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Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget

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  • JonBJ JonB

    @jeremy_k
    I didn't even look in the .h file, just the .cpp. No mention there of threads! :)

    jeremy_kJ Offline
    jeremy_kJ Offline
    jeremy_k
    wrote on last edited by
    #16

    @JonB said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

    @jeremy_k
    I didn't even look in the .h file, just the .cpp. No mention there of threads! :)

    I usually take the opposite approach, and look at the header for structure first.

    In this case the .cpp doesn't mention threads, but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

    Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

    H 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • H hbatalha

      @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

      That doesn't look like a viable solution for this task. QWidget-derived classes should only be accessed from QApplication's thread. QtConcurrent::run will violate that requirement.

      Using QtConcurrent::run was just an idea, a likely last resort solution in case none better was found.

      jeremy_kJ Offline
      jeremy_kJ Offline
      jeremy_k
      wrote on last edited by
      #17

      @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

      @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

      That doesn't look like a viable solution for this task. QWidget-derived classes should only be accessed from QApplication's thread. QtConcurrent::run will violate that requirement.

      Using QtConcurrent::run was just an idea, a likely last resort solution in case none better was found.

      I misread the problem description.

      Using QtConcurrent to add rows to a database sounds fine, as long as it doesn't read the rows from the QTableWidget. It may be necessary to serialize the QtConcurrent tasks.

      Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

      H 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • jeremy_kJ jeremy_k

        @JonB said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

        @jeremy_k
        I didn't even look in the .h file, just the .cpp. No mention there of threads! :)

        I usually take the opposite approach, and look at the header for structure first.

        In this case the .cpp doesn't mention threads, but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

        H Offline
        H Offline
        hbatalha
        wrote on last edited by hbatalha
        #18

        @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

        ...but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

        It actually helps as it just solved my problem described in the OP.

            LongUiTask longTask(tr("Adding downloads"));
            for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i)
            {
                longTask.reportProgress(tr("Adding"), i, len);
        
        // adding rows to the QTableWidget
            }
        

        If I remove it the app becomes unresponsive starting from a certain number of rows.

        jeremy_kJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • jeremy_kJ jeremy_k

          @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

          @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

          That doesn't look like a viable solution for this task. QWidget-derived classes should only be accessed from QApplication's thread. QtConcurrent::run will violate that requirement.

          Using QtConcurrent::run was just an idea, a likely last resort solution in case none better was found.

          I misread the problem description.

          Using QtConcurrent to add rows to a database sounds fine, as long as it doesn't read the rows from the QTableWidget. It may be necessary to serialize the QtConcurrent tasks.

          H Offline
          H Offline
          hbatalha
          wrote on last edited by hbatalha
          #19

          @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

          @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

          @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

          That doesn't look like a viable solution for this task. QWidget-derived classes should only be accessed from QApplication's thread. QtConcurrent::run will violate that requirement.

          Using QtConcurrent::run was just an idea, a likely last resort solution in case none better was found.

          I misread the problem description.

          Using QtConcurrent to add rows to a database sounds fine, as long as it doesn't read the rows from the QTableWidget. It may be necessary to serialize the QtConcurrent tasks.

          Probably but I will be using longuitask for now because aside from adding rows to database I still have two operations when adding rows to QTableWidget that I still haven't found a solution:
          Add widget right aligned to a QTableWidget cell and
          Add QPushButton to QTableWidget cell without using QTableWidget::setCellWidget

          Edit: these two operations are very slow.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • H hbatalha

            @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

            ...but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

            It actually helps as it just solved my problem described in the OP.

                LongUiTask longTask(tr("Adding downloads"));
                for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i)
                {
                    longTask.reportProgress(tr("Adding"), i, len);
            
            // adding rows to the QTableWidget
                }
            

            If I remove it the app becomes unresponsive starting from a certain number of rows.

            jeremy_kJ Offline
            jeremy_kJ Offline
            jeremy_k
            wrote on last edited by jeremy_k
            #20

            @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

            @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

            ...but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

            It actually helps as it just solved my problem described in the OP.

                for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i)
                {
                    longTask.reportProgress(tr("Adding"), i, len);
            
            If I remove it the app becomes unresponsive starting from a certain number of rows.
            

