summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/src/likeback.h
blob: 1f1b6846394d1f3f376cf3f85648cee2968aba36 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
/***************************************************************************
 *   Copyright (C) 2006 by Sebastien Laout                                 *
 *   [email protected]                                                    *
 *                                                                         *
 *   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  *
 *   it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as       *
 *   published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the    *
 *   License, or (at your option) any later version.                       *
 *                                                                         *
 *   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,       *
 *   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of        *
 *   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the         *
 *   GNU General Public License for more details.                          *
 *                                                                         *
 *   You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public     *
 *   License along with this program; if not, write to the                 *
 *   Free Software Foundation, Inc.,                                       *
 *   51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301  USA.         *
 ***************************************************************************/

#ifndef LIKEBACK_H
#define LIKEBACK_H

#include <tqobject.h>

class KConfig;
class TDEAboutData;
class KAction;
class KActionCollection;

class LikeBackPrivate;
class LikeBackBar;
class LikeBackDialog;

/**
 * @short System to Get Quick Feedback from Beta-Testers
 *
 * This system allows users to communicate theire liking of the application to its developers.
 * Thus, developers know what theire users prefer of theire applications, what should be enhanced, etc.
 *
 * Basically, how does it work?
 * Whenever the user notice something good he appreciate or something he do not like, do not understand, do not find polished...
 * he can send a few short words to the developers to tell them what he like or do not like. It is only two or three clicks away.
 * It is fast and efficient.
 *
 * This greatly lowers the communication barrier between the application developers and the application users.
 * It makes the developers understand and satisfy better the needs of the users.
 *
 * The LikeBack system has 5 components:
 * @li In the application: The comment dialog, where the user write a comment, select a type of comment, etc.
 * @li In the application: The KAction to plug in the Help menu. This action displays the comment dialog.
 * @li In the application: The button-bar, that floats bellow titlebar of every windows of the application, and let the user to quickly show the comment dialog.
 *                         The button-bar can be hidden.
 * @li On the server: A PHP script that collects every comments that users send. The LikeBack object should be configured to contact that server.
 * @li On the server: The developer interface. It lists every comments that were sent, let you sort them, add remarks to them, and mark them as fixed or another status.
 *
 * Here is an example of code to call to quickly setup LikeBack on the client:
 * @code
 *     // Instanciate the LikeBack system, and show the first-use information dialog if the button-bar is shown:
 *     LikeBack *likeBack = new LikeBack(LikeBack::AllButtons, LikeBack::isDevelopmentVersion(kapp->aboutData->version())); // Show button-bar only in beta-versions
 *     likeBack->setServer("myapp.kde.org", "/likeback/send.php");
 *     likeBack->setAcceptedLanguages(TQStringList::split(";", "en;fr"), i18n("Please write in English or French."));
 *
 *     // Comment the following line once you are sure all your windows have a name:
 *     likeBack->setWindowNamesListing(LikeBack::WarnUnnamedWindows);
 *
 *     // This line should be called early in your KMainWindow constructor because it references actionCollection().
 *     // It should be called before createGUI() for the action to be plugged in the Help menu:
 *     likeBack->sendACommentAction(actionCollection());
 * @endcode
 *
 * @see Visit http://basket.kde.org/likeback.php for more information, screenshots, a tutorial, hints, return of experiences, and to download the server-side developer interface...
 * @author Sebastien Laout <[email protected]>
 */
class LikeBack : public TQObject
{
  Q_OBJECT
  
  public:
	/**
	 * Ids of every LikeBack buttons the button-bar can have.
	 * The four first values are each individual buttons you can enable or not.
	 * The next ones are combinations: all buttons at once, and the default set of buttons (Like, Dislike).
	 * Those values are used in the constructor, to set the allowed type of comments, and when triggering the comment dialog, to set the default checked type.
	 * @See The LikeBack constructor and execCommentDialog().
	 */
	enum Button {
		Like           = 0x01,                           /// The user select that option to report a positive experience he got with the application.
		Dislike        = 0x02,                           /// The user select that option to report a frustrating experience he got with the application.
		Bug            = 0x04,                           /// The user select that option to report a bug in the application.
		Feature        = 0x10,                           /// The user select that option to ask for a new feature he desire.
		                                                 /// If not enabled, the user is explicitely informed she cannot ask for new features.
		AllButtons     = Like | Dislike | Bug | Feature, /// Usable in the constructor to enable every posible buttons.
		DefaultButtons = Like | Dislike                  /// Usable in the constructor to enable only the recommended default set of buttons.
	};

