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How to catch the signal emitted from C++ global function in QML

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  • raven-worxR raven-worx

    @Naveen_D
    you are creating two different instances of your your object. One in the main() and one in the cpp file.
    You need to ensure that you operate on the same instance. Take a look at the Singleton pattern:

    class Globaltest {
    public:
        static Globaltest* Globaltest::Instance() {  //static method
              static Globaltest* instance = new Globaltest;
              return instance;
        }
    private:
         Globaltest();  //hidden constructor --> only allow to use our static Instance() method
    };
    
    
    Naveen_DN Offline
    Naveen_DN Offline
    Naveen_D
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    @raven-worx without using singleton...it is not possible? becoz i have a global object of that class...

    Naveen_D

    raven-worxR 1 Reply Last reply
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    • Naveen_DN Naveen_D

      @raven-worx without using singleton...it is not possible? becoz i have a global object of that class...

      raven-worxR Offline
      raven-worxR Offline
      raven-worx
      Moderators
      wrote on last edited by raven-worx
      #12

      @Naveen_D
      sure, but you need to make sure you are using the right object instance. The singleton is an easy and understandable mechanism, which prevents some possible poitfalls.
      As i said in your posted example you are using 2 different instances. Define the global object as global static object in the header file instead of the source file.

      --- SUPPORT REQUESTS VIA CHAT WILL BE IGNORED ---
      If you have a question please use the forum so others can benefit from the solution in the future

      Naveen_DN 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • raven-worxR raven-worx

        @Naveen_D
        sure, but you need to make sure you are using the right object instance. The singleton is an easy and understandable mechanism, which prevents some possible poitfalls.
        As i said in your posted example you are using 2 different instances. Define the global object as global static object in the header file instead of the source file.

        Naveen_DN Offline
        Naveen_DN Offline
        Naveen_D
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        @raven-worx
        if i define the global object as global static object in the header file instead of the source file. it is not necessary to again create an object in main.cpp and use context property?..without this i can directly catch the signal using signal handler in qml ?

        Naveen_D

        raven-worxR 1 Reply Last reply
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        • Naveen_DN Naveen_D

          @raven-worx
          if i define the global object as global static object in the header file instead of the source file. it is not necessary to again create an object in main.cpp and use context property?..without this i can directly catch the signal using signal handler in qml ?

          raven-worxR Offline
          raven-worxR Offline
          raven-worx
          Moderators
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          @Naveen_D said in How to catch the signal emitted from C++ global function in QML:

          it is not necessary to again create an object in main.cpp and use context property?

          the context property of course is still necessary. But not the duplicate object creation. Instead reference the static global one from the header file wherever you need it.

          --- SUPPORT REQUESTS VIA CHAT WILL BE IGNORED ---
          If you have a question please use the forum so others can benefit from the solution in the future

          Naveen_DN 2 Replies Last reply
          1
          • raven-worxR raven-worx

            @Naveen_D said in How to catch the signal emitted from C++ global function in QML:

            it is not necessary to again create an object in main.cpp and use context property?

            the context property of course is still necessary. But not the duplicate object creation. Instead reference the static global one from the header file wherever you need it.

            Naveen_DN Offline
            Naveen_DN Offline
            Naveen_D
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            @raven-worx i want to use this global obj in global function to emit the signal from that function.
            the way i am declaring the global function is right ?

            #ifndef GLOBALTEST_H
            #define GLOBALTEST_H
            
            #include <QObject>
            #include <QDebug>
            
            void output();
            class Globaltest : public QObject
            {
                Q_OBJECT
                static Globaltest *s_instance;
            public:
                explicit Globaltest(QObject *parent = 0);
            
            signals:
                void testSignal();
            
            
            public slots:
                Q_INVOKABLE void test();
            };
            
            #endif // GLOBALTEST_H
            

            Naveen_D

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            • raven-worxR raven-worx

              @Naveen_D said in How to catch the signal emitted from C++ global function in QML:

              it is not necessary to again create an object in main.cpp and use context property?

              the context property of course is still necessary. But not the duplicate object creation. Instead reference the static global one from the header file wherever you need it.

              Naveen_DN Offline
              Naveen_DN Offline
              Naveen_D
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              Hi, as you said i have only one instance of the object in the below code but when i use this object in set context property i am getting QVariant error...the error is

              /home/ubuntu/Qt5.7.0/5.7/gcc_64/include/QtCore/qvariant.h:471: error: 'QVariant::QVariant(void)' is private
              inline QVariant(void ) Q_DECL_EQ_DELETE;

              and if i remove the '&' and run the code i get this qml error
              QML debugging is enabled. Only use this in a safe environment.
              qrc:/main.qml:20: TypeError: Cannot call method 'test' of null

              can anyone tell what is wrong in the code and what i need to change
              Thanks

              .h

              #ifndef GLOBALTEST_H
              #define GLOBALTEST_H
              
              #include <QObject>
              #include <QDebug>
              
              void output();
              class Globaltest : public QObject
              {
                  Q_OBJECT
              
              public:
                  explicit Globaltest(QObject *parent = 0);
              
              signals:
                  void testSignal();
              
