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	Change-Id: I61e7cf189a1c4ea04e2a88a80a4f15e43cd3c018 Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt.nokia.com/1187 Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com> Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@nokia.com>
		
			
				
	
	
		
			313 lines
		
	
	
		
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			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			313 lines
		
	
	
		
			12 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
/****************************************************************************
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**
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** This file is part of Qt Creator
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**
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** Copyright (c) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
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**
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** Contact: Nokia Corporation (info@qt.nokia.com)
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**
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**
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** GNU Free Documentation License
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**
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** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free
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** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software
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** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this
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** file.
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**
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** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
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** Nokia at info@qt.nokia.com.
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**
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****************************************************************************/
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/*!
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    \contentspage index.html
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    \if defined(qcmanual)
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    \previouspage creator-keyboard-shortcuts.html
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    \else
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    \endif
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    \page creator-faq.html
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    \if defined(qcmanual)
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    \nextpage creator-tips.html
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    \else
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    \endif
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    \title FAQ
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    This section contains answers to some frequently asked questions about Qt
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    Creator. You might also find answers to your questions in the
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    \l{Known Issues} and \l{Tips and Tricks} sections, or the Troubleshooting
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    sections for a special area, such as
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    \l{Troubleshooting Debugger}{debugging}.
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    \section1 General Questions
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    \bold {How do I reset all Qt Creator settings?}
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    Qt Creator creates two files and a directory:
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    \list
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        \o  QtCreator.db
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        \o  QtCreator.ini
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        \o  qtcreator
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    \endlist
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    The location depends on the platform. On Linux, Unix, and Mac OS, the files
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    are located in \c{~/.config/Nokia}.
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    On Windows XP, the files are located in
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    \c{<drive>:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\Nokia}, and
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    on Windows Vista and Windows 7 in
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    \c {<drive>:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\Nokia}.
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    For all versions, try the path \c{APPDATA\Nokia}.
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    \bold {Qt Creator comes with MinGW, should I use this version with Qt?}
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    Use the version that was built against the Qt version.
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    \bold {Qt Creator does not find a helper application, such as Git or a
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    compiler. What should I do?}
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    Make sure that the application is in your system PATH when starting Qt
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    Creator. Also select \gui {Tools > Options} to check the settings specified
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    for the application. Many plugins specify either the path to the tool they
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    need or the environment they run in.
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    This is especially relevant for the Mac OS where \c {/usr/local/bin} might
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    not be in the path when Qt Creator is started.
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    \bold {How do I change the interface language for Qt Creator?}
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    Qt Creator has been localized into several languages. If the system
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    language is one of the supported languages, it is automatically selected.
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    To change the language, select \gui {Tools > Options > Environment} and
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    select a language in the \gui Language field. The change takes effect after
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    you restart Qt Creator.
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    \bold {Has a reported issue been addressed?}
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    You can look up any issue in the
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    \l{http://bugreports.qt.nokia.com/}{Qt bug tracker}.
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    \section1 Qt Designer Integration Questions
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    \bold {Why are custom widgets not loaded in Design mode even though it
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    works in standalone Qt Designer?}
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    Qt Designer fetches plugins from standard locations and loads the plugins
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    that match its build key. The locations are different for standalone and
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    integrated Qt Designer.
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    For more information, see \l{Adding Qt Designer Plugins}.
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    \section1 Help Questions
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    \bold {The Qt API Reference Documentation is missing and context help does
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    not find topics. What can I do?}
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    Qt Creator comes fully integrated with Qt documentation and examples using
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    the Qt Help plugin. The integrated Qt Reference Documentation is available
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    for Qt 4.4 and later. Qt Creator, \QSDK, and other Qt deliverables contain
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    documentation as .qch files. All the documentation is accessible in the
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    \gui Help mode.
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    To view the documentation that is available and to add documentation,
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    select \gui {Tools > Options... > Help > Documentation}. For more
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    information, see \l{Adding External Documentation}.
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    \section1 Debugger Questions
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    For information on troubleshooting debugger, see
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    \l{Troubleshooting Debugger}.
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    \bold {If I have a choice of GDB versions, which should I use?}
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    On Linux and Windows, use the Python-enabled GDB versions that are
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    installed when you install Qt Creator and Qt SDK. On Mac OS X, use the GDB
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    provided with Xcode. For a custom target, you can build your own
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    Python-enabled GDB. Follow the instructions in
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    \l{http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/QtCreatorBuildGdb}{Building GDB}.
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    You must use at least Python version 2.5, but we recommend that you use
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    version 2.6.
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    For more information on setting up debugger, see \l{Setting Up Debugger}.
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    \section1 Code Editor Questions
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    \bold {How can I get code-completion to work on the standard headers and
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    phonon?}
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    Install a build from March 31, 2009, or later.
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    \section1 Compiler Questions
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    \bold {How can I make use of my multi-core CPU with Qt Creator?}
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    On Linux and Mac OS X, go to \gui Project mode, select your configuration
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    in the \gui {Build Settings}, locate the \gui {Build Steps}, and add the
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    following value, where \c{<num>} is the amount of cores in your CPU:
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    \c{-j <num>}
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    On Windows, nmake does not support the \c{-j} parameter. Instead, we
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    provide a drop-in replacement called jom. You can download a precompiled
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    version of jom from \l{ftp://ftp.qt.nokia.com/jom/}{Qt FTP server}.
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    Put jom.exe in a location in the %PATH%. Go to the \gui {Build Settings}
