#[repr(C)]
pub struct QConicalGradient { /* private fields */ }
Expand description

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

C++ class: QConicalGradient.

C++ documentation:

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Conical gradients interpolate interpolate colors counter-clockwise around a center point.

The colors in a gradient is defined using stop points of the QGradientStop type, i.e. a position and a color. Use the QGradient::setColorAt() or the QGradient::setStops() function to define the stop points. It is the gradient's complete set of stop points that describes how the gradient area should be filled. If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

In addition to the functions inherited from QGradient, the QConicalGradient class provides the angle() and center() functions returning the start angle and center of the gradient.

Note that the setSpread() function has no effect for conical gradients. The reason is that the conical gradient is closed by definition, i.e. the conical gradient fills the entire circle from 0 - 360 degrees, while the boundary of a radial or a linear gradient can be specified through its radius or final stop points, respectively.

Implementations§

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impl QConicalGradient

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pub unsafe fn angle(&self) -> c_double

Returns the start angle of the conical gradient in logical coordinates.

Calls C++ function: double QConicalGradient::angle() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the start angle of the conical gradient in logical coordinates.

See also setAngle() and stops().

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pub unsafe fn center(&self) -> CppBox<QPointF>

Returns the center of the conical gradient in logical coordinates.

Calls C++ function: QPointF QConicalGradient::center() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the center of the conical gradient in logical coordinates.

See also setCenter() and stops().

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pub unsafe fn copy_from( &self, other: impl CastInto<Ref<QConicalGradient>> ) -> Ref<QConicalGradient>

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Calls C++ function: QConicalGradient& QConicalGradient::operator=(const QConicalGradient& other).

C++ documentation:

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Conical gradients interpolate interpolate colors counter-clockwise around a center point.

The colors in a gradient is defined using stop points of the QGradientStop type, i.e. a position and a color. Use the QGradient::setColorAt() or the QGradient::setStops() function to define the stop points. It is the gradient's complete set of stop points that describes how the gradient area should be filled. If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

In addition to the functions inherited from QGradient, the QConicalGradient class provides the angle() and center() functions returning the start angle and center of the gradient.

Note that the setSpread() function has no effect for conical gradients. The reason is that the conical gradient is closed by definition, i.e. the conical gradient fills the entire circle from 0 - 360 degrees, while the boundary of a radial or a linear gradient can be specified through its radius or final stop points, respectively.

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pub unsafe fn new_0a() -> CppBox<QConicalGradient>

Constructs a conical with center at (0, 0) starting the interpolation at angle 0.

Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QConicalGradient::QConicalGradient().

C++ documentation:

Constructs a conical with center at (0, 0) starting the interpolation at angle 0.

See also QGradient::setColorAt(), setCenter(), and setAngle().

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pub unsafe fn new_2a( center: impl CastInto<Ref<QPointF>>, start_angle: c_double ) -> CppBox<QConicalGradient>

Constructs a conical gradient with the given center, starting the interpolation at the given angle. The angle must be specified in degrees between 0 and 360.

Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QConicalGradient::QConicalGradient(const QPointF& center, double startAngle).

C++ documentation:

Constructs a conical gradient with the given center, starting the interpolation at the given angle. The angle must be specified in degrees between 0 and 360.

See also QGradient::setColorAt() and QGradient::setStops().

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pub unsafe fn new_3a( cx: c_double, cy: c_double, start_angle: c_double ) -> CppBox<QConicalGradient>

Constructs a conical gradient with the given center (cx, cy), starting the interpolation at the given angle. The angle must be specified in degrees between 0 and 360.

Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QConicalGradient::QConicalGradient(double cx, double cy, double startAngle).

C++ documentation:

Constructs a conical gradient with the given center (cx, cy), starting the interpolation at the given angle. The angle must be specified in degrees between 0 and 360.

See also QGradient::setColorAt() and QGradient::setStops().

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pub unsafe fn new_copy( other: impl CastInto<Ref<QConicalGradient>> ) -> CppBox<QConicalGradient>

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QConicalGradient::QConicalGradient(const QConicalGradient& other).

C++ documentation:

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Conical gradients interpolate interpolate colors counter-clockwise around a center point.

The colors in a gradient is defined using stop points of the QGradientStop type, i.e. a position and a color. Use the QGradient::setColorAt() or the QGradient::setStops() function to define the stop points. It is the gradient's complete set of stop points that describes how the gradient area should be filled. If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

In addition to the functions inherited from QGradient, the QConicalGradient class provides the angle() and center() functions returning the start angle and center of the gradient.

