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Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists

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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mardzo
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    Yes for that you are right, but as this was only a test program for presentation, i will fix the above asap. Just wanted to tel that when I put querySelect.setForwardOnly(true); the data filling is much faster

    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • M mardzo

      Yes for that you are right, but as this was only a test program for presentation, i will fix the above asap. Just wanted to tel that when I put querySelect.setForwardOnly(true); the data filling is much faster

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

      querySelect.setForwardOnly(true); the data filling is much faster

      http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qsqlquery.html#setForwardOnly :

      Forward only mode can be (depending on the driver) more memory efficient since results do not need to be cached. It will also improve performance on some databases.

      I'm (really quite) surprised this makes much difference, and intrigued. Are you using MySQL, on what platform, or what? How big is your resultset from your query?

      Taz742T 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • M Offline
        M Offline
        mardzo
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        Im fetching results from a remote Microsoft SQL Server 2012 on a local network installed on a windows 10 machine. As this software is still in development i am currently fetching about 500 rows from 6 columns in a request

        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • JonBJ JonB

          @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

          querySelect.setForwardOnly(true); the data filling is much faster

          http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qsqlquery.html#setForwardOnly :

          Forward only mode can be (depending on the driver) more memory efficient since results do not need to be cached. It will also improve performance on some databases.

          I'm (really quite) surprised this makes much difference, and intrigued. Are you using MySQL, on what platform, or what? How big is your resultset from your query?

          Taz742T Offline
          Taz742T Offline
          Taz742
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          @mardzo
          We can not change the Qt base and its aspirations.
          The only thing we can do is keep this information on the Qt side so that further operations are quick.

          Which @JNBarchan said well:
          @JNBarchan said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

          i.e. it represents a single row --- and then return a QList<RowClass>?

          QHash <QString, RowClass> will be faster then QList<RowClass> .

          For example:

          struct RowClass {
              QDateTime dtIN;
              QDateTime dtOUT;
              QString rfid;
          }
          
          QHash<QString, RowClass> hash;
          
          while( querySelect.next() ) {
              QString rfid = querySelect.value( 0 ).toString();
              QDateTime dtIN = querySelect.value( 1 ).toDateTime();
              QDateTime dtOUT = querySelect.value( 2 ).toDateTime();
              
              RowClass cls;
              cls.rfid = rfid;
              cls.dtIN = dtIN;
              cls.dtOUT = dtOUT;
          
              hash[rfid] = cls;
          }
          

          Do what you want.

          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Taz742T Taz742

            @mardzo
            We can not change the Qt base and its aspirations.
            The only thing we can do is keep this information on the Qt side so that further operations are quick.

            Which @JNBarchan said well:
            @JNBarchan said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

            i.e. it represents a single row --- and then return a QList<RowClass>?

            QHash <QString, RowClass> will be faster then QList<RowClass> .

            For example:

            struct RowClass {
                QDateTime dtIN;
                QDateTime dtOUT;
                QString rfid;
            }
            
            QHash<QString, RowClass> hash;
            
            while( querySelect.next() ) {
                QString rfid = querySelect.value( 0 ).toString();
                QDateTime dtIN = querySelect.value( 1 ).toDateTime();
                QDateTime dtOUT = querySelect.value( 2 ).toDateTime();
                
                RowClass cls;
                cls.rfid = rfid;
                cls.dtIN = dtIN;
                cls.dtOUT = dtOUT;
            
                hash[rfid] = cls;
            }
            
            JonBJ Offline
            JonBJ Offline
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by JonB
            #7

            @Taz742

            QHash <QString, RowClass> will be faster then QList<RowClass> .
            hash[rfid] = cls;

            1. You are assuming that OP's rfid is a primary key (or at least unique). While that may be the case, the OP does not state that anywhere in his question.

            2. QHash will only be faster than QList if the OP does multiple lookups by key field in his results. If he does not --- e.g. he just uses the values once to populate the UI, say --- it will actually be (marginally) slower & more memory.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • M Offline
              M Offline
              mardzo
              wrote on last edited by mardzo
              #8

              Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

              JonBJ Taz742T VRoninV 3 Replies Last reply
              0
              • M mardzo

                Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #9

                @mardzo
                Than as I said, stick with QList, not QHash, in your example.

