/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2012 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/ ** ** This file is part of the QtLocation module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public ** License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software Foundation and ** appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the packaging of this ** file. Please review the following information to ensure the GNU Lesser ** General Public License version 2.1 requirements will be met: ** http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. ** ** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional ** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. ** ** GNU General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU General ** Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software Foundation ** and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the packaging of this ** file. Please review the following information to ensure the GNU General ** Public License version 3.0 requirements will be met: ** http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. ** ** Other Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used in accordance with the terms and ** conditions contained in a signed written agreement between you and Nokia. ** ** ** ** ** ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qgeocodingmanagerengine.h" #include "qgeocodingmanagerengine_p.h" #include "qgeoaddress.h" #include "qgeocoordinate.h" QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE /*! \class QGeocodingManagerEngine \inmodule QtLocation \ingroup QtLocation-impl \since QtLocation 5.0 \brief The QGeocodingManagerEngine class provides an interface and convenience methods to implementers of QGeoServiceProvider plugins who want to provide support for geocoding operations. In the default implementation, supportsGeocoding() and supportsReverseGeocoding() returns false while geocode() and reverseGeocode() cause QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError to occur. If the service provider supports geocoding the subclass should provide an implementation of geocode() and call setSupportsGeocoding(true) at some point in time before geoocode() is called. Similarly, if the service provider supports reverse geocoding the subclass should provide an implementation reverseGeocode() and call setSupportsReverseGeocoding(true) at some point in time before reverseGeoocode() is called. A subclass of QGeocodingManagerEngine will often make use of a subclass fo QGeocodeReply internally, in order to add any engine-specific data (such as a QNetworkReply object for network-based services) to the QGeocodeReply instances used by the engine. \sa QGeocodingManager */ /*! Constructs a new engine with the specified \a parent, using \a parameters to pass any implementation specific data to the engine. */ QGeocodingManagerEngine::QGeocodingManagerEngine(const QMap ¶meters, QObject *parent) : QObject(parent), d_ptr(new QGeocodingManagerEnginePrivate()) { Q_UNUSED(parameters) } /*! Destroys this engine. */ QGeocodingManagerEngine::~QGeocodingManagerEngine() { delete d_ptr; } /*! Sets the name which this engine implementation uses to distinguish itself from the implementations provided by other plugins to \a managerName. The combination of managerName() and managerVersion() should be unique amongst plugin implementations. */ void QGeocodingManagerEngine::setManagerName(const QString &managerName) { d_ptr->managerName = managerName; } /*! Returns the name which this engine implementation uses to distinguish itself from the implementations provided by other plugins. The combination of managerName() and managerVersion() should be unique amongst plugin implementations. */ QString QGeocodingManagerEngine::managerName() const { return d_ptr->managerName; } /*! Sets the version of this engine implementation to \a managerVersion. The combination of managerName() and managerVersion() should be unique amongst plugin implementations. */ void QGeocodingManagerEngine::setManagerVersion(int managerVersion) { d_ptr->managerVersion = managerVersion; } /*! Returns the version of this engine implementation. The combination of managerName() and managerVersion() should be unique amongst plugin implementations. */ int QGeocodingManagerEngine::managerVersion() const { return d_ptr->managerVersion; } /*! Begins the geocoding of \a address. Geocoding is the process of finding a coordinate that corresponds to a given address. A QGeocodeReply object will be returned, which can be used to manage the geocoding operation and to return the results of the operation. This engine and the returned QGeocodeReply object will emit signals indicating if the operation completes or if errors occur. If supportsGeocoding() returns false an QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError will occur. Once the operation has completed, QGeocodeReply::locations() can be used to retrieve the results, which will consist of a list of QGeoLocation objects. These objects represent a combination of coordinate and address data. The address data returned in the results may be different from \a address. This will usually occur if the geocoding service backend uses a different canonical form of addresses or if \a address was only partially filled out. If \a bounds is non-null and a valid QGeoBoundingArea it will be used to limit the results to those that are contained by \a bounds. This is particularly useful if \a address is only partially filled out, as the service will attempt to geocode all matches for the specified data. The user is responsible for deleting the returned reply object, although this can be done in the slot connected to QGeocodingManagerEngine::finished(), QGeocodingManagerEngine::error(), QGeocodeReply::finished() or QGeocodeReply::error() with deleteLater(). */ QGeocodeReply* QGeocodingManagerEngine::geocode(const QGeoAddress &address, const QGeoBoundingArea &bounds) { Q_UNUSED(address) Q_UNUSED(bounds) return new QGeocodeReply(QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError, QLatin1String("Geocoding is not supported by this service provider."), this); } /*! Begins the reverse geocoding of \a coordinate. Reverse geocoding is the process of finding an address that corresponds to a given coordinate. A QGeocodeReply object will be returned, which can be used to manage the reverse geocoding operation and to return the results of