Note that the setSpread() function has no effect for conical gradients. The reason is that the conical gradient is closed by definition, i.e. the conical gradient fills the entire circle from 0 - 360 degrees, while the boundary of a radial or a linear gradient can be specified through its radius or final stop points, respectively.

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pub unsafe fn set_angle(&self, angle: c_double)

Sets angle to be the start angle for this conical gradient in logical coordinates.

Calls C++ function: void QConicalGradient::setAngle(double angle).

C++ documentation:

Sets angle to be the start angle for this conical gradient in logical coordinates.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.2.

See also angle().

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pub unsafe fn set_center_1a(&self, center: impl CastInto<Ref<QPointF>>)

Sets the center of this conical gradient in logical coordinates to center.

Calls C++ function: void QConicalGradient::setCenter(const QPointF& center).

C++ documentation:

Sets the center of this conical gradient in logical coordinates to center.

See also center().

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pub unsafe fn set_center_2a(&self, x: c_double, y: c_double)

This is an overloaded function.

Calls C++ function: void QConicalGradient::setCenter(double x, double y).

C++ documentation:

This is an overloaded function.

Sets the center of this conical gradient in logical coordinates to (x, y).

See also center().

Methods from Deref<Target = QGradient>§

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pub unsafe fn coordinate_mode(&self) -> CoordinateMode

Returns the coordinate mode of this gradient. The default mode is LogicalMode.

Calls C++ function: QGradient::CoordinateMode QGradient::coordinateMode() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the coordinate mode of this gradient. The default mode is LogicalMode.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also setCoordinateMode().

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pub unsafe fn copy_from( &self, other: impl CastInto<Ref<QGradient>> ) -> Ref<QGradient>

The QGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify gradient fills.

Calls C++ function: QGradient& QGradient::operator=(const QGradient& other).

C++ documentation:

The QGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify gradient fills.

Qt currently supports three types of gradient fills:

  • Linear gradients interpolate colors between start and end points.
  • Simple radial gradients interpolate colors between a focal point and end points on a circle surrounding it.
  • Extended radial gradients interpolate colors between a center and a focal circle.
  • Conical gradients interpolate colors around a center point.

A gradient's type can be retrieved using the type() function. Each of the types is represented by a subclass of QGradient:

The colors in a gradient are defined using stop points of the QGradientStop type; i.e., a position and a color. Use the setColorAt() function to define a single stop point. Alternatively, use the setStops() function to define several stop points in one go. Note that the latter function replaces the current set of stop points.

It is the gradient's complete set of stop points (accessible through the stops() function) that describes how the gradient area should be filled. If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

A diagonal linear gradient from black at (100, 100) to white at (200, 200) could be specified like this:

QLinearGradient linearGrad(QPointF(100, 100), QPointF(200, 200)); linearGrad.setColorAt(0, Qt::black); linearGrad.setColorAt(1, Qt::white);

A gradient can have an arbitrary number of stop points. The following would create a radial gradient starting with red in the center, blue and then green on the edges:

QRadialGradient radialGrad(QPointF(100, 100), 100); radialGrad.setColorAt(0, Qt::red); radialGrad.setColorAt(0.5, Qt::blue); radialGrad.setColorAt(1, Qt::green);

It is possible to repeat or reflect the gradient outside its area by specifiying the spread method using the setSpread() function. The default is to pad the outside area with the color at the closest stop point. The currently set spread method can be retrieved using the spread() function. The QGradient::Spread enum defines three different methods:

Note that the setSpread() function only has effect for linear and radial gradients. The reason is that the conical gradient is closed by definition, i.e. the conical gradient fills the entire circle from 0 - 360 degrees, while the boundary of a radial or a linear gradient can be specified through its radius or final stop points, respectively.

The gradient coordinates can be specified in logical coordinates, relative to device coordinates, or relative to object bounding box coordinates. The coordinate mode can be set using the setCoordinateMode() function. The default is LogicalMode, where the gradient coordinates are specified in the same way as the object coordinates. To retrieve the currently set coordinate mode use coordinateMode().

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pub unsafe fn interpolation_mode(&self) -> InterpolationMode

Calls C++ function: QGradient::InterpolationMode QGradient::interpolationMode() const.

