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How to visualize LF, CR and other control pictures in QTextEdit?

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  • JonBJ Offline
    JonBJ Offline
    JonB
    wrote last edited by
    #9

    @Robert-Hairgrove I get what you want, I just don't know how well that fits in with QTextEdit. Best of luck.

    Pl45m4P 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • JonBJ JonB

      @Robert-Hairgrove I get what you want, I just don't know how well that fits in with QTextEdit. Best of luck.

      Pl45m4P Offline
      Pl45m4P Offline
      Pl45m4
      wrote last edited by Pl45m4
      #10

      @JonB

      I don't know if it was you who started the topic, but I remember there was a discussion about the "variable/argument hints" in CodeBrowser (for Qt source code) and a guy who tried to implement something like this as text-based QWidget...

      // function
      void foo(int someInt, double someDouble);
      
      // with call
      foo(42, 13.37);
      
      // with added "hint labels"
      // (non-functional, only read-only as Robert describes)
      foo(["someInt":] 42, ["someDouble":] 13.37);
      

      So my thought: If this is possible, showing/adding control characters should also be doable.
      But don't ask me where and when this was and how it ended... :)


      If debugging is the process of removing software bugs, then programming must be the process of putting them in.

      ~E. W. Dijkstra

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      • SGaistS Offline
        SGaistS Offline
        SGaist
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote last edited by
        #11

        Did you already saw the QTextOption enum ?
        It seems to set what you want with caveat that the font used needs to support the stuff you want to show ?
        I just stumbled upon it while remembering there was something somewhere to at least show the line return.

        Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

        R 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • SGaistS SGaist

          Did you already saw the QTextOption enum ?
          It seems to set what you want with caveat that the font used needs to support the stuff you want to show ?
          I just stumbled upon it while remembering there was something somewhere to at least show the line return.

          R Offline
          R Offline
          Robert Hairgrove
          wrote last edited by
          #12

          @SGaist Thanks again!

          I just did a little test ... here is the outcome. Unfortunately, the display shows CR and LF exactly the same way:
          text_options.png
          It was a good idea, though!

          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • R Robert Hairgrove

            @SGaist Thanks again!

            I just did a little test ... here is the outcome. Unfortunately, the display shows CR and LF exactly the same way:
            text_options.png
            It was a good idea, though!

            JonBJ Offline
            JonBJ Offline
            JonB
            wrote last edited by JonB
            #13

            @Robert-Hairgrove
            But does your #define line literally have the content shown in the visual, i.e. something like

            #define SAMPLE_TEXT \
              "The quick brown fox\r\r\nA line ..."
            

            i.e. you typed in a literal string including C++ \r\n "escape" sequences, or do you mean that the macro actually contains physical CR/LF characters in those positions? These are not the same as each other...!

            Also while it is here, if you are intending to paste in C++ code I do not think QTextEdit in rich text/HTML mode is "safe" to get the correct content/output reliably. You should be using QPlainTextEdit, or maybe QTextEdit but forced to be in text/non-HTML mode.

            R 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • JonBJ JonB

              @Robert-Hairgrove
              But does your #define line literally have the content shown in the visual, i.e. something like

              #define SAMPLE_TEXT \
                "The quick brown fox\r\r\nA line ..."
              

              i.e. you typed in a literal string including C++ \r\n "escape" sequences, or do you mean that the macro actually contains physical CR/LF characters in those positions? These are not the same as each other...!

              Also while it is here, if you are intending to paste in C++ code I do not think QTextEdit in rich text/HTML mode is "safe" to get the correct content/output reliably. You should be using QPlainTextEdit, or maybe QTextEdit but forced to be in text/non-HTML mode.

              R Offline
              R Offline
              Robert Hairgrove
              wrote last edited by
              #14

              @JonB I don't understand the question ... in C++, you must escape any control codes, otherwise the compiler would complain.

              The macro is like this (copied and pasted from my code):

              #define SAMPLE_TEXT \
                "The quick brown fox\r\r\nA line with\tTAB...\nSome more text here"
              

              Then, in the constructor of the main window, I set the text like this:

                QString x = QString::fromLocal8Bit(SAMPLE_TEXT);
                ui->textEdit->setText(x);
              

              As to QPlainTextEdit vs. QTextEdit, I don't know what I will eventually use. To achieve my goal, it looks like I will end up using inline pixmaps instead of actual characters, which would imply using HTML or Markdown text. The other alternative would be to create my own font, which I really don't want to do.

              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • R Robert Hairgrove

                @JonB I don't understand the question ... in C++, you must escape any control codes, otherwise the compiler would complain.