the operation. This engine and the returned QGeocodeReply object will emit signals indicating if the operation completes or if errors occur. If supportsReverseGeocoding() returns false an QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError will occur. At that point QGeocodeReply::locations() can be used to retrieve the results, which will consist of a list of QGeoLocation objects. These objects represent a combination of coordinate and address data. The coordinate data returned in the results may be different from \a coordinate. This will usually occur if the reverse geocoding service backend shifts the coordinates to be closer to the matching addresses, or if the backend returns results at multiple levels of detail. If multiple results are returned by the reverse geocoding service backend they will be provided in order of specificity. This normally occurs if the backend is configured to reverse geocode across multiple levels of detail. As an example, some services will return address and coordinate pairs for the street address, the city, the state and the country. If \a bounds is non-null and a valid QGeoBoundingArea it will be used to limit the results to those that are contained by \a bounds. The user is responsible for deleting the returned reply object, although this can be done in the slot connected to QGeocodingManagerEngine::finished(), QGeocodingManagerEngine::error(), QGeocodeReply::finished() or QGeocodeReply::error() with deleteLater(). */ QGeocodeReply* QGeocodingManagerEngine::reverseGeocode(const QGeoCoordinate &coordinate, const QGeoBoundingArea &bounds) { Q_UNUSED(coordinate) Q_UNUSED(bounds) return new QGeocodeReply(QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError, QLatin1String("Reverse geocoding is not supported by this service provider."), this); } /*! Begins geocoding for a location matching \a address. A QGeocodeReply object will be returned, which can be used to manage the geocoding operation and to return the results of the operation. This engine and the returned QGeocodeReply object will emit signals indicating if the operation completes or if errors occur. Once the operation has completed, QGeocodeReply::locations() can be used to retrieve the results, which will consist of a list of QGeoLocation objects. These objects represent a combination of coordinate and address data. If \a limit is -1 the entire result set will be returned, otherwise at most \a limit results will be returned. The \a offset parameter is used to ask the geocoding service to not return the first \a offset results. The \a limit and \a offset results are used together to implement paging. If \a bounds is non-null and a valid QGeoBoundingArea it will be used to limit the results to those that are contained by \a bounds. The user is responsible for deleting the returned reply object, although this can be done in the slot connected to QGeocodingManagerEngine::finished(), QGeocodingManagerEngine::error(), QGeocodeReply::finished() or QGeocodeReply::error() with deleteLater(). */ QGeocodeReply* QGeocodingManagerEngine::geocode(const QString &address, int limit, int offset, const QGeoBoundingArea &bounds) { Q_UNUSED(address) Q_UNUSED(limit) Q_UNUSED(offset) Q_UNUSED(bounds) return new QGeocodeReply(QGeocodeReply::UnsupportedOptionError, QLatin1String("Searching is not supported by this service provider."), this); } /*! Sets whether geocoding is supported by this engine to \a supported. It is important that subclasses use this method to ensure that the engine reports its capabilities correctly. If this function is not used the engine will report that it does not support geocoding. */ void QGeocodingManagerEngine::setSupportsGeocoding(bool supported) { d_ptr->supportsGeocoding = supported; } /*! Returns whether this engine supports geocoding. */ bool QGeocodingManagerEngine::supportsGeocoding() const { return d_ptr->supportsGeocoding; } /*! Sets whether reverse geocoding is supported by this engine to \a supported. It is important that subclasses use this method to ensure that the engine reports its capabilities correctly. If this function is not used the engine will report that it does not support reverse geocoding. */ void QGeocodingManagerEngine::setSupportsReverseGeocoding(bool supported) { d_ptr->supportsReverseGeocoding = supported; } /*! Returns whether this engine supports reverse geocoding. */ bool QGeocodingManagerEngine::supportsReverseGeocoding() const { return d_ptr->supportsReverseGeocoding; } /*! Sets the locale to be used by this manager to \a locale. If this geocoding manager supports returning the results in different languages, they will be returned in the language of \a locale. The locale used defaults to the system locale if this is not set. */ void QGeocodingManagerEngine::setLocale(const QLocale &locale) { d_ptr->locale = locale; } /*! Returns the locale used to hint to this geocoding manager about what language to use for the results. */ QLocale QGeocodingManagerEngine::locale() const { return d_ptr->locale; } /*! \fn void QGeocodingManagerEngine::finished(QGeocodeReply* reply) This signal is emitted when \a reply has finished processing. If reply::error() equals QGeocodeReply::NoError then the processing finished successfully. This signal and QGeocodeReply::finished() will be emitted at the same time. \note Do no delete the \a reply object in the slot connected to this signal. Use deleteLater() instead. */ /*! \fn void QGeocodingManagerEngine::error(QGeocodeReply* reply, QGeocodeReply::Error error, QString errorString) This signal is emitted when an error has been detected in the processing of \a reply. The QGeocodingManagerEngine::finished() signal will probably follow. The error will be described by the error code \a error. If \a errorString is not empty it will contain a textual description of the error. This signal and QGeocodeReply::error() will be emitted at the same time. \note Do no delete the \a reply object in the slot connected to this signal. Use deleteLater() instead. */ /******************************************************************************* *******************************************************************************/ QGeocodingManagerEnginePrivate::QGeocodingManagerEnginePrivate() : managerVersion(-1), supportsGeocoding(false), supportsReverseGeocoding(false) {} QGeocodingManagerEnginePrivate::~QGeocodingManagerEnginePrivate() { } #include "moc_qgeocodingmanagerengine.cpp" QT_END_NAMESPACE