	/**
	 * Flags letting LikeBack print out name and path of each window you show during execution, for debugging purpose.
	 * @See The method setWindowNamesListing() explains how to use those values.
	 */
	enum WindowListing {
		NoListing = 0,          /// Do not print out any window name. For release time.
		WarnUnnamedWindows = 1, /// Each time the user option a window, print out a message if the window is unnamed. For development needs, to check windows.
		AllWindows = 2          /// Print out the window hierarchy of each opened windows during execution. For development needs, to check every windows have an understandable name.
	};

	/**
	 * You only need to call the constructor once, typically in main.cpp.
	 * Even if you do not show the button-bar by default, you should instanciate LikeBack,
	 * to include its action in the Help menu of your application, to let the users send comments or activate the bar.
	 * @param buttons          The types of comments you want to get. Determine which radio-buttons are shown in the comment dialog,
	 *                         and which ones are displayed in the button-bar. Default buttons do not show the Bug and Feature buttons because you are
	 *                         likely to already have a way to get bug and feature reports (most of the time, it is a bugs.kde.org account).
	 *                         If you do not have that, then use the value LikeBack::AllButtons to show every possible buttons.
	 * @param showBarByDefault Determines if the floating button-bar should also be shown, in addition to the action in the Help menu.
	 *                         Advise: to avoid getting too much noise, enable it only if it is a small application or a development release.
	 *                         Notes: This is only a default value, the user will be able to enable or disabled the bar afterward.
	 *                         The button-bar display is stored by version. On a new version, your default value will take effect again.
	 *                         This allow you to disable the button-bar once the version is stable enought to be released as final.
	 * @param config           Set the configuration file where to store the user email address and if the button-bar should be shown.
	 *                         By default (null), the TDEApplication configuration object is used.
	 * @param aboutData        Set the TDEAboutData instance used to get the application name and version. By default (null), the TDEApplication about data object is used.
	 *                         The application name is only used in the first-use information message.
	 *                         The version is used to store the button-bar visibility per version (can be shown in a development version but not in a final one...)
	 *                         and to send with the comment, so you can filter per version and know if a comment refers the latest version of the application or not.
	 */
	LikeBack(Button buttons = DefaultButtons, bool showBarByDefault = false, KConfig *config = 0, const TDEAboutData *aboutData = 0);

	/**
	 * Destructor.
	 * Also hide the button-bar, if it was shown.
	 * Be careful, the KAction is deleted. Do not use it afterward, and take care to unplug it before destroying this LikeBack instance.
	 */
	~LikeBack();

	/**
	 * This method is interesting while setting up the system for the first time.
	 * LikeBack send the current window name (and hierarchy) with the comment. This allows you to put the comments in theire context.
	 * So, of course, you are encouraged to give a name to your windows. It is done in the constructor of the widgets.
	 * This method allows to output the name of the current window to the standard output.
	 * So you can use the application, open all the windows, and when you see a warning, you know which window you should assign a name.
	 * @see The WindowListing flags for an enumeration and explaining of every possibilities.
	 * @Note If you do not name your windows, the name of the classes will be sent. So it is not that grave.
	 */
	void setWindowNamesListing(WindowListing windowListing);

	/**
	 * @Returns The window listing flag.
	 * @see setWindowNamesListing()
	 */
	WindowListing windowNamesListing();

	/**
	 * By default, only English comments are accepted. The user is informed she must write in this language by a sentence placed in the comment dialog.
	 * If you have people talking other languages in your development team, it can be interesting to call this method to define the accepted locales (languages),
	 * and provide a message to inform users. The developer interface on the server let developers view comments in theire locale.
	 * Note that no verification is done to check if the user used the right language, it would be impossible.
	 * The list of locales is there to make it possible to NOT show the message for users of the accepted languages.
	 * For instance, if you accept only English and French, and that the application run in a French environment,
	 * it is likely the user is French and will write comments using French. Telling him he should write in French is unnecessary and redundant.
	 * Passing an empty list and an empty string to the method will make LikeBack display the default message telling the user only English is accepted.
	 * Example of call you can quickly copy, paste and adapt:
	 * @code
	 *     likeBack->setAcceptedLanguages(TQStringList::split(";", "en;fr"), i18n("Please write in English or French."));
	 * @endcode
	 * @Note During tests, if you do not see the sentence, it is because you are running the application with an "accepted language": do not be surprised ;-)
	 * @param locales The list of locales where the message does not need to be shown. See TODO TODO for a list of available locales for you to choose.
	 * @param message The message to displays to the user to tell him what languages are accepted to write his comments.
	 */
	void setAcceptedLanguages(const TQStringList &locales, const TQString &message);

