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Nested class in Qt5

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  • mrjjM Offline
    mrjjM Offline
    mrjj
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    Hi
    Actually i want you to make the outer class a friend of the inner class so when inner class
    is moved to own files, the outer class can access all private variables also in the (was) nested class
    so that the effect is the same as a nested class.

    Doing
    friend void brightnessText(const QString& in);
    allows that function to access private members (in brightness class) when defined outside but im not sure that is what you want/need
    since a normal slot can do that already.

    I though you wanted something like

    class B;
    
    class A
    {
        int val; // this is private
        friend B;
    };
    
    class B
    {
        A obj; // like the nested class.
        void func()
        {
            obj.val = 100; // this is not possible without friend
        }
    };
    
    J 1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • J Juancinho_cardecan

      @jsulm I'm doing nested class for easy access to the variable brightValue inside a different class (In this case brightness class)

      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulm
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      @Juancinho_cardecan said in Nested class in Qt5:

      I'm doing nested class for easy access to the variable brightValue inside a different class

      This is really not a reason to use nested classes. You should think about clean design instead. Why not use getter/setter to access private fields?

      https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

      1 Reply Last reply
      4
      • mrjjM mrjj

        Hi
        Actually i want you to make the outer class a friend of the inner class so when inner class
        is moved to own files, the outer class can access all private variables also in the (was) nested class
        so that the effect is the same as a nested class.

        Doing
        friend void brightnessText(const QString& in);
        allows that function to access private members (in brightness class) when defined outside but im not sure that is what you want/need
        since a normal slot can do that already.

        I though you wanted something like

        class B;
        
        class A
        {
            int val; // this is private
            friend B;
        };
        
        class B
        {
            A obj; // like the nested class.
            void func()
            {
                obj.val = 100; // this is not possible without friend
            }
        };
        
        J Offline
        J Offline
        Juancinho_cardecan
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        @mrjj Hi

        I've been tried to implement your recommendation and also with setters/getters but at time that I want to pass the brightValue from the function void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in) into the function void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in) unfortunately the variable b takes a random value inside the method rgbRecive:

        This is the following code:

        class rgbLed;
        
        class brightness : public QObject
        {
            Q_OBJECT
        public:
            explicit brightness(QObject *parent = 0);
            friend rgbLed;
            void setBrightValue(int newbrightValueMember)
            {
                brightValueMember = newbrightValueMember;
            };
            int getBrightValue()
            {
                return brightValueMember;
            }
        
            bool flag = 0;
            int brightValueMember;
        
        public slots:
            void brightnessText(const QString& in);
        };
        
        class rgbLed : public QObject
        {
            Q_OBJECT
            Q_PROPERTY(int bright READ brigfht WRITE setBright NOTIFY brightChanged)
        public:
            explicit rgbLed(QObject *parent = nullptr);
            brightness obj;
            int regresion_red(int red);
            int regresion_green(int green);
            int regresion_blue(int blue);
        
            Q_INVOKABLE int bright();
            Q_INVOKABLE int setBright(int x);
            Q_INVOKABLE void add(rgbLed *x);
        
        
            int r;
            int g;
            int b;
            int r2;
            int g2;
            int b2;
            int brightValue;
            int myBrightness;
            QStringList list;
            QString my_in;
        
            int red = 0;
            int green = 0;
            int blue = 0;
            int pos = 0 ;
            bool flag = 0;
            int x;
        
        signals:
            void brightChanged(int x);
        
        public slots:
            void rgbRecive(const QString &in);
        };
        
        

        and in my .cpp:

        void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in)
        {
        
            QString Bright = in;
            int brightValue;
            brightValue = Bright.toInt(&flag);
            setBrightValue(brightValue);
        
            qDebug() << "bright: " << brightValue;
        }
        
        void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
        {
            qDebug() << "ColorPicked:" << in;
        
            QStringList listNew = in.split(",");
            QStringList a_list = listNew[0].split("(");
            QStringList b_list = listNew[2].split(")");
        
            int b = obj.getBrightValue();
            qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
        }
        

        Could anyone see why b is taken a random value?

        jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • J Juancinho_cardecan

          @mrjj Hi

          I've been tried to implement your recommendation and also with setters/getters but at time that I want to pass the brightValue from the function void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in) into the function void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in) unfortunately the variable b takes a random value inside the method rgbRecive:

