Struct qt_core::QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
source · #[repr(C)]pub struct QPairOfQStringQJsonValue { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
C++ class: QPair<QString, QJsonValue>
.
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
QPair<T1, T2> can be used in your application if the STL pair
type is not available. It stores one value of type T1 and one value of type T2. It can be used as a return value for a function that needs to return two values, or as the value type of a generic container.
Here's an example of a QPair that stores one QString and one double
value:
The components are accessible as public data members called first and second. For example:
pair.first = “pi”; pair.second = 3.14159265358979323846;
Note, however, that it is almost always preferable to define a small struct to hold the result of a function with multiple return values. A struct trivially generalizes to more than two values, and allows more descriptive member names than first
and second
:
struct Variable { QString name; double value; }; Variable v; v.name = “pi”; v.value = 3.14159265358979323846;
The advent of C++11 automatic variable type deduction (auto
) shifts the emphasis from the type name to the name of functions and members. Thus, QPair, like std::pair
and std::tuple
, is mostly useful in generic (template) code, where defining a dedicated type is not possible.
QPair's template data types (T1 and T2) must be assignable data types. You cannot, for example, store a QWidget as a value; instead, store a QWidget *. A few functions have additional requirements; these requirements are documented on a per-function basis.
Implementations§
source§impl QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
impl QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
sourcepub unsafe fn copy_from(
&self,
other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>>
) -> Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
pub unsafe fn copy_from( &self, other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>> ) -> Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
Calls C++ function: QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::operator=(const QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& other)
.
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
QPair<T1, T2> can be used in your application if the STL pair
type is not available. It stores one value of type T1 and one value of type T2. It can be used as a return value for a function that needs to return two values, or as the value type of a generic container.
Here's an example of a QPair that stores one QString and one double
value:
The components are accessible as public data members called first and second. For example:
pair.first = “pi”; pair.second = 3.14159265358979323846;
Note, however, that it is almost always preferable to define a small struct to hold the result of a function with multiple return values. A struct trivially generalizes to more than two values, and allows more descriptive member names than first
and second
:
struct Variable { QString name; double value; }; Variable v; v.name = “pi”; v.value = 3.14159265358979323846;
The advent of C++11 automatic variable type deduction (auto
) shifts the emphasis from the type name to the name of functions and members. Thus, QPair, like std::pair
and std::tuple
, is mostly useful in generic (template) code, where defining a dedicated type is not possible.
QPair's template data types (T1 and T2) must be assignable data types. You cannot, for example, store a QWidget as a value; instead, store a QWidget *. A few functions have additional requirements; these requirements are documented on a per-function basis.
sourcepub unsafe fn new_0a() -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
pub unsafe fn new_0a() -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
Constructs an empty pair. The first
and second
elements are initialized with default-constructed values.
Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::QPair()
.
Constructs an empty pair. The first
and second
elements are initialized with default-constructed values.
sourcepub unsafe fn new_2a(
t1: impl CastInto<Ref<QString>>,
t2: impl CastInto<Ref<QJsonValue>>
) -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
pub unsafe fn new_2a( t1: impl CastInto<Ref<QString>>, t2: impl CastInto<Ref<QJsonValue>> ) -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
Constructs a pair and initializes the first
element with value1 and the second
element with value2.
Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::QPair(const QString& t1, const QJsonValue& t2)
.
Constructs a pair and initializes the first
element with value1 and the second
element with value2.
See also qMakePair().
sourcepub unsafe fn new_copy(
other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>>
) -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
pub unsafe fn new_copy( other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>> ) -> CppBox<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
Calls C++ function: [constructor] void QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::QPair(const QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& other)
.
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
QPair<T1, T2> can be used in your application if the STL pair
type is not available. It stores one value of type T1 and one value of type T2. It can be used as a return value for a function that needs to return two values, or as the value type of a generic container.
Here's an example of a QPair that stores one QString and one double
value:
The components are accessible as public data members called first and second. For example:
pair.first = “pi”; pair.second = 3.14159265358979323846;
Note, however, that it is almost always preferable to define a small struct to hold the result of a function with multiple return values. A struct trivially generalizes to more than two values, and allows more descriptive member names than first
and second
:
struct Variable { QString name; double value; }; Variable v; v.name = “pi”; v.value = 3.14159265358979323846;
The advent of C++11 automatic variable type deduction (auto
) shifts the emphasis from the type name to the name of functions and members. Thus, QPair, like std::pair
and std::tuple
, is mostly useful in generic (template) code, where defining a dedicated type is not possible.
QPair's template data types (T1 and T2) must be assignable data types. You cannot, for example, store a QWidget as a value; instead, store a QWidget *. A few functions have additional requirements; these requirements are documented on a per-function basis.
sourcepub unsafe fn swap(&self, other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>>)
pub unsafe fn swap(&self, other: impl CastInto<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>>)
Swaps this pair with other.
Calls C++ function: void QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::swap(QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& other)
.
Trait Implementations§
source§impl CppDeletable for QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
impl CppDeletable for QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
source§unsafe fn delete(&self)
unsafe fn delete(&self)
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
Calls C++ function: [destructor] void QPair<QString, QJsonValue>::~QPair()
.
The QPair class is a template class that stores a pair of items.
QPair<T1, T2> can be used in your application if the STL pair
type is not available. It stores one value of type T1 and one value of type T2. It can be used as a return value for a function that needs to return two values, or as the value type of a generic container.
Here's an example of a QPair that stores one QString and one double
value:
The components are accessible as public data members called first and second. For example:
pair.first = “pi”; pair.second = 3.14159265358979323846;
Note, however, that it is almost always preferable to define a small struct to hold the result of a function with multiple return values. A struct trivially generalizes to more than two values, and allows more descriptive member names than first
and second
:
struct Variable { QString name; double value; }; Variable v; v.name = “pi”; v.value = 3.14159265358979323846;
The advent of C++11 automatic variable type deduction (auto
) shifts the emphasis from the type name to the name of functions and members. Thus, QPair, like std::pair
and std::tuple
, is mostly useful in generic (template) code, where defining a dedicated type is not possible.
QPair's template data types (T1 and T2) must be assignable data types. You cannot, for example, store a QWidget as a value; instead, store a QWidget *. A few functions have additional requirements; these requirements are documented on a per-function basis.
source§impl PartialEq<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>> for QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
impl PartialEq<Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>> for QPairOfQStringQJsonValue
source§fn eq(&self, p2: &Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>) -> bool
fn eq(&self, p2: &Ref<QPairOfQStringQJsonValue>) -> bool
Returns true
if c1 and c2 are the same Unicode character; otherwise returns false
.
Calls C++ function: bool operator==(const QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& p1, const QPair<QString, QJsonValue>& p2)
.
Warning: no exact match found in C++ documentation. Below is the C++ documentation for bool operator==(QChar c1, QChar c2)
:
Returns true
if c1 and c2 are the same Unicode character; otherwise returns false
.