              
              public slots:
                  Q_INVOKABLE void test();
              };
              extern Globaltest *MySender;
              #endif // GLOBALTEST_H
              
              

              .cpp

              #include "globaltest.h"
              
              Globaltest *MySender;
              Globaltest::Globaltest(QObject *parent) : QObject(parent)
              {
              }
              
              //Globaltest *Globaltest::s_instance = 0;
              
              void Globaltest::test()
              {
                  qDebug()<<"test called"<<endl;
                  output();
              }
              
              void output()
              {
                  qDebug()<<"output function called"<<endl;
                  MySender= new Globaltest;
                  MySender->testSignal();
              }
              
              

              main.cpp

              #include <QGuiApplication>
              #include <QApplication>
              #include <QQmlApplicationEngine>
              #include <QQmlContext>
              
              #include "globaltest.h"
              
              int main(int argc, char *argv[])
              {
                  QApplication app(argc, argv);
              
                  qmlRegisterType<Globaltest>("com.globalCpp",1,0,"Globaltest");
              
                  QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
                  engine.rootContext()->setContextProperty("TestObject",&MySender); //Getting error here //
                  engine.load(QUrl(QStringLiteral("qrc:/main.qml")));
              
                  return app.exec();
              }
              
              

              main.qml

              import QtQuick 2.7
              import QtQuick.Window 2.2
              import com.globalCpp 1.0
              
              Window {
                  visible: true
                  width: 640
                  height: 480
                  title: qsTr("Hello World")
              
                  Connections {
                        target: TestObject
                        onTestSignal: console.log("Signal caught")
                     }
              
                  MouseArea{
                          id: mouse
                          anchors.fill: parent
                          onClicked: {
                              TestObject.test()
                          }
                      }
              }
              
              

              Naveen_D

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              • sierdzioS Offline
                sierdzioS Offline
                sierdzio
                Moderators
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                You are declaring MySender to be a pointer, so using '&' in setContextProperty() is wrong. '&' is a way to extract a pointer from non-pointer variable. Here you already have a pointer, so no need for '&'.

                You declare MySender variable, but you never set it to any value (meaning: you never create an object of type Globaltest). So QML engine - rightfully - complains that the object is null (== not set).

                You need to set the value of MySender somewhere in your code (before call to setContextProperty), in other words:

                MySender = new GlobalTest;
                

                (Z(:^

                Naveen_DN raven-worxR 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • sierdzioS sierdzio

                  You are declaring MySender to be a pointer, so using '&' in setContextProperty() is wrong. '&' is a way to extract a pointer from non-pointer variable. Here you already have a pointer, so no need for '&'.

                  You declare MySender variable, but you never set it to any value (meaning: you never create an object of type Globaltest). So QML engine - rightfully - complains that the object is null (== not set).

                  You need to set the value of MySender somewhere in your code (before call to setContextProperty), in other words:

                  MySender = new GlobalTest;
                  
                  Naveen_DN Offline
                  Naveen_DN Offline
                  Naveen_D
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  @sierdzio ya that i came to know since i am using pointer var no need of '&' but in cpp before emitting a signal i am allocating memory for that global object...

                  Naveen_D

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                  • sierdzioS sierdzio

                    You are declaring MySender to be a pointer, so using '&' in setContextProperty() is wrong. '&' is a way to extract a pointer from non-pointer variable. Here you already have a pointer, so no need for '&'.

                    You declare MySender variable, but you never set it to any value (meaning: you never create an object of type Globaltest). So QML engine - rightfully - complains that the object is null (== not set).

                    You need to set the value of MySender somewhere in your code (before call to setContextProperty), in other words:

                    MySender = new GlobalTest;
                    
                    raven-worxR Offline
                    raven-worxR Offline
                    raven-worx
                    Moderators
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    @Naveen_D
                    to add up to @sierdzio
                    also remove the line MySender= new Globaltest; from your output() method.
                    Instead call it once before you set it as context property.

                    --- SUPPORT REQUESTS VIA CHAT WILL BE IGNORED ---
                    If you have a question please use the forum so others can benefit from the solution in the future

                    sierdzioS 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • raven-worxR raven-worx

                      @Naveen_D
                      to add up to @sierdzio
                      also remove the line MySender= new Globaltest; from your output() method.
                      Instead call it once before you set it as context property.

                      sierdzioS Offline
                      sierdzioS Offline
                      sierdzio
                      Moderators
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      @raven-worx said in How to catch the signal emitted from C++ global function in QML:

                      also remove the line MySender= new Globaltest; from your output() method.

                      Doh, I did not even look at that method when writing my reply. Good hint, thanks for being so attentive @raven-worx :-)

                      (Z(:^

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                      • Naveen_DN Offline
                        Naveen_DN Offline
                        Naveen_D
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #21

                        @raven-worx @sierdzio
                        yes when i allocate memory before setcontext property it worked...
                        thanks alot for your help...:-)

                        Naveen_D

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • sierdzioS Offline
                          sierdzioS Offline
                          sierdzio
                          Moderators
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #22

                          Cool, good to know :-) Happy coding!

                          (Z(:^

                          1 Reply Last reply
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