//Auto-generated by kalyptus. DO NOT EDIT. package org.kde.koala; import org.kde.qt.Qt; import org.kde.qt.TQMetaObject; import org.kde.qt.QtSupport; import org.kde.qt.TQObject; import org.kde.qt.TQObject; /** If you develop a library that is to be loaded dynamically at runtime, then you should return a pointer to your factory. The K_EXPORT_COMPONENT_FACTORY macro is provided for this purpose:
   K_EXPORT_COMPONENT_FACTORY( libkspread, KSpreadFactory )
 
The first macro argument is the name of your library, the second specifies the name of your factory. NOTE: you probably want to use KGenericFactory instead of writing your own factory. In the constructor of your factory you should create an instance of KInstance like this:
     s_global = new KInstance( "kspread" );
 
This KInstance is comparable to KGlobal used by normal applications. It allows you to find resource files (images, XML, sound etc.) belonging to the library. If you want to load a library, use KLibLoader. You can query KLibLoader directly for a pointer to the libraries factory by using the KLibLoader.factory() function. The KLibFactory is used to create the components, the library has to offer. The factory of KSpread for example will create instances of KSpreadDoc, while the Konqueror factory will create KonqView widgets. All objects created by the factory must be derived from TQObject, since TQObject offers type safe casting. KLibFactory is an abstract class. Reimplement the createObject() method to give it functionality. See {@link KLibFactorySignals} for signals emitted by KLibFactory @author Torben Weis @short If you develop a library that is to be loaded dynamically at runtime, then you should return a pointer to your factory. */ public class KLibFactory extends TQObject { protected KLibFactory(Class dummy){super((Class) null);} public native TQMetaObject metaObject(); public native String className(); /** Create a new factory. @param parent the parent of the TQObject, 0 for no parent @param name the name of the TQObject, 0 for no name @short Create a new factory. */ /** Creates a new object. The returned object has to be derived from the requested classname. It is valid behavior to create different kinds of objects depending on the requested classname. For example a koffice library may usually return a pointer to KoDocument. But if asked for a "TQWidget", it could create a wrapper widget, that encapsulates the Koffice specific features. create() automatically emits a signal objectCreated to tell the library about its newly created object. This is very important for reference counting, and allows unloading the library automatically once all its objects have been destroyed. @param parent the parent of the TQObject, 0 for no parent @param name the name of the TQObject, 0 for no name @param classname the name of the class @param args a list of arguments @short Creates a new object. */ public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name, String classname, String[] args); public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name, String classname); public native TQObject create(TQObject parent, String name); public native TQObject create(TQObject parent); public native TQObject create(); }