09-05-2001
HI
Actually in Ansi version of c++ it is mandatory
to give static specifier during the declaration of an integer array to retain it's the contents during the execution of the program and the values are initialized only once .Without the static in the declaration the program produces unwanted and unexpected results.
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uic(1) General Commands Manual uic(1)
NAME
uic - Qt user interface compiler
SYNOPSIS
uic [options] file
DESCRIPTION
This page documents the User Interface Compiler for the Qt GUI toolkit. The uic reads a user interface definition (.ui) file in XML as gen-
erated by Qt Designer and creates corresponding C++ header or source files. It also generates an image file that embeds raw image data in
C++ source code.
Generate declaration:
uic [options] <file>
Generate implementation:
uic [options] -impl <headerfile> <file>
<headerfile>: name of the declaration file
Generate image collection:
uic [options] -embed <project> <image1> <image2> <image3> ...
<project>: project name
<image[1..n]>: image files
For convenience, uic can also generate declaration or implementation stubs for subclasses.
Generate subclass declaration:
uic [options] -subdecl <subclassname> <baseclassheaderfile> <file>
<subclassname>: name of the subclass to generate
<baseclassheaderfile>: declaration file of the baseclass
Generate subclass implementation:
uic [options] -subimpl <subclassname> <subclassheaderfile> <file>
<subclassname>: name of the subclass to generate
<subclassheaderfile>: declaration file of the subclass
GENERAL OPTIONS
-o file
Write output to file rather than to stdout.
-nofwd Omit forward declarations of custom classes in the generated header file. This is necessary if typedef classes are used.
-tr func
Use func() instead of tr() for internationalization.
-version
Display the version of uic and exit.
USAGE
uic is almost always invoked by make(1), rather than by hand.
Here are useful makefile rules if you only use GNU make:
%.h: %.ui
uic $< -o $@
%.cpp: %.ui
uic -impl $*.h $< -o $@
If you want to write portably, you can use individual rules of the following form:
NAME.h: NAME.ui
uic $< -o $@
NAME.cpp: NAME.ui
uic -impl $*.h $< -o $@
You must also remember to add NAME.cpp to your SOURCES (substitute your favorite name) variable and NAME.o to your OBJECTS variable.
(While we prefer to name our C++ source files .cpp, the uic doesn't care, so you can use .C, .cc, .CC, .cxx or even .c++ if you prefer.)
SEE ALSO
http://www.trolltech.com/
AUTHOR
Trolltech ASA <info@trolltech.com>
Trolltech AS 2 Aug 2001 uic(1)