            LongUiTask::reportProgress() spins the event loop via QCoreApplication::processEvents(). It is making your app responsive because the function that it is called within doesn't return to the event loop quickly. It won't do anything for individual function calls within the loop. The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

            If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

            Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

            H 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • jeremy_kJ jeremy_k

              @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

              @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

              ...but also doesn't have anything that would help with a long running function call.

              It actually helps as it just solved my problem described in the OP.

                  for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i)
                  {
                      longTask.reportProgress(tr("Adding"), i, len);
              
              If I remove it the app becomes unresponsive starting from a certain number of rows.
              

              LongUiTask::reportProgress() spins the event loop via QCoreApplication::processEvents(). It is making your app responsive because the function that it is called within doesn't return to the event loop quickly. It won't do anything for individual function calls within the loop. The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

              If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

              H Offline
              H Offline
              hbatalha
              wrote on last edited by
              #21

              @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

              If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

              To certify that I understood @fcarney solution proposal, say that I have 1000 records to process, I will do it in say 50 records batches, right?

              The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

              Could you provide a simple code example demonstrating that, I don't understand the part about returning the event loop. I thought I had it but when trying to actually code it I just got stuck.

              In the doc QCoreApplication::processEvents() is discouraged and instead it's advised to use another thread for long operations. I could do that once I find the solutions for the two problem mentioned above.

              jeremy_kJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian Ehrlicher
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #22

                Use a proper model instead the convenience QTableWidget.

                Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
                Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

                H 1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                  Use a proper model instead the convenience QTableWidget.

                  H Offline
                  H Offline
                  hbatalha
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #23

                  @Christian-Ehrlicher said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                  Use a proper model instead the convenience QTableWidget.

                  How would that solve the problem described in the OP?

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • H hbatalha

                    @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                    If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

                    To certify that I understood @fcarney solution proposal, say that I have 1000 records to process, I will do it in say 50 records batches, right?

                    The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

                    Could you provide a simple code example demonstrating that, I don't understand the part about returning the event loop. I thought I had it but when trying to actually code it I just got stuck.

                    In the doc QCoreApplication::processEvents() is discouraged and instead it's advised to use another thread for long operations. I could do that once I find the solutions for the two problem mentioned above.

                    jeremy_kJ Offline
                    jeremy_kJ Offline
                    jeremy_k
                    wrote on last edited by jeremy_k
                    #24

                    @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                    @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                    If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

                    To certify that I understood @fcarney solution proposal, say that I have 1000 records to process, I will do it in say 50 records batches, right?

                    The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

                    Could you provide a simple code example demonstrating that, I don't understand the part about returning the event loop. I thought I had it but when trying to actually code it I just got stuck.

                    void batchExecute(QList<BatchTask> tasks)
                    {
                        if (!tasks.isEmpty())
                            tasks.takeFirst().process();
                        if (!tasks.isEmpty()) {
                            QTimer::singleShot(0, [tasks]() { batchExecute(tasks); });
                        }
                    }
                    

                    Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

                    H 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • jeremy_kJ jeremy_k

                      @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                      @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                      If a large volume of records need to be processed, @fcarney's suggestion of using a zero timer works well.

                      To certify that I understood @fcarney solution proposal, say that I have 1000 records to process, I will do it in say 50 records batches, right?

                      The preferred solution is to not do this, and instead return to the event loop.

                      Could you provide a simple code example demonstrating that, I don't understand the part about returning the event loop. I thought I had it but when trying to actually code it I just got stuck.

                      void batchExecute(QList<BatchTask> tasks)
                      {
                          if (!tasks.isEmpty())
                              tasks.takeFirst().process();
                          if (!tasks.isEmpty()) {
                              QTimer::singleShot(0, [tasks]() { batchExecute(tasks); });
                          }
                      }
                      
                      H Offline
                      H Offline
                      hbatalha
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #25

                      @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                      void batchExecute(QList<BatchTask> tasks)
                      {
                          if (!tasks.isEmpty())
                              tasks.takeFirst().process();
                          if (!tasks.isEmpty()) {
                              QTimer::singleShot(0, [tasks]() { batchExecute(tasks); });
                          }
                      }
                      

                      Thanks. I just tried it and even though it solves the app responsiveness problem it makes the app behave weirdly by kinda pausing it after each batch execution. Showing imo will give a better UX.

