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Best Practice to Add Dynamic QML from C++ data

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  • VRoninV VRonin

    ok, let's say our main looks like this:

    #include <QApplication>
    #include <QQmlApplicationEngine>
    #include <QQmlContext>
    #include <QStandardItemModel>
    #include "testdata.h"
    int main(int argc, char *argv[])
    {
        QApplication app(argc, argv);
    
    
        QStandardItemModel testModel;
        testModel.insertRows(0,2);
        testModel.insertColumn(0);
    
        TestData tempTestData;
        tempTestData.setText("Data1Text");
        tempTestData.setDesctiption("Data1Desc");
        testModel.setData(testModel.index(0,0),QVariant::fromValue(tempTestData));
    
        tempTestData.setText("Data2Text");
        tempTestData.setDesctiption("Data2Desc");
        testModel.setData(testModel.index(1,0),QVariant::fromValue(tempTestData));
    
        QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
        qmlRegisterType<TestData>("com.testns", 1, 0, "TestData");
        engine.rootContext()->setContextProperty("testModel", &testModel);
        engine.load(QUrl(QStringLiteral("qrc:///main.qml")));
        return app.exec();
    }
    

    and main.qml is

    import com.testns 1.0
    ApplicationWindow {
        visible: true
        width: 640
        height: 480
        title: "Testing Model"
    
        ListView{
            model: testModel
            delegate: ???
        }
    }
    
    

    What do you put in ??? to simply make text and description appear next to each others?

    The official example http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtquick-modelviewsdata-cppmodels.html splits the internals on Animal into two different roles each containing a QString, I never saw an example of a delegate handling custom variant types

    kshegunovK Offline
    kshegunovK Offline
    kshegunov
    Moderators
    wrote on last edited by kshegunov
    #13

    @VRonin

    Haven't tried it, but I'd do something along the lines of:

    ApplicationWindow  {
        visible: true
        width: 640
        height: 480
        title: "Testing Model"
    
        ListView  {
            model: testModel
            delegate: Rectangle  {
                height: 25
                width: 100
                Text  {
                    id: tmText
                    text: modelData.text
                    anchors.left: parent.left
                    anchors.top: parent.top
                    anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
                }
                Text  {
                    text: modelData.desctiption
                    anchors.left: tmText.right
                    anchors.right: parent.right
                    anchors.top: parent.top
                    anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
                }
            }
        }
    }
    

    Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

    VRoninV 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • VRoninV Offline
      VRoninV Offline
      VRonin
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      needs edit instead of modelData and it works! thanks so much

      "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
      ~Napoleon Bonaparte

      On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

      kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • VRoninV VRonin

        needs edit instead of modelData and it works! thanks so much

        kshegunovK Offline
        kshegunovK Offline
        kshegunov
        Moderators
        wrote on last edited by kshegunov
        #15

        @VRonin said in Best Practice to Add Dynamic QML from C++ data:

        needs edit instead of modelData and it works! thanks so much

        I'm glad it does. :D
        I was just putting down the code to test it ... thanks for sparing me the trouble :P

        Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

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        0
        • P Offline
          P Offline
          Placeable
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          Okay I got it to work, here's what i got now, and it is a long post so bare with me, - I defined a class in the following way and mind you the QObject *parent in the constructor I always define as 0, I never send in anything there. Dunno if it is intended to do so.

          class ComplexData : public QObject {
              Q_OBJECT
          
              Q_PROPERTY(QString text READ testString WRITE setTestString NOTIFY testStringChanged)
          
          public:
              explicit ComplexData(QObject *parent = 0);
          
              QString testString() const;
              void setTestString(const QString &testString);
          
          signals:
              void testStringChanged(QString);
          
          private:
              QString mTestString;
          };
          

          Implementation of ComplexData.cpp

          ComplexData::ComplexData(QObject *parent) : QObject(parent) {
              mTestString = "This is a test string from CPP!";
          }
          
          QString ComplexData::testString() const {
              return mTestString;
          }
          
          void ComplexData::setTestString(const QString &testString) {
              mTestString = testString;
              emit testStringChanged(testString);
          }
          

          My "SomeData" gets this new "ComplexData" as a member variable:

          class SomeData
          {
          public:
              SomeData(const QString &headerText);
          
              QString headerText() const;
              ComplexData* complexData() const;
          
          private:
              QString mHeaderText;
              ComplexData* mComplexData; //::  Has to be a pointer for some reason
          };
          

