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  4. error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'"
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error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'"

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  • S Offline
    S Offline
    SGaist
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on 16 Sept 2019, 19:32 last edited by
    #14

    It means that somewhere in your code you are using the copy constructor which is disabled since QObject objects cannot be copied.

    Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
    Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • L Lucas_1603
      16 Sept 2019, 18:15

      @sgaist Nope, I don't use it in my project and I'm quite sure about that ^^.
      I really want to know what does the error use of deleted function 'Song::Song(const Song&)' mean.

      J Offline
      J Offline
      JKSH
      Moderators
      wrote on 16 Sept 2019, 23:44 last edited by JKSH
      #15

      @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

      Nope, I don't use it in my project and I'm quite sure about that ^^.

      The copy constructor is invoked when you try to assign one Song object to another, for example:

      Song s1("Happy Birthday to You", "Me", "/path/to/song", "/path/to/art");
      
      Song s2(s1);  // copy-constructor invoked here
      Song s3 = s1; // operator=() and copy-constructor invoked here
      

      I really want to know what does the error use of deleted function 'Song::Song(const Song&)' mean.

      It means your code contains something like s2 or s3 above.

      • Song::Song(const Song&) is the copy-constructor
      • A "deleted function" is a function which the creator has removed/deleted from the class -- QObjects are not allowed to have copy-constructors. See https://thispointer.com/c11-c14-delete-keyword-and-deleted-functions-with-use-cases-examples/ for more info

      Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

      L 1 Reply Last reply 17 Sept 2019, 10:57
      4
      • J JKSH
        16 Sept 2019, 23:44

        @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

        Nope, I don't use it in my project and I'm quite sure about that ^^.

        The copy constructor is invoked when you try to assign one Song object to another, for example:

        Song s1("Happy Birthday to You", "Me", "/path/to/song", "/path/to/art");
        
        Song s2(s1);  // copy-constructor invoked here
        Song s3 = s1; // operator=() and copy-constructor invoked here
        

        I really want to know what does the error use of deleted function 'Song::Song(const Song&)' mean.

        It means your code contains something like s2 or s3 above.

        • Song::Song(const Song&) is the copy-constructor
        • A "deleted function" is a function which the creator has removed/deleted from the class -- QObjects are not allowed to have copy-constructors. See https://thispointer.com/c11-c14-delete-keyword-and-deleted-functions-with-use-cases-examples/ for more info
        L Offline
        L Offline
        Lucas_1603
        wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 10:57 last edited by
        #16

        @jksh Yep, I got it. I realized what all you guys said.

        So I change the approach to my project now, assume that I have a PlaylistModel class:

        #include <QAbstractListModel>
        class PlaylistModel : public QAbstractListModel
        {
            Q_OBJECT
        
        public:
            enum Roles {
                TitleRole = Qt::UserRole + 1,
                SingerRole,
                SourceRole,
                AlbumArtRole
            };
        
            explicit PlaylistModel(QObject *parent = nullptr);
        
            int rowCount(const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) const override;
        
            QVariant data(const QModelIndex &index, int role = Qt::DisplayRole) const override;
            void addSong(Song &song);
        
        protected:
            QHash<int, QByteArray> roleNames() const override;
        
        private:
            QList<Song> m_data;
        };
        

        Now I want to access m_data (is the private attribute) from QML file, how can I do that?

        Thanks a lot for your help.

        J 1 Reply Last reply 17 Sept 2019, 12:10
        0
        • L Lucas_1603
          17 Sept 2019, 10:57

          @jksh Yep, I got it. I realized what all you guys said.

          So I change the approach to my project now, assume that I have a PlaylistModel class:

          #include <QAbstractListModel>
          class PlaylistModel : public QAbstractListModel
          {
              Q_OBJECT
          
          public:
              enum Roles {
                  TitleRole = Qt::UserRole + 1,
                  SingerRole,
                  SourceRole,
                  AlbumArtRole
              };
          
              explicit PlaylistModel(QObject *parent = nullptr);
          
              int rowCount(const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) const override;
          
              QVariant data(const QModelIndex &index, int role = Qt::DisplayRole) const override;
              void addSong(Song &song);
          
          protected:
              QHash<int, QByteArray> roleNames() const override;
          
          private:
              QList<Song> m_data;
          };
          

          Now I want to access m_data (is the private attribute) from QML file, how can I do that?

          Thanks a lot for your help.

          J Offline
          J Offline
          JonB
          wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 12:10 last edited by JonB
          #17

          @lucas_1603
          You can only access private variables in the class which defines them. So expose a getter/setter if you really need to. But since QAbstractListModel already has data() & setData() methods you would normally go via those.

          1 Reply Last reply
          2
          • J Offline
            J Offline
            JKSH
            Moderators
            wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 12:12 last edited by
            #18

            @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

            QList<Song> m_data

            Does that compile?

            Store pointers-to-QObjects inside containers, rather than QObjects themselves.

            Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

            L 1 Reply Last reply 17 Sept 2019, 13:44
            3
            • J JKSH
              17 Sept 2019, 12:12

              @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

              QList<Song> m_data

              Does that compile?

              Store pointers-to-QObjects inside containers, rather than QObjects themselves.

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lucas_1603
              wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 13:44 last edited by
              #19

              @jksh Yes, it compiled.
              @JonB As you said, I can access m_data via data() and setData() method. In data(), I have to assign QModelIndex &index and int role to it .
              How I can use data() method with enum TitleRole?