	/**
	 * @Returns The list of accepted locales for the user to write comments.
	 * @see setAcceptedLanguages()
	 */
	TQStringList acceptedLocales();

	/**
	 * @Returns The message displayed to users who are not running the application in an accepted locale.
	 * @see setAcceptedLanguages()
	 */
	TQString acceptedLanguagesMessage();

	/**
	 * Set the path where LikeBack should send every comments.
	 * It is composed of the server host name, the path to the PHP script used to send comments, and optionnaly a port number if it is not 80.
	 * This call is mandatory for LikeBack to work.
	 * @param hostName   The server host name to contact when sending comments. For instance "myapp.kde.org".
	 * @param remotePath The path to the send script on the server. For instance, "/likeback/send.php".
	 * @param hostPort   Optionnal port used to contact the server using the HTTP protocol. By default, it is port 80.
	 */
	void setServer(const TQString &hostName, const TQString &remotePath, TQ_UINT16 hostPort = 80);

	/**
	 * @Returns The server host name to contact when sending comments.
	 * @see setServer()
	 */
	TQString hostName();

	/**
	 * @Returns The path to the send script on the server.
	 * @see setServer()
	 */
	TQString remotePath();

	/**
	 * @Returns The port used to contact the server using the HTTP protocol.
	 * @see setServer()
	 */
	TQ_UINT16 hostPort();

	/**
	 * Get the KAction letting user to show the comment dialog.
	 * You should plug it in your Help menu, just bellow the "Report a Bug" action, or replace it.
	 * Adding the action below "Report a Bug" or replacing "Report a Bug" depends on your application and if you have a Bugzilla account.
	 * If you do not have a Bugzilla account, LikeBack is a good way for your small application to get bug reports: remove "Report a Bug".
	 * For more information about how to configure LikeBack depending on your application size and settings, see the constructor documentation.
	 * @Note The action is named "likeback_send_a_comment". So you should add the following XML in the *ui.rc file of your application:
	 * @code
	 *       <Action name="likeback_send_a_comment" />
	 * @endcode
	 */
	KAction* sendACommentAction(KActionCollection *parent = 0);

	/**
	 * @Returns The path of the currently active window. Each windows are separated with "~~".
	 * Normally, you should not need to call this method since it is used to send the window path.
	 * But if you call execCommentDialog(), you could need to use it.
	 */
	static TQString activeWindowPath();

	/**
	 * @Returns The combination of buttons that are shown in the comment dialog and the button-bar.
	 */
	Button buttons();

	/**
	 * @Returns true if the button-bar is currently enabled. Ie, if it has been re-enabled as many times as it has been disabled.
	 * @see The method disableBar() for more information on how enabling/disabling works.
	 */
	bool enabledBar();

  public slots:

	/**
	 * Temporarily disable the button-bar: it is hiden from the screen if it was shown.
	 * Does not affect anything if the user has not choosen to show the button-bar.
	 * @Note Calls to enableBar() and disableBar() are ref-counted.
	 * This means that the number of times disableBar() is called is memorized,
	 * and enableBar() will only have effect after it has been called as many times as disableBar() was called before.
	 * So, make sure to always call enableBar() the same number of times ou called disableBar().
	 * And please make sure to ALWAYS call disableBar() BEFORE enableBar().
	 * In the counter-case, another code could call disableBar() and EXCPECT the bar to be disabled. But it will not, because its call only canceled yours.
	 * @Note Sometimes, you will absolutely need to call enableBar() before disableBar().
	 * For instance, MyWindow::show() calls enableBar() and MyWindow::hide() calls disableBar().
	 * This is the trick used to show the LikeBack button-bar of a Kontact plugin only when the main widget of that plugin is active.
	 * In this case, call disableBar() at the begin of your program, so the disable count will never be negative.
	 * @Note If the bar is enabled, it does not mean the bar is shown. For that, the developer (using showBarByDefault in the construcor)
	 *       or the user (by checking the checkbox in the comment dialog) have to explicitely show the bar.
	 */
	void disableBar();