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • H hbatalha

                        @jeremy_k said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                        void batchExecute(QList<BatchTask> tasks)
                        {
                            if (!tasks.isEmpty())
                                tasks.takeFirst().process();
                            if (!tasks.isEmpty()) {
                                QTimer::singleShot(0, [tasks]() { batchExecute(tasks); });
                            }
                        }
                        

                        Thanks. I just tried it and even though it solves the app responsiveness problem it makes the app behave weirdly by kinda pausing it after each batch execution. Showing imo will give a better UX.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #26

                        @hbatalha
                        I wrote originally:

                        You might use a QTimer to run the insertions in "batches"of 20 or whatever instead.

                        Here you might make your "task" executed each time round do a number of inserts at a time, if it is presently doing just one. Or fiddle with the size from 1 upward.

                        Having said that. I say again: if you are finding inserting these rows is causing "Not Responding", or "lumpiness", on what is a relatively small number I would investigate whether your QTableWidget architecture is causing the overhead. Could you perhaps try out QTableView + QSqlTableModel by temporarily hacking something together to see whether it is then worth changing over your real code?

                        H 1 Reply Last reply
                        2
                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @hbatalha
                          I wrote originally:

                          You might use a QTimer to run the insertions in "batches"of 20 or whatever instead.

                          Here you might make your "task" executed each time round do a number of inserts at a time, if it is presently doing just one. Or fiddle with the size from 1 upward.

                          Having said that. I say again: if you are finding inserting these rows is causing "Not Responding", or "lumpiness", on what is a relatively small number I would investigate whether your QTableWidget architecture is causing the overhead. Could you perhaps try out QTableView + QSqlTableModel by temporarily hacking something together to see whether it is then worth changing over your real code?

                          H Offline
                          H Offline
                          hbatalha
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #27

                          @JonB said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                          if you are finding inserting these rows is causing "Not Responding", or "lumpiness", on what is a relatively small number

                          No, inserting row is not problem, the problem is what occurs after each row is inserted, in my case it is adding data to database and adding widgets to the table cells using setIndexWidget and setCellWidget, they are what is causing the "Not Responding"
                          Below is the exact structure of my code:

                          for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i) // len == 200 starts causing some lumpiness (at leat leat in my pc)
                          {
                              const int row = ui->table->rowCount();
                          
                              ui->table->setRowCount(row + 1);
                          
                              QPushButton* button1= new QPushButton(this);
                              QPushButton* button2= new QPushButton(this);
                              QPushButton* button3= new QPushButton(this);
                          
                              ui->table->setItem(row, 0, new QTableWidgetItem(title));
                              ui->table->setItem(row, 1, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                              ui->table->setItem(row, 2, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                              ui->table->setItem(row, 3, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                              ui->table->setItem(row, 4, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                              ui->table->setCellWidget(row, 5, button1);// causes "Not Responding"
                              ui->table->setCellWidget(row, 6, button2);// causes "Not Responding"
                          
                          
                              for(int k = 0; k < 5; ++k)
                              {
                                  QTableWidgetItem* item = ui->table->item(row, k);
                                  item->setFlags(item->flags() & ~ Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                          
                                  if(k != 0)
                                  {
                                      item->setTextAlignment(Qt::AlignmentFlag::AlignCenter);
                                  }
                              }
                          
                              QWidget* widget = new QWidget;
                          
                              button3->setFixedSize(10, 10);
                          
                              QHBoxLayout* hLayout = new QHBoxLayout;
                              hLayout->addStretch();
                              hLayout->addWidget(button3);
                              widget->setLayout(hLayout);
                          
                              ui->table->setIndexWidget(ui->table->model()->index(row, 0), widget);// causes "Not Responding"
                          
                              Record* record = new Record(title, destinationFolder, format,
                                                            qualityText, mRecordType);
                              record->button1(button1);
                              record->button2(button2);
                          
                              allRecords.append(record);
                              activeRecords.append(record);
                              database.add(record); // causes "Not Responding"
                          }
                          

                          This is how my code works, I don't see how using QTableView + QSqlTableModel could solve the "Not Responding" issue. I never used QSqlTableModel before so I might be missing something.

                          As I said before it's pretty unlikely that there will be 200 insertions at once, but this number is totally up to the user so I just want the app to be prepared for such moments.

