![]() The easiest way to render content is through the QWebView class. We plan to address this in a future release. Note: Web site icons, also known as "FavIcons", are currently not supported on Windows. Take a look at Tools/mkspecs/features/production_build.prf if you need to change this. Currently Qt WebKit will always be compiled without debugging symbols when using gcc. We recommend building the module only in release mode for embedded platforms. Note: Building the Qt WebKit module with debugging symbols is problematic on many platforms due to the size of the WebKit engine. To link against the module, add this line to your qmake. To include the definitions of the module's classes, use the following directive: #include More information about WebKit itself can be found on the WebKit Open Source Project Web site. Qt WebKit is based on the Open Source WebKit engine. For more information see Qt WebKit Goes Mobile. QtWebKit has been enhanced to become more attractive on the mobile front as well. ![]() In addition to providing pure rendering features, HTML documents can be made fully editable to the user through the use of the contenteditable attribute on HTML elements. Integration with the Qt networking module enables Web pages to be transparently loaded from Web servers, the local file system or even the Qt resource system. For detailed documentation see The Qt WebKit Bridge. Qt WebKit Widgets provides facilities for rendering of HyperText Markup Language (HTML), Extensible HyperText Markup Language (XHTML) and Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) documents, styled using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and scripted with JavaScript.Ī bridge between the JavaScript execution environment and the Qt object model makes it possible for custom QObjects to be scripted. At the same time Web content can be enhanced with native controls. Qt WebKit Widgets provides a Web browser engine that makes it easy to embed content from the World Wide Web into your Qt application. ![]()
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