	/**
	 * Re-enable the button-bar one time.
	 * @see The method disableBar() for more information on how enabling/disabling works.
	 */
	void enableBar();

	/**
	 * Show the first-use information dialog telling the user the meaning of the LikeBack system and giving examples of every comment types.
	 */
	void showInformationMessage();

	/**
	 * Popup the comment dialog.
	 * With no parameter, it popups in the default configuration: the first type is checked, empty message, current window path, and empty context.
	 * You can use the following parameters to customize how it should appears:
	 * @param type           Which radiobutton should be checked when poping up. AllButton, the default value, means the first available type will be checked.
	 * @param initialComment The text to put in the comment text area. Allows you to popup the dialog in some special circumstances,
	 *                       like to let the user report an internal error by populating the comment area with technical details useful for you to debug.
	 * @param windowPath     The window path to send with the comment. If empty (the default), the current window path is took.
	 *                       Separate window names with "~~". For instance "MainWindow~~NewFile~~FileOpen".
	 *                       If you popup the dialog after an error occurred, you can put the error name in that field (if the window path has no sense in that context).
	 *                       When the dialog is popuped up from the sendACommentAction() KAction, this value is "HelpMenu", because there is no way to know if the user
	 *                       is commenting a thing he found/thinked about in a sub-dialog.
	 * @param context        Not used for the moment. Will allow more fine-grained application status report.
	 */
	void execCommentDialog(Button type = AllButtons, const TQString &initialComment = "", const TQString &windowPath = "", const TQString &context = "");

	/**
	 * Popups the dialog for the user to set his email address.
	 * The popup will always be shown, even if the user already provided an email address.
	 */
	void askEmailAddress();

  private:
	LikeBackPrivate *d;

	/**
	 * Get the user email address from KControl.
	 */
	void fetchUserEmail();

  private slots:
	/**
	 * Slot triggered by the "Help -> Send a Comment to Developers" KAction.
	 * It popups the comment dialog, and set the window path to "HelpMenuAction",
	 * because current window path has no meaning in that case.
	 */
	void execCommentDialogFromHelp();

  public:

	/**
	 * @Returns true if the user has enabled the LikeBack bar for this version.
	 */
	bool userWantsToShowBar();

	/**
	 * Explicitely set if the floating button-bar should be shown or not.
	 * Tehorically, this choice should only be left to the user,
	 * and to the developers for the default value, already provided in the constructor.
	 */
	void setUserWantsToShowBar(bool showBar);

	/**
	 * @Returns A pointer to the TDEAboutData used to determin the application name and version.
	 * @See The LikeBack constructor for more information.
	 */
	const TDEAboutData *aboutData();

	/**
	 * @Returns A pointer to the KConfig used to store user configuration (email address, if the button-bar should be shown).
	 * @See The LikeBack constructor for more information.
	 */
	KConfig *config();

	/**
	 * During the first comment sending, the user is invited to enter his email address for the developers to be able to contact him back.
	 * He is only asked once, or he can set or change it by using the bottom-left button in the comment dialog.
	 * @Returns true if the user has already configured his email address.
	 */
	bool emailAddressAlreadyProvided();

	/**
	 * @Returns The email user address, or ask it to the user if he have not provided or ignored it.
	 * @Returns An empty string if the user cancelled the request dialog.
	 */
	TQString emailAddress();

	/**
	 * Define or re-define the user email address.
	 * LikeBack will not ask it again to the user, unless you set @p userProvided to false.
	 * Then, this call can be considered as setting the default email address, that the user should confirm later.
	 */
	void setEmailAddress(const TQString &address, bool userProvided = true);

	/**
	 * @Returns true if @p version is an Alpha, Beta, RC, SVN or CVS version.
	 * You can use this static method in the constructor to enable the button-bar by default only during beta-releases.
	 */
	static bool isDevelopmentVersion(const TQString &version);
};

#endif // LIKEBACK_H