                You still have to fill the QStandardItemModel one row at a time, there is nothing more efficient than that offered from Qt. In this case, of course, there is no need to involve a QList, you do it straight from querySelect.next() into QStandardItemModel.setData().

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • M mardzo

                  Im fetching results from a remote Microsoft SQL Server 2012 on a local network installed on a windows 10 machine. As this software is still in development i am currently fetching about 500 rows from 6 columns in a request

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #10

                  @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                  Im fetching results from a remote Microsoft SQL Server 2012 on a local network installed on a windows 10 machine. As this software is still in development i am currently fetching about 500 rows from 6 columns in a request

                  I'm still surprised/intrigued that you say setForwardOnly() makes any (noticeable) difference to speed. Are you sure it does (i.e. you've run it a few times with and without)? (e..g It would be more likely that it's the "random" delay in response from remote SQL Server than the forward-only.) I'd be grateful if you confirmed this, as it might make a difference to me in code I have inherited --- thanks.

                  M 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • M mardzo

                    Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                    Taz742T Offline
                    Taz742T Offline
                    Taz742
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                    Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                    When I use QTableWidget and fill it with my class. I use a 0-bit column for UID-like. When I need to edit or delete this record in the database, I have this record UID in the QTableWidget's last row and in the 0-van column and this class from QHash is quicker.
                    If you're the same, I recommend you use QHash.

                    @JNBarchan I wanted to say this from the beginning.

                    Do what you want.

                    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                      Im fetching results from a remote Microsoft SQL Server 2012 on a local network installed on a windows 10 machine. As this software is still in development i am currently fetching about 500 rows from 6 columns in a request

                      I'm still surprised/intrigued that you say setForwardOnly() makes any (noticeable) difference to speed. Are you sure it does (i.e. you've run it a few times with and without)? (e..g It would be more likely that it's the "random" delay in response from remote SQL Server than the forward-only.) I'd be grateful if you confirmed this, as it might make a difference to me in code I have inherited --- thanks.

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      mardzo
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #12

                      @JNBarchan yes i have run it multiple times with and without and in I confirm in my case it makes a difference.

                      Cheers

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • M mardzo

                        Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                        VRoninV Offline
                        VRoninV Offline
                        VRonin
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        Did you try running your program in Release mode? Debug mode for QtSql is quite heavy and might be the real bottleneck here (apart from network but that's not something you can control)

                        @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                        Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel

                        Then why are you putting a further step inbetween? just fill the model in the query loop.

                        "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
                        2
                        • Taz742T Taz742

                          @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                          Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                          When I use QTableWidget and fill it with my class. I use a 0-bit column for UID-like. When I need to edit or delete this record in the database, I have this record UID in the QTableWidget's last row and in the 0-van column and this class from QHash is quicker.
                          If you're the same, I recommend you use QHash.

                          @JNBarchan I wanted to say this from the beginning.

                          JonBJ Offline
                          JonBJ Offline
                          JonB
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          @Taz742 said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                          @mardzo said in Better way to store query results from db in Qt Lists:

                          Just to clarify, rfid is not a primary key, and once i fetch the data, i am using it to fill a QStandardItemmodel and display it in a QTableView in the ui

                          When I use QTableWidget and fill it with my class. I use a 0-bit column for UID-like. When I need to edit or delete this record in the database, I have this record UID in the QTableWidget's last row and in the 0-van column and this class from QHash is quicker.
                          If you're the same, I recommend you use QHash.

                          @JNBarchan I wanted to say this from the beginning.

                          Before we confuse the OP, he wants to use QStandardItemModel, and as @VRonin & I have said, he should not go via either QList or QHash, he should just fill the model in the query loop.

                          Next bit for @Taz742 only:

                          Assuming you only show, say, at most 100 rows to the user (you don't want to show thousands, do you), and do the occasional one-time lookup of a column I can't see it will be faster with a QHash than a QList (assuming you remember to count the time for populating the QHash as well as the single lookup). But whatever.

                          What I don't get, however, is why you're doing any lookup at all? From a QTableWidget/QTableView, isn't the whole point to use the QModelIndex functions to map directly from the view to the row in the model, and use that, without any searching?

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