Easy solution:
Just move the cursor there:
textEdit.moveCursor(QTextCursor::Start); //set to start
for( <... y-times ...> )
{
textEdit.moveCursor(QTextCursor::Down); //move down
}
for( < ... x-times ...>)
{
textEdit.moveCursor(QTextCursor::Right); //move right
}
moveCursor is also the goto-way if you need to "select" text for changing it. A similar approach without the loops is also at the end.
A bit more explanation and maybe better solution:
In theory a text has no "lines" like shown in GUIs but the endline-character
(\n
or \r\n
depending on operating system and framework) is only just another character. So for a cursor mostly everything is just one "text" without lines.
There are wrapper functions to deal with this but I get to them later. First you cannot access those directly via the QTextEdit
interface but you have to manipulate the cursor directly.
QTextCursor curs = textEdit.textCursor(); //copies current cursor
//... cursor operations
textEdit.setTextCursor(curs);
Now for the "operations":
If you know at what position you want to go in the string you have setPosition()
here. This "position" is not in respect to vertical lines though, but the whole text.
This is what a multi-line string looks internally:
"Hello, World!\nAnotherLine"
This would show
Hello, World!
AnotherLine
setPosition()
wants the position of the internal string.
To move to another line you would have to calculate the position by looking for the first \n
in the text and add your x-offset. If you want the 3rd line look for the first 2 \n
etc.
Luckily there is also the function setVerticalMovement
which seems to wrap this and maybe is what you want to do. It moves the cursor vertically.
So you could do:
curs.setPosition(x); //beginning at first line
curs.setVerticalMovement(y); //move down to the line you want.
After that call setTextCursor
like shown above with the cursor.
Note:
The order is important though. setPosition
sets the position in the whole text. So setPosition(5)
while maybe in the 3rd line will not set it to the 5th character in the line you are but of the whole text. So move the x-cordinate first then y.
You need to be aware of the lengths of the lines though.
some longer line
short
another longer line
If you now specify line 2 and column 7 it will be "out-of-bounds". I am not sure how verticalMovement
here behaves. I assume the cursor will be at the end of the line.
When you use the QTextCursor
class directly you can also use the move operations without the loops because they have an extra parameter to repeat the operations.
curs.movePosition(QTextCursor::Start);
curs.movePosition(QTextCursor::Down,<modeMode>,y); //go down y-times
curs.movePosition(QTextCursor::Right,<moveMode>,x); //go right x-times