          Implementation of SomeData.cpp:

          SomeData::SomeData(const QString &headerText)
              : mHeaderText(headerText)
          {
              mComplexData = new ComplexData(); //:: I just create the object here for Testing could be passed into Constructor though
          }
          
          ComplexData* SomeData::complexData() const {
              return mComplexData;
          }
          

          And finally in my AbstractListModel 'SomeListModel.cpp' data function now looks like this:

          QVariant SomeListModel::data(const QModelIndex &index, int role) const {
              if (index.row() < 0 || index.row() >= mSolutions.count())
                  return QVariant();
          
              const SomeData &someData= mData[index.row()];
          
              switch (role) {
              case HeaderText:
                  return someData.headerText();
              break;
          
              case ComplexData:
                  return QVariant::fromValue( someData.complexData() );
              break;
              }
          
              return QVariant();
          }
          

          With this I can use this in QML like:

          Text {
                text: model.complexData.text
          }
          

          Okay, all fine and dandy. I basically just moved some data to another class. I could've just kept on having this in the SomeData class. What I really need to know is if it is possible to return the whole "ComplexData" as a QML of type "Text", is that a QTextField type in CPP?

          So instead in the data function of SomeListModel I would return say:

          case ComplexData:
                  return QVariant::fromValue( someData.complexData() ); //::  This returns a formatted textfield setup from C++ to be used in QML instead.
          break;
          

          Not even sure if that is possible though. I am getting a bit confused here :/

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          • p3c0P Offline
            p3c0P Offline
            p3c0
            Moderators
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            @Placeable What do you mean by "formatted textfield setup" ?

            157

            P 1 Reply Last reply
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            • p3c0P p3c0

              @Placeable What do you mean by "formatted textfield setup" ?

              P Offline
              P Offline
              Placeable
              wrote on last edited by Placeable
              #18

              @p3c0 said in Best Practice to Add Dynamic QML from C++ data:

              @Placeable What do you mean by "formatted textfield setup" ?

              In CPP I want to create a set of Texts to be used in QML - I read data from a JSON file and need to create Texts for QML dynamically. All data is stored on the CPP side so let's say I need to create a view with 3 Texts and another with 0 Texts. That is what I am struggling to do.

              So I am wondering if it is possible to create these Texts in CPP (Whatever their CPP variant might be, I dunno) and then return this to be populated in said QML view by changing the QAbstractListModel class somehow.

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              0
              • p3c0P Offline
                p3c0P Offline
                p3c0
                Moderators
                wrote on last edited by p3c0
                #19

                @Placeable Do you mean something like dynamic object creation in QML ?
                And in your case you want the QML component's code(Text) will come from CPP ?

                http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtqml-javascript-dynamicobjectcreation.html#creating-an-object-from-a-string-of-qml

                157

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                • p3c0P p3c0

                  @Placeable Do you mean something like dynamic object creation in QML ?
                  And in your case you want the QML component's code(Text) will come from CPP ?

                  http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtqml-javascript-dynamicobjectcreation.html#creating-an-object-from-a-string-of-qml

                  P Offline
                  P Offline
                  Placeable
                  wrote on last edited by Placeable
                  #20

                  @p3c0
                  Exactly so, dynamically. Basically I want to setup these Texts on the CPP side (Font size, formatting as such etc) and let QML now: Hey here is a Text for you to use, have fun! Oh by the way here's another Text to use for this ListItem. But that ListItem over there you will get no Text to use at all! Hah!

                  So a ListItem could have a variable amount of Texts that I also need to somehow tell my View Delegate.

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                  • p3c0P Offline
                    p3c0P Offline
                    p3c0
                    Moderators
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    @Placeable I have done something similar my project here. So what that particular code does is it creates a QQuickItem from a base QML template as shown here. Then sets some color and font on it. So you can try to do something similar. But remember QQmlComponent requires QQmlEngine. This is the same with which you must have loaded the QML initially. Also remember that dynamic QQuickItem also requires a visual parent which is set using setParent.

                    157

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                    • p3c0P p3c0

                      @Placeable I have done something similar my project here. So what that particular code does is it creates a QQuickItem from a base QML template as shown here. Then sets some color and font on it. So you can try to do something similar. But remember QQmlComponent requires QQmlEngine. This is the same with which you must have loaded the QML initially. Also remember that dynamic QQuickItem also requires a visual parent which is set using setParent.

