status-desktop/ui/StatusQ
Lukáš Tinkl cf5b712306
fix(Wallet): Hiding assets from wallet's main view doesn't work (#15960)
- partially reuse the already available Global/Popups methods to hide
assets (which also emit proper notifications); those are needed as
anotehr shared modal from Popups uses it too (may come from outside of
Wallet)
- some warnings cleanup in the controller

Fixes #15777
2024-08-02 14:03:17 -04:00
..
doc feat(Communities): changes in import popup for private keys 2023-08-07 15:26:35 +03:00
include/StatusQ Connection fixes for v2.30.x (#15921) 2024-07-31 13:23:39 -04:00
sandbox feat: Add initial support for ChartJs plugins (#14433) 2024-06-04 13:08:16 +03:00
sanity_checker fix(StatusQ): StatusQ is QML module (#10207) 2023-04-14 11:18:56 +03:00
scripts fix(StatusQ/Sandbox): move and update build script 2023-02-20 20:36:05 +01:00
src fix(Wallet): Hiding assets from wallet's main view doesn't work (#15960) 2024-08-02 14:03:17 -04:00
tests Connection fixes for v2.30.x (#15921) 2024-07-31 13:23:39 -04:00
CHANGELOG.md chore: remove dictionary 2023-06-09 14:50:08 -04:00
CMakeLists.txt Connection fixes for v2.30.x (#15921) 2024-07-31 13:23:39 -04:00
README.md fix(StatusQ/Sandbox): move and update build script 2023-02-20 20:36:05 +01:00

README.md

StatusQ

An emerging reusable QML UI component library for Status applications.

Usage

StatusQ introduces a module namespace that semantically groups components so they can be easily imported. These modules are:

Provided components can be viewed and tested in the sandbox application that comes with this repository. Other than that, modules and components can be used as expected.

Example:

import Status.Core 0.1
import Status.Controls 0.1

StatusInput {
  ...
}

Viewing and testing components

To make viewing and testing components easy, we've added a sandbox application to this repository in which StatusQ components are being build. This is the first place where components see the light of the world and can be run in a proper application environment.

Using Qt Creator

The easiest way to run the sandbox application is to simply open the provided CMakeLists.txt file using Qt Creator.

Using command line interface

To run the sandbox from within a command line interface, run the following commands:

$ git clone https://github.com/status-im/StatusQ
$ cd StatusQ
$ git submodule update --init
$ ./scripts/build

Once that is done, the sandbox can be started with the generated executable:

$ ./build/sandbox/Sandbox