Prototyping with qmlscene
Qt 5 includes qmlscene
, a utility that loads and displays QML documents even before the application is complete. This utility also provides the following additional features that are useful while developing QML applications:
- View the QML document in a maximized window.
- View the QML document in full-screen mode.
- Make the window transparent.
- Disable multi-sampling (anti-aliasing).
- Do not detect the version of the .qml file.
- Run all animations in slow motion.
- Resize the window to the size of the root item.
- Add the list of import paths.
- Add a named bundle.
- Use a translation file to set the language.
The qmlscene
utility is meant to be used for testing your QML applications, and not as a launcher in a production environment. To launch a QML application in a production environment, develop a custom C++ application or bundle the QML file in a module. See Deploying QML applications for more information.
To load a .qml file, run the tool and select the file to be opened, or provide the file path on the command prompt:
qmlscene myqmlfile.qml
To see the configuration options, run qmlscene
with the -help
argument.
Adding Module Import Paths
Additional module import paths can be provided using the -I
flag. For example, the QML plugin example creates a C++ plugin identified with the namespace, TimeExample
. To load the plugin, you must run qmlscene
with the -I
flag from the example's base directory:
qmlscene -I imports plugins.qml
This adds the current directory to the import path so that qmlscene
will find the plugin in the imports
directory.
Note: By default, the current directory is included in the import search path, but modules in a namespace such as TimeExample
are not found unless the path is explicitly added.
Loading Test Data
Often, QML applications are prototyped with test data that is later replaced by real data sources from C++ plugins. The qmlscene
utility assists in this aspect by loading test data into the application context. It looks for a directory named dummydata
in the same directory as the target QML file, and loads the .qml files in that directory as QML objects and bind them to the root context as properties named after the files.
For example, the following QML document refers to a lottoNumbers
property which does not exist within the document:
import QtQuick 2.3 ListView { width: 200; height: 300 model: lottoNumbers delegate: Text { text: number } }
If, within the document's directory, there is a dummydata
directory which contains a lottoNumbers.qml
file like this:
import QtQuick 2.3 ListModel { ListElement { number: 23 } ListElement { number: 44 } ListElement { number: 78 } }
Then this model would be automatically loaded into the ListView in the previous document.
Child properties are included when loaded from dummydata
. The following document refers to a clock.time
property:
import QtQuick 2.3 Text { text: clock.time }
The text value could be filled by a dummydata/clock.qml
file with a time
property in the root context:
import QtQuick 2.3 QtObject { property int time: 54321 }
To replace this with real data, bind the real data object to the root context in C++ using QQmlContext::setContextProperty(). This is detailed in Integrating QML and C++.
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