I am experimenting with custom events in Qt Creator. I am currently examining this example code on another site:
bool MyClass::event(QEvent* e)
{
if (e && e->type() == MyCustomEventType) {
MyCustomEvent* ce = dynamic_cast<MyCustomEventType*>(e);
return handleCustomEvent(ce);
}
// very important: still handle all the other Qt events!
return QObject::event(e);
}
The conditional statement checks if the event passed is the custom event, then it executes code that it wants to happen when the event occurs. What I do not understand is return handleCustomEvent(e)
(what is this function supposed to do and where is it supposed to be declared?) and what return QObject::event(e)
does. From what I read on the Qt documentation, the only thing this function does is return whether the event's function (is this handleCustomEvent?) is "recognized and processed". Is this supposed to handle all other events in the loop?