitle(tr("Find a Contact"));
connect(findButton, &QPushButton::clicked,
this, &FindDialog::findClicked);
connect(findButton, &QPushButton::clicked,
this, &FindDialog::accept);
}
//! [constructor]
//! [findClicked() function]
void FindDialog::findClicked()
{
QString text = lineEdit->text();
if (text.isEmpty()) {
QMessageBox::information(this, tr("Empty Field"),
tr("Please enter a name."));
return;
} else {
findText = text;
lineEdit->clear();
hide();
}
}
//! [findClicked() function]
//! [getFindText() function]
QString FindDialog::getFindText()
{
return findText;
}
//! [getFindText() function]