              J 1 Reply Last reply 17 Sept 2019, 21:56
              0
              • I Offline
                I Offline
                IntruderExcluder
                wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 13:59 last edited by
                #20

                You should override roleNames method in your model:

                QHash<int, QByteArray> PlaylistModel::roleNames() const
                {
                    static QHash<int, QByteArray>* ret = nullptr;
                    if (ret)
                        return *ret;
                
                    ret = new QHash<int, QByteArray>();
                    (*ret)[TitleRole] = "title";
                    ...
                
                    return *ret;
                }
                

                Then in QML you can use them as model property: model.title.

                L 1 Reply Last reply 17 Sept 2019, 14:31
                0
                • I IntruderExcluder
                  17 Sept 2019, 13:59

                  You should override roleNames method in your model:

                  QHash<int, QByteArray> PlaylistModel::roleNames() const
                  {
                      static QHash<int, QByteArray>* ret = nullptr;
                      if (ret)
                          return *ret;
                  
                      ret = new QHash<int, QByteArray>();
                      (*ret)[TitleRole] = "title";
                      ...
                  
                      return *ret;
                  }
                  

                  Then in QML you can use them as model property: model.title.

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lucas_1603
                  wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 14:31 last edited by Lucas_1603
                  #21

                  @intruderexcluder yes, I overrided it. When I use PlaylistModel as a model in QML, I actually just want to access m_data variable, not all of PlaylistModel attributes.
                  Any suggestions to do that? Thanks a lot

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • I Offline
                    I Offline
                    IntruderExcluder
                    wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 14:36 last edited by
                    #22

                    You are probably doing something wrong, but you can at any time simply add slot or invokable method to access any data.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • L Lucas_1603
                      17 Sept 2019, 13:44

                      @jksh Yes, it compiled.
                      @JonB As you said, I can access m_data via data() and setData() method. In data(), I have to assign QModelIndex &index and int role to it .
                      How I can use data() method with enum TitleRole?

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      JKSH
                      Moderators
                      wrote on 17 Sept 2019, 21:56 last edited by
                      #23

                      @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

                      Yes, it compiled
                      ...
                      I actually just want to access m_data variable, not all of PlaylistModel attributes.

                      Is Song still a subclass of QObject?

                      Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                      L 1 Reply Last reply 18 Sept 2019, 01:51
                      0
                      • J JKSH
                        17 Sept 2019, 21:56

                        @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

                        Yes, it compiled
                        ...
                        I actually just want to access m_data variable, not all of PlaylistModel attributes.

                        Is Song still a subclass of QObject?

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lucas_1603
                        wrote on 18 Sept 2019, 01:51 last edited by
                        #24

                        @jksh No, it's not now. I think I'm doing right way in this time ^^
                        The challenge now is accessing to m_data to get title, singer, source, album_art.

                        J 1 Reply Last reply 18 Sept 2019, 03:23
                        0
                        • L Lucas_1603
                          18 Sept 2019, 01:51

                          @jksh No, it's not now. I think I'm doing right way in this time ^^
                          The challenge now is accessing to m_data to get title, singer, source, album_art.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          JKSH
                          Moderators
                          wrote on 18 Sept 2019, 03:23 last edited by
                          #25

                          @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

                          I think I'm doing right way in this time ^^

                          There's often more than 1 way to achieve something; some are just easier or more efficient than others :)

                          The challenge now is accessing to m_data to get title, singer, source, album_art.

                          I see that you've implemented a Model. The idea behind a model is that you shouldn't need to access the internal data structure directly. Instead, you use the model's standard interface (rows, columns, and maybe roles) to access individual fields.

                          In your example, you can treat each Row as an individual song. You can also treat each Column as a song field (e.g. Col 1 = Title, Col 2 = Singer, etc.). Older examples use Roles instead of Columns

                          In QML, you normally don't call data() and setData() directly; you let the View and Delegate call them for you.

                          Spend some time getting to know the model-view framework first:

                          • https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtquick-modelviewsdata-cppmodels.html
                          • https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtquick-models-objectlistmodel-example.html
                            • https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtdeclarative.git/tree/examples/quick/models/objectlistmodel?h=5.13

                          This is quite a lengthy topic, so it's not something that we can teach you over a few forum posts. You need to spend time going through examples and modifying them to see how they behave. trying things out.

                          Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                          L 1 Reply Last reply 18 Sept 2019, 03:44
                          2
                          • J JKSH
                            18 Sept 2019, 03:23

                            @lucas_1603 said in error: "'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)' is private" and "use of deleted function 'QObject::QObject(const QObject&)'":

                            I think I'm doing right way in this time ^^

                            There's often more than 1 way to achieve something; some are just easier or more efficient than others :)

                            The challenge now is accessing to m_data to get title, singer, source, album_art.

                            I see that you've implemented a Model. The idea behind a model is that you shouldn't need to access the internal data structure directly. Instead, you use the model's standard interface (rows, columns, and maybe roles) to access individual fields.

                            In your example, you can treat each Row as an individual song. You can also treat each Column as a song field (e.g. Col 1 = Title, Col 2 = Singer, etc.). Older examples use Roles instead of Columns

                            In QML, you normally don't call data() and setData() directly; you let the View and Delegate call them for you.

                            Spend some time getting to know the model-view framework first:

                            • https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtquick-modelviewsdata-cppmodels.html
                            • https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtquick-models-objectlistmodel-example.html
                              • https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtdeclarative.git/tree/examples/quick/models/objectlistmodel?h=5.13

                            This is quite a lengthy topic, so it's not something that we can teach you over a few forum posts. You need to spend time going through examples and modifying them to see how they behave. trying things out.

                            L Offline
                            L Offline
                            Lucas_1603
                            wrote on 18 Sept 2019, 03:44 last edited by
                            #26

                            @jksh Thank you so much
                            All you guys helped me a lot and I really appreciate it.
                            I'll spend more time to learn more about model-view framework to see how really they work.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            2

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