                The macro is like this (copied and pasted from my code):

                #define SAMPLE_TEXT \
                  "The quick brown fox\r\r\nA line with\tTAB...\nSome more text here"
                

                Then, in the constructor of the main window, I set the text like this:

                  QString x = QString::fromLocal8Bit(SAMPLE_TEXT);
                  ui->textEdit->setText(x);
                

                As to QPlainTextEdit vs. QTextEdit, I don't know what I will eventually use. To achieve my goal, it looks like I will end up using inline pixmaps instead of actual characters, which would imply using HTML or Markdown text. The other alternative would be to create my own font, which I really don't want to do.

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote last edited by
                #15

                @Robert-Hairgrove
                If you paste arbitrary C++ code into a QTextEdit in HTML mode, how do you know whether there might be character sequences which would be interpreted as HTML rather than literal, e.g. if the code happens to have <pre> or &amp; or similar in it?

                R 1 Reply Last reply
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                • JonBJ JonB

                  @Robert-Hairgrove
                  If you paste arbitrary C++ code into a QTextEdit in HTML mode, how do you know whether there might be character sequences which would be interpreted as HTML rather than literal, e.g. if the code happens to have <pre> or &amp; or similar in it?

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  Robert Hairgrove
                  wrote last edited by
                  #16

                  @JonB For my purposes here as a demo, it doesn't matter. The QTextEdit widget is always set to read-only, anyway.

                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • R Robert Hairgrove

                    @JonB For my purposes here as a demo, it doesn't matter. The QTextEdit widget is always set to read-only, anyway.

                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonB
                    wrote last edited by
                    #17

                    @Robert-Hairgrove said in How to visualize LF, CR and other control pictures in QTextEdit?:

                    The QTextEdit widget is always set to read-only, anyway.

                    Nothing to do with widget read-only-ness. The issue will come when you take arbitrary C++ code and use QTextEdit::insertHtml() or similar from your code. Anyway I will leave that thought with you.

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                    • R Offline
                      R Offline
                      Robert Hairgrove
                      wrote last edited by Robert Hairgrove
                      #18

                      I am marking this as solved, since I developed a work-around for what I am doing. Basically, I am using the following characters which are supported by the most common fonts:

                      Description Symbol Unicode valiue
                      Carriage return (CR, 0x0D):     ¬ U+00AC
                      Line feed (LF, 0x0A): ¶ U+0086
                      Space (SPC, 0x20): · U+0087
                      Tab (TAB, 0x09): → U+2192
                      Invalid code point: � U+FFFD
                      Miscellaneous control code: ¤ U+00A4

                      If Invalid code point or a Miscellaneous control code are detected, the user can hover over the character with the mouse and a tooltip will display the actual Unicode code point as a hexadecimal number.

                      Thanks for all the useful suggestions!

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                      • R Robert Hairgrove has marked this topic as solved
                      • SGaistS Offline
                        SGaistS Offline
                        SGaist
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote last edited by
                        #19

                        How did you implement it in the end ?

                        Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                        R 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • SGaistS SGaist

                          How did you implement it in the end ?

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Robert Hairgrove
                          wrote last edited by
                          #20

                          @SGaist

                          How did you implement it in the end ?

                          I'm still working on it. :)

                          The app is kind of a toolkit for inspecting CSV files and correcting them to a limited extent, if necessary. These files can come from anywhere, and often the consumer of a CSV file doesn't have any control over the process which creates them. What it is supposed to do is the following:

                          1. Determine the text encoding used, either semi-automatically (if Unicode is used, this can be 100% automatic) or by letting the user choose, or for unknown 8-bit encodings iconv, uchardet or icu can be used if the support is installed;
                          2. If the encoding cannot be determined, the file is rejected, or else the user can try different encodings. This is where the control characters can be displayed;
                          3. As to how I am implementing this internally, a copy of the text from the file is made, converting it to QString and using QTextEdit to display it. All of the special control characters can either be displayed or hidden depending on the user's preference; also the highlighting (colors, etc.) is user-configurable;
                          4. The delimiter token and quote character can be automatically determined through heuristics, or the user can override these to something else;
                          5. There is a limited amount of support for comments and metadata at the beginning of a file. The user can add or remove these, and the file can be saved without the extra metadata, and/or in a different encoding, lie endings, etc.

                          Since I don't want to turn this into a full-fledged text editor, the app will just print out a report if the CSV file is not acceptably formatted, indicating the location of invalid characters, and the user can correct this in some other application. When importing CSV data into a database, for example, often the import will fail without giving enough diagnostic information as to where the failure occurred. This app should be helpful in that respect.

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                          • SGaistS Offline
                            SGaistS Offline
                            SGaist
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote last edited by
                            #21

                            Thanks for the feedback !
                            Looks like a nice tool you are building :-)

                            Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                            Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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