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    and set jom.exe as the make command.
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    \note: Unlike GNU make, jom automatically detects your cores and spawns as
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    many parallel processes as your CPU has cores. You can override this
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    behavior by using the \c{-j} parameter as described above.
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    \section1 Qt SDK Questions
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    \bold {I cannot use QSslSocket with the SDK. What should I do?}
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    The Qt build in the SDK is built with QT_NO_OPENSSL defined. Rebuilding it
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     is possible. For more information, see
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     \l{http://www.qtcentre.org/forum/f-qt-programming-2/t-qssl-19222-post94842.html}.
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    \bold {Which development packages from the distribution are needed on
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    Ubuntu or Debian?}
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    \code
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    sudo apt-get install libglib2.0-dev libSM-dev libxrender-dev libfontconfig1-dev libxext-dev
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    \endcode
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    If you use QtOpenGL, you also need:
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    \code
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    sudo apt-get install libgl-dev libglu-dev
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    \endcode
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    \section1 Platform Releated Questions
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    \bold {Where is application output shown in Qt Creator?}
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    \bold {On Unix (Linux and Mac OS):} \c qDebug() and related functions use
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    the standard output and error output. When you run or debug the
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    application, you can view the output in the \gui{Application Output} pane.
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    For console applications that require input, select \gui {Projects > Run
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    Settings > Run in terminal}.
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    \bold {On Windows:} Output is displayed differently for \e{console
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    applications} and \e{GUI applications}.
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    The setting \c {CONFIG += console} in the .pro file specifies that the
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    application is built as a console application using some other runtime.
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    When you run a console application, you can view the output in the console
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    window of the calling application. If the
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    calling application is a GUI application (for example, a release-built
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    version of Qt Creator), a new console window is opened.  For this
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    type of application, \c qDebug() and related functions use standard output
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    and error output.
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    We recommend that you select \gui {Projects > Run Settings > Run in
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    terminal} for console applications.
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    For GUI applications, \c qDebug() and related functions use the Windows API
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    function \c OutputDebugString(). The output is displayed in the
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    \gui{Application Output} pane. However, only one output pane tab may be
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    open at a time or the output is not displayed correctly. You can use an
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    external debug output viewer, such as the
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    \l{http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896647}{DebugView for Windows}
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    to display output from GUI applications.
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    \bold {On Symbian OS}: \c qDebug() and related functions use the native
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    \c RDebug::Print functionality.
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    When you use the Symbian emulator on Windows, the output is redirected to
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    standard debug output. To view it, you can use a Windows debug output
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    viewer, such as the DebugView for Windows.
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    On devices, the \c RDebug output is intercepted by \e CODA or \e {App TRK}
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    and then propagated to Qt Creator, which displays it in the
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    \gui {Application Output} pane.
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    Symbian OS provides no support for differentiating between standard output
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    and error output.
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    \section1 Questions about New Features
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    \bold {Will a requested feature be implemented?}
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    If it is a scheduled feature, you can see this in the task tracker. If a
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    feature already has been implemented, it is mentioned in the
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    \l{http://qt.gitorious.org/qt-creator/qt-creator/trees/master/dist}{changes file}
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    for the upcoming release.
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    \bold {Why does Qt Creator not use tabs for editors?}
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    This question comes up from time to time, so we have considered it
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    carefully. Here are our main reasons for not using tabs:
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    \list
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        \o  Tabs do not scale. They work fine if you have 5 to 6 editors open,
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            they become cumbersome with 10, and if you need more horizontal
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            space than the tab bar, the interface does not work at all.
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        \o  Tabs do not adapt to your working set.
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        \o  The common solution is to give the user the ability to reorder
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            tabs. Now user has to manage tabs instead of writing code.
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        \o  Tabs force you to limit the amount of open editors, because
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            otherwise you get confused.
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    \endlist
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    Consider the following use case: \e {Developers want to switch editors.}
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    In fact, developers do not want to switch editors, but might have to do so
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    to accomplish their tasks. We need to figure out what the tasks are to
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    provide developers with better ways to navigate while performing the tasks.
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    One common factor in many use cases is switching editors while working on a
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    set of open files. While working on files A and B, users sometimes need to
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    look at file C. They can press \key Ctrl+Tab to move between the files and
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    have the files open in the correct editor according to file type. The list
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    is sorted by last used.
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    Typically, users also work on multiple classes or functions that are
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    related, even though they are defined or declared in different files.
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    Qt Creator provides two shortcuts for that: \key F2 to follow the symbol
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    and \key Ctrl+Shift+U to find usages.
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    In addition, developers can:
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    \list
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        \o  Press \key F4 to switch between header and source.
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        \o  Press \key Alt+Left to move backwards in the navigation history.
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        \o  Use the locator (Ctrl+K) to simply tell Qt Creator where to go.
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    \endlist
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    The locator can be used to open files, but opening files is also just a
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    step on the way to accomplish a task. For example, consider the following
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    use case: \e {Fix AMethod in SomeClass which comes from
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    someclass.cpp/someclass.h}.
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    With a tabbed user interface, developers would search for someclass.cpp in
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    the tab bar, and then search for \c {::AMethod}, only to find out that the
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    method is not located in that file. They would then search for someclass.h
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    in the tab bar, find our that the function is inline, fix the problem, and
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    forget where they came from.
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    With Qt Creator, developers can type \c {Ctrl+K m AMet} to find the method.
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    Typically, they only need to type 3 to 4 characters of the method name.
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    They can then fix the problem and press \key Alt+Back to go back to where
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    they were.
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    Other locator filters include \c c for classes, \c : for all symbols, and
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    (thanks to a community contribution) \c . for symbols in the current file.
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*/
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