          This is the following code:

          class rgbLed;
          
          class brightness : public QObject
          {
              Q_OBJECT
          public:
              explicit brightness(QObject *parent = 0);
              friend rgbLed;
              void setBrightValue(int newbrightValueMember)
              {
                  brightValueMember = newbrightValueMember;
              };
              int getBrightValue()
              {
                  return brightValueMember;
              }
          
              bool flag = 0;
              int brightValueMember;
          
          public slots:
              void brightnessText(const QString& in);
          };
          
          class rgbLed : public QObject
          {
              Q_OBJECT
              Q_PROPERTY(int bright READ brigfht WRITE setBright NOTIFY brightChanged)
          public:
              explicit rgbLed(QObject *parent = nullptr);
              brightness obj;
              int regresion_red(int red);
              int regresion_green(int green);
              int regresion_blue(int blue);
          
              Q_INVOKABLE int bright();
              Q_INVOKABLE int setBright(int x);
              Q_INVOKABLE void add(rgbLed *x);
          
          
              int r;
              int g;
              int b;
              int r2;
              int g2;
              int b2;
              int brightValue;
              int myBrightness;
              QStringList list;
              QString my_in;
          
              int red = 0;
              int green = 0;
              int blue = 0;
              int pos = 0 ;
              bool flag = 0;
              int x;
          
          signals:
              void brightChanged(int x);
          
          public slots:
              void rgbRecive(const QString &in);
          };
          
          

          and in my .cpp:

          void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in)
          {
          
              QString Bright = in;
              int brightValue;
              brightValue = Bright.toInt(&flag);
              setBrightValue(brightValue);
          
              qDebug() << "bright: " << brightValue;
          }
          
          void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
          {
              qDebug() << "ColorPicked:" << in;
          
              QStringList listNew = in.split(",");
              QStringList a_list = listNew[0].split("(");
              QStringList b_list = listNew[2].split(")");
          
              int b = obj.getBrightValue();
              qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
          }
          

          Could anyone see why b is taken a random value?

          jsulmJ Offline
          jsulmJ Offline
          jsulm
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by jsulm
          #14

          @Juancinho_cardecan Where do you call brightness::brightnessText?
          Do you call it on rgbLed::obj or maybe on another brightness instance?

          https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

          J 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • jsulmJ jsulm

            @Juancinho_cardecan Where do you call brightness::brightnessText?
            Do you call it on rgbLed::obj or maybe on another brightness instance?

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Juancinho_cardecan
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            @jsulm I called here after your words but the value doesn't change:

            void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
            {
            qDebug() << "ColorPicked:" << in;

            QStringList listNew = in.split(",");
            QStringList a_list = listNew[0].split("(");
            QStringList b_list = listNew[2].split(")");
            
            obj.brightnessText(in);
            int b = obj.getBrightValue();
            qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
            

            }

            jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • J Juancinho_cardecan

              @jsulm I called here after your words but the value doesn't change:

              void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
              {
              qDebug() << "ColorPicked:" << in;

              QStringList listNew = in.split(",");
              QStringList a_list = listNew[0].split("(");
              QStringList b_list = listNew[2].split(")");
              
              obj.brightnessText(in);
              int b = obj.getBrightValue();
              qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
              

              }

              jsulmJ Offline
              jsulmJ Offline
              jsulm
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              @Juancinho_cardecan Called where? And did you call it on rgbLed::obj?

              https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

              J 2 Replies Last reply
              2
              • jsulmJ jsulm

                @Juancinho_cardecan Called where? And did you call it on rgbLed::obj?

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Juancinho_cardecan
                wrote on last edited by
                #17
                This post is deleted!
                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • jsulmJ jsulm

                  @Juancinho_cardecan Called where? And did you call it on rgbLed::obj?

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Juancinho_cardecan
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  @jsulm No I din't call it on rgbLed::obj, I called it inside the function void rgbLed::rgbRecive

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • mrjjM Offline
                    mrjjM Offline
                    mrjj
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    Hi
                    So here

                    void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
                    {
                    obj.brightnessText(in);
                    int b = obj.getBrightValue();
                    

                    b is not what you expect ?

                    J 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • mrjjM mrjj

                      Hi
                      So here

                      void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
                      {
                      obj.brightnessText(in);
                      int b = obj.getBrightValue();
                      

                      b is not what you expect ?

