Identified Modules
Identified modules are modules that are installed and identifiable to the QML engine by a URI in the form of a dotted identifier string, which should be specified by the module in its qmldir
file. This enables such modules to be imported with a unique identifier that remains the same no matter where the module is located on the local file system.
When importing an identified module, an unquoted identifier is used, with a mandatory version number:
import QtQuick 2.0 import com.nokia.qml.mymodule 1.0
Identified modules must be installed into the import path in order to be found by the QML engine.
Locally Installed Identified Modules
A directory of QML and/or C++ files can be shared as an identified module if it contains a qmldir file with the module metadata and is installed into the QML import path. Any QML file on the local file system can import this directory as a module by using an import statement that refers to the module's URI, enabling the file to use the QML object types and JavaScript resources defined by the module.
The module's qmldir
file must reside in a directory structure within the import path that reflects the URI dotted identifier string, where each dot (".") in the identifier reflects a sub-level in the directory tree. For example, the qmldir
file of the module com.mycompany.mymodule
must be located in the sub-path com/mycompany/mymodule/qmldir
somewhere in the import path.
It is possible to store different versions of a module in subdirectories of its own. For example, a version 2.1 of a module could be located under com/mycompany/mymodule.2/qmldir
or com/mycompany/mymodule.2.1/qmldir
. The engine will automatically load the module which matches best.
Alternatively, versioning for different types can be defined within a qmldir file itself, however this can make updating such a module more difficult (as a qmldir
file merge must take place as part of the update procedure).
An Example
Consider the following QML project directory structure. Under the top level directory myapp
, there are a set of common UI components in a sub-directory named mycomponents
, and the main application code in a sub-directory named main
, like this:
myapp |- mycomponents |- CheckBox.qml |- DialogBox.qml |- Slider.qml |- main |- application.qml
To make the mycomponents
directory available as an identified module, the directory must include a qmldir file that defines the module identifier, and describes the object types made available by the module. For example, to make the CheckBox
, DialogBox
and Slider
types available for version 1.0 of the module, the qmldir
file would contain the following:
module myapp.mycomponents CheckBox 1.0 CheckBox.qml DialogBox 1.0 DialogBox.qml Slider 1.0 Slider.qml
Additionally, the location of the qmldir
file in the import path must match the module's dotted identifier string. So, say the top level myapp
directory is located in C:\qml\projects
, and say the module should be identified as "myapp.mycomponents". In this case:
- The path
C:\qml\projects
should be added to the import path - The qmldir file should be located under
C:\qml\projects\myapp\mycomponents\qmldir
Once this is done, a QML file located anywhere on the local filesystem can import the module by referring to its URI and the appropriate version:
import myapp.mycomponents 1.0 DialogBox { CheckBox { // ... } Slider { // ... } }
Remotely Installed Identified Modules
Identified modules are also accessible as a network resource. In the previous example, if the C:\qml\projects
directory was hosted as http://www.some-server.com/qml/projects
and this URL was added to the QML import path, the module could be imported in exactly the same way.
Note that when a file imports a module over a network, it can only access QML and JavaScript resources provided by the module; it cannot access any types defined by C++ plugins in the module.
Semantics of Identified Modules
An identified module is provided with the following guarantees by the QML engine:
- other modules are unable to modify or override types in the module's namespace
- other modules are unable to register new types into the module's namespace
- usage of type names by clients will resolve deterministically to a given type definition depending on the versioning specified and the import order
This ensures that clients which use the module can be certain that the object types defined in the module will behave as the module author documented.
An identified module has several restrictions upon it:
- an identified module must be installed into the QML import path
- the module identifier specified in the module identifier directive must match the install path of the module (relative to the QML import path, where directory separators are replaced with period characters)
- the module must register its types into the module identifier type namespace
- the module may not register types into any other module's namespace
- clients must specify a version when importing the module
For example, if an identified module is installed into $QML2_IMPORT_PATH/ExampleModule
, the module identifier directive must be:
module ExampleModule
If the strict module is installed into $QML2_IMPORT_PATH/com/example/CustomUi
, the module identifier directive must be:
module com.example.CustomUi
Clients will then be able to import the above module with the following import statement (assuming that the module registers types into version 1.0 of its namespace):
import com.example.CustomUi 1.0
© 2015 The Qt Company Ltd. Documentation contributions included herein are the copyrights of their respective owners. The documentation provided herein is licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Qt and respective logos are trademarks of The Qt Company Ltd in Finland and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.