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pub unsafe fn set_color_at( &self, pos: c_double, color: impl CastInto<Ref<QColor>> )

Creates a stop point at the given position with the given color. The given position must be in the range 0 to 1.

Calls C++ function: void QGradient::setColorAt(double pos, const QColor& color).

C++ documentation:

Creates a stop point at the given position with the given color. The given position must be in the range 0 to 1.

See also setStops() and stops().

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pub unsafe fn set_coordinate_mode(&self, mode: CoordinateMode)

Sets the coordinate mode of this gradient to mode. The default mode is LogicalMode.

Calls C++ function: void QGradient::setCoordinateMode(QGradient::CoordinateMode mode).

C++ documentation:

Sets the coordinate mode of this gradient to mode. The default mode is LogicalMode.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also coordinateMode().

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pub unsafe fn set_interpolation_mode(&self, mode: InterpolationMode)

Calls C++ function: void QGradient::setInterpolationMode(QGradient::InterpolationMode mode).

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pub unsafe fn set_spread(&self, spread: Spread)

Specifies the spread method that should be used for this gradient.

Calls C++ function: void QGradient::setSpread(QGradient::Spread spread).

C++ documentation:

Specifies the spread method that should be used for this gradient.

Note that this function only has effect for linear and radial gradients.

See also spread().

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pub unsafe fn set_stops( &self, stops: impl CastInto<Ref<QVectorOfQPairOfDoubleQColor>> )

Replaces the current set of stop points with the given stopPoints. The positions of the points must be in the range 0 to 1, and must be sorted with the lowest point first.

Calls C++ function: void QGradient::setStops(const QVector<QPair<double, QColor>>& stops).

C++ documentation:

Replaces the current set of stop points with the given stopPoints. The positions of the points must be in the range 0 to 1, and must be sorted with the lowest point first.

See also setColorAt() and stops().

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pub unsafe fn spread(&self) -> Spread

Returns the spread method use by this gradient. The default is PadSpread.

Calls C++ function: QGradient::Spread QGradient::spread() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the spread method use by this gradient. The default is PadSpread.

See also setSpread().

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pub unsafe fn stops(&self) -> CppBox<QVectorOfQPairOfDoubleQColor>

Returns the stop points for this gradient.

Calls C++ function: QVector<QPair<double, QColor>> QGradient::stops() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the stop points for this gradient.

If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

See also setStops() and setColorAt().

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pub unsafe fn type_(&self) -> Type

Returns the type of gradient.

Calls C++ function: QGradient::Type QGradient::type() const.

C++ documentation:

Returns the type of gradient.

Trait Implementations§

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impl CppDeletable for QConicalGradient

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unsafe fn delete(&self)

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Calls C++ function: [destructor] void QConicalGradient::~QConicalGradient().

C++ documentation:

The QConicalGradient class is used in combination with QBrush to specify a conical gradient brush.

Conical gradients interpolate interpolate colors counter-clockwise around a center point.

The colors in a gradient is defined using stop points of the QGradientStop type, i.e. a position and a color. Use the QGradient::setColorAt() or the QGradient::setStops() function to define the stop points. It is the gradient's complete set of stop points that describes how the gradient area should be filled. If no stop points have been specified, a gradient of black at 0 to white at 1 is used.

In addition to the functions inherited from QGradient, the QConicalGradient class provides the angle() and center() functions returning the start angle and center of the gradient.

Note that the setSpread() function has no effect for conical gradients. The reason is that the conical gradient is closed by definition, i.e. the conical gradient fills the entire circle from 0 - 360 degrees, while the boundary of a radial or a linear gradient can be specified through its radius or final stop points, respectively.

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impl Deref for QConicalGradient

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fn deref(&self) -> &QGradient

Calls C++ function: QGradient* static_cast<QGradient*>(QConicalGradient* ptr).

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type Target = QGradient

The resulting type after dereferencing.
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impl StaticDowncast<QConicalGradient> for QGradient

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unsafe fn static_downcast(ptr: Ptr<QGradient>) -> Ptr<QConicalGradient>

Calls C++ function: QConicalGradient* static_cast<QConicalGradient*>(QGradient* ptr).

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impl StaticUpcast<QGradient> for QConicalGradient

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unsafe fn static_upcast(ptr: Ptr<QConicalGradient>) -> Ptr<QGradient>

Calls C++ function: QGradient* static_cast<QGradient*>(QConicalGradient* ptr).

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