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      Juancinho_cardecan
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      @mrjj yes it's not what I'm expecting, it might be changing all the time but the value is zero always.

                      mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J Juancinho_cardecan

                        @mrjj yes it's not what I'm expecting, it might be changing all the time but the value is zero always.

                        mrjjM Offline
                        mrjjM Offline
                        mrjj
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by mrjj
                        #21

                        @Juancinho_cardecan
                        I would check

                        brightValue = Bright.toInt(&flag);
                        (in void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in))
                        and see if flag is false as that mean text to Int failed.

                        J 1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • mrjjM mrjj

                          @Juancinho_cardecan
                          I would check

                          brightValue = Bright.toInt(&flag);
                          (in void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in))
                          and see if flag is false as that mean text to Int failed.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          Juancinho_cardecan
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #22

                          @mrjj the flag is true and the value of brightValue is passing correctly, then the text to Int didn't failed, i dont know what is happening because if the values from QML are passing correctly, I'm calling in the wrong way the function brightnessText inside:

                          cpp file:

                          void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
                          {
                               my_brightness.brightnessText(in);
                              int b = my_brightness.getBrightValue();
                              qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
                          }
                          
                          void brightness::brightnessText(const QString &in)
                          {
                              QString Bright = in;
                              int brightValue;
                              brightValue = Bright.toInt(&flag);
                              qDebug() << "brightValue: " << brightValue;
                              qDebug() << "flag: " << flag;
                              setBrightValue(brightValue);
                          
                              qDebug() << "bright: " << brightValue;
                          }
                          
                          
                          
                          

                          main.cpp:

                          int main(int argc, char *argv[])
                          {
                          
                              QCoreApplication::setAttribute(Qt::AA_EnableHighDpiScaling);
                              QGuiApplication app(argc, argv);
                             
                          
                              QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
                              engine.load(QUrl(QStringLiteral("qrc:/main.qml")));
                              if (engine.rootObjects().isEmpty())
                                      return -1;
                          
                              //Root Object to find Items in QML
                              QObject* root = engine.rootObjects()[0];
                              assert(root != nullptr);
                          
                              // The QML Item to which we want to inject our QML-Item-loaded-from-file
                              QQuickItem* colorSelector = qobject_cast<QQuickItem*>(root->findChild<QObject*>("colorSelector"));
                              assert(colorSelector != nullptr);
                          
                          
                              // Load the QML file to a component
                              QString qml_path = "ColorSelector.qml";
                              QQmlComponent comp(&engine, QUrl::fromLocalFile(qml_path));
                          
                              QScopedPointer<rgbLed> slider (new rgbLed);
                              engine.rootContext()->setContextProperty("slider", slider.data());
                              QObject *topLevel = engine.rootObjects().value(0);
                              QQuickWindow *window = qobject_cast<QQuickWindow *>(topLevel);
                          
                              // Create an instance of the component
                              rgbLed my_rgbLed;//Creation an Object instance
                              brightness my_brightness;
                          
                              //Code to conecct a signal with the slot
                              QObject::connect(colorSelector, SIGNAL(colorChanged(QString)), &my_rgbLed, SLOT(rgbRecive(QString)));
                          
                              // connect our QML signal to our C++ slot
                                QObject::connect(window, SIGNAL(submitTextField(QString)), &my_brightness, SLOT(brightnessText(QString)));
                          
                              return app.exec();
                          }
                          
                          
                          

                          header file:

                          class rgbLed;
                          
                          class brightness : public QObject
                          {
                              Q_OBJECT
                          public:
                              explicit brightness(QObject *parent = 0);
                              friend rgbLed;
                              void setBrightValue(int newbrightValueMember)
                              {
                                  brightValueMember = newbrightValueMember;
                              };
                              int getBrightValue()
                              {
                                  return brightValueMember;
                              }
                          
                              bool flag = 0;
                              int brightValueMember;
                          
                          public slots:
                              void brightnessText(const QString& in);
                          };
                          
                          
                          class rgbLed : public QObject
                          {
                              Q_OBJECT
                              Q_PROPERTY(int bright READ brigfht WRITE setBright NOTIFY brightChanged)
                          public:
                              explicit rgbLed(QObject *parent = nullptr);
                              brightness my_brightness;
                              int regresion_red(int red);
                              int regresion_green(int green);
                              int regresion_blue(int blue);
                          
                              Q_INVOKABLE int bright();
                              Q_INVOKABLE int setBright(int x);
                              Q_INVOKABLE void add(rgbLed *x);
                          