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Placeable
                      wrote on last edited by Placeable
                      #22

                      @p3c0 This is great, I like how to create QML from CPP. I came up with a different solution though which I think works but not sure if it is "best practice" - I'd like to experiment the way you did it as well.

                      Here's how I have done it now to create "dynamic" Texts in QML from CPP data:

                      In my QAbstractListModel data function I have this field that returns a QVariant:

                      case TextData:
                              return QVariant::fromValue( someData.textList() );
                      break;
                      

                      The implementation of that returns a QList of QObject:

                      QList<QObject*> SomeData::textList() const {
                          return mTextList;
                      }
                      

                      I can populate this QList with my TextData class that derives QObject

                      TextData.cpp:

                      class TextData : public QObject {
                          Q_OBJECT
                      
                          Q_PROPERTY(QString text READ testString WRITE setTestString NOTIFY testStringChanged)
                      
                      public:
                          explicit TextData(QObject *parent = 0);
                      
                          QString testString() const;
                          void setTestString(const QString &testString);
                      
                      signals:
                          void testStringChanged(QString);
                      
                      private:
                          QString mTestString;
                      };
                      

                      Then in QML I can do something like this now to create QML Texts and populate them from the CPP data:

                      Component.onCompleted: {
                          var arr = model.textData;
                          var component = Qt.createComponent("SomeTextLayout.qml");
                          for ( var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++ ) {
                             var txtObject = arr[i];
                             var txtQml = component.createObject(someParentId);
                             txtQml.text = txtObject.text;
                             ... //Etc fill in more props from the txtObject
                          }
                      }
                      

                      Again how this is performance wise I am not sure I am inclined to do the QML markup on the CPP side as well.
                      I'll mark this topic as Solved as I think there is a lot of great input here that would help anyone else in the future.

                      Thanks everyone!

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                      • p3c0P Offline
                        p3c0P Offline
                        p3c0
                        Moderators
                        wrote on last edited by p3c0
                        #23

                        @Placeable Beware of Component.onCompleted.

                        The order of running the onCompleted handlers is undefined.

                        Due to this it could be possible that your initialized components may be not be available when required. May be create them when you require them.

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                        • p3c0P p3c0

                          @Placeable Beware of Component.onCompleted.

                          The order of running the onCompleted handlers is undefined.

                          Due to this it could be possible that your initialized components may be not be available when required. May be create them when you require them.

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          Placeable
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #24

                          @p3c0

                          I am not sure what this means. From my testing I see no issues. You mean there is a chance onCompleted is finished before the nested component.createObject(..) is created for this.

                          How would one solve this preferably?

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                          0
                          • p3c0P Offline
                            p3c0P Offline
                            p3c0
                            Moderators
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #25

                            @Placeable

                            If you find no issues then continue. Just a warning if you find some odd behavior during your implementaion. In some of my cases I found that onCompleted is not the most reliable place for initialization of components. Sometimes it triggered earlier causing problems to the objects which were intialized in it and which were dependent on others.

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                            • p3c0P p3c0

                              @Placeable

                              If you find no issues then continue. Just a warning if you find some odd behavior during your implementaion. In some of my cases I found that onCompleted is not the most reliable place for initialization of components. Sometimes it triggered earlier causing problems to the objects which were intialized in it and which were dependent on others.

                              P Offline
                              P Offline
                              Placeable
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #26

                              @p3c0 Alrighty, I'll bare that in mind. Thanks again!

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • kshegunovK kshegunov

                                @VRonin

                                Haven't tried it, but I'd do something along the lines of:

                                ApplicationWindow  {
                                    visible: true
                                    width: 640
                                    height: 480
                                    title: "Testing Model"
                                
                                    ListView  {
                                        model: testModel
                                        delegate: Rectangle  {
                                            height: 25
                                            width: 100
                                            Text  {
                                                id: tmText
                                                text: modelData.text
                                                anchors.left: parent.left
                                                anchors.top: parent.top
                                                anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
                                            }
                                            Text  {
                                                text: modelData.desctiption
                                                anchors.left: tmText.right
                                                anchors.right: parent.right
                                                anchors.top: parent.top
                                                anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
                                            }
                                        }
                                    }
                                }
                                
                                VRoninV Offline
                                VRoninV Offline
                                VRonin
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #27

                                Since this was something new from me and the issue popped up again after a while
                                I prepared a small wiki article that summarises the technique

                                "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                                ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                                On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                                1 Reply Last reply
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