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • H hbatalha

                            @JonB said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                            if you are finding inserting these rows is causing "Not Responding", or "lumpiness", on what is a relatively small number

                            No, inserting row is not problem, the problem is what occurs after each row is inserted, in my case it is adding data to database and adding widgets to the table cells using setIndexWidget and setCellWidget, they are what is causing the "Not Responding"
                            Below is the exact structure of my code:

                            for(int i = 0, len = titlesList.size(); i < len; ++i) // len == 200 starts causing some lumpiness (at leat leat in my pc)
                            {
                                const int row = ui->table->rowCount();
                            
                                ui->table->setRowCount(row + 1);
                            
                                QPushButton* button1= new QPushButton(this);
                                QPushButton* button2= new QPushButton(this);
                                QPushButton* button3= new QPushButton(this);
                            
                                ui->table->setItem(row, 0, new QTableWidgetItem(title));
                                ui->table->setItem(row, 1, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                                ui->table->setItem(row, 2, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                                ui->table->setItem(row, 3, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                                ui->table->setItem(row, 4, new QTableWidgetItem("-"));
                                ui->table->setCellWidget(row, 5, button1);// causes "Not Responding"
                                ui->table->setCellWidget(row, 6, button2);// causes "Not Responding"
                            
                            
                                for(int k = 0; k < 5; ++k)
                                {
                                    QTableWidgetItem* item = ui->table->item(row, k);
                                    item->setFlags(item->flags() & ~ Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                            
                                    if(k != 0)
                                    {
                                        item->setTextAlignment(Qt::AlignmentFlag::AlignCenter);
                                    }
                                }
                            
                                QWidget* widget = new QWidget;
                            
                                button3->setFixedSize(10, 10);
                            
                                QHBoxLayout* hLayout = new QHBoxLayout;
                                hLayout->addStretch();
                                hLayout->addWidget(button3);
                                widget->setLayout(hLayout);
                            
                                ui->table->setIndexWidget(ui->table->model()->index(row, 0), widget);// causes "Not Responding"
                            
                                Record* record = new Record(title, destinationFolder, format,
                                                              qualityText, mRecordType);
                                record->button1(button1);
                                record->button2(button2);
                            
                                allRecords.append(record);
                                activeRecords.append(record);
                                database.add(record); // causes "Not Responding"
                            }
                            

                            This is how my code works, I don't see how using QTableView + QSqlTableModel could solve the "Not Responding" issue. I never used QSqlTableModel before so I might be missing something.

                            As I said before it's pretty unlikely that there will be 200 insertions at once, but this number is totally up to the user so I just want the app to be prepared for such moments.

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #28

                            @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                            and adding widgets to the table cells using setIndexWidget and setCellWidget

                            Yes, as @VRonin would tell you, that is because you should not use these. They are "horribly inefficient", and precisely because you have hundreds of them you will be in the bad situation.

                            In which case, all your talk about "adding rows concurrently/in a thread", and most of the other stuff discussed, is not relevant. It sounds like your slowness is to with many widgets on a QTableWidget.

                            H 1 Reply Last reply
                            2
                            • JonBJ JonB

                              @hbatalha said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                              and adding widgets to the table cells using setIndexWidget and setCellWidget

                              Yes, as @VRonin would tell you, that is because you should not use these. They are "horribly inefficient", and precisely because you have hundreds of them you will be in the bad situation.

                              In which case, all your talk about "adding rows concurrently/in a thread", and most of the other stuff discussed, is not relevant. It sounds like your slowness is to with many widgets on a QTableWidget.

                              H Offline
                              H Offline
                              hbatalha
                              wrote on last edited by hbatalha
                              #29

                              @JonB said in Avoid "Not Responding" when adding rows to QTableWidget:

                              It sounds like your slowness is to with many widgets on a QTableWidget.

                              Not only widgets, adding rows to database also causes slowness. To solve the slowness, having the unsolved delegate topics (Add widget right aligned to a QTableWidget cell and Add QPushButton to QTableWidget cell without using QTableWidget::setCellWidget) answered solves the problem since all I will have to do is to add rows to database in a thread.
                              Right now longuitask solves the problem described in the OP, but @jeremy_k pointed out that it's not the ideal solution so I am trying to understand why he said that and trying out his sugestions.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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