                          
                              int r;
                              int g;
                              int b;
                              int r2;
                              int g2;
                              int b2;
                              int brightValue;
                              int myBrightness;
                              QStringList list;
                              QString my_in;
                          
                              int red = 0;
                              int green = 0;
                              int blue = 0;
                              int pos = 0 ;
                              bool flag = 0;
                              int x;
                          
                          signals:
                              void brightChanged(int x);
                          
                          public slots:
                              void rgbRecive(const QString &in);
                          }
                          
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • mrjjM Offline
                            mrjjM Offline
                            mrjj
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote on last edited by mrjj
                            #23

                            Hi
                            I think you have 2 instances of brightness called my_brightness

                            void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
                            {
                            my_brightness.brightnessText(in); <<< is the SAME my_brightness as you have in main.cpp?
                            int b = my_brightness.getBrightValue();
                            qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
                            }

                            so
                            rgbLed my_rgbLed;//Creation an Object instance
                            brightness my_brightness;

                            how does the my_brightness from outside come into

                            void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in) ?
                            It seems it has its own ?
                            So one is being updated but other is not ?

                            In the original code, it was called

                            class rgbLed : public QObject
                            {
                                Q_OBJECT
                                Q_PROPERTY(int bright READ brigfht WRITE setBright NOTIFY brightChanged)
                            public:
                                explicit rgbLed(QObject *parent = nullptr);
                                brightness obj; <<< the old internal name of the instance
                            

                            So it works from QML
                            as you do
                            // connect our QML signal to our C++ slot
                            QObject::connect(window, SIGNAL(submitTextField(QString)), &my_brightness, SLOT(brightnessText(QString)));

                            and that changes the one in Mian.cpp
                            but the rgbLed my_rgbLed; and its "obj" is not.

                            I assume you want the brigness instance inside my_rgbLed to change ?

                            jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                            3
                            • mrjjM mrjj

                              Hi
                              I think you have 2 instances of brightness called my_brightness

                              void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in)
                              {
                              my_brightness.brightnessText(in); <<< is the SAME my_brightness as you have in main.cpp?
                              int b = my_brightness.getBrightValue();
                              qDebug() << "Value: " << b;
                              }

                              so
                              rgbLed my_rgbLed;//Creation an Object instance
                              brightness my_brightness;

                              how does the my_brightness from outside come into

                              void rgbLed::rgbRecive(const QString &in) ?
                              It seems it has its own ?
                              So one is being updated but other is not ?

                              In the original code, it was called

                              class rgbLed : public QObject
                              {
                                  Q_OBJECT
                                  Q_PROPERTY(int bright READ brigfht WRITE setBright NOTIFY brightChanged)
                              public:
                                  explicit rgbLed(QObject *parent = nullptr);
                                  brightness obj; <<< the old internal name of the instance
                              

                              So it works from QML
                              as you do
                              // connect our QML signal to our C++ slot
                              QObject::connect(window, SIGNAL(submitTextField(QString)), &my_brightness, SLOT(brightnessText(QString)));

                              and that changes the one in Mian.cpp
                              but the rgbLed my_rgbLed; and its "obj" is not.

                              I assume you want the brigness instance inside my_rgbLed to change ?

                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulm
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #24

                              @mrjj said in Nested class in Qt5:

                              I think you have 2 instances of brightness called my_brightness

                              I already tryied to explain that...

                              https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              3
                              • JonBJ Offline
                                JonBJ Offline
                                JonB
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #25

                                @Juancinho_cardecan
                                Assuming @jsulm & @mrjj are correct, each time you create a brightness object anywhere why don't you set its https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qobject.html#objectName-prop (setObjectName()) to a unique string, then you can see whether one instance is different from another. Printing out &brightnessObjectInstance may also tell you the same, I think.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • mrjjM Offline
                                  mrjjM Offline
                                  mrjj
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by mrjj
                                  #26

                                  Hi

                                  Could you try to add

                                  brightness & rgbLed: :getBrightness() {
                                  return obj; // or what you called it
                                  }

                                  to
                                  class rgbLed : public QObject

                                  then in main.cpp

                                  QObject::connect(window, SIGNAL(submitTextField(QString)), my_rgbLed.getBrightness(), SLOT(brightnessText(QString)));

                                  and remove all
                                  brightness my_brightness;
                                  as we dont want to use brightness alone ever, only via rgbLed.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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